part 2: The studio fell silent…-skychi

The studio fell silent.

No laughter.

No whispers.

Only the faint creak of the old wooden floor beneath the woman’s feet.

The young dancer stared at the photograph.

Then at the woman.

Then back at the photograph again.

“What did you say?”

His voice sounded smaller now.

The elderly woman closed the pendant gently.

“That baby was your mother.”

The students exchanged nervous glances.

Nobody laughed anymore.

The young man shook his head.

“No.”

But even as he said it, uncertainty crept into his face.

“My grandmother died before I was born.”

The woman nodded.

“That’s what your grandfather told everyone.”

The room became still.

A breeze drifted through the tall windows.

The old woman took a slow breath.

Forty years of pain seemed to sit behind it.

“I didn’t die.”

The young dancer’s face went pale.

“You disappeared.”

A sad smile crossed her lips.

“No.”

Her eyes glistened.

“I was sent away.”

The students watched without moving.

The elderly woman walked toward the center of the studio.

Each step seemed heavier than the last.

“When your mother was a baby, I was the lead dancer of the company.”

Her fingers brushed the barre.

“I toured the world.”

She looked around the room.

“I danced on stages bigger than this city.”

Nobody interrupted.

Then her voice broke.

“The night your mother was born, I was told I had to choose.”

The young dancer swallowed.

“Choose what?”

The woman’s eyes filled with tears.

“Her… or my career.”

A sharp silence filled the studio.

“Your grandfather said a mother had no place on stage.”

Several students lowered their eyes.

The old woman continued.

“He took custody of your mother.”

Her hands trembled.

“And made sure I never saw her again.”

The young dancer stepped backward.

“No.”

But his voice lacked conviction.

The woman reached into her bag.

Slowly.

Carefully.

She removed a stack of yellowed letters tied together with a faded ribbon.

“I wrote to her every birthday.”

The ribbon came undone.

Hundreds of letters spilled into her hands.

“I never stopped.”

Her voice cracked.

“Not once.”

The students stared.

The young dancer stared.

Every envelope carried the same name.

His mother’s name.

All unopened.

All returned.

All hidden.

The woman looked at him.

“She never received a single one.”

The young dancer’s breathing became uneven.

Because he recognized the handwriting.

Not from the letters.

From an old journal his mother kept hidden in her bedroom.

A journal filled with one question.

Why didn’t my mother ever come back?

The elderly woman wiped her eyes.

“She spent her whole life believing I abandoned her.”

The room felt smaller.

Heavier.

Then she glanced down at her worn pointe shoes.

The same shoes everyone had mocked.

The same shoes repaired over and over again.

The woman smiled sadly.

“Your mother bought these for me.”

The young dancer froze.

“What?”

“Three months before she died.”

The world seemed to stop.

Nobody moved.

Nobody breathed.

His mother had never mentioned meeting her.

Never.

The old woman nodded slowly.

“We found each other.”

A tear slid down her cheek.

“For six beautiful months.”

The young dancer felt his knees weaken.

Because his mother had died five years earlier.

Which meant she had carried this secret to her grave.

The woman stepped toward him.

Not as a stranger.

Not as an old dancer.

As family.

As his grandmother.

But before she could say another word, the studio door suddenly opened.

A man rushed inside holding a tablet.

His face was white.

“Mrs. Bellamy…”

The old woman turned.

“What is it?”

The man looked from her to the young dancer.

Then back again.

His voice shook.

“You need to see this.”

He held up the screen.

A photograph filled it.

An old newspaper article.

Dated forty-two years earlier.

The headline made the color drain from every face in the room.

BALLERINA DISAPPEARS AFTER ACCUSING COMPANY DIRECTOR OF SABOTAGE.

The director’s photograph appeared beneath the headline.

The young dancer stared at it.

Then stared again.

Because he recognized the man instantly.

It wasn’t some stranger from the past.

It was his grandfather.

And next to the article was a newly discovered court file that had never been opened.

A file containing evidence his grandfather had spent four decades hiding.

Evidence that could destroy the family’s name forever.

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