Ian Rowland,
The Full Facts Book of Cold Reading
, p.60
I
was licking garlic butter off my fingers in the cozy, dark-timbered ambiance of The Royal Castle Hotel's Galleon Bar, when Paul said, âToo bad you didn't like the mussels.'
âMmmmmussels!' I moaned.
With the exception of a mound of empty, wing-shaped ebony shells piled haphazardly in a bowl next to my elbow, there was no evidence that mussels had ever been served.
Between bites, I'd retold the story of my encounter with Susan Parker. Paul had listened politely, rolling his eyes only twice, which, knowing his propensity for critical thinking, must have required superhuman self-control.
Now I was finishing off my story as well as the last of the
frites
that had come with my
moules
. âSo, you see why I'm kind of freaked.'
âHannah, Hannah, Hannah,' Paul chided, as if he were dealing with a particularly slow and difficult child. âShe's a talented cold reader â i.e. a fake.'
I decided to ignore him. I dragged a French fry though the scrumptious broth remaining at the bottom of the pot the mussels had so recently occupied, popped the fry into my mouth and chewed slowly.
âEarth to Hannah.'
âAre you going to talk to me like a grown-up?' When Paul agreed, I said, âOK. Leaving aside for a moment the question of is-she-for-real-or-isn't-she, what I want to know is this: what's in it for her? Why would she walk up to a total stranger on the street, pretend to have a conversation with that stranger's dead mother, then simply disappear?' I reached for my wine glass. âShe didn't ask me for money, Paul.'
âNo, but neither did that so-called psychic who showed up on our doorstep when Timmy was kidnapped. Dakota Whatshername.'
âMontana. Montana Martin.'
âWhatever.'
âBut for Montana, there
was
money in it. There was the reward money, of course. Worse case, she did it for the publicity.' I polished off another fry and stared at the copper pots gleaming from the walls, admiring the way they reflected the light. I flashed back to the day Montana Martin parked her boots on my daughter's doorstep, and in a parting shot, claimed that my late mother wanted me to have her emerald ring. âLucky guess,' Paul had insisted at the time, but I had never been totally convinced.
âRemember the ring?' I asked.
Paul shot an exasperated here-we-go-again glance at the ceiling. âThe opposite of cold reading, Hannah, is hot reading. Quite simply, Montana cheated. Did her homework, I mean. The ring? It's mentioned in your mother's will. The will is on file with Anne Arundel County. It's public record. Montana could have looked it up.'
Paul had a point. I hadn't thought of that. âBut, but, but . . .' I was stalling, organizing my thoughts. âBut Susan Parker doesn't know me from Adam! For all she knew, I was a tourist fresh off the Eurostar and she'd never see me again. What you're suggesting is that she targets likely tourists, manages to learn their names, does a bit of research â on the Internet, I suppose â and then contrives to run into them on the street sort of accidentally on purpose.' I puffed air out through my lips. âDoesn't make sense. And that bit about my sister, Georgina. Spooky!' I dragged out the âo' and waggled my fingers.
âYour mother's obituary,' Paul said reasonably. âIf it appeared in the newspaper, it would definitely be available on the Internet.'
I had one of those duh, head-slapping moments. âRight. “Survived by three daughters”, et cetera, et cetera.'
I reached across the table and grabbed Paul's hand. âWait a minute! Information about my sisters could certainly be squirreled away in some remote corner of the Internet, but Susan knew that my mother died of a heart attack, and I'm pretty sure that information isn't on the Internet.'
âNot in her obituary?'
âNo, sir. I wrote it myself. It said “after a long illness”, which could mean anything.'
âAs I said earlier, Hannah, all that means is the woman's an extraordinarily skilled cold reader. Tell me. Did this Parker woman come right out and say “heart attack” or did she work up to it first, like, “I feel a pain in the chest area”?'
I closed my eyes and tried to replay the conversation I'd had with the medium, but I couldn't remember Susan's exact words.
âThink of how many medical conditions “chest area” could refer to,' Paul continued. âHeart attack. Lung cancer. Emphysema.' He squeezed my hand. âEven breast cancer.'
