Age nineteen
âDuuuuuuude. Can you believe Lauren sprained her ankle porking a tourist? I would die.â Katia, my roommate, runs a contour stick under her cheekbone, all the way down the tip of her jaw. She glides her tongue along her upper teeth to get rid of lipstick residue, her eyes glittering as she studies herself in the mirror.
Our Juilliard dorm room is smaller than my walk-in closet back home and haphazardly furnished. Two bunk beds. One rickety desk. An immeasurable amount of Broadway posters, throw pillows, and inspirational quotes scissored into hearts. Daria says trying to make this place look livable is like putting lipstick on a pig: âOnly you got yourself a dozen pigs and one stick of cheapo lipstick.â
But Daria is also a high school counselor, not a world-renowned ballerina. She never made it to the Big J, so itâs probably the jealousy falling out of her mouth.
âHello? Earth to Bailey? Should we send a search party to find your brain?â Katia dumps the contour stick on the desk, picking up a brush to blend in the makeup. âBitch finished her career because of a Tinder date! Itâs more pathetic than Kylie, who gained a bunch of weight and lost her spot at the Bolshoi.â
âDude, Kylie has lupus.â I rear my head back. Holy mean girl.
âSo does Selena, and sheâs still hot shit.â She rolls her hazel eyes. âThere are always excuses, arenât there? If you wanna be successful in our industry, you gotta hustle.â
âYou know I like Lauren. And that story hasnât really been confirmed by reliable sources.â I refuse to engage in shit-talking, even if itâs my peersâ favorite blood sport.
âNot confirmed?â Katia shrieks. âBitch has a cast and a one-way ticket back to Bumfuck, Oklahoma. What more do you need, an in-depth article in The Atlantic?â
I hug a throw pillow to my chest on our bunk bed, eager to change the subject. âOkay, but can we talk about how I love this eye shadow on you?â
âYou know throwing shade is my passion.â Katia twists her head and winks, a shock of platinum-blond hair slinging over her shoulder. She straightens her posture and tosses the brush inside her makeup bag. Sheâs wearing my sequined Gucci minidress. A hand-me-down from Daria.
Katia is on a scholarship here. She migrated to the U.S. from Latvia with her mom eight years ago and got into Juilliard on a full ride. We got paired in the freshman dorm room and now live on a steady diet of ramen, pizza rolls, and motivation, much to her chagrin. She tried to stage an intervention when I canceled the organic, gluten-free food subscription my parents placed on my behalf when I moved in here. But I made a conscious decision to cut myself off from their bank account when I turned eighteen. So far, Iâve been doing pretty well.
Thing is, the more you swim in money, the drier your creativity pool is. Art comes from a place of depravation. In art, privilege is a disadvantage. Art is about bleeding. Dying onstage. Telling your story through a mediumâbe it paint on canvas, clay, dance, or song. Whatâs my life story? A couple bad manicures and an unfortunate braces phase?
I read a quote somewhere by an author named Amy Chua: âDo you know what a foreign accent is? Itâs a sign of bravery.â I canât stop thinking about this. About how neatly and insipidly Iâve always fit into the world around me. With my Valley-girl twang and pastel cardigans and cushy trust fund.
Until now. Until Juilliard.
âOhmygosh, Bails, stop being such a party pooper. I like Lauren too. Even though sheâs a bitchbag for hooking up with Jadeâs ex.â Katiaâs voice daggers through my fog-filled brain. Iâm in excruciating pain. I have three stress fractures, one in each of my tibias and one in my spine, and theyâre all throbbing, demanding to be acknowledged.
âHe gave her a ride upstate.â I scrunch my nose. âThis is all speculaââ
âItâs just a shame because it was her last year,â Katia cuts me off. âShe signed a Broadway contract, you know. Hamilton. Ensemble member. Now she has to go back to Oklahomaââ
âMontana,â I correct, choking on the pain.
âTo likeâ¦work at her dadâs pig-racing ranchââ
âHer family doesnât farm.â
âWhatever, Bails. Youâre literally the worst person to talk shit with. Havenât you heard? Nice women donât end up in history books.â Katia downs the remainder of her pregame beer, slam-dunking the can in the trash.
âThatâs not true,â I murmur, knowing Iâm being an annoying brainiac prude and still not able to stop myself. âWhat about Eleanor Roosevelt? And Harriet Tubman, Maââ
âLa la la la la.â Katia pretends to block her ears, strutting to the door. âThis is college. Iâm here to have fun, not learn something new.â She puts her hand on the door handle, stopping to glance behind her shoulder. âSure you donât wanna come to Luisâs party? The textbooks arenât going anywhere.â
âI know. And Iâm still positive.â I drop my phone on the throw pillow Iâm clutching and gesture toward my ankle. It is currently the size of a tennis ball. âI should probably stay off my feet.â
Katia winces. âDid you at least kill it in the audition?â
More like the audition killed me. Hence why you need to get out of here so I can drown in painkillers, low-stakes reality Netflix competitions, and self-pity.
