know by now that Nicole Campbell of Trust Me is in the process of being prosecuted by the CPS for fraud, she said. I feel for you, Mrs Haig, what’s your first name, please?
Harriet, the boy’s mother said.
I can feel you are carrying pain, Harriet, Karen Pretty said. I feel that someone full of sadness lives in this house.
Karen Pretty, eyes closed, smiled and nodded.
White, she said or maybe, Quite.
Are you going to be able to get upstairs? the boy’s mother said. Only, that’s where he is.
Where who is? Karen Pretty said still with her eyes shut.
My son. Anthony. He’s the one who’s ill, the boy’s mother said.
Yes. Somehow I sensed, Karen Pretty said, that I would be doing a tarot reading for a boy who couldn’t get down some stairs today.
She opened her eyes, looked into her shoulder bag, took something out and held it up.
I could carry him down, the boy’s mother said.
Oh no, we don’t actually need him actually bodily in the room with us, Karen Pretty said.
She unwrapped a little wooden box from inside a swatch of red silk.
I charge fifty pounds per reading, she said. But I intend not to charge you, Harriet, for today’s session. The guides have asked me not to.
The Girl Guides? the boy’s mother thought. She imagined them all in the uniforms of her own childhood, standing in a blue line all shaking their heads at Karen Pretty.
They say you will remember this kindness and repay my kindness amply in the future with your own kindness, Karen Pretty said.
No, if you don’t mind I’d much prefer to –, the boy’s mother said.
He is carrying pain, Karen Pretty suddenly said. His spirit is very strong. Is he a headstrong kind of a boy?
Well, no, the boy’s mother said.
Yes, that’s right, Karen Pretty said.
Karen Pretty and the boy’s mother sat in silence for half a minute or so. It felt like a very long time. It was long enough to feel embarrassing. Then Karen Pretty put her hand out and presented a worn pack of cards to the boy’s mother.
Your mother is going to shuffle them for you, Anthony, she said to the fireplace.
The boy’s mother blushed. She shuffled the cards and handed them back to Karen Pretty who turned one up, then the next, then the next, and laid them beside each other on her knees.
A struggle for position will end in improvement, she said pointing at the boy on top of a hill with a stick, fighting off a lot of people below him with sticks. A difficult journey to a calmer place, she said pointing at the boat full of swords in the water. A reawakening, she said pointing to the family climbing out of a grave beneath a giant set of wings. I am not going to charge you the usual £50 for this reading, she said gathering the cards and putting the pack together again.
The boy’s mother insisted. She gave Karen Pretty two folded twenties and a ten. Karen Pretty took the money and put it down on the carpet by the chair leg. She called a taxi firm on her mobile. The two women sat in silence while they waited. Karen Pretty smiled a sweet smile at the boy’s mother and shrugged her eyebrows high into her forehead. She sighed. She hummed a tune. She was patient as if patience was a part of her remit.
Peace to you, Harriet, she said when the taxi drew up outside the house.
She leaned on her crutches to get to her feet. The boy’s mother watched her back herself on to the seat of the taxi and watched the taxi drive away. She looked round the room, in which there was more than a trace of Karen Pretty’s perfume. She opened the window. She put the dining room chair back in the dining room. She went to the kitchen and came back with a wet cloth. She wiped the chair down. Then, in the sitting room, she kicked the folded money across the carpet until it disappeared under the sofa.
She went upstairs to check. He was asleep. His short out-breaths made her own breathing hurt.
That night, though she’d already undressed and got into bed, she made herself get up again and come downstairs. In the kitchen over the sink, she struck a safety match and set the two twenty pound notes and the ten alight together and held them so they burned all the way to her hand. She flushed the