Final Breath Page 13
PSYCHIC READER
Love? Career? Happiness?
Answers about Your Past, Present & Future
Ask MARCELLA-$5.00 a sitting
Eli switched off his iPod and took out his earpieces. His mother wasn't talking anymore. Now he heard some man's voice booming from the ValuCo parking lot.
He stared up at the psychic woman's sign. He certainly had some questions about his future. But the lady's name was kind of weird. Wasn't Marcella a certain breed of chicken or something? And five bucks? It sounded like a ripoff. Still, he felt sorry for the lady, because she was blind.
"For five dollars, I'll tell your future!" the woman called to him.
Startled that the lady could actually see--and she was addressing him--Eli quickly shook his head and started to move on.
"I'll give you a discount!" the woman persisted. "I'll read your fortune for only three dollars. I can see you have many questions!"
"I'm sorry, thanks anyway!" Eli replied. But he paused for a moment.
"C'mon in, and I'll give you a free reading," she called, waving him into the booth. "It's slow anyway." As she raised her voice, the old German shepherd slowly got up on its feet to see what the hubbub was about. "Sit!" Marcella said.
Eli wasn't sure if she was talking to him or the dog, but he stepped around the front counter and sat down in the folding chair across from her. It was hot in the tent booth, and smelled like cigarettes. Sitting this close to Marcella, he could see she was sweating. "When were you born?" she asked.
"August 29th, 1995," he answered.
"Virgo," she said, stubbing out her cigarette and reaching for his hand. "Your planet is Mercury. I should have known you were Virgo the minute you said, 'No thanks,' to me. You didn't want the strange lady to read your fortune. You're cautious, a classic Virgo trait. You're also intelligent, but a bit too critical of other people." She studied his hand--both sides, as if it were a piece of fish in the marketplace. "Relax," she said, focusing on his palm now. "You have a long life line, but there are several breaks--many different lives. You'll be doing some traveling in the near future..."
Eli wondered if that meant they'd be moving back to Chicago soon. Or was that just some standard line she gave everyone?
"You're going through a lot of changes right now, difficult times, but you should be okay."
Once again, he wondered if she was really seeing something, or if she was giving him the same reading she'd use on any teenager. Lots of changes, difficult times, well, sure, duh.
She looked up from his palm and into his eyes.
It made Eli nervous to be scrutinized like this. He was aware every time he blinked. The German shepherd, curled up on the floor, wagged his tail and it slapped against Eli's feet.
This close, he could see Marcella's eyes narrowing behind the dark glasses. "You're an only child, aren't you?"
He nodded.
She kept staring at him. "You have three letters in your first name," she said finally.
Eli felt the hair stand on the back of his neck. "Yes. My name's Eli."
She just nodded, very matter-of-fact. Then she held her hand directly over his head for a few moments. "You're in touch with the spirit world, aren't you?" she asked.
Eli hesitated before he said anything. He thought about the ghost--or maybe ghosts--in their apartment; the former occupant who killed her teenage son and then herself.
"Yes--yes, you are...very spiritual," she said, answering for him. She suddenly pulled her hand back, as if she'd touched something extremely hot. The German shepherd lifted his head from the ground for a moment.
"What is it?" Eli asked. "Do you see something that's going to happen to me in the future?"
"It's been happening to you for a while now. But you've been very secretive about it."
Eli shifted a bit in the folding chair. What was he being secretive about? He wondered if she was talking about all the time he spent whacking off lately. Maybe she could see that he was a major pervert or something. He broke eye contact with her to glance at the people passing by Marcella's booth. He saw these two older teenage girls pass by. They glanced at him, whispered something to each other, and then laughed. Eli felt embarrassed. He turned his attention back to Marcella.
He figured she was just jerking him around, waiting for him to reveal something about himself so she could claim she'd seen his aura or something. "I don't know what you're talking about," he said finally. "What do you think has been happening to me?"
"You already know, Eli," Marcella said, staring at him from behind those dark glasses. She took hold of his hand again. "Someone dead is communicating with you."