âYup,â I pop the P. âYou have fun for both of us, okay?â
âScoutâs honor.â She raises two fingers.
âText me if you feel unsafe,â I say, as I always do whenever she goes out. Thatâs me. Bailey Followhill. Designated driver. Straight-edged, straight-A mathlete. Charity enthusiast. Voted Most Likely to Become the First Female President. Mommy and Daddyâs pride and joy.
Always there to pick up the slack my older, shinier sister leaves behind. Thatâs just who I am. Little Miss Goody Two-Shoes.
âSee you in the a.m., babe.â Katia finger tickles the air.
She leaves me in a cloud of hairspray fumes and despair. I swing my gaze to the ceiling. The room smears behind a coat of my unshed tears. The pain in my legs and spine is so acute, I have to bite my inner cheek until blood fills my mouth. I know what to do. Iâve been doing it for weeks. Okay, months. Itâs a temporary solution, but it works wonders and makes the pain go away.
Inhaling sharply, I fling myself off the bunk bed and skulk my way to my padlocked diary. The one Mom gave me the day I moved into the dorms.
âDocument everything, Bailey. Every tear. Every smile. Every fail, every win. And rememberâdiamonds are made under pressure. Shine always, my lovebug.â
I unlock the diary with the key, which I keep buried under a potted plantâyes, I keep plants here to ensure Katia and I get good, clean oxygen. Inside, there are no pages. No words. No ink. I guess itâs a good metaphor for my existence. The way I gutted the glittery, pink-leathered journal my third week at Juilliard and placed a five-and-a-half-by-eight-and-a-half-inch box containing my pills there instead. I donât have a prescription drug problemâmainly because my doctor hasnât been prescribing me drugs for months now. So I found other ways to get them.
Dr. Haddock had wanted me to get a cast on my right ankle and go on a four-week bedrest followed by physiotherapy. âI canât prescribe you more Vicodin, Bailey. May I remind you weâre in the midst of an oxy epidemic?â
I pleaded and begged, argued and bargained, then dished out anecdotal facts to support my quest for painkillers. He ended up prescribing me some Motrin 800 to pull me through my audition today. An audition that was supposed to redeem my failing grade at ballet and dance composition. I gave it my all. Every ounce of energy. Stretched every ligament and muscle to its limit. But it wasnât enough.
I wasnât enough.
âI can tell you want this badly, Miss Followhill.â One of the senior choreographers tapped her pen over her clipboard rhythmically, her mouth downturned in dissatisfaction. âBut passion without skill is like fuel without a vehicle. You need to work on your Alexander Technique. To relearn how to work your basic movements. You need to revise your plié and tendu. Go back to the roots.â
Slamming my eyes shut, I shake my head, making her words dissipate. Half the time I donât even know if I want to be ballerina or if itâs the only thing Iâve ever meant to be. My destiny was written for me from the moment I was born, and I went along with it. Mom saw a potential, scouters agreed, letters of invitation from ballet institutions began pouring in when I was around eleven, and that was it. I was on the fast-track to becoming a ballerina.
I reach for the box and pat its insides. Thereâs only one Motrin left. Not a benzo to pick up my mood or a Vicodin to take the edge off.
âWhat the luck?â I hiss. Katia mustâve stolen a bunch. She somehow got her hand on my key. I know I had a couple Xannies lying around. No way did I consume all of them in less than a week.
I grab the pill and swallow it without water, then pick up my so-called diary and hurl it against the window with a yelp. It slams against the glass and collapses on the floor. The empty cardboard dislocates, placed face down on the old carpet, like a prima ballerina in dying swan position. The professorsâ voices twirled in my head a few minutes after they thought I left the room. Instead, I was still kneeling behind the curtain, holding my ankle and trying not to sob through the pain.
âNot flexible enough.â
âNot enough energy.â
âIsnât she Melody Followhillâs daughter? Figures. I remember her mother. Wasnât the brightest star in the sky. If you ask me, she was lucky to break that leg. Got a cushy marriage out of it. Followhill Jr. is better but still no Anna Pavlova.â
That was after I managed to convince them to let me retake the test, go onstage again so I could pass the semester. Thereâs no way I, Bailey Followhill, brainiac extraordinaire, am going to fail my freshman year of college.
