his pocket to check for a missing message. He swiped and thumbed in his password, and his wifeâs image filled his screen. Dressed in a costume and wearing a wig from a now-forgotten show, Kay looked over her shoulder at him, caught in a moment between surprise and happiness. He showed the photograph to Egon. âAre you sure you donât remember her? Sheâs in the balancing act with the contortionist, one of the flower girls. And sheâs in the tableaux, the tumbling finale.â He thrust the phone closer.
Egon leaned in to take a good look. âKay, Kay, Kay, Kay? Yes, I know that girl. Seems to me, yes, now that you showed me her picture, of course, I know her. Supporting cast. A voice in the chorus.â With a wave, he dismissed the phone.
âSo do you have any idea where she might be? Friends in the show? She texted me last night that some of the cast were going out after the performance. Not to wait up. But she never came home.â
Wiping his eyes with the heels of his palms, Egon bore down on his clouded memories. âThey all run together, these nights, but thinking it over, she may have been with a bunch of the actors. Sarant and some of the others, now I recall. She may be the girl arm in arm with Reance. You know him, the master of ceremonies? Old fart in a pair of goggles?â He caught the expression on Theoâs face. âYou mustnât be alarmed. There were a bunch of them going out together. Actors, you know. Toujours gai, toujours jolie. So he makes a play for each of them in time, but often as not, pfft, nothing comes of it.â
âWhere can I find this Reance?â
âPatience, monsieur, they have a call for tonightâs performance at four oâclock. Heâll show up.â
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
She should have never gone. At first, it was flattering to have been noticed and asked to join the party, and on the way over to the bar, they had been a jolly crew, Sarant and Reance, four others from the show. But Kay had too much to drink and that man had been pawing her at the table. Hand on her thigh to punctuate a joke. Brushing against her to reach another bottle of wine. Arm around the back of her chair and then leaning against her to tell a story. Whenever she dared to speak, Kay could feel his eyes upon her, rapt, attentive, darting with an unspoken question. She tried to shrug him off, change the subject, let someone else take the spotlight, but he persisted in flirting with her without saying a word. The empty glasses seemed to breed more glasses, and the bottles crowded the tabletop. All around them, couples finished their nightcaps, parties broke up and departed, leaving the place to the actors. At two, a weary waitress forced a check upon them, and they counted out the strange Canadian dollar coins to split the bill. The tipsy revelers staggered out and congregated on the sidewalk, caught between the desire to carry on with their fun and the flagging energy of a long night. Sarant and two of the other women called a taxi. The men wavered and waited under a crescent moon, Reance lurking at her side like a jackal.
âI think Iâll walk,â Kay said. âIt isnât far. Clear my head.â
âLet me escort you,â Reance said. âSo that youâre safe.â
âNot necessary,â she answered quickly. âBesides, I go the other way. Our flat is in the Basse-Ville. Thereâs nobody about, and I walk home alone nearly every night after the show.â
âItâs so late. I insist. I wouldnât feel right.â He was playing the gallant, but just below the skin was a rogue.
âNo, I insist. It was fun though. Thank you for asking me to join the party, but I will be perfectly fine.â With a wave, she said her good-byes.
Muddled by the wine, Kay set off in the wrong direction and had gone down an unfamiliar side street before realizing her mistake. Rather than backtrack and risk