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Teenage Psychic on Campus

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by Pamela Woods-Jackson




  Table of Contents

  Excerpt

  Praise for Pamela Woods-Jackson

  Teenage Psychic on Campus

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  A word from the author…

  Thank you for purchasing this publication of The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

  The attractive older woman Gary had been talking to reached over and hugged Gary’s shoulders. Just as I was thinking how creepy it was for a woman her age to be so friendly with a guy in his teens, one of those mini-flicks went through my mind. I relaxed a little. “Is this your mom, Gary?”

  “Brenda Riddell,” she said as she turned to me with a smile that lit up her face.

  Despite Annabeth and Sean’s efforts, I wasn’t the least interested in Gary, but I liked his mother immediately.

  Gary ran his fingers through his dripping bangs. “Come on, Mom, I gotta hit the shower.”

  Brenda nodded but stopped to speak to some other adults as Gary playfully punched Sean in the arm. “Thanks for the ride, Sean. And for bringing”—he glanced at me with either disdain or indifference, I couldn’t tell which—“friends.” With that, he gave Sean the universal fist to ear signal for “call me” and turned to leave.

  But then he stopped mid-stride. I watched in amazement as Gary stared at a tree, then put his hands on his hips and spoke to…the tree? Huh?

  I grabbed Annabeth’s arm and pulled her back. “What’s that guy doing?”

  Annabeth followed my gaze and saw the same thing I did, but seemed a lot less concerned. She shrugged. “Rehearsing?”

  Rehearsing? After the play? That made no sense.

  Praise for Pamela Woods-Jackson

  CERTAINLY SENSIBLE, by Pamela Woods-Jackson, has been selected to receive the Literary Classics Seal of Approval.

  ~*~

  “This author is going on my must-read list.”

  ~Theresa Joseph

  ~*~

  “Endearing to the core! CONFESSIONS OF A TEENAGE PSYCHIC is a great read for anyone looking to reminisce with the days of high school or anyone still in high school, looking for someone to relate to. Caryn Alderson is just your typical teenager…or wait, is she?”

  ~LAS Reviewer

  Teenage Psychic on Campus

  by

  Pamela Woods-Jackson

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales, is entirely coincidental.

  Teenage Psychic on Campus

  COPYRIGHT © 2017 by Pamela Woods-Jackson

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author or The Wild Rose Press, Inc. except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

  Contact Information: info@thewildrosepress.com

  Cover Art by Tina Lynn Stout

  The Wild Rose Press, Inc.

  PO Box 708

  Adams Basin, NY 14410-0708

  Visit us at www.thewildrosepress.com

  Publishing History

  First Fantasy Rose Edition, 2017

  Print ISBN 978-1-5092-1435-8

  Digital ISBN 978-1-5092-1436-5

  Published in the United States of America

  Dedication

  To Nancy,

  family friend and psychic medium,

  who encouraged me to continue writing about Caryn

  Chapter 1

  I picked up my ringing phone off the bedside table without bothering to check the caller ID. One of the things I’ve always been able to do is predict phone calls, a “parlor trick” as Mom calls it. I was just five years old when I told her Dad was on the phone and she said the phone hadn’t rung. And then it did, and of course it was him. But there are times when I really should check to see who’s on the line. Like now.

  “Hey, Caryn. How are ya?”

  My heart skipped a beat, my pulse started to race, and I got butterflies on top of butterflies in my stomach. “Uh, oh, hi, Quince,” I gulped, hoping he couldn’t hear the nervousness in my voice.

  “I just wanted to say ‘hey,’” he said. “I thought maybe we could…”

  Meet up somewhere? Have a date? Get back together? I was freaking out, barely able to catch my breath.

  “…be friends, you know? You busy this afternoon?”

  Good news, bad news I guess. He said the dreaded F word—friends—but the fact that he wanted to get together with me after all these months was encouraging. “Um, well, I have some clients, but…”

  Suddenly the tone of Quince’s voice changed. “Yeah, right. Never mind. Have a nice summer.” And he hung up.