I grab my phone, scroll down my contacts, my thumb hovering over one name. Payden Rhys. The chisel-jawed ballerino from Indiana who got a lead role in La Sylphide without even breaking a sweat. He makes his pocket money selling Vicodin, Xanax, and other party favors. Shadier than a cowboy hat and a man I despise with all my heart, but somehow I find myself increasingly spending more and more time with.
There are only a couple months left before the semester ends, and my grades outside the dance studio are flawless. I canât go home early. Canât show the world that my best isnât the best. Besides, I just need to retake this test, get a good grade, then Iâll have the entire winter break to allow my injuries to heal and ditch my very recent, very manageable drug habit. I text Payden.
Bailey: Wanna party?
He knows exactly what I mean by that.
Payden: How hard?
Translation: How many do you need?
Bailey: Spring break hard.
As many as you got.
Payden: Be there in five.
I plaster my back against the door and slide to the floor, nestling my head between my knees, sobbing noiselessly. I hate that my body is not keeping up with my ambition, with my drive, with my academic grades. And I hate that it gives someone like Payden power over me.
Sometimes I want to unfurl like the satin ribbons of my pointe shoes. To spin rapidly, the layers of my self-consciousness and anxiety uncurling, loosening, until I am left bare. I secretly resent my older sister, Daria. Itâs easy to be her because the expectations placed upon her are slim to none. She embraces her imperfections. Wears them proudly like battle scars. She showed her husband, her friends, our parents, the worst sides of her, and impossiblyâimplausiblyâthat only made them love her harder.
Thatâs not an option for me. Iâm Bailey Followhill, the perfect little ballerina. No mountain is too high, no test is too difficult.
Got a problem? Ask Bailey. She knows everything.
Well, spoiler alert: I have no idea what Iâm doing right now.
Three minutes later, thereâs a knock on the door and Payden is standing in my room, a mischievous spark in his brown eyes. He greets me by helping me up to my feet and slapping my ass, leaving a punishing sting. Thereâs a casual maliciousness to him that always sets me on edge.
âDamn, Bails. I love a good thigh gap, but this is too much, even for me.â And he is a body-negative prick who prides himself on making people feel bad about themselves. Word around is he landed in hot water with his professors last year for telling his dancing partner she was too heavy for him to ballroom lift. She was less than a hundred pounds and he used the F-bomb.
âYou look like a mess.â He pulls up his pant leg and tugs a Ziploc bag from his holey sock. Inside it are smaller individual bags with pills. âYou been crying?â
âNo. Just the stupid injuries bugging me,â I lie, pulling my sleeves over my fists and rubbing at my nose. I want him to leave. I hate him. But heâs the only person who ever sold me benzo that passed my chemical tests and carries genuine Vicodin.
âThose fine legs giving you trouble again, Followhill?â He flicks a small bag full of Vicodin with his thumb and forefinger, a cigarette clenched between his lips. âWell, the offer to wrap them âround my neck still stands. Iâll be your best painkiller.â
âBeen there, done that,â I mutter, trying to suppress the lackluster memory of us together. âYouâre no Vicodin, Pay. Barely half an Advil.â
âOof.â He laughs. âIf I gave half a fuck what some spoiled little princess from Todos Santos thinks, Iâd take offense.â
âYou were the one who wanted in my pants,â I remind him.
âCan you blame me? Fucking a virgin had always been on my bucket list.â
I glare at the Vicodin dispassionately, wondering if itâll do the trick. I took two Motrin before my audition today and still messed up the choreography. My tibias feel like theyâre about to snap.
âGot anything stronger?â I honestly donât recognize myself in this conversation. I graduated from high school without even trying pot. Lev once had to pick me up from a party because I thought I got too high on the fumes when other people were smoking it.
âThan V?â Payden pauses, a look of confusion painting his face. âSure. Iâve got oxy if you wanââ
âYeah, Iâll try oxy.â
His features darken. âI was gonna say âif you want to kill yourself.â I donât sell oxy to students, and Iâm definitely not gonna sell it to your lightweight ass.â
âYouâre exaggerating.â I pull my hair into a tight bun, my scalp screaming with pain.
âNuh-uh. Youâre fast approaching tweaker zone, and those assholes tend to die and get their dealers into all kinds of trouble.â He runs a hand through his sandy hair. âLook, I know youâre good for the money, but you ainât worth the risk.â His eyes lick me from head to toe appreciatively. âSure you donât want a repeat of our night of passion, for old timeâs sake?â
Iâm too polite to tell him his lovemaking skills match those of a dead hedgehog. âPositive. Give me ten of the Vicodin and go on your merry way.â
âTen? Baileyâ¦â
âPayden.â I arch my eyebrows pointedly, stretching my palm open in front of him. When he remains a pillar of salt, I seize my wallet from a drawer and pull out a wad of cash, fanning it like a magician doing card tricks.
