I yelped in surprise.
He laughed and looked over at Imelda. “Well, at least she’s easy to lift.”
I squirmed out of his grasp, flustered. That contact had felt weirdly intimate. I mean, it wasn’t as if I didn’t expect to be grabbed on the ice. I did. That was how lifts happened. But that spontaneous embrace? That flustered me.
Imelda got to her feet and held out two pieces of paper in front of us. “Now that you two are warmed up, I thought I’d go over the choreography for the first routine.”
I skidded away from Ty on the ice and moved to the edge, reaching out and grabbing the first piece of paper from Imelda. “Print outs? Really?”
“So you can learn your steps,” she told me in a calm voice. “I’ve already mapped out your routine and what you’ll be wearing.”
“You what?” I looked at her in shock. “You picked music and everything?”
“I have. It’s all taken care of.”
That…didn’t make me happy. “So why did you guys get professional figure skaters?”
She tilted her head at me. “What do you mean?”
I shook the printout at her. “You can get any idiot to do a jump and a sit spin. After all, you’re having celebrities do this.”
“Hey,” Ty said sharply.
“It’s true,” I said, looking down the list and reading it. “This is kiddie shit. So if you’re picking out the routines and the costumes and the music, why not hire amateurs? Why do you want real skaters doing this?” I was lashing out at her, but I was growing increasingly disappointed with this job. I thought it would be a chance for me to show my stuff in a public venue. Get my face back on the map. Instead, they wanted an idiot that would just wander around the ice and do what she was told.
I scanned the routine she’d made for us. Yawn city. This was turning into a disappointing job, all right. I’d be paid well, but that was about it. No one would be interested in a figure skater who did as shitty a routine as what Imelda had mapped out. I’d get a paycheck for this job and not much more.
To say I was frustrated was an understatement.
Imelda looked clearly hurt by my arguments. “Well, Miss Zara, I understand your concerns. Would you like for me to tell the network that you’re not interested in doing the routine?”
I blinked a few times. “No, ma’am. I want this job.”
She beamed at me, just as if I hadn’t argued with her at all. “Well then, I believe we should practice, don’t you? Now for starters, let’s get you two comfortable with each other. You both look like two porcupines with how prickly you’re being to one another.” She gestured with her hands for us to move forward. “Ice dancing is all about body language, and right now your body language is telling me ‘no thank you.’ I want you both to pull in together and try to waltz on the ice.”
I dug my toe pick into the ice and skated toward Ty, extending my hand for him to take.
He grasped it in his, and I was immediately struck at how strong—and big—his hand was compared to mine. I knew that my build was small, but standing next to Ty’s bulk, he made me feel positively dwarfed. His big hand clutched mine, and his hand went to my waist, pulling me in.
Did I think that Ty spontaneously holding my hands had been intimate? It was nothing compared to him putting his hand at my waist and dragging me against him. My breast pressed against his chest, and my body fitted against his.
Imelda tittered. “Not that close. This isn’t dirty dancing.”
“Yeah, that’d probably get better ratings,” Ty muttered, his gaze flicking to me.
I smothered a laugh. “This is serious,” I told him in a stern voice. “Please concentrate.”
“Further apart, please,” Imelda instructed us.
I obediently took a step backward, extending our embrace outward.
Imelda continued to sit on her bench, directing us from afar as she guided us on our posture. She never took a step toward the ice, content with politely barking orders from afar as we shuffled, clasped hands, re-clasped, adjusted our arms, and whatever else she wanted us to do. When she was satisfied with our posture, we were instructed to simply dance around the rink in time.
I picked it up easily, which was no surprise, since I had a lot of skating experience.
Ty was definitely the weak link on our team. He struggled to find a rhythm, and his hand clasped mine so tightly that it was sweating. He frowned the entire time, watching our feet. When he stumbled, he thrust me away from him, clearly done. “This is stupid. I hate this.”
“Ty,” his manager said warningly.
“I feel like I’m f**king back in high school,” Ty muttered.
“You’re acting like it too,” I told him in a light voice, extending my hand back out to him.
He glared at me, wiping sweat from his brow. “Aren’t you tired? Don’t you want a break? I think we’ve got this.”
“Actually,” I told him. “We don’t have this. We’re not even close to having this. Your steps aren’t even remotely close to being in time with mine, your arms aren’t locked, and your skating has no rhythm at all. If we go out there like this, you’ll make us a laughingstock, and I’m not about to have that happen. So if it takes twelve hours for us to get down how to move around on the ice? I’m fine with that, and you should be, too. Understand?”
He pushed my extended hand away. “I’m not doing this for twelve more hours today.”
“Fine then,” I told him. “You can take the rest of the day off, and we’ll do twelve hours tomorrow of nothing but holding hands and skating together.”
He threw his hands up, as if done. “You know what? I’m out of here. Close enough. We have two weeks to learn this shit.” He began to skate off of the ice.
I skated after him. “You can’t quit. It’s barely even eleven am. That’s way too early to finish for the day.”
Both Imelda and his manager were frowning at him. “Ty,” his manager began.
“Nope,” Ty said, stomping onto the carpeted steps with his skates, and then outside, not even bothering to take his skates off. “Done,” he yelled. “I’ve done enough.”
I put my hands on my hips, frustrated. “Well, what the hell?” I looked over at Ty’s manager. “Are you going to let him just walk away like that?”