Maggie Face-timed her mentor, a ballet teacher, for advice. When the woman answered, Maggie heard Tchaikovsky's Romeo and Juliet in the background. A woman's face filled the screen, razor thin, straight as a ruler, a mask fastened tightly. Above her mask, her dark eyes pierced the screen. Maggie saw Christmas decorations, in red, green, and silver, on a back wall of the office. The teacher removed her face mask as soon as she recognized her student, Matryoshka. Her mouth puckered with maroon lipstick against her leathern cheeks. Her elongated neck perched elegantly above her thin shoulders.
"You haven't been to the studio, Matryoshka," the teacher chided. Maggie loved the way she pronounced her name, the same way her parents did. "You still need the discipline of dance during this trying time."
"What's the point? All performances have been canceled. We won't perform the Nutcracker this year. Will we ever perform it again?"
"Now, now, little doll, the classics never disappear. You must remain strong to survive. That is the Russian way. The music, the ballet, the audience will return. Never fear." The teacher shook her finger as she spoke.
"But I need to dance for an audience now! I want to be seen. My body craves the opportunity to perform and to be appreciated. I want to wow audiences. I want their eyes and their judgment on my form. I want to transport them."
"And you will, my child, you will, but not yet. Keep your instrument in perfect shape. Push yourself. If you like, come back to the studio and I will take you further than ever in your education."
"You are kind but it's not what I want, teacher," Maggie said in Russian. "I am compelled to dance before real people, now."
The teacher tapped her long maroon fingernails on her desk. "So impatient! You have talent, but you must not squander it."
"So, I ask your advice," Maggie said. "Everywhere is closed except the places where women dance for money. You see, I am willing to dance there; I want to dance there."
Her teacher was visibly shocked. Her eyes widened, her lips pursed. She looked down her nose at the phone. "You propose to dance where men pay you to take off your clothes? Are you that desperate for money? Because, I must be honest, little doll, you have a ballet dancer's figure. It is not the kind of body men pay to see."
"But at least I would be dancing!" Though in her mind, Maggie recalled how pleased her boyfriends and lovers had been when she revealed her body. These memories gave her confidence.
"That's not dancing! That's shaking your "grud' zaboya," your "zad," your "pizda." I talk to you crudely so you understand me clearly. The type of man who frequents those clubs doesn't pay to see you dance but to see you humiliated."
"So? I'd be dancing."
The teacher made a spitting sound. "I can't stop you. But you may be sorry, little doll."
"I may surprise you, teacher. I may become a big star."
"Go, then. Try it. You can always come back, if you haven't ruined your form or been damaged by the publicity you'll find."
"Pray for me, teacher." Maggie signed off. She would show the teacher. She could still dance before anyone and they would appreciate her skill and grace.
Maggie fairly danced down the streets of her adopted city. Her cloth mask obscured all but her own glittering dark eyes. She glimpsed others on the street and tried in vain to read faces from a study of eyes alone. It was impossible. Eyes convey emotion, but are used primarily for observing. A face's message needs the nuances that come from the shape of the smile, the set of the chin, the lift of one's cheeks, the glint of teeth, the curl of lips, in order to telegraph what that person is thinking. Is that person a friend, an enemy, a threat, an invitation, a possible lover, or a comforting friend? Without these clues, the world becomes indecipherable and hence, threatening.
Maggie's parents emigrated from St. Petersburg in Russia and passed to her their love of the exquisite ballet performed at the Mariinsky Theatre. Her parents still called her by her Russian name, Matryoshka, which means Lady. They encouraged her study of ballet. She especially loved the Nutcracker Suite performed at Christmastime. Lately, she felt less like a lady and more like a peasant, a Maggie, just one more isolated dancer, waiting for the sequestration to end.
The University she attended was shut down and its students sent back home or to their own apartments. They couldn't return after the holidays until they tested negative for the virus or quarantined for fourteen days. Maggie's favorite local student bars were closed. The restaurants would only allow pick-up or run meals in styrofoam containers to her car, for your dining pleasure. She had felt at home among the scruffy students at the University. She enjoyed lounging in the small coffee shops with a steaming cup of black coffee, flirting with American boys and enduring their rude manners. The pandemic changes and lockdowns were driving Maggie nuts.
She missed the attention that every beautiful young woman receives. Admittedly, she intimidated most of her dates because her posture was impecable, her head held high, her jaw pointing forward when most silly girls dropped their chins, slouched, and clouded their eyes. Favored young men liked to place their strong hands on her knee as she sat next to them. Some moved their hand up her muscular thigh, hoping to find the rough fuzz between her legs. The more successful men moved their hand down from her knee. They traced the corbel curve of her calf, noticing with sexual excitement how slim the leg became, until they found her dainty ankle, the tight bundle of muscle, bone, and nerves that served as her gyroscope for dancing. If a young man complimented her ankles, she willingly rewarded that appreciation. One benefit of being a dancer was that her body responded enthusiastically to stimulation and love. None of her lovers were disappointed. But she was a challenge. And now she was lonely.
Maggie was tired of practicing ballet alone in her apartment. Her pointe shoes were her only companion. She needed to dance again for an audience. Any audience.
She began looking forward to mundane things, like the mail arriving. Most of the mail was junk until she found the official envelope from the County Courts. She was summoned for jury duty three weeks hence. She called the County Court Administrator to confirm that the summons was not in error.
"Is this a mistake? I thought everything was shut down for the pandemic," she said.