The Short History of a Prince
by Jane Hamilton
List Price: $12.95
Pages: 349
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 0385479484
Publisher: Anchor Books

As it turned out there was so much baggage on the trip to Lake Margaret
that Walter's friends, Susan and Mitch, sat crushed in one foldout seat
in the back of the car, and Walter was left with the middle bench seat.
Robert McCloud had arranged the two aquamarine coolers, the suitcases
and the grocery bags. It wasn't for nothing, he said, that Joyce had been
a Girl Scout: she was fully prepared for an ice age, a drought, a monsoon
and the invasion of the termites. Walter was pinned against the door by
the coolers, it was awkward to turn around, and he had to shout to be
heard. The teenagers gave up talking after a few minutes on the expressway.
Susan and Mitch fell asleep against each other. Nothing had gone according
to plan, and Walter stared gloomily out the window. Just as well that
Daniel was sick, he thought. If he'd come they'd have had to tie him to
the roof rack.
Joyce glanced back now and then to make sure there was nothing unseemly
going on between the two lovebirds in the kiddie seat. She gave her husband
a preview of the day to come, quietly, and with restraint, evoking her
hysterical sister. Even marking the gestures, not imitating them full
out, was funny, and Robert snorted into his shirt and twice said, "Oh,
Joycie."
She had enough sense not to ask Walter if he was all right. She could
see that he was troubled about something, and he in his turn knew that
she had taken note of his unhappiness. Her general sympathy brought him
a guilty little pleasure. His thin skin and tender heart were at once
a source of pride and anxiety to her. He had asked to study ballet, she
had known better than to try to talk him out of it, and she had clung
to the belief that his enthusiasm for the dance would shield him from
the predictable taunts. It had been such a stroke of luck that his two
dancing-school friends happened to live in Oak Ridge. They had been put
together in the First Junior Class at the Kenton School of Ballet in Chicago
when they were ten years old and together they'd advanced all the way
up to the Second Intermediate Class. But through good and bad fortune
Walter would always have his own temperament, and Joyce feared that he
would feel the injuries of adolescence more keenly than his peers. Still,
she hadn't given up on a straightforward future for him, and she wondered
if it was Susan, if the leggy girl squeezing against Mitch, was the source
of his present misery.
Her conclusion was not exactly off the mark. Walter was thinking about
the night the week before, when he and Susan and Mitch had been in the
McClouds' living room, dancing and listening to records. Walter had picked
out Tchaikovsky's Serenade, a piece that had been their favorite
since the previous summer. George Balanchine, the greatest choreographer
in the history of the dance, according to Walter, had made a plotless
ballet to the music, and Walter, in a tribute to both virtuosos, had the
volume up so high that the Gamble dogs, in their yard, cocked their heads
this way and that, hearing noises in a frequency Tchaikovsky never intended.
The dancers rushed headlong in and out of the doors, running the length
of the room with their arms outstretched, doing the bits of the Balanchine
choreography they had absorbed over the years. Between the three of them
they had seen eight performances of Serenade. Walter and his aunt
Sue Rawson had seen it four times the month before, night after night
at Ravinia Park.
Mitch was always the man, intermittently lifting Susan over his head and
carrying her around like a barbell. It seemed to Walter that Mitch's strength
was inherent, that it was a quality he had not had to work for, no need
to lift weights or wrestle or play a lot of catch. It was just there,
that strength, a part of him. There were few hard, fast, unstated rules
to their dancing game, principles not to be broken or bent. They were
meant for Walter. It was curious, he thought, that he understood the protocol
instinctively, that no one had ever had to slap his wrist or say, Repeat
after me. Funny, that it was the kind of thing he knew with animal sense.
He was not allowed to lift Susan, but he could offer his arm if she wanted
support for an arabesque. He was not to turn her; the pirouette business
was also Mitch's privilege. Susan, however, could turn Walter, with good
humor on both sides. He most certainly was not to attempt, even as a joke,
to lift Mitch. But he could touch Mitch if, say, they were dancing in
a circle, holding hands. Then they were comrades, the three of them. When
they spun there was nearly an absence of possession.
Walter, in the first movement of Serenade, threw himself into the
wind of the large fan on the dining-room table and struck a pose. He buffeted
back and forth, in and out of the steady push of air. If only he had on
one of the blue chiffon costumes that Balanchine's dancers wore, a gown
that would flutter and billow after him. He was going full tilt--no one
could say that he did not have enough feeling for the entire ensemble
of twenty-eight girls. "Not having the blue dresses," he panted as he
jetéed past Susan, "for this ballet, is probably on a par with
riding a motorcycle and"--he called over his shoulder--"finding that it
doesn't rev."
Excerpted from SHORT HISTORY OF A PRINCE by Jane
Hamilton. Copyright© 1998 by JANE HAMILTON. Excerpted by permission
of Anchor, a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part
of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing
from the publisher.
Excerpted from The Short History of a Prince © Copyright 2012 by Jane Hamilton. Reprinted with permission by Anchor Books. All rights reserved.
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