A small round table sat in the center of a tiny room that wasn’t much bigger than a walk-in closet. Two chairs were pulled into either side. Candelabras—with small light bulbs rather than candles—hung from the walls and lit the dark space.
The woman from the counter snatched a package from a shelf near the door, then dropped down heavily on one of the chairs. While she unfolded the cloth parcel, Janine took the seat opposite her.
“So I’m Briar,” the woman said. She spread out the burgundy fabric across the table and pulled out the stack of cards wrapped within.
Janine watched with rapt interest as Briar shuffled the large Tarot cards. “I’m Janine.”
“Any preferences today? Standard spread or do you have a particular question?”
Though she opened her mouth to speak, she couldn’t quite get the words out. She did have questions, of course, but part of her didn’t want to voice them.
“Just about my love life, I guess.”
“Okay, let’s see how this goes...” She cut the deck a few times, then began turning cards up on the table in a pattern. Janine couldn’t make much sense of them, but then she’d never tried Tarot before.
“What’s it say?” Janine asked after Briar had studied them in silence for a few moments.
“This one,” her red-tipped fingernail tapped on a card with cup, “says you don’t know what you want with love. You had your heart broken in the past.”
That’s more than a little accurate, Janine thought, but she had to remember to stay rational. Every person has had his or her heart broken at some point—that was hardly a revelation. Unless the psychic mentioned Trish by name, she wasn’t getting too excited.
“Your heart wants what you know is wrong for you,” Briar continued. “You’ll struggle with that for awhile. And your current lover is lying to you.”
Janine swallowed hard and the hair stood up on her bare arms. She shivered a little. God, I don’t want to ask this...I don’t want to know. She didn’t think her heart could take again...but she spoke up anyway. “Is she cheating on me?”
Briar shook her head almost immediately. “No. Not yet, at least, and maybe not ever. But...I see others in your future.”
The psychic’s words stung, but Janine smiled anyway. “As long as she’s not cheating, though...”
“Well, she’s not sleeping with anyone, if that’s what you mean. But she’s keeping other people—and another life—from you.” Briar cocked her eyebrow, the stud in her brow glittering in the light. “We could do something about that, you know. Like...a little fidelity spell? Something to keep her with you? That’s doable...for a fee.”
“I...I don’t think I can afford that kind of thing...” Janine said. She glanced absently at the packet of bath salts. Five bucks for some smelly salts? Fine. But no spells—that stuff was just weird.
“Ah well,” Briar said with a sigh. “You know where to find me if you change your mind. Just don’t tell my partner in crime here—he disapproves of that kind of thing. Anyway,” her dark gaze scanned the cards again, “the outcome won’t necessarily be that bad for you and your girlfriend.”
Janine looked over the cards. In the center sat The Wheel of Fortune, though she couldn’t derive any meaning from the pictures.
“Sometimes people are fated to find their way back to one another again and again,” Briar said. “And I get that sense from...” She glanced up and put on a quick smile. “From the pair of you, of course. No worries.”
Gen fidgeted a little in her seat while she waited for Liam—the psychic guy—to shuffle the cards. He seemed to do so deliberately slowly, as if pausing to feel the weight and smoothness of each card before sliding it back into the deck.
“So I’m Genevieve,” Gen said. “Do you need to know anything about me?”
“I’d rather not,” he said, his voice cool and detached. “It would influence things.”
“Oh. Right. So...what exactly makes you a qualified psychic?”
He glanced up at her sharply and his eyes narrowed. She tried not to fidget any more than she already was.
“Fifteen years involved in various Wiccan covens, and three years as a High Priest. I’ve also been reading Tarot since well before you were born.”
“Ah, so are you one of those naked ritual, waving around an athame kind of wiccans then, or do you do actual spells and stuff?”
He rolled his eyes. “Let’s just do this reading. I don’t have time for inane questions about my religion from people like you.”
Good thing I’m not expected to tip the guy, Gen thought.
Liam quickly drew cards, one after the other, until he had a selection of them spread across the table. Gen had tried ages ago to learn Tarot, but always failed to remember what they all meant and quickly gave up. She only recognized the odd one Liam drew, and even then, she had no idea what the significance of them was.
“This,” Liam pointed to a card with a woman in blue, “represents you in the spread.”
The High Priestess, Gen read the label at the bottom, which faced her.
“She looks pretty bad ass,” Gen said. “So that’s a good thing?”
Liam frowned. His lips parted, as if to speak, but he said nothing for several long moments. “It’s reversed.”
“Uh...so that’s bad?”