"I have one last question here--and it's for Sydney Jordan!" Gil Sessions announced, checking an index card. Gil, the host of PM Magazine, was the MC at this event. After everyone had their brief "it's great to be here" speech, they had to answer questions certain audience members had written down ahead of time. As he read off the queries, Gil asked the questioner to raise his or her hand. But only about half of those people were still in the area. The rest had obviously lost interest in the celebrity appearances and wandered into the store or to the fun fair in the neighboring lot. It made the interview session pretty pointless, but Sydney, Terri Tatum of What's Cooking, Seattle?, and the obnoxious weatherman from Channel 6 had bravely gone through the motions. Sydney had kept her responses humorous and brief.
"This question's from Tammy Milsap of Federal Way," Gil announced. "Tammy, are you out there? Tammy?"
From the audience, a pretty blond woman waved.
"Hi, Tammy, looking good!" Gil said into his handheld microphone. Then he turned to Sydney and glanced at the index card. "Sydney, Tammy would like to know: 'Are you and your family making the Seattle area your new home?'" He glanced up from the card. "Your husband is a Chicago police detective, isn't that right?"
Seated between the Channel 6 weatherman and Miss What's Cooking, Seattle? Sydney kept a smile plastered on her face and got to her feet. She moved to the standing mike at the front of the platform. She'd already developed a standard answer to questions about her recent move to Seattle sans her handsome, hero-cop husband. The topic had already come up a few times--in interviews with Seattle Magazine, The Seattle Times, and some online articles. "That's right, Gil," Sydney said into the mike. "Joe's a Chicago cop, and obviously, he doesn't work undercover."
This got a few chuckles from the crowd. Sydney scanned the sea of faces for Eli, but she didn't see him. "I'm originally from Seattle, so I've always thought of this area as my home. My son and I are here for the summer, not a bad time to escape the sweltering Chicago heat..." Sydney hated lying to all these people in front of her son. She kept expecting to see Eli's scowling face among the crowd. Instead, she saw someone else. "Um, Joe, my husband, he might be joining us next month--if he can get away from his--um, police work...."
She couldn't take her eyes off the lean, swarthy man with sunglasses and a baseball hat. He stood a few yards away. A woman directly in front of him stepped aside for a moment. Now Sydney could see his blue T-shirt--with a silver 59 on the front of it.
She froze at the microphone.
An hour ago--and thirty some-odd miles back in Seattle--she'd almost plowed into that man in her driveway. And now he was here, watching her. At least, she was almost certain it was the same man. The T-shirt was definitely the same. Had he followed them all this way from their apartment complex?
"Sydney?" Gil said into his mike. He chuckled. "Did we lose you for a second, Sydney?"
She suddenly remembered to smile. "Um, I was just thinking, Gil--how great it is to be back in the Seattle area. There's no doubt about it, the Puget Sound area is one of the most beautiful places in this great country of ours. I've really missed it. Tammy, thanks for that question."
The crowd applauded. Sydney slinked back toward her chair. She'd sounded like an idiot. This great country of ours? What, was she running for office or something?
As she sat down,
Sydney looked at the man again. Was he stalking her? Up until now, her being married to a cop had discouraged the stalker types. Then again, maybe her minor-celebrity status just hadn't warranted stalkers--until this Number 59 guy. She couldn't get over the fact that he'd followed her and Eli in their car for thirty miles. Why? She remembered his scowl as he'd passed in front of her car in the driveway. "If looks could kill..."
Sydney shifted in her chair. This guy obviously knew where they lived. He was hanging around there today. Had he been there on the night of July Fourth as well? Maybe he's the one who got inside their place. She had to remind herself to sit straight and keep smiling.
One small solace, as long as she could see the man, she knew he wasn't preying on Eli. But right now, Sydney wished she could see her son out there somewhere.
"Do you know who this dead person is?" Eli asked the psychic woman.
Gazing at him from behind her sunglasses, she held onto his hand and said nothing for a few moments.
Though the booth was open in front, no breeze came in--just heat. Eli began to sweat. Curled up under the table, her mangy dog's tail still slapped at his feet occasionally. Eli waited for Marcella to say something.
"Your father isn't--he isn't dead, is he?" she asked finally.
