A Collaborative Novel Featuring Eleven Writers Complete Novel
BREAKING GLASS
Chapter ELEVEN by Peter Heywood
She glanced at the elegant gold watch adorning her left wrist. A gift from an unknown admirer.
Eleven fifteen. Just
over eighteen hours to the Grand Opening of the glass court. Eighteen
hours to the spectacle, the excitement, the glamour. Eighteen hours to
her performance in the privileged presence of Rio’s great, good…and not
so good. It was time for the real challenge to begin. Tomorrow she
would compete with the blonde American girl in the quarter-final. Her
next step on the road to becoming the world’s number one player.
She was ready now.
Drawing her black lace
shawl around her shoulders, she gazed through the window of the
limousine as it picked its way through the city’s chaotic streets.
Streets which she had visited many times in the past. Streets filled
with traffic jostling for position, looking for an opening, poised to
make a move. In a few hours, it would be quieter. It usually was by the
time she returned from her night-time excursions into her special
world. Nights when she indulged in her passion, when she shared moments
of intimate connection. Nights when she felt the embrace of her
partner’s arms as their bodies moved in unison. Special nights.
The limousine drew up
outside a whitewashed three storey building on Rua do Catete. A single
light shone down from above its entrance porch. She waited as the
motorista climbed out of the driver’s seat, adjusted his peaked cap and
opened the door for her to alight. She stepped out into the warm night,
her sense of excitement beginning to mount.
“Have a good evening, senhorita.”
He smiled a knowing smile.
++++
As she entered the
building, Florencia Perez could hear the music drifting from the salon
on the first floor. The music born in her home town. Music from the
birthplace of the father she had never known. Music from the Golden Age
of tango.
She strode across the
entrance hall towards the staircase, her low heels sounding on the
black and white tiles. In her right hand, she held the straps of a
small black sequinned purse and a black satin shoe bag. Her hair was
drawn back in a simple ponytail, secured with a golden band. Gold hoops
dangled from her ears. She was wearing a sheer black slit dress with a
jagged hemline, adorned with fringes, swaying as she walked. Ready to
join the dance, the milonga.
Ready to feel the bodies of others close to hers.
++++
In the salon, the dance
floor filled with couples moving to the music played by the residente,
a young DJ hunched over his sound equipment at the far end of the
high-ceilinged room. From her table on the edge of the dance floor, she
watched as the unattached men in the room nodded their invitations to
women they wanted as their partners in the next set of dances. The next
tanda.
She watched the men
leading their partners around the floor to see which of them she would
trust to lead her in the way she wanted to be led. To see which of them
would be suitable for her to choose as a partner. She noticed too whose
invitations were being ignored.
After an hour in the
salon, she’d accepted two invitations to dance. One was from a young
olive-skinned boy whose embrace proved to be rather too close for her
liking. The other was from a tall middle-aged man with light skin and a
long nose who led her elegantly in three exhilarating tango waltzes.
She felt safe in his embrace, following him easily around the floor,
swinging her body, moving sinuously around him, feeling like a woman.
She thanked him, returned to her table and sipped her drink, suddenly
feeling that the evening might just turn out to be…
She sensed his gaze
before she saw it, before she’d had time to see who had arrived since
she’d taken to the floor. To see who had seen her dancing, seen her
feeling the passion.
She raised her eyes and met his. Dark eyes.
Eyes she had seen before.
++++
He glanced at his watch
and entered the salon. It was almost one. Tonight he would meet the
Australian in the glass room. A chance for him to raise his profile, to
move up the world rankings in a sport he’d played and loved since he
was a child.
But tonight, Andres
Lopez was not thinking about the sporting challenge to come. He was
thinking about someone who could be very special. Someone who had not
been easy to find.
Since he had seen her
compete in his home town, he had followed her progress with more than a
little interest. He knew that she had begun to more than fulfil her
potential in competition. But, until recently, he did not realise that
her beauty had transcended both her athletic ability and her sporting
success. Now, from conversations with his fellow professionals, he had
also discovered that Florencia Perez shared another of his passions.
In the subdued light of
the salon, he nervously ran his fingers through his long brown
hair, searching for her among the tables and the dancers
moving around the crowded floor.
Suddenly he saw her,
dancing with a smartly-dressed middle-aged man. She moved with cat-like
grace, weaving an elegant path around her partner to the music of a
tango waltz. He watched her as she thanked her partner and walked
across the dance floor to her table.
Moving quickly, he
found a table directly opposite hers and sat down, his heart suddenly
racing as he tried to relax., to let the passion in the room be his
inspiration in seeking her consent to dance with him. Usually, he would
watch the women as they moved around the dance floor, looking for the
qualities that he valued in a partner. Then he would invite them – with
his eyes, with a nod of his head, with the cabeceo – to allow him to
lead them, to reward their trust, and to show his own qualities as a
dancer.
