Tango isn't about dancing — it's about connection. For one tanda, follower and leader connect, heart and head, on the dance floor. It's not a dance, it's life itself. With that in mind, I wrote my novella, Dance of Desire. It's for all tangeuras -- and tangeuros-- everywhere, who follow their passion, on and off the dance floor.
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Once upon a time, I read Steven Tyler's autobiography. You know what stood out? His refusal to have something to fall back on — that guy was going to make it as a rockstar or bust. No other option. I wrote this story years ago when I hadn't written a single full-length anything. I found it again and its words swiped a gut punch. “I’m gonna make you a deal, right?”
The last of the summer sun beats down, bloated on long days and short nights. “I’m listening.” She’s wearing jeans with studs that ride up into her backside as she sits on the concrete steps outside her rented apartment. She schlurps her Coke with a straw, watching the bubbles rise. I’m armed with the want ads - rows and rows of black ant type looks for accountants, regional managers, and first grade educators with basic math and science. “What say I do something that’ll pay the bills? Just for a bit. Not forever. Just until I’ve got back on my feet again?” She takes a sip. “No jobs for writers then?” “Not today. Not most days.” She can’t feel the pit of anxiety chewing away in my gut. Heck, my gut’s somewhere near my teeth, gnawing away. “You’ve still got some retrenchment money”, she points out. “It’s for rent. And food. And petrol. Important things.” Acid reflux starts slithering upwards, poised to strike at the back of my throat. She flicks the straw with her teeth. A rogue ant mountaineers up her arm. “You could start freelancing. Or writing short stories. Or start that book.” I dismiss her suggestion. “Writers are people who look chic in hand-made smocks and know what to say at art exhibitions.” I abandon the paper. “Now. Where did I put that fallback career?” She rolls her eyes, and points back towards my apartment’s front door. “It’s where you left it. Under the photo of your graduation.” Ah, yes. I head back inside and pull it out of its safe place. It’s knotted up with rope. It nestles in cardboard packaging, a box that can be kept for storage of knick-knacky things, or knitting wool, or even some remnants of the scrapbooking craze. The rope can be used again, too. Sturdy. Taught. Good for camping even, if you’re into that sort of thing. Opening the box, is not unlike the reverse of Christmas. The absence of glitter, red bows, and expectant butterflies in my heart. No carols. No singers. The sound of something sensible rather like Aunt Mildred’s Hush Puppies shoof-shoofing on the carpet — dark beige and lace-up. She’s followed me in. Whoo, schlur, whoo, schlur as she sweeps the straw round the bottom of the can, and vacuums up her Coke, no drop remaining. I lift up the lid, peer in, and prepare to swallow my dreams. She crushes the empty can in her hand. “So, what do I gain in this?” I ignore her. The fallback’s the way I remember it: wrapped up in my parent’s fears, cloistered in their expectations, and a bit bent out of shape from the battering it took in its last wearing. She continues. “A deal’s gotta mean that you and Ibenefit right? Win win?” I pause. “If I’m able to go and get a job doing this, I’ve got time in the evenings — and money — to do the things I really want to.” The serpent in my throat weaves back down. Just. She looks through me with eyes that can see into the future. “Remember last time?” “That was different.” “It was the same. If you get sucked in, you don’t listen, and when you don’t listen, you make me wait and wait and wait and wait. You think you get forever or something?” “Heaven forbid.” “It frequently does. I’ll give you six months.” She spits on her hand and offers it to me. “Deal?” “Are we at school or something?” She repeats. “Deal?” I spit and shake. First day on the job. I meet the PAs, the AMs, the ADs, the AADs, the GMs and HR. My cheeks ache from pinning my smile up. My stilettos bite into my heels as I smooth down the lines of my skirt. Pin-striped. With a matching jacket. “Wow, will you look at that. A whole metre squared just for you.” She slumps against the partition made of upholstered boarding. “Pity your back faces the balcony door.” When she’d first seen the balcony, she’d hollered about how she wanted to race out and over into the parking lot below, clamber into her car, ram it into first gear and