by Sarah Raplee
Psychic medium
Cora Merryweather popped a couple of antacid tablets to quell the burning in
her stomach. Today’s one o’clock appointment will be a doozy for sure.
Limiting
readings to locals might weed out the haters, but her bank account couldn’t
afford to take that kind of hit. Half of Cora’s clients came from outside Iowa
City, some from as far away as Waterloo and Des Moines. Like everyone else,
mediums had to eat. And she refused to set her rates so high only the well-off could afford a reading.
Cora’s
sigh was cut short by a string of sneezes. Great,
just great. She sounded like Typhoid Mary. How was she supposed to relax
into a meditative state with her anxiety level rising like the temperature
outside?
The sneezing
fits had started as soon as silver-haired Mrs. Donovan, her morning client, had
departed. After grabbing a box of tissues off the table, she’d settled down at
her small desk and opened her old laptop. By lunchtime, she’d finished her
record-keeping in spite of continued bouts of off-and-on sneezing. The
persistent, unusual symptom made her suspect she was having a negative psychic premonition.
She was normally an extremely healthy young woman. Besides, her negative
premonitions had manifested as physical symptoms a few times in the past. When the
chocolate protein shake she called lunch soured as soon as it hit her stomach, her
fears had been confirmed.
The grandfather
clock she’d inherited from Aunt Tillie along with the house whirred before
emitting a single deep chime to mark the quarter hour. A shiver skittered up
her spine. Fifteen minutes to show time. She
reached for her blue plastic water bottle to wash down the last of the minty antacids. The burning in her stomach had eased, but now
she needed to pee. She plunked the bottle down and
drew her brows together in a deep, dark, heartfelt scowl.
No doubt her
next client would turn out to be a hater. Why couldn’t the Doubting Thomases live
and let live, the way she and most other mediums did? How would they like it if
she barged into their places of business and accused them of being liars and
con artists? Tried to ruin them?
She grabbed her
neon orange cell phone off the desktop, paused to sneeze into a tissue and then
texted her friend Joan at Discrete Security.
Is Owl on duty? The message was code
asking if the security camera in the stuffed barred owl on her bookshelf was
working properly.
Owl’s awake, Joan replied. Big Sister is watching. Bwa-ha-ha-ha-ha.
Cora’s lips
stretched into a grateful smile. It helped to know someone had her back, someone
who cared about her and believed in her unusual abilities.
On a computer
monitor in her office across town, Joan had a clear view of Cora’s room through
the wide-angle lens in Owl’s left eye. Her friend wouldn’t hesitate to deploy a
pair of well-trained security officers if “Barry” flipped to the Dark Side. No cops would be called unless Cora appeared
to be in physical danger; Joan’s business wasn’t called Discrete Security for nothing. Plenty of business people whose
clients expected privacy preferred to handle unpleasantness without attracting
media attention. Lawyers, therapists, talent agents…psychics.
Knowing Joan
had her back gave Cora confidence. She stood and waved at Owl before heading
down the short hallway toward the bathroom.
Bring it on, Barry—or whatever your name
really is!
She never asked
for more than the client’s first name and phone number. Her job was to channel
their loved ones to bring her clients healing and a measure of peace. In order
for them to accept that she was the real deal, she had to be careful not to
acquire any information about them or their deceased loved ones ahead of time.
No last names, no checks, nothing.
Her lack of
information made it relatively easy for the haters to get in to see her. The patient
ones, anyway; she was booked up for months ahead because of her spotless
reputation. Luckily most doubters weren’t that dedicated.
Unlike Barry,
her one o’clock. She sneezed three times and shut the bathroom door.
***
Tom Chase
twisted the bell key beside the red front door of Cora Merryweather’s blue
Victorian house and schooled his face into a pleasantly neutral expression. The authentic antique bell sounded a lot like an old-fashioned
bicycle bell, only louder.
The smell of fresh paint permeated the air. Business must be exceptionally good if she could afford to hire house painters. He squelched a grimace that wanted to curl his upper lip. How many grieving widows did it take to paint a house, metaphorically-speaking?
An indignant-sounding meow sounded at his elbow. He glanced down into the unblinking, deep-blue eyes of an enormous, long-haired white cat laying in the wide porch swing. A sunbeam highlighted the snowy whiteness of his fur against the red-checkered cushion How could the animal stand to lie in a sunbeam when it was so damned hot? Tom’s oxford shirt was already sticking to his back, and he’d only been outside his air-conditioned truck for a few minutes.