But now, it was too late. He could not tear his eyes away from her as she sipped her drink.
He was in danger now. Danger of…
Suddenly, her eyes met his.
In them, he sensed
surprise, yes…and something else, something warmer. Much warmer.
Instantly, he relaxed. And nodded. There was a pause as he sensed her
curiosity, awaited her response. And then his nod was returned, his
invitation accepted.
He slipped on his dance shoes beginning to notice the other people in the room. People whose passion he shared.
He was passionate about
many things in his life. His country, his sport, the dance he had been
introduced to in his home town. Passion that had landed him in trouble
with the authorities more than once. But now, he was calm, waiting for
the cortina, the musical interlude preceding the next set of dances,
when she would be his partner.
When the time arrived,
he stood and walked towards her, threading his way through the other
dancers leaving and joining their partners. Reaching her table he bowed
and held out his hand, inviting her onto the floor. She rose and
stepped towards him.
The music, a tango
canyengue, began to play. Instinctively, he sought her embrace and was
accepted. Leaning towards her, he moved slightly from side to side,
sensing the music, breathing her perfume, feeling her body close to
his. Then, without knowing, as their hearts beat together, he stepped
towards her. Leading them both into the dance, into the rhythm of the
music.
Into the passion.
++++
It had been easy to follow her to the salon.
He had waited until she
entered the building on Rua do Catete before climbing out of the taxi
and striding towards the entrance. He was dressed smartly in a dark
grey tailored suit and white shirt which perfectly fitted his tall,
lean frame. Like the girl, he had carried his dance shoes in a small
bag which dangled on a strap circling his wrist. His greying hair was
swept back from his narrow face with its long nose.
After so many years, he
was nervous, but ready. Ready to meet her on a night which could change
both their lives forever. Inside, he paid his entrance fee and found a
table from which he could make eye contact with her. But first he
invited other women to dance with him, eager to take a few turns around
the floor before seeking her consent.
When the time came, it
felt natural. Something he had done many times before. He met her eyes,
nodded and was accepted. They danced, and after they had danced, he
returned to his table and sought out other women to dance with as the
room filled and the floor became a single rotating embrace.
He watched her dance
with other men, including the Colombian boy who returned to his table
with what he sensed was more than just an air of satisfaction. The boy
danced well, his dark good looks and long brown hair attracting the
attention of the women, the invitations made with his dark eyes winning
their consent. Using the cabeceo, following the code.
He glanced at his
watch. Now, as the milonga entered its fourth hour, he made her a
second invitation with his eyes. She caught his gaze and nodded with a
hint of a smile. Now she trusted him.
This time he led her in
three tangos, leaving her space to decorate, to hook, to tap her toes
as they moved effortlessly around the busy floor. He felt a sense of
pride as they paused in silence after each dance, waiting for the next
to begin.
As the last chord of
their final dance died away, he escorted her to her table knowing that
now, after all these years, he must speak to her. He waited for her to
sit, then leaned towards her and whispered into her ear.
“Listen to me, my child. You do not have much time.”
She paused, listening
to his voice with surprise…and recognition. It was a soft voice, a
caring voice. The voice of a porteno, a native of her home town.
“Tonight at the Grand Opening there will be great danger. You must not go there.”
She turned her head to look at him. To look into his eyes.
“How do you know this?”
“Trust me.” he replied. “Trust one who has always loved you. One who has always cared.”
He placed something on the table in front of her, touched it with his forefinger and looked into her eyes.
“I am sorry,” he said, then turned and walked quickly away.
++++
Florencia Perez looked
down at the table. On its surface lay a plain, white card. Her heart
racing, she reached out to pick it up, half knowing what she would
find. She touched its smooth surface, closing her eyes and letting her
fingers seek out the indentations she sensed would be present.
As she found them, an
image formed in her mind. An image which had been with her for as long
as she could remember. Since she was a child.
An image of a very tall man with a long nose. A kind man. A caring man.
She stared at the
elegant gold watch adorning her left wrist. A gift she had received on
her eighteenth birthday, on the eve of her first international
tournament. In the home town of a Colombian boy. A gift from an unknown
admirer. A gift accompanied by a plain, white card.
Embossed with the image of a stork.
About The Author
PETER HEYWOOD is a
scientist, a writer and a leadership coach. He discovered squash when
he moved to the South-East of England to take up his first ‘proper’ job
as a research scientist at a top secret nuclear facility with four
courts and a subsidised bar. His career has included spells (as in
‘periods’ not ‘Harry Potter’) in forensic science, pharmaceutical
R&D and management consultancy. He recovered from a heart attack to
resume playing the game he loves and train as a squash coach. He’s
currently writing The Squash Life Book for squash leaders and
entrepreneurs. He lives in London within ten minutes walk of his squash
club.