my hands for their attention. âLetâs start with a read-through. Everybody, to the stage.â
Obediently, they all shuffled down the carpeted aisle of the theater and up the steps on either side of the stage. Scripts in hand, they sat down, assembling themselves into a wide oval on the black-painted floor.
âSusanâhighlighters,â said Austin.
Susan made her way around the oval, handing out the neon-colored markers to everyone who had a speaking part.
âWhat are these for?â asked Maddie.
âTo highlight your lines for easy reference,â I said. âWhen youâre done, weâre going to start with a read-through.â
âWhatâs a read-through?â asked Brady.
âExactly what it sounds like,â I said. âYou just sit where you are and read through the script, without any blocking or moving around.â
Susan finished distributing the markers. As the actors began the task of highlighting their lines, she gave me a puzzled look.
âWhatâs wrong?â I asked.
âWhen I put the highlighters in my backpack this morning,I counted out just the right amount,â she said. âOne per kid.â
âAnd?â
She held up a neon-green marker and frowned. âThereâs one left over.â
âMaybe you miscounted,â said Austin.
Susan rolled her eyes. âHave we met? Iâm an organizational genius. I donât miscount.â
âWait,â I said. âYou werenât expecting to need a marker yourself because you didnât know youâd be highlighting lines of your own.â
âRight,â said Susan. âWhich means Iâd be one short .â
âWell, even organizational geniuses make mistakes once in a while,â I said.
I waited for the actors to finish coloring their lines. When they were done, there was a rustle of pages as they turned back to the first scene, then a hush fell over the theater. They were waiting for me to start them off. I glanced at Austin, who was standing beside me with our scriptâthe directorâs copyâopen in front of him.
I smiled and took a deep breath. âWhenever youâre ready.â
Silence.
I tried again. âStart when it feels right,â I said a little louder, in case the acoustics of this huge space were working against me.
Still, nothing.
Heads began to swivel. Kids frowned and whispered.
I turned to Austin. âWhatâs the first line?â I asked.
He consulted the script. â â Reporting live from ancient Greece . . .â â
âWho says it?â
âGreek Chorus Number One.â
I closed my eyes, picturing the cast list:
Greek Chorus Number One: Mackenzie
It was then I realized . . .
Mackenzie was nowhere to be seen!
CHAPTER
11
âMaybe she had one of those super-special, last-minute New York City dance classes her motherâs always springing on her,â Susan guessed.
Austin shook his head. âI doubt it. She would have texted one of us.â
âNo, she wouldnât,â Maxie corrected. âHer mom took her phone away last week. She said it was distracting her from dancing.â
I reached into my pocket for my own cell. âIâll call her house phone,â I said. âMaybe she overslept or something.â
âActors, start looking at your lines,â said Susan. Then she grinned, raised her arms in the air, and said in a deep, booming voice, âUseless mortals, I command thee to start looking at your lines by order of Zeus, father of the gods.â
I gave her a look. âThatâs gonna get old fast,â I warned asthe phone rang once, twice . . .
âHello?â came Kenzieâs motherâs voice through the speaker.
âHi, Mrs. Fleisch, this is Anya Wallach.â
âGood morning, Anya.â
âIs Mackenzie there?â
âNo, sheâs not. Sheâs gone out for a run.â
âOh. Well, when she
Susan Conant
Tracy Daugherty
Jenny Block
Mary Higgins Clark and Carol Higgins Clark
Laurel Cain Haws
Sherilee Gray
Jackie Collins
Lauren K. McKellar
Danielle Bourdon
Justine Davis