The smell of fresh paint permeated the air. Business must be exceptionally good if she could afford to hire house painters. He squelched a grimace that wanted to curl his upper lip. How many grieving widows did it take to paint a house, metaphorically-speaking?
An indignant-sounding meow sounded at his elbow. He glanced down into the unblinking, deep-blue eyes of an enormous, long-haired white cat laying in the wide porch swing. A sunbeam highlighted the snowy whiteness of his fur against the red-checkered cushion How could the animal stand to lie in a sunbeam when it was so damned hot? Tom’s oxford shirt was already sticking to his back, and he’d only been outside his air-conditioned truck for a few minutes.
“Hello,” he
said. He'd always liked cats. The cat’s tail tip twitched a warning. He turned away.
A bee buzzed
past his head and drew his gaze to baskets overflowing with sweet-scented, multicolored
flowers that hung above the porch railing. As he’d gone up the front walk, he’d
half-noticed the row of neatly-tended snapdragons that guarded the front of the
house and the green, long-leafed hostas that encircled a young sugar maple
tree.
He caught a whiff of the
flowers’ perfume and clenched his teeth. This place reeked of hope. He knew from hard experience that hope was a
dangerously addictive emotion. He’d spent more than two years trying to break
his own habit.
His eyes narrowed
at two weathered wicker armchairs framing an equally dilapidated side table at the
far end of the porch. A cluster of white spray paint cans peeked out from
behind one of the chairs.
Tom frowned.
Maybe business wasn’t as good as he’d thought.Or she needed to raise her rates.
On the other
side of the red door, a clock chimed the hour. He glanced at his watch and then
gave the bell key another impatient twist. The medium was late. He tried the
doorknob, but it wouldn’t turn. Maybe she’d stood him up. His gut began to
burn. He’d waited six months for this reading. She’d damned well better show
up.
The knob
rattled and then turned. The door opened
and a pretty, ponytailed blond wearing a short pink sheath that showed off her
legs smiled up at him. The smile didn’t quite reach her clear gray eyes.
“Hello,” he
said. “I’m Barry.” If she’d had a tail, he was sure it would have twitched a
warning.
Even so, she
nodded, sending her gold beaded earrings swinging in graceful arcs from
delicate her delicate earlobes. She opened the door wider. “I’m Cora. Please
come in, Barry.” She turned and
walked away.
Eyeing the
seductive swing of her hips, he followed.
They passed
through a small, tiled foyer that was empty except for a coat rack and an
umbrella stand. The large room they entered ran the width of the house. To his
left, a comfortable-looking overstuffed couch and chair were grouped around a
brick fireplace. On either side of the
fireplace, mullioned windows let in the light.
Cora moved to
the right. “What kind of name is Barry, anyway?” she said.
“What do you
mean?” He turned and watched her retreating ass. She didn’t seem to have heard
him.
“Please, sit down.”
She waved a casual hand at the square, polished wooden table, then took a seat.
The wall behind her was lined with floor-to-ceiling shelves crammed with books
and a few knickknacks.
Tom chose the
seat across from hers. He wanted a clear view of her facial expressions while
she “read” him.
She sat as if a
she had a broom handle for a backbone and folded her hands on the tabletop. Her
short, neatly-manicured nails were unpainted, probably because she worked in
the garden. A thick gold band etched
with a raven totem encircled the middle finger of her right hand. Her left hand
was bare.
His shoulders
twitched. She made him uncomfortable in his own skin.
“Is Barry short
for—what? Barold? Barney? Barrow?” The frozen smile had been replaced by a look
of disdain.
Why was she
fixated on the damned name? “I was named after my father.” That much was true.
Something
flashed in her eyes. “I don’t doubt that for a minute. Your father’s come
forward, you see. The problem is his name is Thomas, not Barry.”
***
Cora scowled
when his earth-brown eyes slid away from hers. The skin under his fashionable
dark stubble reddened. A muscle jumped in his jaw. At least he had the decency
to be embarrassed at being caught in a lie.
When he shot to
his feet, she realized she was mistaken. His voice dropped to a feral growl.
“Where is it?”
She swallowed. He
seemed to occupy a lot more space than he had a minute ago. Her tongue darted
out to lick lips that were suddenly parched.
