Read Keeping it Real Online

Authors: Annie Dalton

Keeping it Real (10 page)

BOOK: Keeping it Real
8.37Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Chapter Twelve

I
n order of urgency, my official worry list now read:

Sky Nolan

Eve Jackson

Karmen Patel

However, since Sky probably wouldn’t be back home for hours yet, rather than twiddling my little angel thumbs I’d decided to start with Jax.

I shimmered into her room feeling v. slick and professional.

My mate was still sleeping deeply, one arm dangling off the bed. Her fingertips had raw places where she bit her nails.

I was pleased I’d got here before she woke up. Sleeping humans are more open to angelic suggestion.

I sat down beside her, trying not to notice the grubby sheets. When I knew her, Jax was the cleanest girl I knew. She washed her hair every day, and if she ate something at school, she’d have to brush her teeth immediately afterwards. I’m not sure where she got that habit. It wasn’t her parents.

Jax was the youngest Jackson and the only girl. She reckoned that after four trouble-making boys, her parents just lost interest. They gave her a sweet name - Eve. After that Jax was basically on her own. I think she did a really great job of bringing herself up. OK, there was the shoplifting, but if your mum and dad don’t teach you right from wrong, you’re hardly going to learn that from a teen magazine, are you?

Jax’s eyes were moving under her lids. She was dreaming.

I smiled to myself. The conditions for my friend’s first angel lesson were almost perfect. Later in the day something might just go ‘click’ and she’d remember her mad dream where her dead friend was in her room, wearing pink suede boots and claiming to be an angel.

I leaned in closer. “Jax? It’s me, Mel. The first thing I want to say is I’m not a scary spook - hopefully you can tell the difference from the vibes!” I joked. “I’m an angel, Jax! Kind of a surprise, yeah? Don’t ask why they picked me, because I have NO idea! Listen, I’ll probably be around for a few days and I’ve just had this really cool idea.”

I shifted a little closer.

“Tell you how it started - I was actually wishing you guys could all come back with me and be angels just for a day. I know it’s just a fantasy, but it got me thinking. I have
such
a beautiful life, Jax! I live in this huge vibey city, and I’m going to this cool angel school! I went into pure shock, though, when they first told me! I’m like, ‘I’m dead and I
still
have to go to school! Is that heartless or what!’”

Jax’s mouth quirked up at the corners. My heart gave a little skip. Could she possibly be smiling at my joke?

I softly stroked her hand, willing her to hear my voice. “I think you might actually like school in Heaven! When you’re training to be an angel, it’s like you’re a part of something HUGE, and it makes you feel
so
proud. I never felt like that before, and I want to share it with you, Jax!”

Did I imagine it, or did my friend give a soft little sigh?

“So then I’m like, OK, maybe your mates can’t go to angel high school, Melanie, but what’s to stop you taking the angel school to them? Yeah, I know! Creative thinking or what! I’m not talking scary advanced stuff, just basic cosmic laws, simple techniques for keeping yourself safe and whatever? You’d be like, an undercover angel! Would you be up for that?”

I heard another soft sigh. I took that as a yes, and settled myself into a calm yoga sitting pose. I was about to teach my first official angel lesson.

“OK, listen carefully now, babe, because I’m going to tell you something that will blow you away.” I paused for extra emphasis. “You’re magic, Jax!”

If she remembered just this one thing, it would change her life forever.

I took a deep breath. “And it’s not just you, girl. Everyone’s born magic, even that stinky old man who used to come into Costcutter. Ok, so he doesn’t look so magic now, but that’s because he’s got something called ‘cosmic amnesia’…”

I told Jax that she must never ever think she was alone - that she had a huge celestial organisation watching out for her - and I dropped a tiny hint about the PODS for her to think about when she was awake.

When I’d given my mate as much cosmic info as I thought she could absorb for one day, I slung my bag over my shoulder.

“You’re magic, Jax, remember,” I repeated softly. “Never forget that, OK?”

I checked my watch. Time to shoot off to Karmen’s.

On my way out, I noticed the cactus. Maybe it had just been pretending to be dead, or maybe it was just the right time for it to come back to life? I don’t really know about cactuses. All I know is that this particular cactus had a tiny, shocking-pink flower shyly blooming from its withered little stump.

