think a guy in a skirt must be a sissy? Then Sandy chimed in to tell her about another incident with a similar outcome, except that heâd ended up with a black eye.
Halfway through the second story, Dan wandered off. Liss started to call him back, then let him go. It wasnât as if he didnât know anyone at the reception.
She surveyed the gathering, quietly pleased at its success. A great many local people had come, in addition to a good number of college students and faculty members. Liss caught sight of a neighbor, Angie Hogencamp, and her daughter, Beth, at the other side of the room. Liss had been giving the girl dance lessons since August and had found the task surprisingly enjoyable.
A burst of laughter pinpointed Stewart Grahamâs location. Good old Stewartâthe more he drank, the worse his puns became. Liss tuned in just long enough to hear him proclaim that Scottish country dancers were reel people and had to stifle a groan at hearing that old chestnut again. None of Stewartâs puns were particularly original and he tended to repeat the same ones over and over.
âNice shindig, Liss,â Sandy said a short while later, when they found themselves standing together with no one else nearby.
âYes,â she agreed. âThanks.â But she couldnât hold back a sad little sigh.
âWhatâs wrong, kid?â he asked. He was all of three years older than she was, but heâd always called her that. He claimed it was because, during those first few years with Strathspey , sheâd tended to look at the world through rose-colored glasses.
No longer. That wide-eyed nineteen-year-old innocent had started to grow up a long time ago, and the abrupt end to her career as a dancer had completed the process.
âKid?â
âI was just daydreamingâwishing there could still be a place for me with the company. A nondancing role, of course. But there isnât. Not unless Victor suddenly decides to resign.â
âHeâll never do that.â Sandy sounded grim. âIt would make too many people happy.â
Chapter Two
S herri Willett glanced at her watch. It was getting late and she had a five-year-old son who got up at the crack of dawn. She looked around for Pete, and found him deep in conversation with one of the organizers of the local Scottish festival. Pete competed in some of the athletic events and had a vested interest in when they were to be scheduled. Both Pete and Sherri were deputies with the Carrabassett County Sheriffâs Department, she at the jail and he on patrol, and both planned their lives around what shift they were on. It was a crazy schedule in some ways, but did allow for a very long weekend once every three weeks.
Leaving him to it, she wandered back to the refreshment table. Liss had done herself proud. There wasnât a loser in the bunch. Sherri was reaching for one of the crunchy little bacon thingies, since the supply had just been replenished, when someone spoke to her.
âWell, arenât you a pretty little thing,â the man said in a slurred voice.
She spared him a sideways glance but didnât respond verbally. He was with the dance troupe, although he wore a plain suit and was clearly not a performer. Not with that flabby midsection. Victor Something. She remembered that Liss had said he was the companyâs manager.
Sherri was a little surprised he wasnât at least decked out in a tartan tie. Sheâd worked part-time at Margaret Boydâs gift shop long enough to know that most people who were into things Scottish flaunted their heritage. Even the ones who wouldnât wear a kilt and sporran tended to have little Scottish lion flags as lapel pins or bagpipe tie tacks.
The manâVictorâtook a sip from his glass. It was whiskey by the smell of it. Then he leered at her. When Sherri moved farther along the table, he followed, plucking up bits of food as he went. The servers were