He swallows. âDude, this is no longer recreational. Youâre getting a dependency.â
âDependency? Donât be ridiculous. I know WebMD like the palm of my hand. I just need to finish this semester. I can handle it.â
He says nothing.
âSince when do you care about me?â
âI donât,â he says dispassionately. âI care about me. My ass is too talented, young, and hot to end up in jail. You know what they do to people like me there?â He frames his face with his fingers.
Avoid them, because youâre a horribly annoying human?
âIâll be fine, Pay.â
Ultimately, his survival instinct trumps his pesky conscience and he sighs, taking the money. He shoves the bag of pills to my chest, raising his finger in warning. âShit, dude. Youâre my steadiest client on campus. Didnât see that one coming.â
Didnât see me coming, either. Seriously, why did I ever think sleeping with him was a good idea?
âThanks so much. Enjoy your night.â I jerk my chin to the door. Which is literally less than a step away from him. âSee ya around.â
He shakes his head. âYouâre one messed-up chick, Followhill. Iâm glad we never got together seriously.â
Feelingâs mutual.
I push him out of my room, though he takes his time looking around, loitering, hoping Iâll change my mind about a hookup. âDone anything to your room? It looks differentâ¦â
âPayden!â I chide. âGet out before I tase you.â
After the door shuts, I hop on my bunk bed with the bag of Vicodin pinched between my fingers and take a slow, steadying breath. I could take one and wait for it to kick in, facing more pain and anxietyâ¦or I could take two and get knocked right to sleep. Iâll be able to wake up tomorrow ready to conquer the world. Kill it onstage. Get perfect grades. Payden is wrong. Iâm not an addict. Iâm just trying to save my career like every other dancer out here. Andâ¦maybe forget about how cold, isolating, and unfriendly New York is.
Sliding two pills into my open palm, I knock them back with some water. After twenty minutes of pacing and pretzeling from the pain, I take a third one. Finally, it kicks in. I let my body sink down onto my bed. Only it feels like Iâm soaked into the mattress. My head drowning in the pillow.
Iâm fallingâ¦
Plungingâ¦
Plummeting to a place deep and dark where light canât break through.
A place where dreams go to die.
I wake up groggy and shivering.
Itâs not supposed to be this cold in here. The heater is on full blast, and Iâm wearing Dariaâs oversized Valentino sweater. Last time I felt this cold was when I got mugged this November and the prick forced me to strip down to my underwear so he could steal Dariaâs Vivienne Westwood ivory silk dress. An incident I conveniently forgot to tell my parents about so they wouldnât freak out. I check my Apple Watch. Itâs only been twenty minutes since I fell asleep, yet Iâm struggling to keep my eyes open. My breathing is labored, and my arms feel like theyâre nailed to the bed. Good news is I canât feel the pain in my legs. Bad news is I canât feel my legs, like, at all.
Iâve been to enough D.A.R.E. classes to recognize the signs of an overdose. A violent shudder tears through my flesh. I throw a heavy hand down on the carpet, where my phone is charging. My balance is so off, I twist out of the bed, falling to the floor. I canât move. I canât stand up. Holy crap, what do I do?
Somehow, my fingers curl around my phone. I yank it off the charger and aim the screen at my face, shaking, sweating, panicking. A lifetime passes before it unlocks. I think about calling Katia, then realize I canât afford to waste my one call on someone untrustworthy. Instead, I punch the first name I call when Iâm in trouble. Or that I would call if I ever got into trouble. Doesnât matter that things have been weird between us. Doesnât matter that I yanked his heart out of his chest, put it in a blender, and set the speed on x4. Doesnât matter that he pretty much hates me.
Doesnât matter that all thatâs left of us are bittersweet memories and two ragged bracelets. Or even that his absence is the most present thing in my life, and something tells me that if we were still usâreally usâI never wouldâve gotten hooked on Xanax and Vicodin.
While I wait for him to answer, the world shrinks in front of my eyes. Like a photo being devoured by fire, the edges blurring inwards.
âBailey?â
He sounds flippant, disinterested; he has good reasons to be. #Bailev is dead. I killed it with my own hands. His background noise is sultry music, laughter, and beer bottles clinking together. Heâs at a party.
