Joanne's heart missed a beat. The rumours were true. There it was in black and white on the notice board: Michael Hurst, internationally famous dancer, was going to be a guest star with the company for the next season.
Everybody was excited, and all the talk between classes and rehearsals centred on Michael Hurst. At the age of 25 he'd suddenly taken the dance world by storm and had become a star of the New York City Ballet. Now, five years later, he was at the height of his career and travelled the world, appearing as a guest with the most famous companies. With his forthcoming appearance at Covent Garden, Michael Hurst was coming home.
Home? Well, maybe not. Although he had been trained by the Royal Ballet, he had never appeared with them. Too tall, they said. So he'd carved out his own career and become more successful than he could ever have been with the company.
Joanne stared at the notice. Michael Hurst was coming. She thought he'd gone out of her life for ever, but now they would meet again. A tear rolled down her cheek as the memories came flooding back.
"You'll be all right, dear," Joanne's mother assured her, trying to sound confident.
"I'm not sure."
"You'd better be sure," her father growled. "This is costing us a packet!"
"Gerry!"
"What?"
"If you can't be more tactful than that, why don't you just go back to the car?"
"I only said....."
"I know what you said, but you've got to remember Joanne's only eleven and she's never been away from home before. Naturally she's feeling apprehensive and she's allowed a few tears."
"Just as long as she hasn't changed her mind," father muttered.
"Of course she hasn't. Have you, dear?"
A fresh outburst of tears sent her father stomping off in a fury. His wife looked around her helplessly, but was immediately cheered by the sight of several children weeping. Many of them were obviously not first year students, either.
Then she noticed a tall boy calmly bidding goodbye to his parents. He didn't appear to be at all upset. He was so confident he gave the impression of having been at the school for at least a year, but Mrs Keane recognised him; this was his first year, too.
"That boy was at the audition with you," she said to Joanne. "Do you remember?"
Still sniffling, the young girl looked in the direction her mother had indicated.
"Um," she miserably agreed.
"He's not crying." It sounded like an accusation to poor Joanne.
"Maybe he hates his home and parents," she answered viciously.
"No, I shouldn't think so, dear. He accepts that his chosen career has brought him here. If sacrifices have to be made, he'll make them because he's determined to get on."
Joanne looked at her mother in amazement. "Can you tell all that just because he's not crying?"
"Yes."
Joanne laughed and threw her ams around her mother. "Oh, mummy, you are funny."
"There, that's better." Mrs Keane felt relieved. "I didn't want to leave you in tears. Anyway, it won't be long before you're home again."
"Six weeks." Joanne sounded mournful again.
"That's not long at all. You'll be so busy and have so many exciting new things to do that you won't even notice the time pass."
"I'll be all right, Mummy."
"Of course you will. This is the opportunity of a lifetime. Not many girls are able to come to the Royal Ballet School. You have to have a very special talent and a will to succeed. I think you've got both, so does your father, even if he seems to be offhand about it."
"I'll work hard, I promise. You'll both be proud of me."
They hugged and kissed and said their last farewells. Joanne waved as the car drove away, then, fighting back the tears, went into the building.
The Royal Ballet's lower school for children between the ages of 11 and 16 was in White Lodge, set in the middle of Richmond Park. It used to be a royal residence, a grand old house, which had been extended to provide more studio space. Joanne immediately felt a welcoming atmosphere in the labyrinth of narrow corridors and small rooms. Her mother was right. In no time at all she was settled and happy with her new life.
Contact with the boys was fairly minimal to begin with but, nevertheless, there was always a lot of talk about Michael Hurst. Tall and dark, he possessed a striking presence and graceful movement. He also had a wayward streak, which didn't enamour him to his teachers, but gave the other pupils a lot of fun.
Right from the start Michael was popular with his peers and most of the girls worshipped him from afar, Joanne included. At the end of each year the pupils were assessed and some of them were discarded, but both Joanne and Michael continued at the school.
The art of partnering was now being taught and the girls were agog to know which boy would be allotted to them. Naturally they all wanted Michael as their partner, but he was tall; only the tallest of the girls would be suitable.
"Joanne, you go with Michael."
When the teacher spoke those words there were audible groans of disappointment and many looks of envy.
In the beginning they both felt clumsy and shy, but gradually, as one lesson succeeded another, they became fluid in their movement and confident of the other's abilities. On the occasions when there was a change of partners Joanne felt desperately disappointed. No one else could make her dance as well as Michael, and she felt the reverse was true.
The second year passed and they were both through to the third. Their friendship was deepening and each Saturday they would go into Richmond and have lunch together. Michael spent a half-term holiday at Joanne's house and she visited him during the Easter break.
The teachers, as they watched these two youngsters dancing together, nodded sagely. It was that rarity -- a true partnership. If only they could keep it up through their formative years, the world could be their oyster.
There was, however, a problem. Michael was fighting authority more and more the older he got. 'Rules were made to be broken'seemed to be his motto. He worked hard at his dancing and gave it everything he'd got, but his academic performance was a different story. He neglected his studies and made no attempt to attain the necessary standard. Away from the studio he became listless and bored. Dance was all he cared about, all he wanted to do. He fought constantly with those in authority and there was even talk of dropping him; but he was too good and it was too near exam time.
By the time they were 16 and in their final year at the lower school, Joanne knew she was in love. She knew it as certainly as she knew the world was round. When she was with Michael she was alive; when he wasn't there she was alone and dead inside.
At the end of the year she was offered a place in the upper school at Hammersmith for two years. When she was 18 there was a good chance she would be taken into the company. Overjoyed she ran to Michael to tell him, but her happiness quickly faded when she saw his scowl.
"What's wrong?" she anxiously asked.
"They don't want me," Michael replied, bitterness hardening his tone.
"What!" Joanne couldn't believe it. "You're not going to the upper school?"
"They've offered me a year."
Joanne was relieved. "Well, that's all right."
"Is it?"
"A year's better than nothing."
"They might as well have given me nothing," he said savagely. "They also said I'd no chance of getting into the company."
"Why not?"
"Too tall. Six feet two is too tall for the Royal Ballet. They knew I was going to be tall right from the start. Why didn't they refuse to take me?"