for me, along with my wonderful future? Or was that
   one of the fantasies Madame Senetsky would
   eventually end?
   The sound of Howard's laughter coming from
   below surprised all of us. We paused when we turned
   the corner of the stairway and saw him emerge from
   the parlor beside a tall man with dark, wavy brown
   hair and a smart mustache that curled gently toward
   the corners of his mouth. He wore an earthy brown
   corduroy jacket and a red ascot. I thought he was a
   very handsome man, with a dark complexion and soft
   blue eyes. He smiled at the sight of us.
   "These are the others," Howard told him.
   making 'others' sound a bit inferior. I thought. "Oh, how do you all do? I'm Brock Marlowe,
   your drama coach," the man said, nodding toward us.
   No one spoke. Finally. Cinnamon stepped forward. "Since you've already managed to meet Mr.
   Marlowe. Howard, why don't you introduce
   everyone? Properly," she added, sending an impish
   glance back at me.
   "Right. This is Cinnamon... Carlson, is it?" "So short a memory. Howard? How do you
   manage to memorize your lines?" she shot back. Howard sucked in his breath and forced a small
   smile, turning to the rest of us.
   "Honey Forman. Rose Wallace. And Ice-- I'm
   sorry. I really didn't get your last name," Howard said. "Goodman." she said quickly.
   "Ice Goodman. And that's Steven Jesse trying
   to hide behind them."
   "Ah yes, the man with the Mozart ear.
   Howard's been telling me. Pleased to meet all of you"
   Brock Marlowe said.
   "What else has our Howard been telling you.
   Mr. Marlowe?" Cinnamon asked with feigned
   sweetness.
   "I don't know that much about any of you to tell
   any stories," Howard said quickly.
   "So, he talked mostly about himself. How
   surprising." Cinnamon said.
   Ice actually laughed aloud. I could see she liked
   Cinnamon, and looked forward to everything she did
   or said.
   "No. I did not talk about myself. We talked
   about the theater." Howard said out of the side of his
   mouth. 'Mr. Marlowe happens to be a hero of mine.
   He directed the revival of Ibsen's A Doll's House in
   the West End in London last season, a smash hit. He
   also single-handedly created the Player's Theater in
   Chicago,"
   "Howard has done his research," Brock
   Marlowe said. "but I'm not quite the only one
   responsible for the Player's Theater. Many good
   minds went into that."
   He smiled at us.
   "So, who are the prospective actors here?" "I guess I am," Cinnamon said. "I am surprised
   Howard didn't mention it, yet mentioned Steven's
   piano talents," she added. sending Howard a hard,
   cold look that made him shift his eyes guiltily away. "We're all supposed to develop dramatic
   talents," Rose remarked.
   "And so you will. Rose. I am looking forward
   to working with you all," Mr. Marlowe said. "So are we," Howard quickly followed. Laura Fairchild came walking quickly down the
   corridor from the rear of the house, her tall, thin heels
   pinging like steel raindrops over the floor.
   "Oh, Mr. Marlowe." she said. "Madame
   Senetsky was asking after you. The rest of the staff
   has been meeting with her in her office. She sent me
   for you. Girls, boys," she continued turning toward us.
   "'follow me into the dining room for your seating." "See you in a while then," Mr. Marlowe said,
   and hurried down the corridor toward Madame
   Senetsky's office.
   "She won't spank him for being late, will she?"
   Steven quipped. Ms. Fairchild ignored him and led us
   into the dining room.
   "You'll sit across from your teachers." she
   began. "Ice here." she said, holding the back of the
   chair at the near end of the long table. "Steven. Rose.
   Honey. Howard. and Cinnamon," she continued down
   the table.
   She nodded at the empty chairs.
   "These will be your permanent seats at this
   table.."
   "Permanent seats? What is this, grade school?"
   Steven asked.
   "Maybe that is how our teachers will recognize
   us," Cinnamon wondered aloud.
   "No." Ms. Fairchild said. "You'll be properly
   introduced when they arrive. Please be seated. Do any
   of you have any questions about dinner table
   etiquette? Which fork to use when. anything?" She
   looked pointedly at Steven. "Madame Senetsky
   prefers no one be embarrassed or embarrass the
   school."
   "Does that mean we can't eat with our hands?"
   Steven asked.
   "Not yours. They're insured for millions,
   remember?"
   Cinnamon said. "Oh. right."
   "If there are no intelligent questions, then
   please be seated. When your teachers enter, please
   stand and wait for them to take their seats before
   sitting again. When Madame Senetsky arrives, we all
   stand."
   "And wait for her to take her seat before sitting
   again?" Steven queried with a sly smile.
   "Of course,' Ms. Fairchild replied. "Dinner will
   begin in a moment."
   She left the dining room. Everyone gazed at the
   elaborate table with its heavy silverware, its crystal
   goblets, and beautiful china. There were three candles
   in gold candleholders, waiting to be lit. Platters of
   bread were already on the table, but covered with
   what looked like silk.
