The Urban Sherpa keeps a collection of stories and curios filed under Mythic Proportions.
Stella of the Angels 
(Also available as a downloadable MP3, thanks to Miette's Bedtime Story.)
I lost focus so I went to a fortune teller. I picked the first one within walking distance who took credit cards. She asked me to hold out my hands, and as soon as she touched me, I got a hard-on. Within ten minutes we were fucking on the sofa.
"You've got a really strong love line," she said.
I moved in that night. That was three years ago.
* * *
(Did she see it coming? I always wondered, and I never knew.)
* * *
Her name was Stella Luna, like the children's book. That's what it said on the sign in her parlor. Her real name was Stella DeAngelis, but she changed it. "I thought Luna sounded more mystical," she explained.
"More mystical than, 'From angels'?"
I asked if she came from a long line of psychics, and she laughed. "My daddy was a plumber." But she also had an uncle who made a good living betting on horses, and legend has it that her grandmother predicted the assassination of JFK, in vivid detail, including the phrase "grassy knoll." She claimed she saw the face of the third gunman, and could have picked him out of a police line-up. "But who knows?"
* * *
"You're going to struggle a while," Stella told me, as we laid naked on her sofa, she finally reading my palm. "Because you're a seeker."
"What do I seek?"
She ran her finger along my palm but didn't answer.
"What do I seek?"
"That which you don't have," she said finally, and got up to pull on her clothes.
"That's obvious. That's everyone. That's tautological."
"I don't know what that word means."
* * *
She knew the future but she didn't know that certain truths follow from their atomic propositions.
* * *
"You're going to go home and pack a bag of things and move in with me," she said.
"Is that a prediction? Or just something you want?"
She smiled and kissed me. "It's your destiny."
* * *
I went home, packed a bag, and moved in with her, which was a shitty thing to do, because I'd lived with a woman at the time, a woman who told me often that she loved me.
"I'm moving out."
"What? Why?"
"It's my destiny."
I paid an extra month's rent and let her keep my share of the deposit, and since she was justified in saying all of those bad things about me, I never tried to stop her. I still think about her sometimes.
* * *
Stella and I took a trip to Vermont, after I'd been living with her for a few months. We rented a car and took turns driving up the coast through the rain. Halfway through Connecticut, she said, "Pull over. I want to fuck you."
I stopped the car, and she unbuckled my pants and climbed on top of me, somehow squeezing her lithe body into the space between me and the steering wheel.
"That was great," I said, and she laughed and wiped the fog of our breath off the windows.
Up ahead, a tractor trailer had jack-knifed and killed twenty-two people—the largest single auto accident in Connecticut history.
"Did you know?," I asked her.
"I just wanted to fuck," she answered.
* * *
"Do you believe in predestiny? Are our futures written?"
"Of course." She looked at me like I'd questioned the roundness of the Earth, or gravity. She didn't understand why this idea put me into a three-day sulk and got me wondering about suicide. "Do you ever think of killing yourself?," I asked her.
"That's stupid."
* * *
"What do they say?"
She looked at me impatiently.
"Nothing about sinking ships, right? Nothing about death at sea? I couldn't bear knowing I was going to drown."
"When I read your palm," she explained, "I am reading your palm."
"That's tautological."
"But when I read the cards, I am reading the cards. And the cards are reading you. Do you understand?"
"No. I mean of course, yes, but, no, not at all. Why does a random shuffle of cards offer meaning about my life?"
"Right? Why does a random shuffle of events, or a random shuffle of jobs, or a random shuffle of girlfriends, offer meaning about your life? Exactly."
"So what do the cards say?"
She looked at them quietly for a while. She didn't like telling my fortune. Or maybe she just didn't like my fortune.
"You're going to struggle a while," she finally said.
"That's vague."
"The cards are kind of hard to read tonight. I'll look at them again tomorrow."
"I want my money back," I told her.
"Then you should have paid me." She kissed me sweetly on the cheek. "Let's go to bed."
* * *
She held a bag in her hand and she told me she was leaving. She gave me an extra month's rent, and said I should keep her share of the deposit.
"What? Why?," I asked. But she didn't answer.
"I've loved you," she said. "I'll always love you."
"Did you see this coming?," I asked.
"Did you see this coming?," I asked. "Because I didn't see this coming."
But I was shouting at the door. She was already gone.
* * *
We were lying on the sofa, and she was kissing my hand. "What am I seeking?," I asked her. We were both so relaxed, the way lovers are. "I don't know," she answered. "What are you seeking?"
"I don't know," I told her. "I don't know."