A jumble of
images flashed in her mind's eye. Too many spirits vied for her attention for her to make
sense of the mess in her head. Right now she needed to focus on the crazy guy in
her living room, and he was very much alive.
Not now, she told the spirits. Later, I promise.
They pulled back
their energy and left her to deal with Thomas on her own.
He squatted and
ducked his head to look up at the table bottom, then stood once more and
glanced wildly around the room.
Heart chugging
like a runaway train, she rose from her chair. She had to tip her head back to catch
his troubled gaze. Why had she bothered to bait this tall, dark and handsome
nut job? How long would it take Joan’s minions to get here?
He flattened
his hands on the tabletop and leaned in, looming over her with fire scorching
the earth of his eyes. Cora felt very small and helpless as he loomed over her
like a volcano about to erupt.
Then a gentle
child’s spirit touched her mind, leaving a single clear image behind.
“What’s the
significance of the little brown teddy bear with the purple bow?” she asked
him.
He stepped back
as if she had shoved him. His face paled and his eyes frosted over. “Where did
you find out about the bear?” he said through clenched teeth. “On someone’s
Facebook page? Or did you go to the funeral home’s memorial page?”
She leapt onto
her chair seat so they were eye-to-eye, teetered for a moment, and then
straightened, fisting hands on her hips. “How dare you try to intimidate me, you imposter!
Get out before I call the police.”
His icy gaze slid
down her body like a ghostly caress, stopping at her breasts, her hips, and the
hem of her short skirt. She suppressed a shiver. His eyes darkened and then he
bared his teeth in a caricature of a smile. “How do you plan to call for help? A ghostly
messenger?”
She felt the
blood leave her face. Her dress had no pockets. She’d left her cell on the
desk. If she made a dash for it, he’d be on her before she could make the call.
Had he seen her
tremble? Climbing to his eye level left her very exposed in a precarious
position. She folder her arms across her chest and tried to think logically. She
needed to keep him talking until the security detail arrived. “What do you want
from me?”
“The truth,” he
said. But something in his expression told her that, for the briefest moment,
he wanted more. He wanted her.
She lifted her
chin. “You can’t handle the truth.”
If he made a
move toward her she’d grab her letter opener off the desk and defend herself.
He wouldn’t expect her to stab him. She swallowed against a surge of nausea. There’d
be an awful lot of blood. What if she hit a vital organ and he died? Would her
Spirit Guides be able to protect her from Thomas? Or would he haunt her for the
rest of her life?
Her vision
blurred and her knees seemed to lose their strength. Her body stopped obeying
her mind’s orders. She was falling. Then strong arms caught her and cradled her
to a muscled chest. What seemed like only a moment passed before she was
lowered onto the soft couch.
She squinted up
at the hater’s worried face. He brushed her hair off her forehead with gentle
fingers. Her eyelids fluttered shut.
Coming around
to find him fumbling with her ears, she jerked her head back and forth while slapping
at his hands. “Stop it! Get away from me, you pervert!”
He captured her
wrists in his hands and sat on her thighs, pinning her legs down. She gasped
and bucked, but he didn’t budge. This
can’t be happening.
Her eyes burned
with unshed tears. “My security guys will be here any minute.” Shouldn’t they
have already arrived?
“Now who’s
telling lies?”
What had been a
distant wail grew louder. Joan must have called the police. Hot tears rolled
down Cora’s cheeks.
The fine lines
that radiated from the corners of his eyes deepened. He swore under his breath.
“I’m not going to rape you. Promise not to attack me and I’ll let you up.”
She nodded her
agreement. He released her, moved off her and sat in the armchair with his head
in his hands. “I was sure you were wearing an earpiece to connect you to an
accomplice who feeds you information.” He scrubbed his face with both hands and
then gazed at her with weary eyes.
Feeling the
atmosphere in the room shift, she pushed herself up to a sitting position.
His eyes
pleaded with her. “I’m begging you. Tell me how you work the con and I’ll go. I
won’t give your secret away. I have to know how it’s done. I have to.”
She stared at
him mutely. After all he’d done, he still thought she was a fake. Hardening her
heart, she stood up, straightened her dress and gave him the look she reserved
for when Sugar Cat crapped in her flower bed. A police car pulled up in front
of the house.
