Chapter 2
In the small parlor where she did her readings, she sprayed the marble-topped table with lavender oil cleaner and wiped it down.
The wrought iron door of the cozy anteroom was still propped open to the sidewalk—something she’d done earlier that morning when she’d been feeling optimistic about the river of abundance that was—definitely, absolutely, finally—flowing her way.
But this was the new Savannah, and optimism didn’t pay the bills here.
Not like it had in the old version of the city—that quirky Shangri-la tucked away on Georgia’s coast, which had been her grandmother Edie’s home.
In the mid-nineties a wildly popular book came out—Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil, usually referred to by the locals as “that bestselling book”—and changed all of that.
The book, then the movie, built a kind of mythos around the town, one of cheerful transgender cabaret stars, reckless gigolos, and murderous debutantes, and it drew tourists from all corners of the earth to it like a magnet.
But the book was never a complete picture of the city.
And now, the true artists, the provocateurs of this town, didn’t command the main stage.
They’d been swept off the streets and into the gutter to make way for the real show: money.
The new Savannah was buffed, shiny, corporate, and ridiculously expensive.
A postmodern, gentrified, Airbnb- and Uber-infested playground whose rents were now out of reach for many of its own citizens.
Savannah was the plain girl who had, after getting her glow-up, immediately dropped all her weird friends.
There were still pockets of the old city left, but there was no telling how long these places would last; from time to time, an old restaurant or shop would quietly shutter its doors only to be replaced by a Moe’s or Jersey Mike’s or simply a placard that read AVAILABLE.
Downtown was all Urban Outfitters and Hilton Garden Inns and Starbucks.
It made Ingrid glad Edie had lost her grip on reality before having to witness it.
And now, the vultures were circling Ingrid.
If she wanted to keep her small corner of Savannah intact—her house and the psychic business she operated out of it—she’d have to somehow figure out a way to pay the property tax bill that was coming due next month.
She was many thousands of dollars shy of having the full amount, and things weren’t looking good.
Even after she’d sent Miles out with more flyers.
Ingrid walked out to the sunny sidewalk and glanced up and down the street.
There was no one in sight. She looked at the chalkboard sign that proclaimed MISS EDIE’S PALM AND AURA READING in careful chalk calligraphy letters.
Her grandmother had done business on this street, in this same town house that faced what used to be Calhoun Square but was now Taylor Square, nearly every day for more than fifty-five years and been able to easily pay off the mortgage on the place back in the eighties.
She had been a fixture in Savannah for decades.
Now it seemed like no one remembered her.
Five years ago, when Edie got sick, Ingrid had taken over the business.
It had been a struggle to convince Edie’s regulars to entrust their psychic needs to an eighteen-year-old, but she’d managed to replace the clients who left with new ones.
And then, two years ago, Edie died. She left her granddaughter the town house, free and clear of any encumbrances.
But Ingrid was young and financially untrained and had been ignorant of the ever-inflating size of the property taxes levied on the well-located house. The realization had been a shock.
The small amount of cash Edie left her had been eaten up in that first year on a new furnace, foundation repair work, and the taxes.
Since then, Ingrid lived in a state of near-constant panic.
The place was falling down around her ears.
She could barely keep up with the utilities.
She felt the burden of the money she would soon owe every single day.
How na?ve she’d been, in so many ways. Na?ve and foolish.
No wonder her business was failing. What kind of psychic-witch loses her grandmother’s fully paid-for house? A bad one, that’s what kind.
Now, as Ingrid, squinting into the glaring midday sun, surveyed the house, a whisper of dread threaded through her.
The place might look magical at night, in the moonlight, behind the lacy veil of Spanish moss, with the streetlamps and the flickering ghostly gaslight of the huge brass lantern above the front door casting shadows over the pink plaster.
But right now, in the unforgiving light of day, it just looked like a dump.
“Ahoy there!” Miles’s golden-haired head, tied with a faded green bandanna, appeared on the roof of the town house.
He was holding onto one of the fourth-floor gables, like the seaman he was raised to be.
