Her name was Wu Xia, thirty-four, taught ballet to children aged six to twelve at a studio in Jing'an. Then she stopped. Now she managed a WeChat group for a skincare pyramid scheme, posting before-and-after photos three times daily, collecting likes from women she'd never met.I found her in a coffee shop near her old studio. Same building, different floor. She sat by the window, phone in hand, editing a photo. Smoothening a stranger's jawline."You were good," I said, sitting down. "I saw the videos. 2019 competition, Shanghai Youth Ballet, you choreographed the winning piece. Twelve-year-olds moving like they understood grief. Critics mentioned your name."She didn't look up. Thumb sliding across the screen, erasing a pore."That was a long time ago," she said."Three years with Lin. Then this."Now she looked. Not at me. At the window, at the building across, at nothing specific."She saved me," she said. "I was destroying myself. My knees, my back, my—" she stopped, found the wor
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