âWhy do you have to be so goddamn reasonable?'
âShe was fishing for details, I'll bet, and reading your body language, letting
you
connect the dots.'
I was saved from having to agree with my husband by the reappearance of our server, inquiring if Sir and/or Madam would care for pudding this evening.
âYes, please.' I dredged up a smile for the young woman. âIt's been a stressful day.'
After she went off to fetch Paul's apple tart and a crème brûlée for me, Paul leaned back in his chair and announced, âAnybody can be a psychic, even me.'
âDo tell.'
Paul reached across the table and captured my hand in both of his. âFirst, I get you comfortable, ply you with good food and fine wine.'
I snatched my hand away. âWhere did
you
learn to be a psychic?'
âI used to wow 'em with my magic tricks in high school. At lunchtime, I was the star of the cafeteria. And I did a lot of reading. The Amazing Randi has a lot to say on the subject of psychics.'
âRandi? The magician?' I put my lips together and made a rude noise. âNone of it positive, I imagine.'
âLike Houdini, he uses his skills as an illusionist to expose frauds. I guess you could call Randi a professional debunker. He refers to psychic shtick as woo-woo.'
Grinning, Paul reclaimed my hand. âNext, I smile, make eye contact . . .' He stared at me, his eyes like deep chocolate pools. What with his goofy grin and wide-eyed, silent screen star gaze, I couldn't help it. I started to giggle.
âYou are . . . let me see.' Paul began stroking the top of my hand as he held it over my half-empty wine glass. âI'm getting a strong feeling about September, here.'
âNot fair! You know my birthday's in September!'
âJust play along, Hannah.'
I closed my eyes. âOK. Yes. I was born in September, O Magnificent One.'
âAh, yes, I can see that.'
My eyes flew open. âHah! But what if I'd said, “September? I can't think of anything special about September”? What would you have said, then?'
Paul raised an eyebrow, patted my hand sympathetically. âYes, I see that you've suppressed the memory of it. Something painful happened in September. Ah, I feel it, now. A pain, here, in my chest.'
Then it was my turn to roll my eyes. âWell, duh!'
Paul forged on. âYou are not cooperating, Hannah! OK, try this on for size. What if I say, “You don't work with heavy machinery, do you?” What do you answer?'
âI say no, of course.'
âBut here's the beauty of it! If you say no, I say, “Yes, I thought not.” If you say, “Yes, that's amazing, I drive the Zamboni around the ice rink,” I say, “Yes, I thought so.” For the psychic, it's win-win either way.'
âOrder me another glass of wine, Professor Ives, and do shut up!'
Paul waved to attract the attention of our server. âScientists have been trying to find proof of life after death for over a century,' he continued as the server trotted off in the direction of the bar to fetch us more wine. âThey've designed experiment after experiment, but I'm quite certain nothing's been proved.'
âLots of things are invisible,' I said. âAtoms, radio waves, the wind. You don't see the wind; you see the effects of the wind. Maybe the spirits of the dead are like that.'
âWilliam James certainly thought that was a possibility,' Paul agreed. âBack in the 1880s he theorized that researchers could be overlooking some sort of natural fact that might explain ghostly phenomena, simply because it didn't fit into their carefully organized system of knowledge.'
âDo I see a crack opening in your great wall of skepticism, Paul?'
Paul laughed. âI'm willing to keep an open mind.'
âThen promise me you'll behave yourself at dinner on Thursday night,' I said. âNo ghost busting. No trick questions.'
âYou have my word.' Paul raised his wine glass and clinked it against mine. âBut sometimes you need a reality check, Hannah. And that's my job, too.'
âThe Great Carnac has spoken.'
âDamn right, sweetheart,' Paul said, imitating Cagney.
Our desserts arrived and we dug into them, all serious conversation replaced by a succession of yummy noises. As I scraped the last dabs of pudding from the ramekin, I had to admit that assuming Susan Parker
had
somehow managed to target me in advance, Paul's arguments made sense. But there was something I still didn't understand. Susan had asked me,
Why do I keep seeing a refrigerator?