belt like merry hell in the opposite direction. “I can’t believe they let you in.” She runs her hand over the plywood desk’s smoothness and shrugs. “I smiled nicely at security.” Perched on the edge of my desk, she admires my computer’s view out into the green wide open. The IT man with hooded eyes comes by and hands me a slip of paper with my access codes, passwords, and email address. She notices me noticing him. “Sure, he’s cute. But wedding ring tan, knowing smile, smooth patter. Lady killer.” I remove my jacket and reach below the desk and switch on the hard-drive. Whoosh. A faint buzzing sound joins the rest of the drone in the open plan. A soft warm whispering on my ankle reminds me that the computer will heat up as the day progresses. The air conditioner sign reads, Out of Order. She’s still sitting there. On my desk. “Coffee?” She nods. No-one looks up as we leave the cubicle. Corridors of tight-piled carpets with coffee stains. Static shocks. In-trays overflowing. Blackberries without an ‘off’ button. Meetings that start after hours. Eyes held open with invisible match-sticks decanted from the coffee machine. She catches the look on my face. “Remember the story of the editor who died at his desk. No-one noticed for five days. Five days.” “What-ever. Six months. I’ll be on my feet by then. Promise.” The coffee machine heats up. Tinsel and fairy lights go up, come down. We drink to Auld Lang Syne. Easter hops in and hops out again on a surfeit of chocolate covered tidings. She visits, holding an idea in her hand. “You should eat some more fruit. Here! Look at this!” I barely glance back from my screen. Deadline. Comms strategy. Big client. Big retainer client. Possible promotion. “Six months are up, I believe.” She tucks the idea behind her and bats flirty eyes, before admiring the curve of her legs in her polka-dot high-heels. “Already? Can’t be.” “Can be.” I try not to look at her closed hand. But. I do. “What is it?” She reaches over and picks up the reading diary I harbor in my in-tray. “You sure? I know you’ve got a lot of work to do. Important work. For clients. Fee paying clients. With deadlines. And CEOs. Very important.” “Just shoot already.” “But aren’t you committed to your fallback?” I pause. “Yes. And no. Yes. Well.” She puts the reading diary back down. And picks up my journal. And my English usage dictionary. “Pretty sure this comes in handy,” she waves the dictionary about, “for strategy and business meetings, and all that kind of thing.” I rip the dictionary out of her hand and settle it back in my top drawer. “The idea?” She glances round the office, leans forward and stage-whispers in my ear. “How about a story about a young woman who’s a hit maker. Only she’s down on her luck. Last few songs bombed.” “Riches to rags?” “Kinda.” She wanders over to the balcony door. “You gave up with the view, I see. We should go out there. We can now. Six months of corporate hell done with. Might be nice to sit under the sun instead of the fluorescent, right?” I hesitate. “Nah, the boss might see” “Ooo, shall I alert the media too?” I raise my eyebrows, she continues. “So, the last few songs bombed, but she meets this cute guy” “Lyricist? Right?” “Right. You sure you don’t want to go outside, there’s that nice guy from accounts out there.” She points towards a willow tree that sways from side to side. “He likes to sit outside there every lunchtime you know.” “I know. Not my type.” “But Mr. IT was?” “Married, would you believe.” “Did try to warn you.” I watch her stilettos sink into the carpet. She continues. “So, she meets this cute guy. And badda-bing, badda-bong, lightning strikes, heavens sing a hallelujah chorus, but hold up just one second - he’s from the wrong side of town.” “Dodgy past he’s trying to escape?” She nods. I lean back in my chair. The blank screen titled ‘communications’ strategy’ winks back at me. I point to the screen. “Don’t suppose you have any ideas for this new account?” “Clean out. Should we go outside?” I can feel my feet moving in the direction of the door, my heart twisting round towards the open space of the future. Towards the blank pages of the story that has yet to be written. I turn back towards my strategy. “Nah. I’ve really gotta finish this.” “Your six months. Are. Up.” “Six months more. Just six more. Then I can get this promotion and then I’ll be a Senior Account Director, and I’ll be able to make partner. Then I can buy my apartment outright.” She bristles. “And me? What about me? When do I get to do what I want to do?” “Just another six