"Hi, Jessica--Jen. Great news! I've got an ongoing role for you to audition for on Growing Sideways! Let's have coffee and talk about it soon. Let me know when's a good time. Bye for now!"
Jen Garnett was a middling agent in the Toronto and Vancouver scenes and Jessica had owed most of her first shots in TV commercials to her work. Wow. A shot at a role on a semi-serious family drama about a single mom lawyer with two kids each heading down different self-destructive roles. She should have called Jen right back. Serious money for acting, and only a year after graduating. Instead she went to her bartending job at swanky Labyrinth without calling Jen back. She'd call tomorrow--early enough to still seem super keen.
Tuesday nights at Labyrinth were five dollar pints and she worked with Kevin, a twenty-something engineering student who she figured had the hots for her judging by the temperature and edge of the flirting he put out. She wore her staple for the bar's vibe--black formal pants and dressy shoes or boots with a olive or black tank top. She came on to the bar at six, and the straight bar stools were full of regulars from the hipster neighbourhood the bar bordered. Tyla was her best friend and served tables, usually staking out the back lounge section full of white and black leather couches. She was shorter than Jessica but just as pretty, with her Japanese good looks and long, silky black hair making her a favourite with regulars and walkthrough customers alike. Tyla was a graphic design student still looking for a job since graduating from college, though she had already assembled plenty of interesting freelance gigs on a site called Alternative Designs, a website hub for designers and artists to hang their singles online.
"How's life?" Tyla asked.
"Um, good... Really fun lately. I've been looking into some new things."
"Acting?"
"Sort of? Sort of like acting... I guess."
Tyla's face lit up. Rather than ask, she gave her a purposeful look that mixed concern with excitement and mischief.
"Tell you more later if it gets slow."
"Or let's go to my place for drinks and a puff! You down?"
"That might be cool. Yeah."
Alan, one of the regular hipsters who monopolized a bar stool on Tuesdays and other nights asked her what was new.
"Just doing the starving actress thing and seeing if a new lead pans out. My agent has got me an audition of a show produced in town."
"What's the show? Do I know it?" She could tell he was asking with the hope that it was a lame show--something that would keep her grounded in the realm of the opportunities that Labyrinth's gorgeous, mostly female staff usually attracted. A bit part here, reading for a small theatre role there. Nothing anyone would have heard of, that was popular and on the big networks.
"No, I doubt you'd have heard of it. It's just a small theatre production."
"I'm interested. What's the role and the show?" He said, making a show of keen interest.
"It's a play about child abuse and how this painter takes this sexually abused kid and saves her with a creative outlet that really takes off for her." Jessica didn't know how she'd come up with that good a lie on the fly. She noticed Tyla raise a questioning eyebrow.