  Tears sprang to my eyes as I plunged into the pits of despair, a place where I’d spent a lot of time lately. Before I could collect myself, my phone rang again. “Hi Annabeth!” I sang out, trying to sound chipper.

  “Hey, Caryn.” Annabeth paused. “What’s wrong?” It’s like she’s the psychic.

  I couldn’t answer. All that came out was a squeak and a sniffle.

  Annabeth let out a sigh. “You wanna talk about it?”

  “Um, well…” I tapped my foot on the floor.

  Annabeth knew I’d been in a funk for months. I may be psychic, but my skills don’t extend to my own life, so I was as blindsided as any other girl would have been when my boyfriend dumped me. Nothing says Merry Christmas like the guy you care about showing up on social media with his arm around a gorgeous girl at some holiday frat party.

  Annabeth kept telling me I needed to snap out of it, but it wasn’t so easy getting over that kind of hurt. And it hurt a lot. So I couldn’t tell her that Quince called and messed with my head again or she might strangle him.

  “Uh, Caryn? You there? Did I catch you at work or something?” Annabeth asked.

  “No, I’m still at home.” I shoved aside some t-shirts that needed to go downstairs to the laundry and sat down on my unmade bed. Before heading to work I needed to clean up my bedroom, but as I glanced around at the untidiness, I was still proud of the DIY decorating job I did. My stepdad was a good sport when he gave up his home office. I painted the formerly gray walls a pale green, picked out a coverlet with peace signs all over it, and hung more peace signs on the built-in white bookshelves that doubled as a headboard.

  George’s house was the nicest place I’d ever lived. Back when I was a new transfer at Rosslyn High, my mom was struggling financially, what with opening her New Age Bookstore in eclectic Rosslyn Village in Indianapolis and trying to keep it afloat. My bio dad contributed when he could, but he’s a struggling actor, so Mom and I lived in a small apartment close to both the store and my school, and cut corners every way possible. Then one day a pharmacist named George Desmond came into the store. He kept coming back and coming back, and I was pretty sure he wasn’t there to buy books. One thing led to another, one date led to another, and finally he proposed to my mom! They got married a few months later and we moved into his house in Rosslyn Village.

  With more financial stability than we’d ever known, Mom was finally able to afford to buy both of us cell phones and laptops. Uncle Omar, who’s sort of my spirit guide
, was duly impressed. He rubbed his hands together in excitement when I stood behind the check-out counter at Mom’s store and booted up my new computer for the first time.

  “Let’s get us some Twitter followers!” he exclaimed.

  Of course, no one but me heard him, so I got a few weird looks from store customers when I burst out laughing. My mother’s half-brother may be long dead, but his sense of humor didn’t die with him.

  Annabeth was getting impatient on the other end of the line, waiting for me to answer. “Caryn?”

  “Yeah, I’m here.”

  “Girlfriend, you need to lighten up! And I know just how to change your mood. You up for some fun?”

  Annabeth Walton has been a great friend to me, not only these last few months after the breakup with Quince, but before that when I was the new kid in town. It was kinda weird how we met, because she went to a private school up in the ritzy suburb of Belford while I attended an urban school in Indianapolis. Who knew a preppy girl like Annabeth could be so into the paranormal?

  I stretched out on the bed. “What did you have in mind? I do have to work today, you know. I’ve got back-to-back readings set up.” The very same readings that so unnerved Quince that he hung up on me.

  “But it’s summer break, Caryn,” she said with a hint of whine in her voice. “And then you’ll be off to Texas to visit your dads and won’t be back till it’s time to start college. We need to make the most of our time before you go.”

  “Mom’s got the time slots all booked at the store and I can’t disappoint my clients. Besides, I need the money.”

  “Why do you need the money?” Annabeth asked. “You’ve got three dads pitching in to finance your college education!”