“It means...” His gaze moved over the cards for a moment, then darted up to hers. He switched focus again to stare at the cards once more, and Gen got the distinct impression that he intentionally avoided her eyes. “It means you don’t know something about yourself. About the things you’re capable of.”
“How about that one?” Gen thrust her finger on a card that sat at the top of a row.
Liam gave her a cold glare and looked pointedly at her finger. She shrank back a bit and gave him an apologetic smile for touching the cards.
“The Wheel of Fortune,” Liam said. “Consequences and possibilities...there’s a lot of movement and change around you. Things are coming that you can’t escape. The Wheel of Fortune is, in essence, representative of your destiny.”
Gen studied the card again, and realized it was surrounded with different cards from the sword suit. “That doesn’t look good.”
“You’ll have a lot of obstacles to overcome.”
Her gaze settled on one card with several swords protruding out of a dead man. “You don’t say. Maybe we should go back to The High Priestess.”
Liam gathered the deck up suddenly. “Maybe we should call it the day. The cards aren’t speaking to me well today—this one will be on the house.”
The crappy psychic visit had Gen feeling shivers up and down her spine. Clutching her sigil book tightly, she didn’t argue with Liam, but instead exited the room. Out in the main area of the shop, she found Janine browsing a rack of necklaces by the door with a paper gift bag labeled, “Curio Killed the Cat” in hand.
Guess I’d better hurry... Genevieve dropped her book on the counter and pulled out her wallet. “Liam said he couldn’t read the cards and it was on the house.”
The dark-haired tattoo girl at the counter glanced back toward the private rooms, but Liam hadn’t followed Gen out. With a heavy sigh, she punched in the price of the book and didn’t argue about the reading.
“Can I ask you something?” Gen said. “About the Tarot?”
“Sure. First, gimme fifteen thirty-five.”
Gen passed her a twenty. “In my cards, there was The Wheel of Fortune with a bunch of swords around it. And then he said I was represented by The High Priestess, and she was reversed. What does that mean?”
The woman glanced up quickly, her dark eyes wide with worry. Her fingers trembled as she handed Genevieve her change.
Oh god, it means something bad...
“Your power...it’s significant. But dark. You’re going to do something horrible, but you don’t even know it yet.”
Gen felt hyperaware of everything suddenly; the air she pulled into her lungs with every breath, the weight of the change in her hand, and the chills running along her skin.
Things are coming that you can’t escape... Genevieve swallowed hard, stuffed the money into her pocket, then grabbed the book and ran to meet Janine at the door.
Just as the two girls left, Liam approached Briar at the counter. “What was—”
As she turned to answer his question before he could get much further, the bell over the door chimed. Both looked towards the entrance.
A woman marched in, heavy heels thumping loudly on the hardwood. Long black skirts swirled around her legs, and dyed red hair—complete with fake extensions—mimicked similar movement around her shoulders. She stormed to the counter and slammed a piece of paper on the surface. Rage danced within her dark eyes.
“Hey Billie,” Briar said with a grin. “What’s up?
Wilhelmina Raven glared at her. “Next time, I’m phoning the police.”
“I don’t know what your problem is today,” Liam said coolly, “but—”
The intruder held up the paper, which Liam took and read aloud. “’Out on my broomstick—try Curio Killed the Cat down the street.’” His gaze moved to Briar, who looked up at him innocently. She doubted he believed she was blameless in this, but he didn’t dare reprimand her in their rival’s presence.
“I’m very sorry,” he began.
“And we have no idea how that happened,” Briar interrupted. “Though maybe if you got said broomstick out of your ass, your customers wouldn’t end up here.”
“I mean it!” Wilhelmina spat. “Don’t do it again!” She stomped off again without another word, slamming the door and leaving the poor bell shaking above it.
Liam turned to speak, no doubt with a lecture in mind, but Briar raised a hand to stop him. “Hey, at least my sign got a couple of new people here. Not like it did any good, with you giving readings on the house.”
“I don’t like reading Tarot, which is why I generally don’t,” Liam said. “The girl left in a hurry, though, so what did she ask you?”
“Oh, that. Yeah, she wanted to know what The Reversed High Priestess meant.”
Liam frowned. “I already told her that. She didn’t know the things she was capable of. What did you tell her?”
“Uh...” Briar grinned and looked away. “That she was going to do something really evil.”
Liam closed his eyes and shook his head dramatically. “What is wrong with you? Why do you have to make up things like that?”
Briar shrugged. “I just like fucking with the tourists. I’m sure she won’t take it too seriously.”