Acting on
intuition, she walked over to the hater and slapped his hangdog face. “You’re
the only one with secrets, Barry.
Consider this your get-out-of-jail free card. You only get one. I won’t press
charges. Leave through the kitchen and out the back gate.” She crossed to the
foyer. “Don’t ever, ever even think about coming back.”
***
The little
sugar maple tree had turned bright orange before Tom found the courage to
ignore Cora’s warning and return to try to set things right.
The wind
brought the spicy scent of fallen leaves as He parked his car at the curb and
studied her house for a moment, noting subtle changes. The snapdragons had been
replaced with bold orange and gold chrysanthemums. A large un-carved pumpkin
squatted beside the bottom step like a soldier guarding the castle gate.
The flower
baskets were gone. A painted wooden sign hung on short chains from the hooks. A
fairytale castle glittered at one end of the sign; a good likeness of the big
white cat stared at him from the other. The words Do you believe in magic? If
so, welcome. If not, go jump in the moat! filled the space between the
artwork.
He smiled. The
words were typical of his experience with Cora Merryweather. They gave him
courage to climb out of his car and start up the short walk.
Although there
was no excuse for the way he’d frightened and manhandled Cora, he owed her an
apology and an explanation. She must have sensed there was more to the
situation than she knew. Why else would she have failed to press charges
against him? He owed her thanks for that, too.
She believed he
considered her to be a fake, a con artist. She damned well deserved to know the
truth of the matter. It would take real magic for her to find it in her heart
to forgive him, but she’d made him believe in magic.
Tom took the
steps two at a time. A loud meow
brought him up short. The big white cat lay on the porch swing cushion as if he
hadn’t moved in all this time. Deep blue eyes squeezed shut and a purr rumbled
from his chest. Tom stroked the big animal’s head with one cautious finger. The
purr grew louder.
He desperately
wanted to start over with Cora. At first he’d told himself she was only
important because she was the one he’d been afraid to hope for, a person who
could really communicate with the dead. Someone who proved life continued
beyond this earthly plane, something he’d never believed until now. Someone who
could help him say goodbye to his wife and little girl, tell them how sorry he
was that he’d been unable to control the van when their front tire blew on the
Cedar River Bridge. Tell them he would have gladly traded his life for theirs.
All that was
true, but he found himself thinking about Cora constantly. The way her hips
swayed when she walked. The way she’d climbed on her chair to make herself
taller. The way her storm-cloud-colored eyes sparked when she was angry. Her
flowery scent.
Taking the
cat’s change of heart as a good sign, he squared his shoulders, faced Cora’s
shiny red door and turned the bell key. The hollow sound jangled his nerves.
The door opened
and a disheveled Cora blinked up at him. She wore faded jeans and a dirty pink
Iowa Hawkeyes tee-shirt. A dusty rag was clutched in one hand.
She raised her
arm and sneezed twice into her shirtsleeve. “I figured you’d turn up sooner or
later. You’re not the type to leave well enough alone.” She looked tired and
cranky and sexy as hell.
He felt his
mouth stretch into a grin. “Has anyone ever told you you’re one hot medium?”
Her eyes
widened and her brows lifted in apparent surprise.
He pressed the
advantage. “Everything you told me that day was spot on. There was no way you
could have known my real name, or about Gracie’s bear.”
When her gray
eyes turned to velvet, he plunged into the apology he’d prepared, ready to
shove his foot in the door if the shock wore off and she moved to shut him out.
“I shouldn’t have lied about my name. I shouldn’t have scared you. I definitely
shouldn’t have touched you.” He paused to clear his dry throat. “I was in no
condition to approach you or any other medium. At the time I didn’t realize how
far off the reservation I’d ventured.”
He plowed a
hand through his hair. “I swear I’ve never manhandled a woman before. I can’t
believe it happened. But it did, and I’m sorry. I’m sorry for everything.”
The silence
stretched for what seemed like forever. Then she sighed and gestured toward the
freshly painted white wicker chairs. “Let’s sit.”
A surge of
elation lightened his footsteps. After they’d taken their seats on either side
of the small table, he tried to explain the events that had driven his erratic
behavior. “My parents were both scientists. They believed in the here and now,
in living the one life that nature evolved for us the best way we can. That’s
what I believed, too, until the accident that killed my wife, Evelyn, and our
little girl, Grace. At first grief consumed me every moment of every day. Then
I found myself talking to them at home. At times I had the overwhelming sense
that they were still with me, that they heard me. At those times I found a
small measure of peace. I was desperate to believe those feelings were more
than just a part of the natural grieving process, more than just coping
mechanisms to help me make it through the pain. But I knew reality didn’t work
like that.”