He was shirtless, his lean torso gleaming as golden as his hair in the burning sun, and even from the street she could see his startling, light blue eyes. Turquoise as the Caribbean.
Slight but sinewy, tanned beyond what his fair complexion should be, Miles had worked on his father’s shrimping boat right up until the man had lost it in a legal dispute.
Now at age twenty-six, in exchange for a room on the third floor and whatever food she had in the fridge, he helped Ingrid keep the place running.
But just barely. The town house was bigger than it looked, and he could only do so much.
And he had another job that kept him busy enough—leading historical and ghost tours for a local outfit in town.
They’d met after Ingrid had found a Moonlight and Magnolia Tours brochure tucked into the garden-level, iron door of her town house and decided a ghost tour was the perfect place to meet tourists and rustle up some more business.
She’d been assigned to Miles’s group, and they’d hit it off immediately.
It was only a week later when she asked him to move in.
They had a unique friendship, she and Miles.
Close, but not in a romantic or sexual way.
Just real, true friendship. He was a generous soul.
Guileless, upbeat, and giving. He would drop whatever he was doing when she asked for help or a favor or even just something to drink.
And while she always sensed that she fell short of reciprocating his particular form of ardent, fiery commitment, she still felt a deep connection to him.
He always had looked a bit to her like he could’ve been living in another century. Maybe kidnapped by Blackbeard to swab the deck of The Queen Anne’s Revenge and terrorize merchant ships. Poor Miles. Born to the water. Lost on land.
But he was her other half. A fellow traveler in this harsh, often cruel world. He made her feel less alone in this new Savannah without her grandmother. They would always be there for each other, no matter what.
She squinted up at Miles. It was so hot.
She could feel her dress, made of an unbreathable polyester chiffon and purchased at the Goodwill, sticking to her.
Drips of sweat were already coursing down her back, tributaries forming a river down her spine and into her ass.
But she’d never dream of wearing shorts.
Edie hadn’t approved of dressing casually for work.
Edie also revered the hot Savannah sun. The sun, the light, was female, she’d always said.
The sun was their Goddess, not a male entity like some believed.
The moon was male, only able to reflect the glory of the Goddess.
Edie’s beliefs weren’t like anything Ingrid had read in witchcraft texts or teaching, but they made sense to her.
Right now, though, Ingrid wished the Goddess would take it down a notch.
“You’re going to need a new roof,” Miles shouted down at her. “I did what I could with the extra shingles, but the flashing’s a mess. Even the decking is rotted through …” He held his hands up, apologetic.
“Okay.” She nodded.
“Don’t worry about this ship, though. She ain’t gonna sink. She’s got good …” He swung a hand around his head, trying to think of the word. “Um, the heavy stuff, down in the hull?”
“Ballast,” she supplied.
“Oh yeah!” He crowed like a lunatic rooster. “She’s got good ballast. The heaviest of the heavy, you know? It’s you, sitting down there at your table, pulling down all the power of the Goddess.” He shook his head. “You’re holding it down, Miss Ingrid. You’re the ballast.”
“All right,” she said with false cheeriness. “Okay.” She really was starting to dread these pep talks of his. In the end, it wasn’t him who had to pay the tax bill.
Miles turned back to the rotting roof.
“Hey—” she yelled up at him, suddenly feeling bad for taking his support for granted.
He appeared again, a grin lighting his eyes. “Hey!”
“Be careful up there.”
“Hey,” he said back.
She squinted up.
“Those guys give you any trouble?”
She waved him off. “Couple of college dummies. No big deal.”
He gave her a look that said he didn’t buy it. He knew her so well, which sort of annoyed her. Still, she wasn’t about to confess what she’d done. Basically, gone down a dark path and imparted information to a client that, while true, should’ve been delivered in a far more sensitive way, if at all.
She had been given a gift, the same gift Edie had. She was supposed to use it wisely, not to make a stupid kid feel bad about his life. Not for revenge or any other selfish goal. She was supposed to stay in the light. Edie had told her how important that was the day before she died.
Ingrid knew better.
She just had to buckle down and do what was right.