“They better,” she said. “And I’ll prove it to you. I’ll get a reading and then a receipt.”
“Whatever you say,” Dylan said with a laugh.
“And when I do,” Abby continued, “you’ll have to be our servants for a day.”
“Aren’t we already?” he asked.
“And if you don’t, then you’ll have to be ours.” Jake smiled.
“I guarantee
My friends cuddled and studied with their boyfriends as I imagined what my fortune might be.
I gazed outside. I could see the moon hanging in the cloudless blue sky. It looked lonely, staring back at me. I wondered if it thought the same of me.
After school, Ivy, Abby, and I left the suburbs for the more rural side of Legend’s Run. Farms, lakes, and vineyards filled the landscape. I always thought the Westside had more character. However, Ivy and Abby were only interested in the strip and indoor malls, restaurants, and fast food in the burbs. Even the yuppies didn’t stop in Riverside but rather pedaled through it on the bike trail on weekend outings. As the years passed, I had no reason to venture there on my own.
As we came into Riverside, antiques shops, used car lots, and neighborhoods without homeowners associations lined the terrain. The businesses had left for the suburbs, and the downtown wasn’t as viable as it once was. However, a small town remained, including a hardware store, bars, flea and farmers’ markets, a biker bar, and Gerald’s Garage — where Gerald still pumped the gas.
“Let’s not run out of gas!” Ivy said.
“It’s not like we’re on the other side of the earth,” I said. “We could walk back.”
“Are you crazy? Walk?” Abby asked, horrified. This comment was coming from the jayvee champion track star. I guess it just mattered
“Jake said it’s dangerous down by Riverside. So far, it doesn’t look that bad to me.”
“I think it’s beautiful,” I said, gazing into a wooded area. “All these trees and hills.”
“But where do people who live here shop?” Ivy asked. “I haven’t seen a mall for miles.”
“Yes,” Abby said. “And where is a community pool? There aren’t even any health clubs here.”
“I guess you don’t need a treadmill if you are plowing a field.” Ivy laughed.
“They have cars, just like us,” I defended. “If they want to go to a mall, they drive just like we do.”
We continued on and passed a wooded area that ran along the road for about half a mile. Then we came into the small downtown area.
On the tiny main street many shops were vacant, but the ones that remained — a tattoo and piercing parlor, a hair salon, and a florist — seemed to be thriving.
“We could get a tat,” Abby said. “I think a tramp stamp would be really cool. Dylan would love it.”
“No one is coming at me with a needle,” Ivy said. “Not even for a guy.”
I imagined the tattoos my friends would have: Ivy’s would be a designer label drawn on her arm, and Abby might have one of a volleyball.
Ivy parked her car at the meter in front of Penny for Your Thoughts.
“I don’t have change,” Ivy said. Ivy was used to paying for things with plastic. I don’t even think she owned a coin purse.
“How much should I put in?” Abby asked, rummaging through her purse.
“I don’t know how long it takes to get a reading. I’ve never done it before,” Ivy said. “Is it longer than a massage or a pedi?”
I shrugged my shoulders. I’d had a pedicure several years ago for my sister’s graduation. I was so relaxed and zoned out I forgot how long it took.
I fished some change out of my hoodie pocket and fed the meter.
Penny for Your Thoughts was quite the curiosity shop. Candles, crystals, jewelry, books, and the smell of incense filled the one-room store.
I examined books on healing, numerology, astrology, angels, and interpreting dreams. There were so many different paranormal ideas, I wasn’t sure how a person decided which one to believe in.
I did like the mood of the shop. It was very calm and relaxing. Soothing mandolin, harp, and flute music played over the sound of a roaring ocean. The store was a nice change of pace from our frenetic high school, with lockers slamming and students yelling across the hallway. I was just hoping I could stay awake long enough to get my fortune told.
“Doesn’t anyone run this place?” Abby asked. She got irritated if she wasn’t immediately greeted like a VIP upon entering a store or restaurant.
“If she was truly psychic, wouldn’t she know we were here?” I whispered.
“Maybe she does and doesn’t want to talk to us,” Abby said pensively.
But I was suspicious. Maybe Dr. Meadows wasn’t going to come out right away so she could overhear our discussions. Or maybe she was watching us on a hidden camera.
Abby perused books on witches, and Ivy headed straight for the jewelry displays. Any gift shop was a potential sale to her. She was sizing up some aquamarine earrings that matched her eyes. I thought they were beautiful, and if I had more money, I, too, would have loved a pair. I caressed the glassy stones, trying to figure out how long it would take for me to buy them. Ivy didn’t even bat an eyelash.
“That’s not why we are here,” Abby said, taking the earrings from Ivy and returning them to the jewelry stand.
Abby rapidly tapped a bell on the counter.
“Maybe she’s back there casting a spell or something,” she said. “Or making potions.”
No one came out to wait on us. We were certain the store was open but not sure how long we should stay. My friends were often impatient — but not this time.
“We can leave,” I offered.
“Not without my receipt,” Abby said. “If you think I’m going to be Dylan’s servant for a week… I can only imagine the horrors he’ll ask of me. Clean his locker? Forget it. Besides, I’ve been thinking all day of things I can have him do. I really could use a back massage.”
“And Jake can return those skirts I bought at the mall,” Ivy said.
I wondered what I’d ask Nash to do as my servant. Carry my books? My backpack worked fine. Do my homework? I wasn’t a cheater. Clean my room? He never came over. Then it occurred to me. The one thing that would really make Nash squirm. I’d have him host a party and make him invite a Westsider.
“You’re right,” I said. “We need to get those receipts!”
Now I tapped the bell.
A woman appeared, startling all of us.
“I’m so sorry to keep you girls waiting. I hope you had a chance to look around. What brings you in today?”
“Are you Dr. Meadows?” Abby asked.
“Yes, have you heard of me?” she asked incredulously.
Dr. Meadows’s appearance wasn’t that of a typical doctor. She didn’t wear a lab coat or scrubs. She also didn’t look like a witch doctor. She did, however, have long gray hair tied back in a ponytail, and she wore an oversized silk blouse, a floor-length scrunchie skirt, and layered beaded necklaces. I guessed she was in her fifties.
Dr. Meadows had a gentle energy around her. Not that I was an aura reader, but I imagined hers to be a mixture of warm and bright hues.
“We’d like our fortunes told,” Abby said.
“You mean an interpretive reading?” she asked as if fortune-telling was so “yesterday.” “Have you had one before?”
Again, I figured she should already know this, but I just shook my head.
Dr. Meadows turned the sign hanging on the door from OPEN to CLOSED.
“We can’t have any distractions,” she said. “Let’s go into the reading room.”
The reading room was painted indigo blue, with a hanging teardrop chandelier. There was a square table