Sex, Spooks and Sauvignon (Adventures of an Accidental Medium Book 1) Read online




  Spooks

  &

  Sauvignon

  TRACY WHITWELL

  Fast, funny, spooky and disturbing: meet Tanz, Geordie actress turned accidental psychic, as she tries to cope with the voices in her head, especially when they lead her to a crime and into danger...

  Tracy Whitwell is an actress who has worked in British film and television, including hit shows Playing the Field, Soldier Soldier and Peep Show. She has written for radio, stage and television and loves directing music videos. She lives in London with partner Don Gilet and their son.

  Prologue

  Normal Bloody Job

  The phone rings six times before he picks up. When he does, there’s a clunking sound and some fumbling. Shit, I hope I didn’t wake him. Surely it’s too early for him to be in bed?

  ‘Hiya? Tanz…? Hiya, sorry, I’m a bit drunk; I fell off the settee.’

  Now there’s a coincidence, as I’m a little tiddly myself. I don’t bother with pleasantries; we phone each other too often for that malarkey.

  ‘Milo, I have to get a normal job. I bombed in that audition and I’m really skint.’

  ‘Oh. I’m so sorry, sweet cheeks… Don’t stay in that bastard London for another second. Get on that bastard train and come home and move right next door to me. Gateshead needs you!’ His sentences are all one, drawn-out word. He’s mullered.

  There’s another crash. I think he’s fallen off the settee again. Milo is always trying to get me to move back to the north-east. Or ‘home’ as it was for the first nineteen years of my life. But moving back ‘home’ means defeat in my career. Moving ‘home’ is everybody knowing my business. Moving ‘home’ is seeing my parents all of the time. Moving ‘home’ is not bloody happening.

  ‘I can’t move back there, Milo. All of my auditions are in London. Anyway, with your writing doing so well, you should be thinking about moving here.’

  ‘How dare you…! (Howairrrrrrooooo.) I am a Geordie, young lady. Unlike you, I refuse to leave my roots behind. I have a laptop, I can email things, I don’t have to go to London in person, and I certainly don’t need to live among the enemy.’

  The enemy being ‘southerners’. And the real reason he doesn’t move is that he’s basically agoraphobic and he would never live more than half an hour away from his mam and her well-stocked drinks cabinet. Milo is a creature of habit, as well as a genius and my best friend. If he carries on drinking the way he does, he will also be dead by the time he’s forty-five.

  ‘I’m applying for a job in a shop.’

  There’s a sharp intake of breath.

  ‘A shop?’

  ‘Yes. A fucking shop.’

  ‘You are an artist, Tanz. You can’t work in a shop.’

  ‘I don’t have a choice.’

  Suddenly his voice is thick with tears.

  ‘Tanz, you are a trouper. A modern-day hero.’

  ‘I know. Thank you.’

  ‘And, of course, a witch.’

  ‘Don’t start on this again.’

  ‘My best friend is a witch. You know things.’

  ‘I guess things, Milo. I “gather” things. I have good powers of deduction.’

  ‘Sherlock Holmes had good powers of deduction. You have special skills, Tanz.’

  He’s always saying that. Other people have said that. But I’m a normal Geordie girl who’s perceptive, and that’s it.

  There’s one final, almighty crash. Sounds like he was sitting on the back of the settee and it toppled over backwards. The line goes dead. He’ll probably fall asleep like that.

  I am not a bloody witch.

  Sundays Are So Rotten

  So I open my eyes and it’s Sunday morning. Well, it’s ten a.m. My mam would say that was nearly lunchtime. I’m still tired. I didn’t go out last night, but I had three buckets of Merlot, talked rubbish at Milo over the phone, then watched The Hairdresser’s Husband again. I love that film. Right now I have a jet black cat wrapped around my head. Inka has been licking my hair; it’s streaked with damp, and I’m seeping tears the way my washing machine leaks wet foam if a sock gets stuck in the seal. I’m not sobbing. Tears are simply brimming and cascading steadily into my pillow, soaking it, and me, in brine.