And that was a question even Carnac in all his magnificence couldn't answer.
FOUR
âIt may seem strange but Operation Tiger, which happened so many years ago [to the Americans] is as if it happened yesterday . . . I have no doubt that this emotional feeling of loss stems also from the fact that they never got the bodies back. They never knew what had happened to them. All they had received were telegrams saying that their men were killed in the European theatre of operations.'
Ken Small,
The Forgotten Dead
, Bloomsbury, 1989, p.197
A
t home in Maryland, there are no surprises at the breakfast table, just Paul hunched over a bowl of Cheerios with the
New York Times
folded open to the OpEd section and propped up against the salt and pepper grinders. At a B&B, though, every morning stars a new cast of characters and some days can surprise you, like tuning in to
Good Morning America
without checking the program guide first.
At Horn Hill House on Tuesday morning there were eight around the breakfast table, including a family of four from Nantes, and a rough-hewn Yorkshire man and his florid-faced wife who appeared to be huffing and puffing their way from Starcross to Salcombe along the coastal path. By Wednesday, the couple from Yorkshire had hiked on, to be replaced by an American who, if the noise on the stairway the previous night was any indication, had arrived late and out of sorts. It was well past eleven when she woke me with her grumbling as she bump-bump-bumped her roller bag up the staircase and along the landing just outside our room.
âGood morning,' the American chirped as she slid an expanse of Madras plaid into the chair next to Paul, grabbed her napkin, snapped it open and smoothed it over her bare knees. She leaned forward. âOK, so who are the other Americans here?' Before anyone could answer, she held up a cautionary hand. âNo, wait a minute. Let me guess.'
Through slitted eyes, she considered each of us in turn, as if we were in a police line-up and she were a victim intent on making a positive ID. âYou,' she said, jabbing her finger at the mother of two from Nantes who had been ignoring the whole production while helping her daughter carve up some sausage. âYou from the States?'
The woman looked up. â
Mais
,
non
. I am Nicole. My family and I, we are from France.'
âWell, can't win 'em all.' The new arrival snorted daintily, then turned to lavish a smile on my husband. She stuck out a pudgy hand. âSo, you must be the Americans. I'm Cathy Yates, Cathy with a “C” from Pittsburgh, PA.'
Paul laid down his fork. âI'm Paul Ives, and this is my wife, Hannah. We're from Annapolis.'
âIndianapolis?' Cathy inquired lazily, toying with her spoon.
âAnnapolis. As in Maryland.'
âHoley moley! My brother went to the Naval Academy in Annapolis!'
After we compared notes and determined that Paul and her brother had overlapped, but he hadn't been enrolled in any of the classes my husband taught, Paul and I got down to the serious business of tucking into the full English breakfast Janet set down in front of us: two eggs â I prefer mine soft-boiled, toast, baked beans, fried tomatoes, sautéed mushrooms and a nicely browned American-style sausage, not the fat, white tube of sausage-like substance one usually encountered in British B&Bs.
âGosh, that looks good,' Cathy said. A strand of long, blond, stick-straight hair slipped over her shoulder and hovered dangerously over Paul's plate as she leaned over to inspect his breakfast. âI'll have what they're having, Janet.'
When a woman reaches a certain age, the hairstyle that saw you through the peace marches of the 1960s has got to go.
Get a haircut, Cathy
, I wanted to tell her,
or put a bag over your head
. But I held my tongue.
While we ate, the newcomer entertained us with a stream-of-consciousness account of her harrowing trip to Dartmouth from Heathrow. âJeeze laweeze,' she began, âI thought I'd never get here. How on earth do you drive in this flipping country? I mean, cheese and crackers! It's bad enough that you're sitting on the wrong side of the car driving on the wrong side of the road, but you can't see a flipping thing over the gee-dee bushes. Please pass the O.J.?'
When the French couple simply looked confused, I translated for them â
jus d'orange, s'il vous plaît
. Nicole passed the pitcher to Paul who poured some orange juice into a glass and handed it to Cathy.