   "What if she never sits down?" Steven asked.
   "Would we all eat standing?"
   "Your wisecracks are going to get you in
   trouble quickly here," Howard warned him.
   "That can't happen. Howard. I would just
   switch from piano to stand-up comic and continue." We all sat and for a long moment just
   contemplated the room. One of the maids came in and
   put dishes of butter out. She didn't really look at any
   of us.
   "I'm as nervous as I was at my audition," I
   admitted,
   "Me. too," Ice said.
   "I didn't have an audition," Rose revealed.
   Everyone turned to her.
   "What?"
   "Well, not a formal one like y'all had. I mean." "How did you get into this school then?" Howard demanded, as if it was an affront to him and
   his talent.
   "My dance teacher at school was friendly with
   Madame Senetsky's son. Edmond."
   "So?" Howard pursued.
   "He attended my performance and she brought
   him backstage. He told me his mother permitted him
   to select one student a year, and he decided to select
   me,' Rose explained.
   "That's not fair. I had to prepare and travel here
   and wait to find out if I had been accepted or not. I
   turned down the
   3: Girl Ta/k Page 100
   University of Southern California before
   knowing," Howard moaned. "He must have had a
   thing for you," he quickly decided.
   "What?"
   "How can you say that? You don't know how
   talented she might be," Ice piped up with such
   vehemence, it not only  
					     					 			took Howard by surprise, it
   made us all widen our eyes.
   "Maybe he's right," Rose thought aloud. "I
   never considered that."
   Howard looked smug.
   "Don't pay attention to him. Rose," I said.
   "Howard, you're making her feel bad."
   "I'm just suggesting a possibility," he insisted. "It' s not even a possibility," Cinnamon
   snapped at him.
   "Oh? Why not, pray tell?"
   "First, if Edmond sent someone here who didn't
   meet his mother's standards, she would know
   instantly, wouldn't she?" Cinnamon asked. "And what
   do you think she would say or do to Edmond?
   Remember what Madame Senetsky told us? We, of all
   people, can't hide our imperfections, our failures.
   There's no way to fake it. You either belong here or
   don't," she told Rose.
   "Howard." she said, sending daggers his way
   with her small eyes. "should know that better than any
   of us, and does know that. He's just a little jealous. "Beware the green-eyed monster. Howard, it
   mocks the meat it feeds upon."
   "Ha! I guess she told you. Howard Rockwell
   the Sixth," Steven cried and reached for a piece of
   bread.
   "Don't!" Cinnamon barked,
   He pulled his hand back as if he had burned his
   fingers. "What?"
   "You can't do that until everyone is here. It's
   not good etiquette."
   "She's right," Howard muttered. I'm surprised
   you didn't know that!"
   Steven grimaced and folded his hands under his
   arms.
   "I don't know why all this is so important. It has
   nothing to do with the way I play piano," he
   complained.
   "If that's all you want, get a job in some smoke
   filled dive," Howard told him.
   Steven glared at him. What a time to begin
   bickering amongst ourselves, I thought, with our
   teachers about to meet us. Why was it my
   expectations rose and fell with roller coaster
   emotions? One moment I was feeling optimistic about
   us all enjoying this experience, and the next I was
   dreading another moment in this house. I gazed about
   the table, searching everyone's face to see if anyone
   else seemed to have similar feelings. They all looked
   lost in their own thoughts.
   A grandfather clock ticked the hour.
   And, on cue, our teachers began to enter the
   room. With Howard practically leaping to his feet
   first, we all stood.
   A short, bald man with dull brown watery eyes and a complexion as pale as tissue paper took the seat directly across from me. He didn't smile so much as he turned his lips into each other and pulled back the corners of his mouth. He was plump, a little barrelchested, with a necklace of fat hanging at the sides of his throat. His ears were far too large for his head. They looked tacked on at the last minute, mistakenly
   taken from someone else's assigned features. Right behind him came a far younger-looking,
   tall, slender man with hair as black as Ice's, styled
   with a soft wave from his forehead back. He had
   bright hazel eyes with specks of green and a thin,
   straight nose above very soft-looking lips. Unlike the
   bald man, he wore a pleasant smile. He nodded at us
   and gave Rose, in particular, an additional and wider
   smile.
   A very fat, robust man with thinning dark gray
   hair but heavy sideburns and a bulbous nose with a
   patch of redness over each nostril marched in firmly,
   nearly knocking into his chair with his stomach. He
   had very thick lips and large, dark brown eyes. Brock
   Marlowe came in after him, moving far more
   gracefully, and he was followed by a rather sternlooking man, about six feet tall with long, thick
   pecan-brown hair. He kept his lips tight, drawing a
   slash across his angular face.
   Our teachers gazed at us and we gazed back at
   them. For a moment I wondered what would happen
   next. Then Ms. Fairchild appeared at the foot of the
   table.