  Seconds ago I was in a field. The grass was warm and there were daisies. I was in Saltwell Park, a big, sprawling, beautiful place with a lake, ducks, rowing boats, greenery, swings and a fairy castle in the middle of it. I spent my childhood playing there and, just moments ago, I’d been back there with my friend Frank. Repeating his name in my head is enough to wrack a sob. We were eating egg sandwiches by the octopus tree. We were sitting on a red tartan picnic rug and he was laughing at me, smiling his goofy smile, because I was singing a song by The Smiths. He was joining in. It was ‘What Difference Does It Make?’ All we did was make the jangling sounds of the Johnny Marr guitar riff together.

  ‘Dang-a-dang-a-dang-a-dang-danga-danga-dang-dang…’

  Then he grabbed my hand, said, ‘You’re mental’ and I woke up.

  Frank died in a stupid car crash three years ago, and he was only thirty-two, so I still get a bit messed up when I see him in a dream. It happens every couple of months. They seem to be getting less frequent, but I always wake up wishing I’d given him the biggest squeezy hug in the world. Sometimes I think he’s fooling with me. I never went out with him when he was alive; he was far too fickle, so now he plays hard to get with the whole cuddle thing. Sometimes I hear him talking to me in my head. I know I’m making it up, but it’s still nice to hear his voice. I don’t want to forget him.

  I get up and mooch, then sob on my blood red velvet chair for a good ten minutes, filter coffee in hand, sunshine piercing through the mucky brown slats. I wonder if I should run a feather duster over them as I hiccough. I can multi-task when I weep – it’s a talent. I miss Frank a lot, especially when I dream about him, but I am also a neurotic bitch and those blinds need a wipe.

  Once I’ve mopped my face and my frog’s eyes have un-swelled, I pull myself out of the misery chair and let in some light. My sitting room’s bay window opens on to a teensy front garden and privet hedge two feet away. After that is my street, East View Road, a narrow row of terraced maisonettes, pretty and quaint with walls like paper (I can hear my next door neighbours breathe) and tiny back yards opening out on to each other with low, lichen-covered fences separating one from the next.

  I rent it on my own, since the complete bastard I used to love moved out and left me to cover the huge rent, but ended the snide comments about my ‘funny shape’ and ‘awful taste in mirrors’. He was actually much more nasty than that, but that’s how petty it got before I eventually told him to get lost. Now I’m wandering about in leggings and a vest top, what passes for jim-jams these days, and pretty much deciding that the best way to cheer myself is to call Elsa. Elsa is my buddy, of sorts, and she’s a character. She is so pathetically trend-conscious that she never wears a flat shoe, never gets bigger than a British size eight and always has sunglasses worth more than my car. (Bearing in mind I’ve owned spoons worth more than my old, but perfectly serviceable, car.)

  I call her and she answers on the third ring. Funnily enough, she’s another borderline alcoholic but still, most days, gets up to go to the gym before seven a.m. Almost all of my friends are nut-jobs of one kind or another, but she makes me laugh when she’s not having life-sapping nervous breakdowns. She sounds groggy.

  ‘Hi, Tanz.’

  I hate my name. My mam called me Tania, barely a millimetre behind Annie as the blandest name she could have lan
ded me with. Plus, no middle name. My dad I’ve forgiven, men are shit with names, but my mam could have had more imagination. Tanz is the only permutation I can stand.

  ‘Hiya. Wild night? You sound tired…’

  ‘Work. A stupid article for Woman and Home about housework. I hate housework. And women.’

  I laugh.

  ‘You want to meet me for lunch? I’m feeling rotten.’

  ‘What’s wrong?’

  ‘Nowt. I just fancy some chips and wine.’

  ‘Well, if you put it that way. Half twelve at Minnie’s?’

  ‘Yay! See you then.’

  I feel better already. Warm day, and Sunday lunch covered. I will endeavour not to think about Frank being so sweet in my dream. If I don’t think, I won’t cry.