Karmen’s bedroom smelled of hot clean hair. She was in front of the mirror using her hair straighteners. There was like, one tiny kink in her hair and she was stressing like you would not believe.

This morning my friend was looking extra grownup and serious, in a fabulous shalwar kamiz sparkling with gold threads. Karms is usually more of a cool-casuals girl, so I guessed her parents were dragging her off to see the rellies later.

Checking that her hair straighteners were switched off, Karmen ran back to the mirror and started yanking crossly at her hair.

“Karmen Asha Patel,” I said sternly. “You look totally luminous, so stop stressing!”

And she did! She actually walked away from the mirror!! I hadn’t even got started yet!!

Maybe it was just a coincidence though, because Karmen immediately started burrowing in her wardrobe, until she’d located a pair of pretty sandals which would match her outfit.

“Karms,” I said in the same firm voice. “Just chill, OK?”

And again she stopped, only this time there was something in her eyes that hadn’t been there before.

“Omigosh, Karmen?” I said excitedly. “You can hear me, can’t you? It’s me, Mel. I’m an angel, Karms. I
know
! I hardly believe it myself, but it’s true.”

Next minute Karmen’s eyes went all wistful. Then she did a strange, not to say slightly creepy, thing. She walked up to the photo with its little scented candle and started talking to it!

“I hope you’d be proud of me, Mel,” she whispered. “I really do.”

“Karms, I’m humongously proud of you,” I said warmly, “but I’m actually right behind you, and I’m only in town a few days and we’ve got a LOT of ground to cover. You see… EEK,” I squeaked.

Karmen had walked right through me on her way to the karaoke machine. Her room filled with cheesy music and to my dismay Karmen started belting out one of the big numbers from GREASE.

Ever tried teaching cosmic survival to someone who’s yelling, “You’re the One that I Want” at the top of her lungs?

Luckily I saw the funny side. I imagined Reubs and Lola howling with laughter as I described my frustrated attempt to pass on angel skills to a caterwauling Karmen. Knowing Reubs, he wouldn’t see a problem! He’d be like, “Why didn’t you just go with the flow, angel girl?”

Yeah, angel girl
, I thought.
Just go with the flow!

So I sang along!

I can’t sing for peanuts, but I really got into it. Halfway through the number, Karms and I lost all our inhibitions and launched into a wild dance routine. I can’t swear to it, but I thought I saw her throw in some cheeky Bollywood moves.

When the music finished, we both had to get our breath back.

“Woo, that was fun! Almost like old times!” I panted. “Except obviously I was visible then!”

Then I was like,
Omigosh
.

All the strain had left Karmen’s face. She was glowing from dancing and laughing in that way you do when you’ve been kidding around. It was like I’d actually done her some good, you know?

Then her eyes went wistful again. “Oh, Melanie, I hope they let you be one in Heaven,” she said softly.

She was looking past me to our London Eye photo, but it was a really shivery moment. It was like, Karmen didn’t
absolutely
know I was here, but she
kind of
did.

And be one what in Heaven?

“Karms—” I started.

“Time to go,
beti
,” her dad sang from the hall.

I’d been at Karmen’s house exactly twenty minutes!

I thought Reuben would be proud of me for managing to stay so chilled. What did it matter if my friend and I had connected during a cheesy song and dance routine, so long as we’d connected? And we had. I still had goose bumps to prove it.

Two down, one to go
, I thought, shimmering out into the street.

In case Sky was still with lover boy, I went the long way round, strolling past shops and cafes. I think the dawn vibes were still fizzing in my veins, because I was genuinely loving being out in my old community. I started feeling like a bona fide local angel, bopping along in my borrowed parka, so I thought it was time I behaved like one.

I started sending vibes to anyone who looked like they needed it (Ok, so maybe a couple of times I sent them to really fit boys -I’m just an angel, you know, not a saint!!).

Soon angel vibes were raining down everywhere. I’m talking serious showers of gold sparkles. Little kids were smiling. Old married couples were holding hands. Park Hall was literally becoming a better place!

I felt that special glow inside my chest. Helix wanted a word.

“Isn’t this just pure magic!” I bubbled.

“The best magic there is, sweetie. Not sure you should be drawing this much attention to yourself though. Angels aren’t the only beings who see vibes, remember.”

“Oops,” I said. “Sorry, I’ll stop. It was cool though,” I added with a grin.

