Get ready.
My hands are shaking with nervous
apprehension. My eyes are locked onto the back of those blood-red velvet
curtains. I’m not sure whether to fear or anticipate the moment when they’d
open. It doesn’t matter. With the ease of a practiced hand I bend down and
adjust my pointe shoe strap.
“On in 5. We’re up to Trisha’s
scene. You ready?”
“You ready?”
It's been a while since I last heard that question.
It was 1977. The summer air was
thick and muggy, the heat smouldering and the sun relentless in its pursuit to
sear my already freckled skin.
1977 was the year I turned
seventeen. It was the year the Beehive opened and we finally got our own
national anthem apart from God Save the
Queen. A lot of other stuff happened in 1977. July was the month I got an
audition from Royal New Zealand Ballet. August was the month I met Mike. I
can’t remember how exactly I met Mike, maybe through a friend of a friend or a
friend at a party, the details became murky and unimportant. On December the 15th
of 1977, the Contraception, Sterilisation and Abortion bill was passed with
much controversy and outrage. Two days after that, I got accepted into Royal
New Zealand Ballet. And two weeks after that, on December the 31st, 1977,
(sometime in the afternoon to be precise) I had found myself lying on a soft,
secluded patch of grass in the Belmont reserve, my hand in Mike’s and his hand
grazing suggestively up my thigh.
You can probably guess what happened
next.
“You ready?” He had asked me,
like there had been an option. Like I had known any better. My reply at that
time should’ve been no. I was not ready for the consequences (and there were
much more than I ever would’ve imagined) nor the backlash. My not-readiness was
sealed by the shameful fact that I was naïve enough to believe Mike when he’d
told me no one used condoms and had reassured me his method would work just
fine.
The next “You ready?” came almost precisely 3 months after that. On a chilly
afternoon at the end of March, I found myself standing uncomfortably outside a
dingy clinic in Auckland. It was dimly lit and all the girls who were in the
waiting room looked either sullen or on the verge of tears. I’d felt more near the latter.
Mike had not come with me. He had
not bothered to call and check up on me after I told him the news. Later when I
bumped into him he said it was because he didn’t have two dollars to make the
call. Just like how he didn’t have two dollars to buy a condom I guess.
That clinic had been one of the
only ones open in New Zealand at that time. Looking back now, I truly admire my
seventeen year old self’s bravery at stepping into that sort of place on my
own. It was the autumn of 1978 for god’s sake. Abortions were still frightful,
frightful things. In fact, the very notion of it had chilled me to the bone at
that time.
The nurse there tried to be nice.
She’d given me a tight smile and a tentative, “You ready?”. She asked me that question just like Mike did.
Like I had a choice. Like I knew any better. Nothing could’ve prepared me for the
emotional ramifications that followed.
As I laid back onto the sterile,
linen-clad operation table, blinded by a halo of cheap fluorescent light, I had
never felt so scared or furious or indignant. For the first time the reality of
what I was about to do hit me, that I was truly going to end a life – something
living, breathing and a part of me. My
baby. I had never given abortion much thought before that summer. I’d felt
that if you were stupid enough to land yourself pregnant then you might as well
have the intelligence to take responsibility for your actions the right way. And
yet here I was, stupid, stupid me, going against my very own morals. I had
thought about it, honestly I had. For the longest time I had considered keeping
her. I’d call her Charlotte. She would be a darling little girl with crinkly
blue eyes like Mike’s and they would squeeze up when she giggled. She would
have my light brown hair and my father’s nose.
However, even during that period
of inner turmoil, every time I closed my eyes it wasn’t Charlotte I saw.
Despite the shameful dilemma I was faced with in reality, my dreams were still plagued
full of pirouettes and deboulés, jumps and turns and twists and a shadowy
figure performing a Grande adage with such fluidity and grace that I would
often wake up with tears prickling my eyes from the terrible beauty of what I
had seen. I had realised then that dancing was never just a dream or an
ambition for me, but a certainty and a necessity. There had been no other
option for me.
“Rachel. You
ready? You’re on.”
I draw a deep
breath. I think of the beautiful Grande adage I dreamt of last night. I press a
hand to my belly, silently wondering.
“Rachel.”
I look up. His
eyes were as warm and grey as they had been last night, crinkly and smiling. He
held my hand, his ring grazing my pinkie.
“Hey baby you’ll
be fine. It’s your last show. I know you’re ready for this.”
As I walk on
stage I think about the beautiful daughter I will have in the future. As
I look across the theatre, a hundred thousand faces look back. Reality sinks
in. The blood-red velvet lies behind me, a backdrop of vivid scarlet
silhouetting my white leotard.
As I poise myself for the
beginning of my final Adage, I ask myself.
You ready?
I draw a deep breath.
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