âLevâ¦â My tongue is a half-dead thing in my mouth. I canât believe Iâm saying these words. âIâve overdosed.â
âWhat theâ¦?â A door shuts in the background, and the noise fades. He went somewhere quiet so he could hear me. My throat is all clogged. Shitshitshit. âRepeat that?â he demands. âLike, right the fuck now.â
âI overdosed! Drugs. Iâ¦I think Iâm about to die.â
Even though up until this second Lev has had absolutely no knowledge of my ever consuming anything stronger than Infantsâ Tylenol, he catches on quickly.
âWhat did you take?â His voice turns soft, raspy.
No judgment. No anger. I canât believe we grew apart. Canât believe I tore us apart. I canât believe this is the last time I might be speaking to him. Ever.
âVicodin, supposedly. But it feelsâ¦different. Wrong.â My breathing shallows; my body is shutting down. âI need you to call an ambulance.â I try to swallow. Fail. âAnd send someone in the residence hall to my room with Narcan. In caseâ¦you knowâ¦â
Who says being a nerd doesnât pay off? I listened carefully during those D.A.R.E. classes.
âActually, I donât fucking know, but thatâs a conversation for later.â The sound of him frantically rummaging through something fills my heart with stupid, unwarranted hope. âWait on the lineâ¦shit! Fuck! Where is it?â he growls. âIâm using Thaâsomeone elseâs phone to make the calls. Count to ten for me.â
Normal Bailey would do it backward, in Latin, just to show off. Current Bailey isnât even trying. Current Bailey is also dumb enough to wonder who is Thaâ? A girl? A girlfriend? Is he hooking up with people now? Nowâs not the time to be jealous. My oxygen levels are way down. Everything is going darker by the second.
âLev, Iâm scared.â
âDonât be,â he barks, but he sounds more scared than I am.
I gulp, and he can sense my panic because he asks, âWhen have we ever let anything bad happen to each other?â
âSome things are bigger than us.â
âNothing is bigger than Bailev,â his voice is resolute. âRepeat it.â
âNothing is bigger than Bailev,â I say weakly.
âAtta girl. No lies detected.â
My eyes flutter shut. Iâm too tired. Too heavy. Too numb. In the background, I hear Lev talking to a 9-1-1 dispatcher, then to the Office of Housing and Residence Life. He is calm, in control, and bossy as hell.
Lev is the epitome of a heartthrob. Broad-shouldered, pillowy-lipped, with drowsy sex eyes and a body that makes Adonis look like a dude with a dad bod. But thatâs not why Iâm in love with him. Iâm in love with him because heâs the boy who drags me every first rain of winter to dance among the raindrops, barefoot, since he saw me doing that once when I was six. Because he kisses my forehead when Iâm sad and watches cheesy Netflix rom-coms with me when Iâm PMSing but also has a side of him that races sports cars and bungee-jumps from cliffs.
He is hardness and softness. Air and water. He is my everything and yet nothing to me at all these days. And Iâm ripped to shreds even thinking about it right now.
âIâ¦Lev, Iâmâ¦â I croak.
âYouâre getting through this is what you are. Helpâs on the way. Now, remind me what year did they allow women to start dancing ballet?â
1681. He is trying to distract me, and I appreciate it, but my mouth is too heavy to answer.
âDove?â His voice is a lullaby, wrapping around me like a wooly blanket. âYou there?â
My eyelids droop, darkness engulfing me. Death is cold and quiet and beautiful, and itâs so close, I can feel its breath on my skin. The first thought that pops into my head is how selfish I am for putting him through this, hearing me die, after everything heâs been through.
âAnswer me, Bailey!â I hear the smash of glass breaking, followed by a string of curses. A startled voice what-the-fucks him in the background. Itâs male, and I donât know why Iâm so relieved, seeing as Iâm about to die, but at least Lev has a friend there to take care of him.
I hear Lev tromp out of the party, shrugging off pleas to play donut on a string. âJust wait,â he keeps chanting in my ear desperately. âThey should be there any second, Dove. You hold on tight for me, okay?â
âLevâ¦â I choke. âCome? Here? To Newyeeeek?â I slur.
âYeah,â he says without missing a beat. âIâm on my way. You just keep waiting, all right?â
Foam coats the back of my throat, the tears making it impossible for me to see. I clutch my bracelet. A black tattered string with a silver turtle dove. Lev has a matching one he never takes off.
No wonder your name means heart in Hebrew, I want to tell him. You captured mine between your teeth and swallowed it whole.
âHowâs the sky looking, Dove?â I hear his car door slamming shut.
The last words Iâm able to produce before I log off are âCloudyâ¦with a chance of rain.â