Eli shook his head. "No, my dad's fine."
"But he isn't with you. You're separated from him."
"Yeah," Eli replied, leaning forward in his chair. "But it's just temporary, and my dad isn't dead." He glanced at his own hand, trying to figure out what she was picking up from it. "Um, do you know who this dead person is I'm communicating with?"
Marcella touched his forehead, and her hand lingered there for a few moments. Her fingers smelled like an ashtray. Eli tried to sit still. He had a pretty good idea about this dead person. He just needed Marcella to confirm it for him.
Someone dead is communicating with you.
Eli had heard the muffled voices at night. They had seemed to come from within his bedroom walls. He'd felt the weight of some other presence sitting on his bed--or touching his cheek as he tried to fall asleep. Eli didn't need to overhear the neighbor woman talking the other day about the murder/suicide in their unit. He already knew a teenage boy had once lived in their unit--and met a violent death there.
Not long after a second night visit--during which, for a few minutes, Eli had been utterly certain someone had crept into his room--he'd finally gotten a night-light. He'd also gotten his mom to acknowledge that their apartment was indeed haunted. Not long after that, he'd bought a Frisbee and a Ouija board at a neighborhood yard sale. Real smart. In order to use either one, he needed another person. Except for his mom and his Uncle Kyle, he didn't even know anyone in Seattle. And he'd have rather been shot than be seen playing Frisbee with his mother.
His uncle wasn't a big Frisbee fan. "Eli, I'll give you ten dollars not to play Frisbee catch with you," his Uncle Kyle had told him. "That thing is a bent-back finger or a Marcia Brady broken nose just waiting to happen. I hate Frisbee."
That left the Ouija board. There wasn't much public humiliation in trying out the Ouija with his mother--in the privacy of their kitchen on a rainy afternoon a few weeks back. She asked lame questions like, "Should we go out for dinner tonight?" and "Will Eli have a girlfriend a year from now?" Both times, the Ouija's movable indicator (his mother said it was called a "planchette") gradually moved over to YES.
Then it was Eli's turn. They both had their hands on the planchette. Eli closed his eyes. "Are we going to move back to Chicago and be with Dad by August?"
The indicator didn't move. Eli opened his eyes to see his mom frowning. "Honey, I don't think it's such a good idea to ask that. I don't want you getting your hopes up."
"But I let you ask what you wanted!" he argued. "God, you're so unfair--"
"All right, all right," she sighed and rolled her eyes. "Ask it again."
Eli repeated the question, and he felt the indicator under his fingertips as it slowly inched over the board. "You're moving it," his mother said.
"I'm not, I swear!"
When the indicator ended up on YES, Eli shoved his fist in the air. "All right! We're gonna go back to Chicago and be with Dad!"
His mother winced, and shook her head again. "Eli, I told you, don't get your hopes up. This is just a game. It doesn't mean anything. Back when I was in junior high, my best friend Rachel Porter had an Ouija board. If what it told me turned out to be true, right now I'd be a millionaire, have an Olympic Gold Medal in figure-skating, and be happily married to Michael Schoeffling. This is just a game, honey."
"Who's Michael Schoeffling?" he asked, squinting.
"He played Jake in 16 Candles, and I was in love with him." She set the disc back on START again. "Go ahead, and ask another question."
Eli rested his fingertips on the planchette again, then closed his eyes. "Who is the ghost in this house? What is his or her name?"
"Nope, no way," his mother said, shaking her head and pulling her chair away from the table. "We have enough otherworldly excitement around here. I think we should just leave it alone. I'm not up for a seance right now. Let's ask it something else. Ask for the name of this girlfriend you'll have."
"What? Are you scared?" he asked, laughing.
"Yes. I don't want to stir things up with whatever's going on around here," she admitted. "Bringing a Ouija board into the equation is taking too much of a chance. I don't want to push our luck. Some people believe Ouija boards can be dangerous. That's why I think you shouldn't ask it anything too serious. Call me a chicken, I don't care."
"A minute ago you were telling me it's just a game and it doesn't mean anything."