  One good thing is that I can be summery today. It’s June and it’s lovely out there. As soon as it’s not cold I have flip flops welded to my feet. My latest faves are decorated with tarnished silver sequins and butterflies. I slip on my white hippy skirt with a little top. I’m addicted to comfort which is why I refuse to walk down to Minnie’s in my best wedges, which will bring me out in blisters in 2.3 seconds. Elsa always looks glam, so I slick on a bit of gloss and layer on the mascara. What I can’t do is make myself look tanned. Elsa has olive skin. Naturally, I resemble a bottle of slightly pink milk. Only false tan changes this, but I’m rubbish at applying it. My legs often sport the ‘giraffe effect’. Not that I like showing my legs, anyway. I hate my knees.

  When I open my front door I’m hit with an unexpected wave of gratitude. The warm air is only part of it. I’m grateful I’m alive and I’m grateful my ex doesn’t live here any more. I always throw up some thanks to the gods when I get this feeling. When you moan as much as I do you have to balance the books a bit when you have a moment of clarity.

  Minnie Isn’t Mini

  Minnie’s isn’t mini at all. In fact, it’s quite roomy. They prepare lovely, locally sourced food and they stock a few choice wines as well as other kinds of alcohol, all of which I’ve tried. As I walk in, a scent-wall of hot potatoes, coffee and something sweet and cinnamonish hits me bang in the face. I spot Elsa in the corner, crouching over a large Sunday broadsheet, a lemon pressé already in front of her. The tables are made of thick pine, the walls have hand-painted murals and the chairs are big school chairs. I love it in here and so does most of North London, but the sun seems to have drawn a lot of people out into the fresh air, so it isn’t rammed with its usual middle-class families feeding their small children tofu and couscous. Winner.

  I plonk myself in front of Elsa. She’s reading a piece about fashion. I like clothes, but I don’t ‘follow fashion’. I’ve always thought ‘fashion’ clothes are best modelled by transvestites. Fashion clothes are rarely for five foot four girls with proper hips. Elsa is exactly the same height as me, but has bony shoulders and perfect little boobs. I am jealous of that part of her, but couldn’t be bothered to give up bread for the rest of my life to achieve her build. Elsa has dark circles under her beautiful eyes. She has a dusky complexion and navy blue irises; I have seen men buckle at the sight of her. I give her arm a pat.

  ‘Hey, handsome.’

  She’s wearing a lemon sundress with white rosebuds on it. I know without looking it will fall slightly below the knee. She hates her knees, too.

  ‘Hi. I look like shit, don’t I?’

  ‘Elsa, you have never looked like shit in your life…’

  ‘I couldn’t sleep again last night. I had to turn the lamp on – and the radio.’

  I have an ‘on and off’ terror of the dark. Sometimes I have to leave on my fairy lights for comfort. I’ve always had an uncomfortable relationship with being alone at night. I have been addicted to old-school horror films and magazines about murderers for as long as I can remember and yet I’m often afraid of turning off the light. Ridiculous, but I feel her pain.

  ‘Maybe you’re stressed about something?’

  ‘It’s my flat, it creeps me out.’

  She is always stressed out about something. Mostly money. The waitress arrives. She’s petite and Spanish with a nice open smile. I think she’s younger than us. I’m hitting that point where all of the waitresses in Crouch End are younger than me. I don’t want to think about what that means.

  I feel carnivorous. Usually I have a baked potato with houmous. Today I want gammon, egg and skin-on fries. Elsa, who’s a vegetarian, tries not to look disgusted and orders a mushroom risotto. Our waitress, Maria, grins when I ask for a large glass of white. She already knows which I’ll have. If I have red it’s the Merlot, I don’t care how common that makes me, white is always Sauvignon Blanc. Minnie’s stocks one from Chile and it’s bloody lovely. Elsa orders a glass of champagne with a drop of elderflower. Elsa barely survives after rent, so much of her wage goes on credit card bills, but she still lives like she’s married to Denzel Washington. I use this example because she’s completely besotted with Denzel Washington and that’s probably why she doesn’t last five minutes with anyone she dates.

  ‘Why did you move in there if it creeps you out?’

  ‘I didn’t realise until it got dark, did I? It’s a nice place by day, it feels like a garret in Paris, but at night my bedroom makes me feel sick.’

  She looks exhausted enough for me to feel sorry for her.

  Our drinks arrive and after a chink of glasses and a slurp (a sip for her, she never slurps) she prods me.

  ‘So what about this new job, then?’

