Then everybody laughed.
A large black paw was dipping in the footbath as if trolling for colorful koi.
When it came to scene-stealing, Midnight Louie was a master.
But his interference also gave the avid media maggots the money shot they craved. They faded away into the hall, leaving Zoe to mount her platforms again and assess the situation.
“So Sou-Sou can dance tonight?” she asked Yvonne Smith and her “Proud Parent” name tag.
No wonder the daughter had an exotic first name.
Mrs. Smith honored Zoe Chloe with a displeased once-over, but bowed to her online notoriety.
“Oh, yes. Doctor said a night’s elevation of her feet, along with ice packs and soothing ointment would have her in top tiptoe condition, and she is. Doctor said she just needs to keep her feet soothed between learning the new dance’s steps. She’ll trip the light fantastic like Tinker Bell by tonight.”
The woman smiled happily, basking with her daughter in the afterglow of media attention. Nobody would even wonder if mom had planned the shocking, attention-getting mishap.
Only Zoe Chloe had such a nasty, suspicious mind. And Midnight Louie.
Speaking of which, Temple decided to search out her light of love and see what insight he had into the goings-on.
The adult rehearsal rooms were down a whole different hall, one that Midnight Louie did not choose to explore. Maybe he guessed things could turn mushy if she could get Matt alone. Nothing hated mush more than a tomcat.
The Terrible Tatyana was in full cry.
“You are the perfect pupil but you have not a drop of Latin in your soul!” she was keening in despair when Temple teased open the door to Matt’s rehearsal room.
“That’s not true,” Matt answered reasonably. “I have spoken it, sung it. The old Polish neighborhoods in Chicago still have one Latin mass a Sunday.”
“Not this church Latin of the priests! I speak of the Latin of the bullfight and the sword and the cape, of the hot intemperate zone. Spain! Portugal and the prado singers. Of passion that is known only in the shadowy taverns of the Old World or the tangos that inflame the South American countries of the New World. This is not to be found in Chicago churches,” she finished, her words and voice and posture saturated in scorn. “This is to be found in the dancer’s soul.”
“There’s a lot of soul in churches,” Matt said, unperturbed.
Temple saw precisely what drove Tatyana crazy, the laid-back sweet reason that made Matt a master of the late-night airwaves. Also, he was too sophisticated to buy into the Old World domination mode of the battle of the sexes.
The Russian spitfire was right. This was a severe handicap in the current situation.
Tatyana turned her temper on the intruder.
“Who are you?” she demanded, whirling around in her tight spandex dance clothes as if wearing a ruffled skirt and castanets on her imperious fingers. She absorbed Zoe Chloe Ozone’s kooky façade and dripped more disrespect.
“Oh. This silly Internet clown-girl. You deal with the children division. You have no right here. We rehearse.”
“No.” Zoe Chloe swaggered onto the wooden dance floor. “You badger. And I deal with him.”
“Ladies,” Matt began, so not getting it.
There were no ladies here.
“I would like a word,” Zoe Chloe said, “with my fiancé.”
Tatyana’s eyebrows snapped up toward her hairline. “This is true?” she demanded of Matt. “This ridiculous circus girl is your lover?”
“Fiancée,” he said quickly. “And there’s nothing ridiculous about her.” He eyed Zoe Chloe. “This is a performing persona.”
“Ah.” Tatyana eyed Zoe Chloe with more respect. “She is ‘playing’ the zany gamine.”
The last three words came out: ze zanee gah-meen.
The French pronunciation made Zoe Chloe sound like an exotic animal. So she stamped one thick-hooved platform sandal.
“Darn right, toots. Now take a sweat break and let me deal with the dude.”
Zoe Chloe’s American slang had Tatyana blinking in confusion. She threw up her hands. “He is impossible. I need break. Tell him if he does not do sexy it will not sell and Tatyana will be fool of the entire competition.”
She exited with a final slam of the door.
“She’s temperamental,” Matt explained after a long silence.
“She’s exasperated,” Temple said, turning back to him, “because you do not do sexy.”
“I didn’t sign up for sexy. And she’s right. I don’t have that Old World Spanish temperament. I don’t preen at killing tormented bulls. I don’t want to sling women around the floor. I don’t get it. At best, it’s hokey. At worst, it’s abuse.”
“Sure. It’s all those things. It’s theater. Look at me! Zoe Chloe is theater. It’s hokey, but Zoe Chloe thinks she’s sexy. I don’t need to be her but something out there in Internet land needs to think she’s special, that she is what they could be if they had the nerve.
“Sexy is in the mind of the beholder, Matt. You spent half your life not allowing anyone to see you that way. It worked great while it lasted, and that you still don’t need to strut makes you sexy in a whole new way to all those dear hearts and lost souls on late-night radio.
“But to me”—Zoe Chloe slid nearer on her ridiculous shoes— “you are ultrasexy because you love me, because you dare to feel. And that’s what the dances demand. Feelings you can show. These Spanish dances ought to be a cakewalk for you.”
“No way on earth! Why?”
“Because . . . they are all about control. Self-control. And self-control is very sexy, because it can be lost.”
“You’re talking about virtue lost.”
“Or love found.”
“In the tango, the couple barely look at each other through most of the dance. It’s sublimated violence.”
“Yeah. You do get it. But she’s as powerful as he is. She can reject. We are twelve millennia from the cave days when a guy in an animal skin could drag a woman by the hair into his bachelor pad. These ritual Spanish dances explore the power of ‘no.’ The man can be gloriously egotistical and commanding, and still get shut down. It was a great leap forward for the species.”
“So . . . you’re saying?”
“Passion makes life earnest and real, the arts revealing, spiritual, affecting. I know you’ve got it. In what you believe in, in other people, in what you feel for me. I ask you. In your place. Here. Now. What would Max do?”
His head reared back as if slapped. “Temple—”
“And you think Tatyana is a demanding taskmaster.” She kissed her forefinger and pressed it to his lips to shut him up. “You’ve got the same smoldering dark brown Latin eyes José Juarez does, and a swimmer is as supple and strong as a fencer. You can out-tango him any day. The pasodoble is yours if you want it. You got me away from Max, didn’t you?”
Talk about pressing someone’s buttons. Talk about motivation.
He looked shocked, angry, turned-on.
He looked ready for the pasodoble.
Hell, he looked ready for Max.
But all he had at hand was her.
Matt seized Temple and pasted her to him like a paper doll, his long gliding strides propelling her backwards while he stared into her eyes as intently as a cobra practicing hypnosis. He spun her left and then right, ending each dizzying twirl with a full frontal embrace that hot-glued them together from neck to knee. This dance should be banned in Boston.
Temple wasn’t aware of her feet touching the ground and they didn’t need to. Matt flung her around with such skill and authority that she couldn’t think of anything other than being caught in a sensual eddy of motion that had her stomach lurching like she was plummeting over the scary top of a Ferris wheel or experiencing sudden serial stabs of pure lust, pardon the oxymoron. . . .
He dipped her parallel to the floor, leaning closely over her, never breaking their gaze, and let her settle there gently, only his braced arms on either side of her shoulders keeping him from pinning her to the hardwood in an R-rated hip-lock.