He cleared his
throat. “When I couldn’t shut those feelings away, I wondered if I was going
crazy. Then a friend’s wife talked me into going to a so-called medium. I found
myself hoping for proof, for validation of my experiences. The medium would
demonstrate that there is life after death.”
The thud of the
big white cat jumping down from the swing made them both flinch. They watched
him pad over to flop at their feet. Cora leaned over to scratch the cat’s cheek
for a moment. Then she turned sideways in her chair and met Tom’s gaze. “Please
go on.”
“It was
ridiculously easy to prove the first medium was a con man.” Tom couldn’t keep
the disappointment out of his voice. “I didn’t know then what I know now. Hope
is an addictive emotion.”
“Sometimes,”
she said softly. Her eyes were full of compassion.
He nodded. “I found
another medium. And another. And another. Some were smarter than others, but I
always found a rational explanation for how they got the information they seemed
to pull out of thin air. I went through half a dozen before the hope finally
died. I made it my mission in life to discredit every medium I could find, and
I was able to do so—until you.”
He shook his
head. His gaze fell to her gold raven ring. He wasn’t proud of the fact that he
went a little crazy trying to ruin her life. “While I was on your waiting list,
I interviewed as many of your clients as I could find. Every one of them was
certain you had a supernatural gift. Not one had a bad thing to say about you. You
were warmhearted, kind, patient. Hell, your rates were even reasonable. And
you knew things no one else could know, like how Mrs. Donovan had gone to her
laundry room the morning of her reading and breathed in her dead husbands scent
from his favorite sweatshirt. Crazy obscure knowledge that could only be
explained by your incredible psychic gift.”
His laugh
sounded bitter, even to himself. “The more I learned about Cora Merryweather,
the more determined I became to prove you were nothing but a crook with a
pretty face.” He forced himself to glance at her face to read her reaction.
She tucked a
strand of hair behind one ear and gave him a tentative smile, a smile that lit
up her eyes from within. A smile he didn’t deserve.
“I became
obsessed with you. I spent hours every evening doing online research, sometimes
forgetting to eat or sleep. I stopped going out except to work and buy
groceries. Just before my appointment date, my boss put me on a leave of absence
from work. I didn’t care.” Looking back on that time, he found it hard to
remember the details of what he’d done.
“Grief can do
strange things to a person,” Cora said. “It will tear you apart if you let it.”
His throat
tightened. He couldn’t look at her.
“By the time
the day of my reading arrived, I had nothing to work with: no evidence of fraud,
no dissatisfied customers, only my crazy convictions.” Tom sighed. “I was
terrified to hope again. Another disappointment would have killed me. The
moment we met, my instincts told me you were genuine, a good person doing good
work. But if I was wrong about that…” He looked away from her stricken
expression. “I’m not proud of my cowardice.”
Cora slipped
out of her seat and knelt beside him. He caught a whiff of her flowery scent
and his blood heated. She cupped his jaw in her small, strong hand and forced
him to meet her gaze.
“You are not a
coward, Tom.” Her voice and eyes held conviction. “You’re here, aren’t you?
You’ve faced your demons, admitted your mistakes, asked for forgiveness. You’ve
changed your worldview in a way few people are capable of doing.”
Her words gave him courage to hope. He turned his head and pressed his lips her warm,
soft palm. “Can you find it in your heart to forgive me?”
Her eyes turned
to smoldering charcoal. “That depends,” she said. “How hot do you think I am?”
He spent the
rest of the day showing her.
© 2013 Sarah Raplee All rights reserved
© 2013 Sarah Raplee All rights reserved
Love it! Great story!
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you enjoyed the story, Diana.
ReplyDeleteSarah,
ReplyDeleteLove the picture of the cat...and the story. Hope can be addictive. I'm glad Tom was able to move from hope to a real relationship with "One Hot Medium".
Great story and characters! This needs to be expanded into a book.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you enjoyed the story, Judith.
ReplyDeleteWow, Paty! Thank you for the encouragement.
ReplyDelete