  Some kids I know barely have one parent, so I was lucky to have four—Mom, George, my bio dad Guy McNamara, and his partner Michael Ferguson. They all get along great, too. Dad and Michael even flew to Indianapolis for Mom’s wedding, and Dad walked her down the aisle! All four of them are contributing to my college expenses, and I also scored some scholarship money to study journalism. But I was still gonna need spending money. Besides, being psychic is who I am, a gift I was born with. Giving readings made me feel like I was helping people.

  “I get done with my clients around six,” I told Annabeth. “So what did you have in mind?”

  Annabeth giggled. “How ’bout some Shakespeare in the Park?”

  I could visualize the whole setting, and not just in my imagination. I could see what I knew to be the real thing in my head: the outdoor gazebo-turned-stage, decorated with what was supposed to be a forest setting. I saw audience members sitting on blankets or lawn chairs, and then I got a quick “hit” of Annabeth’s boyfriend Sean Paxton shaking hands with one of the actors. “This Sean’s idea?”

  Annabeth sighed. You’d think she’d give up trying to sneak things past me. “Yeah, okay, his best friend Gary is playing Puck. Mid—”

  “Midsummer Night’s Dream,” I finished for her. When she groaned, I said, “Oh, come on, we read that play in English class junior year.”

  “Well,” Annabeth sniffed, “Gary’s cute. And it’s been months since you and Quince…”

  Now it was my turn to groan. Loudly. “Oh, please, Annabeth. No more fixups.” In the months since Quince and I broke up, Annabeth had been relentlessly trying to find me a new Mr. Right. But the guys always seemed to fall into one of two categories: the ones who got creeped out thinking I was reading their minds, which I wasn’t because I can’t, or the ones who wanted an impromptu reading and then headed off to find the girl I told them they’d soon be meeting. So no thanks, I was done with dating. Besides, talking briefly today with the former love of my life was like breaking open a wound that had just barely scabbed over.

  “Too late,” she sang out. “I’ll pick you up at seven.” And she hung up before I could object.

  “Gary’s interesting,” said a disembodied voice.

  I still jumped sometimes when Uncle Omar popped in unannounced. “I’ve asked you not to do that.” I turned around to see my dead uncle, looking solid like he always did, standing in the corner of my bedroom leaning against the wall, his biceps bulging out of the army fatigue t-shirt he was wearing when he died. His dog tags caught the light flowing in through my bedroom window. Too bad he died so young, because he was a handsome guy, what with that blond hair and those soulful eyes.

  Uncle Omar shrugged. “If you’d keep your antennae up I wouldn’t surprise you.”

  I rolled my eyes. Being tuned in twenty-four/seven would never allow me any peace and quiet. I crossed my arms and glared back at him. “What about Gary?”

  “You’ll see.” And just like that, he vanished into the ether.

  Today I was scheduled to read a new client who called the store and talked to my mom. He asked a lot of questions about me, about the whole process, but she assured him that I was the best.

  The client was right on time. Mom greeted him and then walked him back to me in the storeroom where I have a table with my grandmother’s white lace tablecloth, two chairs and a low-wattage lamp. Since it was Saturday, he was dressed casually in khakis and a navy golf shirt with the Polo logo prominently displayed. Professional, well-educated, I told myself.

  “Hi,” I said, reaching over to shake his hand. “I’m Caryn.”

  “I’ll just leave you to it,” Mom said.

  Once we were alone the client looked me over. “Uh, nice to meet you,” he mumbled.

  “And you are…?”

  He blushed. “Oh, sorry. Ned.”

  I smiled, hoping to put him at ease. “I guess you were expecting someone more…”

  “…mature?” he offered.

  I shrugged. “Yeah.” I looked him in the eye. “I’m eighteen in a couple of weeks, and off to college in the fall if that helps.” Apparently it didn’t, judging by the expression on his face. “I may be young,” I reassured him, “but I’ve been a psychic medium all my life.”