   "Ladies and gentlemen," she began, "let me
   introduce you to your instructors.
   "Mr. Angus Masters, your speech instructor,"
   she began, and the bald man across from me nodded
   at us. "Mr. Cameron Demetrius, your dance
   instructor." she continued. The trim- figured, gentlefaced man smiled wider and turned his shoulders as if
   he was scratching his back against a wall. "Mr. Alfred
   Littleton, your vocal instructor," she said. The heavy
   man opened and closed his thick lips without
   speaking. "You already know Mr. Marlowe, your
   drama coach, and this is Mr. Leonard Bergman, our
   instrumental and piano teacher." Mr. Berman's eyes
   brightened a bit, but he didn't change expression and
   barely nodded.
   She then recited our names and, after our
   instructors sat, we sat.
   "Everyone settle in okay?" Cameron Demetrius
   asked immediately, to break the silence.
   We all answered at once, and that lightened the
   heavy air with some laughter.
   Howard then started a long story about his trip,
   speaking as if he was doing a scene on the stage, his
   hands moving like two birds circling each other. A moment later. Edmond Senetsky entered with
   Madame Senetsky on his arm and everyone rose. She
   took her seat at the head of the table. Edmond sat at
   the far end, and our first formal dinner at the Senetsky
   School began.
   We learned that Alfred Littleton, our vocal
   teacher, was a former light opera star, and the
   instrumental teacher. Leonard Bergman, was an
   internationally famous conductor. The more we
   learned about each and every one of them and their
   accomplishments, the more nervous and insecure I
   felt. Surely, they would take one good look at me and
   see what an imposter I was. How could a farm girl
   from Ohio be considered someone so talented she
   could compete for a place in the world's greatest
   orchestras?
   Mr. Masters would find my speaking ability
   and speech patterns so flawed, he would throw up his
   hands in frustration. I knew I didn't have the kind of
   grace or muscle coordination to please a professional
   dance instructor, and I couldn't carry a vocal note. There would be no point to any singing instructions for me. Once all this was learned. I was sure I, would be called to Madame Senetsky's office, where she would quickly inform me a great error had been made and there was someone far more qualified waiting in
   the wings. I would almost be relieved. I thought, I was so frightened. I competed with Ice for the
   position of the most silent person at dinner. I could
   see how Mr. Masters was keenly listening to
   everyone's speech patterns. It made me very selfconscious. As I expected. Howard Rockwell led us
   with his questions, his eagerness to show just how
   much he knew about each of our teachers. When
   Brock Marlowe asked him about parts he had played.
   Howard rattled off a very impressive range of roles. I
   was terrified Mr. Bergman would follow by asking me
   how many times I had performed in public, what
   orchestra I had been a member of, or what 
					     					 			 my training
   had been up until now. I would surely look like a
   musical pauper.
   I continually glanced at Madame Senetsky to
   see her reaction to everything said and asked. She
   maintained a stoic expression, her eves barely
   confessing an emotion or a thought. I had the distinct
   feeling that she wanted her staff to make its own judgments about us and would do nothing to influence
   that evaluation.
   As the evening wore on, most of us did relax.
   Despite the formal, stiff beginning to the dinner, each
   of our teachers spoke about himself and his
   professional experiences, and before long we were all
   witnessing a fascinating conversation about
   international theatrical events with names of famous
   people woven in so casually and so quickly, we didn't
   have a chance to react. Every so often. I looked at
   Cinnamon and Rose, who wore soft smiles of
   appreciation on their faces. Steven looked bored and
   from time to time fidgeted with his silverware. Ice
   looked like someone visiting another country, her
   eyes small but full of curiosity. Only Howard sat with
   a demeanor of confidence, as though he was a regular
   participant at such dinners.
   Edmond Senetsky apparently knew something
   about everyone anyone mentioned and had stories of
   his own, name-dropping his clients at every
   opportunity. Since Howard had made his accusation
   earlier. I couldn't help but watch the way Edmond
   glanced at Rose from time to time. It was probably my
   imagination. but I did think he was trying to catch her
   eye more than he was trying to catch anyone else's attention. Howard looked directly at me when Edmond described Rose's dance performance for Mr. Demetrius, using superlative after superlative. Then Howard looked at Cinnamon, who was glaring not daggers but spikes back at him. He quickly turned
   away.
   The dinner itself was as elegant and rich as any
   I had ever seen or read about, much less experienced.
   We did have the roast duck we saw Mrs. Churchwell
   preparing earlier, but it was nothing like any duck
   Mommy had made back on the farm; it had an orange
   flavor. We were served wine, which started a
   discussion about the quality of California wines
   compared with French and Italian. From the
   comments Mr. Littleton made, it appeared he had
   tasted wine all over the world. I had no idea if what I
   was drinking was good; great, or otherwise. Wine was
   still just wine to me. I was familiar only with
   Mommy's elderberry.