  A good-looking lad with longish hair and carefully distressed jeans passes by as I shrug. He’s headed for the counter. Looks like a new barman. I force my eyes back towards Elsa. I’m such a lech.

  ‘I’m starting tomorrow. It’s only part-time and if I get that telly job I’ll be out of there within the week.’

  I’ve been an actress for years, but jobs have been very rare over the past eighteen months. I sold my flat twelve months ago and have been renting and living on the meagre profit since. My savings won’t last forever, though, and a girl has to eat.

  ‘Come on, then. Tell me about it.’

  ‘It’s Mystery Pot up the road. I went in to get some joss sticks and saw a sign saying they needed someone to work on the till. They’ve got tarot readers, apparently. I have to book appointments in and all that. I asked this woman about the job – Maggie – she owns the place. She looks evil but was friendly enough. Weirdly, she offered me a trial after about five minutes. Says she wants more time with her horse.’

  ‘And what’s the telly job?’

  ‘Oh, it’s massive. Every actress in London will have their claws out for it. I don’t even know why I bothered auditioning: there were six other actresses there when I arrived and every one of them was off the telly and posh. Why would they want a broad Geordie who gets no work?’

  ‘You never know.’

  ‘I think I do.’

  ‘Well, good luck for tomorrow. It might be fun.’

  Acting is becoming an expensive hobby. The amount of people chasing so few jobs is ridiculous. I’ve thought of retraining, putting my degree, and brain, to some use but the only other job I fancy is a forensic profiler and that would mean another two hundred years of study. For now, shop work will have to tide me over. I glance at the long-haired bloke again. He’s about twenty-five. I remind myself that that is ten years younger than me. I like his mouth. I take another slug of wine. As our food arrives, Elsa looks suddenly serious.

  ‘If any of the readers at that place are good, give me a call will you and I’ll book in? It might help me work out what to do next with my life.’

  I’m surprised by this.

  ‘OK…’

  As I raise my fork the new lad at the bar presses a button behind him. A familiar guitar riff kicks in. Suddenly the speaker beside us pumps out the slightly too loud intro to ‘What Difference Does It Make?’ by The Smiths. And to Elsa’s utter bamboozlement I burst into tears.

  Very funny, Frank.

 
; The Shop that Smells of Hippies

  I used to be a Goth when I was a teenager – Bauhaus and black clothes and big boots with skulls on them – just before I graduated to being a full-on rock chick. I love music and I also love the paranormal, so I should feel right at home in a new age shop. And the thing is, I do quite like crystals and the smell of patchouli. I’m interested in spirituality, I’m interested in the power of thought, I’m interested in many things, but, I have a huge suspicion of anything that garners a following and generates money and claims to be ‘a way of life’.

  As soon as something spiritual becomes a business my palms begin to itch. It’s how I feel about religion, too. There is something beautiful about having a faith that helps you to lead a good life and be kind to other people. But once it turns into a big gang, with rules and leaders and money and the threat of punishment or eternal damnation if you get something wrong, I get very uncomfortable. Gangs always have bullies, don’t they? So at five to nine, clutching a huge Starbucks coffee that I shouldn’t be squandering my dwindling savings on, I approach the green door of Mystery Pot, feeling more than a little freaked out.

  Maggie is waiting for me and has evidently just opened up. She wears a caramel-coloured jacket and slacks, has immaculate, permed, grey hair and looks like a Tory MP’s mother. She hands me the keys and nods.

  ‘I’ve written down all of the rules for locking up and cashing up and the float is already in there.’

  She took me through these things when she offered me a week’s trial, but I’m glad she’s written it down. She has a chilly, carefully cultivated voice and a pointy face, but her eyes aren’t cold. Again, I wonder why on earth she owns a shop like this. With her clipped tones you would expect her to introduce herself as an executive of The Pony Club. Still, judge not, lest ye be judged. To her credit she doesn’t hang about long and seems happy enough that I’m wearing my black polo neck, tight jeans and old knee-high, wedged boots (it’s a bit chilly today). I thought I might be expected to wear some kind of hippy attire, as befits the shop, but obviously not. She tells me the reader today will be Sheila, she’ll be here by ten, and hands me a feather duster on the way out.