She got up from the table. "I'm sorry. I just don't feel like summoning the dead right now. Besides, we should wrap this up anyway. If we're going out to eat, you should wash up and change your clothes."
Eli stayed up late that night. He waited until his mother had gone to bed, then he pulled out the Ouija board. He felt so sneaky, almost like he was digging out the one Playboy he owned (bestowed on him by his best friend in Chicago, Brad Reece, who had inherited it from his college-age brother) from its hiding place in his desk's bottom drawer. His mother hadn't discovered the Playboy yet. And he didn't want her discovering him summoning the dead with the Ouija. He locked his bedroom door and then set the Ouija board on the spare bed.
Eli had two twin beds in his room. He didn't think he'd be living there long enough to make any friends--at least, no one he'd know well enough to invite overnight. He wondered why his mom had wasted her money on the extra bed. There was a lava lamp on his desk, and his Homer Simpson lamp on the nightstand. From his old bedroom he had a lighted Dad's Root Beer clock, two Chicago Bears posters, and another one from the Will Farrell movie Anchorman.
Eli also had a ghost, and he wanted to know more about it.
He sat on top of the spare bed, placed the movable indicator on the board's starting point, then gently rested his fingertips on it. "Does the undead person dwelling in this house have a name?" he whispered.
Eli listened for the muffled voices. He waited for the room to get warmer--always a sign he was about to have a visit. But he didn't hear or feel anything. All he heard were the waves rolling onto the shore at the nearby beach. He must have waited at least two or three minutes before the indicator started to move. He felt a chill race through him. He wasn't moving it. He expected it to gradually move over to the YES sign. Instead it started spelling something: C-A-R-L. Then the planchette moved to GOOD BYE at the bottom of the board.
"Carl?" Eli whispered. "Your name is Carl? Are you here right now?"
He closed his eyes this time, because he didn't want to cheat. When he felt the indicator move, Eli kept his eyes shut tight--until it stopped. He glanced at the board. He thought the indicator would be on YES, but it was on the letter I. Eli's hands started to shake, but he kept his fingertips on the indicator. The planchette inched over the board again--to the letter, M, and then to the
word GOOD BYE.
"I-M?" Eli murmured. "Oh, my God, 'I am.' You're here right now. Your name is Carl, and you're here with me now. Did you die in this house?"
Eli wasn't sure if it was his imagination, but it felt as if the room was getting warmer. The planchette seemed to move on its own now. He was barely touching it. Eli watched the indicator move to YES.
Eli didn't even wait for GOOD BYE. "Did you die in this room?" he asked.
The indicator moved to YES again.
"How old were you when you died?" Eli whispered.
Then the planchette seemed to stall on him. Finally Eli gave it a nudge toward the row of numbers. He knew he was cheating, so he closed his eyes. The first number the indicator stopped on was 1. Then it moved to 4, and then GOOD BYE.
A fourteen-year-old named Carl had died in this bedroom. "How?" Eli asked. "How did you die?"
The planchette slowly skimmed across the board to the letter L, and then A. It seemed to take forever for it to move from letter to letter. After eight letters, Eli wondered if it was ever going to make sense: L-A-C-E-R-A-T-I. But the disc kept moving until it spelled out the word: L-A-C-E-R-A-T-IO-N. Then it said GOOD BYE.
Eli climbed off the bed and went to his desk. He grabbed his Webster paperback dictionary, and looked up the word. He found something under lacerate. "To tear roughly," it said.
He glanced up at his Dad's Root Beer clock and realized it was 3:40 in the morning. The bedroom didn't feel so warm anymore. Eli figured that last GOOD BYE from Carl would be for a while.
His mother was wrong about the Ouija. Instead of stirring up their ghost, that long session with the Ouija board seemed to have made Carl more docile. The next few nights went by without any otherworldly incident, though Eli felt more scared than ever--sleeping in that room where someone was murdered. He tried to get more information from the Ouija about fourteen-year-old Carl and exactly how he'd died. But it was frustrating, nothing at all like that first night. When he didn't come up with letters that spelled gibberish, Eli knew he was controlling the planchette himself. So he wasn't sure about Carl's last name, who had lacerated him, and how long ago it had happened.