Temple eyed the only table. A large circle of glass rested atop an abomination: a ring of chubby, gilded plaster Oriental figures with raised hands that were either modeled on Wu Fat in
Atop these gaudy, somewhat ungainly gentlemen—floating on the glass like lily pads on water—were rainbow-colored carnival glass plates, cheap giveaways from days gone by, now dear.
Temple regarded stacks of plump brown pancakes centered on the wavy-rimmed plates. A dollop of white stuff resembling sour cream or Zymonal reposed beside them.
At least there was coffee. She took a sip from a steaming Porky Pig mug.
“Chicory,” Electra announced as she sat, watching Temple fight not to spit out her mouthful. “Now try your wheat cakes. If you must have something unhealthy, here’s a tub of no-cholesterol vegetable oil.”
Temple eyed this concession warily. As far as she was concerned, butter was butter. Pretenders weren’t much tastier than axle grease, but the heavy-textured pancakes needed something. She used her knife tip to scoop out a blob of the pale stuff.
The tofu beside her pancakes shook like Santa Claus’s belly as she smeared her cakes and dug in. Not half bad, if you chewed fast. Electra was dribbling something that resembled rat droppings atop her cakes.
“Raw bran,” she explained.
“Okay,” Temple said. “What about the raw facts? What did you find out at the Goliath?”
“Lots.” Electra tilted her head as she chewed a bite, toying with her shoulder-dusting earrings, a cornucopia of apples, cherries, bananas and pineapples so appropriate to the breakfast hour. “What do you want to know first?”
“About Dorothy Horvath. I actually met the second victim, and saw for myself that she had an abusive lover. But Dorothy was the first, and she’s still a mystery to me.”
“Dorothy—oh, you mean Glinda. Yeah, they all knew Glinda.” Electra pushed the half-dozen colorful wooden bangles ringing each arm up like sleeves as she braced her elbows on the cool glass tabletop and leaned forward to tell Temple all.
“A lot of these dancers live on a very simple level. They don’t worry about who’s gonna be president, or pollution in Mexico City, nothing global or political. Survival is their prime directive, as they say on
“I get the picture,” Temple put in.
“I don’t want to sound like I’m putting them down. They’re doing their best with a bad deal. Poor Glinda—that face of hers was worth a million bucks, but the brain behind it wasn’t worth enough to make a local call at a pay phone. They say she acted like a ten-year-old. Never quite understood what happened to her—or why, or why it kept happening again and again. She could move on that stage like liquid lightning, but she was a patsy for any smooth operator with a rough reputation who came along. She was going to lose her kids to her first husband, an upright type whose contempt drove her into exotic dancing and who was using her work as a reason to get custody of the kids. Some of the dancers are fighters, some aren’t. Glinda wasn’t.”
“Maybe that was why she based her act on
“Or she wanted to go home to a place like Kansas that she never had. Sad story. Sad girl. Guess hubby has the kids for sure now.”
“What about him? Where does he live? Could he have—?”
Electra fanned her hands to stop Temple’s jackhammer questions. “I thought of that, too. Still stationed abroad after the Desert Storm call-up. And he was a shoo-in to get custody anyway, from what the other dancers told me. Glinda kept missing her court dates, so afraid the system wouldn’t help her that she made sure it didn’t.”
“It’s hard to understand self-esteem so low that it can be that self-destructive,” Temple said. Her fork skated a bit of pancake into the pile of tofu. “I can see it, from my one encounter with the kind of a world that sticks out a fist and strikes you down every time you move. Eventually, you’d stop moving.”