It was late afternoon by the time I picked my way down the basement steps to the Nolans’ flat. They were still glassy with ice, though the snow had mostly melted everywhere else.

I could hear a radio DJ talking through the door.

I found Sky in the kitchen whizzing up a diet shake.

“Hiya,” I said, when she’d finally switched off the blender. Sky carefully poured her shake into a glass and stood at the counter, gulping it down. My mate was dressed for comfort now, in trackie bottoms and a hoody she must have worn for decorating; you could see teeny streaks and splodges of paint.

“Babe?” I tried again.

The microwave dinged. Sky had been microwaving some popcorn. She took her snack to the table. An old R&B number came on. Sky moved her body while she munched, but from her eyes you knew she was back with the boyfriend, or maybe fantasising how it would be next time.

“See you’re back on the Popcorn Diet,” I commented. “Not that you need to lose weight. You’re too skinny, girl!”

My friend was alternating mouthfuls of popcorn with gulps of diet shake. I wondered if she could even taste them.

I softly put my hand over hers, the first time I’d touched her. “Where are you, Sky?” I whispered. “You heard me last night.”

She started picking at a miniscule speck of paint on her sleeve.

“Just tell her what’s in your heart,” Helix suggested. “Isn’t that what real friends do? Tell each other the truth?”

I thought she was right. Now that the Pinks had split up, Sky didn’t have a single mate left who could give her a reality check.

I took a shaky breath. “Sky, you think you’re in love, but I’m your friend, plus I’m an angel, and I’m telling you he’s just playing with you, girl! He doesn’t really care about you, you know! No decent boy would make you run around these streets in the middle of the night.”

I could hear my voice getting husky.

“I was so scared for you, last night, Sky. I was scared for all you guys. I didn’t think I could be more scared until I saw that—”

I caught myself before I started to describe the eerie comings and goings in the school annexe. This flash of fear wasn’t anything I could put into words, but it had something to do with that disturbingly passive vibe my friend was putting out. I felt that even mentioning the Dark Powers just then could make them pop up right there in the Nolans’ kitchen. Something bad had happened to Sky, something that had left her wide open to any dark vibe that blew in off the street. So many people had let her down, and now she seemed lost - she’d forgotten who she was. She’d just given up on herself.

“Everyone leaves me,” she’d sobbed out that night.

You’d think that wouldn’t you, if your dad walks out and your so-called mother sees nothing wrong with abandoning you for an entire weekend in a dangerous city?

You left her too, Melanie
, whispered the dark angels who’d come to live at the back of my mind. I tuned them out, quick as a flash. I was here now wasn’t I? And unlike those other people who’d disappointed Sky, I was going to take proper care of my friend; more importantly, I was going to teach her how to take care of herself.

I didn’t care what Brice, Helix or anyone said. My first task was to help my friend get back her old feisty self-confidence.

I decided to start by just beaming positivity.

“You’re such a star, Sky,” I said in my warmest, most upbeat voice. “Do you know that? All you need is some really basic cosmic info, then you’ll be like,
untouchable
. A few minutes a day, that’s all it’ll take, but you’ll be amazed at the results.”

Yeah, I know it sounded like I was recommending heavenly beauty products, but with Sky how she was, it could be dangerous to get into anything too heavy. I was giving her like the fuzzy pink version of Cosmic Survival for Humans - Lesson 1.

With Sky I basically stressed over and over that she wasn’t alone. “It sounds so simple! But, once you’ve grasped this one basic fact, I swear, your whole Universe will be like, transformed.”

Sky abruptly brushed past me on her way out of the kitchen.

Still talking, I followed her into the sitting room, where she’d left the gas fire full on. She crouched down, holding out blue-tinged hands to the flames.

For all the response I was getting, she might have had her earphones in. I felt like she could,
technically
, hear me, but some deeply suspicious part of Sky was deleting my words as fast as I put them out.

BOOK: Keeping it Real
8.37Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Joe Gould's Teeth by Jill Lepore
Louise Rennison_Georgia Nicolson 09 by Stop in the Name of Pants!
Mind of Her Own by Diana Lesire Brandmeyer
The Man from Forever by Vella Munn
Spires of Spirit by Gael Baudino
Cut to the Chase by Joan Boswell
Wicked Appetite by Janet Evanovich