  Ned’s eyes widened. “You’re a medium? I thought you were, uh, that is, I hoped to find out, I mean, just ask about…” His eyes darted around the space like he was looking for a crystal ball or something.

  Ned was one of those clients that needed clarification about what I do before I could help him. And let’s face it, there was a lot of misinformation floating around in cyber-space, not to mention all the skeptics who made fun of people like me. “A person can be psychic and not be a medium,” I explained, “and there are mediums who aren’t psychic, but I’m both. So one way or another I hope I can help you sort out your questions. If that’s what you still want.”

  “Well, I’m here, so…” His voice trailed off.

  “How did you hear about me?” I motioned to the chair opposite me, and after giving the cane seating some serious study, he sat down on the edge. I don’t know how he didn’t fall out.

  “One of my law partners. Harvey Walton?”

  Okay, I got it. This guy worked with Annabeth’s dad. I guess she must have convinced her father that I was the real deal if he was recommending me to people.

  Still, Ned looked dubious. He sighed and ran his fingers through his thick, blond hair. “Harvey said you might be able to tell me…”

  I held up my hand. “I don’t want to know anymore, if you don’t mind. It skews my readings.”

  He shrugged.

  I closed my eyes to concentrate. When I opened them, a lovely woman was standing behind Ned. She appeared to be in her seventies, stylishly dressed in a lavender silk suit, her graying hair framing her face in a short bob, and a huge diamond ring on her left hand. Unfortunately, she was holding a lit cigarette, causing me to flinch and fan away the invisible smoke.

  “Did a family member recently pass? I’m hearing the name Olivia?”

  Ned’s eyes got wide. “My grandmother. She died about a year ago.”

  “From lung cancer, right?”

  Ned seemed stunned. “How did you know?”

  “She’s here.
” I watched as Ned did a visual search of the room. “I see symbols and smell things other people can’t.”

  “Now that we’ve settled that,” Olivia said with a frown as she tossed the cigarette into the ether, “get him to talk about his son.”

  “Olivia says you have a son,” I told him. Ned nodded as he eyed me suspiciously. Now sometimes I get information like a little mini-movie in my head, but this time I felt like someone had sucker-punched me. Bad news: Ned and his son were estranged. More than estranged. “You don’t really know each other.”

  “That’s got to change,” Olivia said.

  Ned put both feet on the floor, hands knotted in fists on the table, and looked me square in the eye. “No, we don’t, but…”

  “Your grandmother is very concerned about that.” I closed my eyes again to visualize more of the story. “You and your son’s mom were in high school, right? And your parents didn’t approve.”

  Olivia shook her head, sadness in her voice. “I insisted his parents end that relationship, but now…”

  “You’re right, they didn’t approve.” Ned ran his fingers through his hair again, messing it up. His eyes wandered off and he gazed up at the ceiling, like he was reliving the whole scenario, and it wasn’t a happy one from the expression on his face. “She and I were from different schools, completely different backgrounds. I met her at a movie theatre that summer. She was only fifteen. I was seventeen and headed to Harvard in the fall. When I found out about her condition, my parents told me to make it go away.” He refocused his attention on me. “Sorry. Lawyer talk.”

  I nodded in response to Olivia’s pleas and told Ned what I was hearing. “Your grandmother is very sorry now that she didn’t support you, but she says it isn’t too late.” Then the rest of the story slammed into my head. I saw Ned giving the girl a wad of money and telling her to get an abortion. She was broken-hearted, pocketed the money, and hadn’t spoken to him since.

  Ohmigod. What a nightmare. I didn’t know what to say.

  Ned looked miserable, his face all contorted like he was fighting back anger, tears, frustration, or maybe all of those emotions. “I didn’t even know she’d had the baby until I graduated law school and moved back from Boston. By then he was already in school. I wanted a relationship with him, but his mom wouldn’t return my phone calls. Still won’t. Now my son hates me.”

 

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