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Cassandra (standard:fantasy, 1600 words) | |||
Author: GXD | Added: Oct 16 2008 | Views/Reads: 3387/2127 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Not every clairvoyant has the insight of a Chinese fortune cookie. Cassandra, of course, is the exception. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story Tarot, astrology, voodoo, love potions, alchemy, thaumaturgy, divination, sorcery. We used to carry out rituals and conjure up spells to hex our teachers and came away with the best grades in the class. Before graduation, Marcia managed to read the palm of her Sunday School teacher and got pregnant. That's when she decided to specialize in forecasting. Next year, I was inducted by the Army and Marcia began collecting crystal balls in earnest. Most of our classmates went on to college. They became Marcia's loyal clientèle. Now, twenty years later, we both had changed little. "There's only one way," she said. "You've got to go after it yourself." It sounded good for about ten seconds, then I realized that I couldn't take a step without her. If she looked into the crystal it would keep me on track.... We ended up planning the neatest gambit since I lost those two fingers. She would look into the ball and find some way to get into that room. Next, she would take a good look round in every direction and describe the landmarks to me. With a few discreet questions, I could be in the file cabinet in two hours. All I had to do was lift out the money, bring it to the nearest bank and open an account. We could split it and have the bank transfer to our personal accounts any time. It didn't work out exactly that way. When I got to the alley she described, it was jam-packed with people. They all seemed to be men, with black bowler hats and capes, wearing brown trousers. I asked an official- looking gentleman and he told me, "About an hour ago, it was. They took him away." "He must have been pretty important, to attract a crowd that big," I acknowledged, "What did he do?" The driver of the milk truck stared down at me, disbelief written in his eyes. "He owed them all money," he said, then got up in his truck and drove away. I could see there was no way of getting in today. Amazing! The neighborhood fitted Marcia's description perfectly. All I had to do was to keep an eye on the office to make sure some vandal didn't get the money first. By nightfall, things were quiet: I crossed the alley and slipped in the open garage door. It smelled of oil inside. A minute later, my credit card flipped open the lock and I was looking at a room with a file cabinet and a desk. An instant later, the third drawer yielded a worn leather Gladstone bag. The light was too dim to reveal how much money was in it. Reaching out with both hands -- presuming that the bag was heavy -- I slipped my fingers underneath, scraping my knuckles on the rough wooden drawer. The bag was not physical, not tangible. In short, it simply wasn't there. That meant the money wasn't there. The whole thing was a mirage. A flash of light, bright as a skyrocket, lit up the room around me. It was as if a giant hand had just struck a match. The bagful of money vanished. It was only a projection! Now I had good reason to doubt: was the cabinet real? The desk? The room? If it vanished too, what would happen to me. I rubbed my skinned knuckles. That instant, the match went out. Regarding the vixen, this actually turned out to be another story altogether. A dark-haired woman came into my life at 3:45 p.m. on Tuesday, May nineteenth. She stepped off flight 44, handed me her bags and hailed a taxi. "Mom!" I yelled after her in vain. "I'll meet you at the house." At least she had her own key. I tossed the bags into the trunk of my car. They say a woman's guess is much more accurate than a man's certainty. Well, in this case -- however much a vixen my mother might be -- I wouldn't make any special effort to keep the money out of her hands. When and if the money ever appeared. This district where I lived was the most charming in town. It nestled in the shadow of a very tall sheer cliff, overlooking the city to the East. Its streets were paved with hammered stone, and crowned to drain away the torrents of rain now and then. The foundations of this house were formed by carving a huge basement into the living rock, then carving a moat around it. Huge rocks, chipped to nestle into each other, made up the walls. Skillfully rippled red clay tiles formed a waterproof interlocking roof. A thousand earthquakes into the future, this house would still be standing. Marcia crept up behind and rested her arm on my shoulder. She loved this house even more than me. "Courage is your greatest present need," she counseled. "But life to you is a dashing and bold adventure. The star of riches is shining upon you. Never falter. You may attend a party where strange customs prevail. Learn all you can." The dark-haired vixen joined us in the kitchen. "It's time to eat. Where are the servants?" “Would you like some homemade coffee cake? I'll put on some coffee.” I replied. When I left for work the next day, Marcia and my mother were sitting cross-legged on a Coptic rug flashing Tarot cards at each other. "The wicked knight," I thought I heard Mom say. I closed the door discreetly. Seattle, October 15, 2008 Gerald X. Diamond Copyright 1992 Tweet
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