months. That’s it, I swear.” She dumps the idea down on my desk so hard it shatters. As she stalks out, I can feel the urge to follow. It begs me, pleads with me, tempts me and taunts me. It smells like chocolate fudge brownies seconds before you break your diet. Just another six months. That’s. It. I. Swear. I make partner. The bags under my eyes could fill buckets of blue paint. I never did meet the man from accounts who sits under the Willow tree every lunchtime. She stopped visiting a long while ago. My fault. I didn’t answer her calls. I stopped replying to her emails. Anytime I heard her voice, I tuned her out. In fact, I thought she’d gone for good. And then I recovered one of her ideas she’d dropped off — the one about the lyricist or music guy or something. It lay abandoned, tucked in my in-tray. I stuffed it into my workbag and brought it home. That night, the doorbell rings. She stands there wearing red stilettos and a red velvet dress that winds round her. “About bloody time”, she says, as I let her in, “You know why they call it a fall back don’t you? Cos every time you pick the darn thing up, you fall back — fall behind — on completing your mission. Now. Are. You. Ready. To. Start? Or are we gonna have to do this all over again in a few months’ time?” “Nope, I’m ready.” “Good. Now I’ve got this idea…” Whoop. She settles back into my heart. A disastrous thing happened in mid-May – my entire hard drive disappeared. Yes, the iStore assured me, they’d be able to reinstall my last cloud backup. Only catch was that that the iStore function had failed to store at all. My cloud backup had vaporised too.
There I was, a blank laptop with absolutely nothing on it. Zip. Diddly squat. Bugger all. No CVs, no invoices, no emails (also bombed), no writing portfolio, no music, nada. Here’s the funny thing…I still had my manuscripts. Well two had gone AWOL but I managed to get them both back from the publishers. And another one returned the following evening with the first round of completed edits. Everything else had left the metaphorical building but my manuscripts remained. I’m scraping together a snapshot of my finances for my tax return, tediously working my way through bank statements, but I won’t have to rewrite any of my manuscripts. Some might call that a sign (that one of the manuscripts is called The Signsis not lost on me). The moral of the story: backup to an external hard drive unless you want to spend your evenings working out how much you spend at the coffee shop next door. Sitting at a birthday dinner, talking about movies, as you do, I admitted a liking for a rather awful King Arthur adaption. Despite the inclusion of both Sean Connery and Richard Gere, First Knight is not a winner, wena. Admittedly, there were some people who felt it was 'historically inaccurate'. Should I be the one to tell them that the legend of Arthur, is exactly that? But point taken, it's not the Arthurian story we know and love. Still, I LOVED it. Why? The Lancelot/Guinevere story, naturally. C'mon did you think I was going to mention the action scenes or something? There was a lot to be said in this film about romantic tension. Will they/won't they ramped up in a neat cloak of forbidden love. And then this happens: Ohmywordybee, that scene is the culmination of so much tension building building building, that it imprinted in my mind like...forever. Then someone mildly ruined it by saying he looked like a gorilla charging (never read the comments on something you LOVE...read them on something you're entirely indifferent to). Watching this kiss led me to considering which other movie kisses were note-worthy. Yes, I loved the Spiderman upside-down kiss, and The Notebook, I-wrote-you scene. But, I'm more of a delayed-gratification kind of gal. Case in point, The Painted Veil. There's a strong likelihood you haven't see this one. Cholera and romance don't go together too well (but more popular than you'd think, hello, Love in the Time of Cholera). Yet, Ed Norton and Naomi Watts simmer. I started watching this movie on a flight back from Zurich...and they SWITCHED OFF the movie RIGHT BEFORE THIS MOMENT BELOW. I then had to WAIT FOREVER for it to come on circuit so I could see what happened. In a tiny nutshell, Naomi marries Ed for convenience, has an affair with Liev Schreiber, and then slowly falls in love with her husband. It's that slow burn, tension building that has me swooning. [Just a quick note: The Painted Veil is sadly, not a romance]. Now I want to go and watch these movies again. Happy Monday!
