The Disappearing Act



That’s okay honey. No worries at all. Work comes first. Maybe I’ll fly out for Easter? If you’re not off jet-setting by then!! Keep up the good work. I’m real proud of you. Dad XX



I stare at her words on the screen. She doesn’t even try to explain the absence. And he doesn’t push her on it. But whatever happened in that six-day gap made her change her mind about going home to see him.

The fact that Emily disappeared for six days a month ago and eventually reappeared should give me some kind of reassurance but doesn’t.

I look away from the screen, suddenly aware of the similarities between Emily’s situation and mine. We’re both far from home, separated from friends and family, trying to further our careers, and while Emily was imminently expecting big news I have my own screen test, my own big opportunity, on Monday morning.

Two women on the cusp, waiting to hear about the role of a lifetime—the thought of it sends a shiver through me. I can’t help but wonder what role she was waiting to hear about. I open her mail app and scan through her inbox going back to the sixth of January, the original day she was supposed to receive the news. I click on an email from her agent sent that day.

From: Rogers, Asst

Sent: Monday, January 6, 2021 10:47 AM

To: “Emily Bryant” <[email protected]> Subject: RE: Self Tape: EMILY BRYANT / SUNDAY CLUB

Self-tape received. Great work!

Danny Engels

Office of Bernice Rogers



That’s it? It certainly doesn’t sound like the kind of email an agent would send to someone expecting huge news that day. And it’s not even from her agent, it’s from her agent’s assistant. Which is odd considering, in my experience, agents tend to get pretty hands-on when clients start doing well. I jot down Danny Engels on my list.

I pull up Google and search Sunday Club, the project mentioned in the email subject, just in case that’s the role. A Deadline casting announcement from mid-January pops up and a row of headshots smile back at me, cast and ready to film. This clearly isn’t the job Emily was excited about, it’s just a standard network pilot, a couple of weeks’ filming at most, nothing groundbreaking.

A wave of sadness floods through me as it suddenly occurs to me that she may have made up this potential job entirely—or that the job she’s talking about might not be an acting role at all. She might have been waiting to hear about an entirely different life-changing job. But whatever it is, it features heavily before both disappearances.

I head back to her message app hoping to find messages between Emily and her friend Marla, certain that they must have discussed Emily’s new job.

I don’t find her name anywhere on messages. But as I scroll through I find a relatively recent conversation with an unnamed number. I open the chat.


Fri Jan 1, 12:02am


Happy New Year bish!!! Sad I had to bail. Got to tape tomorrow. Bleurgh! Drink all the drinks for me.


Done





*Hiccup


Lol.


House guy’s not still bothering you, is he?


Nope. Guess he found someone drunker?! Or more ambitious. lol Okay. Well if he comes back, hide. Text me when you get home x Fri Jan 1, 11:48am


What time you finish last night? How are you feeling ?


Fri Jan 1, 3:48pm


That bad huh?


Sat Jan 2, 9:12am


Listen, sorry I bailed on New Year’s. Forgive me? Brunch?


Sat Jan 2, 5:26pm


Sorry Marla. Just seen these.


Not feeling great.


Hahaha! Still?! How much did you drink girl?


Sat Jan 2, 9:57pm


Em, is everything okay?


Sun Jan 3, 8:04am


Can you meet me at the coffee shop?



The piercing ring of the security monitor phone rips my attention from the screen, causing my heart to pound high in my chest as the sound tears through the apartment again, high and insistent.

It’s nearly eleven p.m. I stumble up and head out to the hallway monitor, mildly annoyed at the interruption, but when I see the screen is blank my blood runs cold. Somebody has disabled the security camera and I can’t see who’s standing outside my door.

My mind races as the tone angrily blares again. Lucy must have let someone up without checking—why would she do that, they said they never did that? I edge toward the door’s tiny peephole, possibilities flooding through my head, half expecting to see Cortez, or Joanne, or even Emily on the other side of the door. I pray it’s any one of those people over the possibility that this visitor may be someone else entirely.

I take a breath and lean in to look.





22


    When No One Is Looking


SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13

My eye focuses through the peephole and I pull up sharply. The hallway is completely empty.

There’s no one there.

The security phone screeches loudly beside me again and I realize what I’ve done. It’s just a call from reception; no one is outside the door. But why isn’t the hall camera working? It usually lights up even for an intercom call.

I lift the receiver and it’s Lucy’s voice I hear.

“Hi, Mia, sorry to bother you this late. We’ve got another package for you down here, it just arrived from Universal, a new script and revised script pages for Monday? They said it’s urgent, but it’s after eleven p.m. on a Saturday so I didn’t know if you’d appreciate a courier or me bringing it up in person this late.”

“Oh right! Thank you so much. Should I maybe come down?” I answer, trying not to betray the huge relief I feel at the fact that Lucy refused to let a stranger up to my apartment.

“No, it’s fine, I can bring it up. I just wanted to check you were okay to be disturbed this late.”

“Yeah, that would be fantastic, thanks, Lucy. Oh, and there’s something up with my security monitor. It’s not working.”

“Oh. Okay, I’ll take a look at it when I come up.”

Revised pages for Monday? I hang up and dash back into the living room to check my emails but there’s nothing about new scenes from either Universal or from my agents, which is odd. Nobody thought to tell me I’d have entirely new scenes to learn for Monday.

The package Lucy delivers is exactly what she described, another large packet similar to the first stamped with the studio logo. Once she hands it over I direct her to the broken monitor and its lifeless screen. She carefully removes the casing around the unit, revealing the circuitry beneath.

“Hmm, I thought it could be something simple like a dead battery,” she says, her forehead creased in concentration, “but it looks like these are hooked up to the mains.” She shrugs and carefully replaces the casing. “That’s annoying, but nothing to worry about. I can get someone from maintenance to take a look on Monday, if that works? I usually call up to check if someone arrives for you, anyway.”

“That would be fantastic,” I reply, my tone breezy, even though the thought of having no security monitor until Monday is deeply unsettling given what I now have sitting open on my coffee table. At least I can be assured Lucy is downstairs preventing anyone from randomly wandering up here in the night. And then there’s the security cameras along the hall. I can only pray that they’d be enough to put whoever hired Joanne off paying me a visit. I try not to think about the extreme coincidence of my camera going out after the very peculiar day I’ve had.

As soon as Lucy leaves, I double-lock the door behind her and carry my new script into the kitchen. Inside I find a note from Kathryn’s assistant, mentioning having already emailed me the scene numbers for Monday and the new pages, but now sending everything in hardcopy, too, just in case it’s easier for me that way.

I never received that email.

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