lThe other day, something happened I never thought would – a rather manly man referenced Sex and the City. Yes, we’re about ten years (at least) too late on this one, but I was left poleaxed. He watched it, that’s one thing. He remembered it, that’s another. And he brought it out in conversation. Well. Who knew? I’m a huge fan of SATC (the series, the movies not so much). Rather than play the game: a Samantha, a Carrie, a Miranda or a Charlotte, I preferred this one: Big, Steve, Harry or Smith? Can’t remember them (you may have to ask manly men in your vicinity)? To refresh your memory, Big was Carrie’s abso-effing-lutely on/off love of her life, Smith was the studly HOTTIE, Steve the bartender (wish they'd never had the episode about his skid marks, because that's ALL I think of when I see him), and Harry. Now another Harry is in the spotlight this week, what with royal wedding fever. But this Harry was no apparent prince. Balding, chubby, hairy, sweaty, what other less than choice comments did Charlotte make about him? But then there was this: Those words! (Love Charlotte's comments in response).
Who was your favourite? And are you watching the big wedding on Saturday? It’s super unlikely that you’ve never heard me not reference something from the eighties. I blame this entirely on my obsession with the video shop (millennials asking WTH are those?). Every weekend, we could choose a video, sometimes two, and armed with parents who had no issue whatsoever with things like age restrictions, I got to watch acres of that decade’s celluloid finest and not-so-finest too. Is it any wonder that upcoming novel The Romeo Prototype gives a nod to Romancing the Stone and Weird Science? None. As for Watched? Let me break it down for you: A Night in Heaven. A little context…male strippers were BIG back then, and other movies like Summer School exploited the male-student-by-day-stripper-by-night angle as a C or even D storyline. But A Night in Heaven had student Christopher Atkins (post Blue Lagoon, pre Dallas) seduce, sort of, his older, married teacher Lesley Ann Warren*. Warning: this movie is worse than terrible, and has exactly (in my non-expert opinion) one killer song (Heaven by Bryan Adams) and one redeeming scene. Said scene features Christopher Atkins - blonde, blue-eyed and kind of jail-baity - dressed up as a rocketman which firmly cemented my thing for men in racing gear complete with helmet (yes, Daft Punk are hot). He humps the bannister (hot, well, you can judge for yourself - have a look here), and spots his teacher, who just flunked him nogal, in the audience. Sparks fly and as someone yells, “Give him an A. Look at him!” Not that my Cameron is a stripper. He’s not. But, teacher/student… Which led me to the next bit of weird inspiration: Self-control by Laura Branigan, a single released a year after the epic fail of A Night in Heaven. Switch on any nostalgia radio station, and you’ll hear this little ditty to the creatures of the night. But it’s the video that had me looking twice. Sjoe. It’s hot. Like serious flames. That masked stranger guy (okay, he’s stalking her, I do get that but in this context, it’s sort of Phantom of the Opera way before its time and other voyeuristic overtones). I once read that women’s top fantasies often involve faceless or masked strangers. They also tend to involve exhibitionism. Well, the late Ms Branigan must have been up-to-date on her research, because this video nails it. Somehow or other, these two bits of eighties collided in my coffee-addled brain, and Watched was born. So far, there haven’t been any flashes of inspiration combining Gremlins and Perfect in which little green monsters terrorise the local gym’s singles scene. Maybe that’s a good thing. *On re-watching, as a woman with more mature taste, Lesley Ann Warren’s husband is way way hotter. And taller. |