Showing posts with label Vivia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vivia. Show all posts

Sunday, October 2, 2016

Chapter 3.19- The Empress

            Mariah waved after her last customer. As an apprentice she was only allowed 4 readings a day. She sighed heavily and returned to the room behind her. 4 readings a day wasn’t nearly a tax on her, but she wouldn’t be on her own until her mentor felt she was competent enough in her abilities to not make a fool out of the Institute.




            “Oh, for PlumbBob’s sake, come on!” Mariah burst out upon seeing Christie. “It wasn’t that bad!”
            “Wanna bet?” Christie answered coldly. Which basically meant she’d never be competent enough in her abilities to finally earn her living around here.
            “Fine,” she returned wearily, dropping into the chair opposite her ‘mentor.’ “I’ll take the usual lecture today. Fries and coke on the side, please. In fact, SuperSize that Extra Value sermon! I’m not feeling nearly low enough.




            “Your ‘schtick’? Is cold. If you really want your customers to warm up to you take a leaf out of your grandmothers book and dive in. Quit pinching fingers and start holding hands,” said Christie wearily. “I’m really tired of telling you this.”
            “Yeah, well I’m tired of hearing it,” Mariah bit back. “Obviously, it isn’t going to happen, so drop it.”




            “And here I thought you wanted to get out of my clutches to receive your own clientele as well as earn a living around here.”
            Having her own thoughts constantly parroted back to her was as old as Christie’s criticisms and Mariah had finally had enough.
            “I.Don’t.Like.People.To.TOUCH.Me! I understand you think my grandmother was wonderful, but let me enlighten you for once. That old witch was just that. And it’s because of her that no one touches me without my permission!”




            Mariah had risen, bending over the table. Across from her? Christie chuckled coldly.
            “Oh, the irony there. Sit down before I have you written up and sent back to classes.”
            But Mariah’s line had been crossed. Baring her teeth she prepared to launch into the tirade of a lifetime.
            “You want to earn a living? Sit down.” Christie’s voice had become deadly quiet, her eyes wide.
            Mariah inhaled. She wanted nothing more than to get Christie out of her life. She owned the place. She didn’t have to have this as a job along the way. If she really wanted, she could fire Christie! In fact, that’s just what she should do to get the bitch out of her life!
            “I want you out of my life as much as you do, but my help only extends as far as you’re willing to take it. If you really want the Institute to succeed, if you really want to turn the Institute around to the point you don’t need this job, I’m your best bet and you won’t fire me. Now Sit.Down.”




            Glaring for all she was worth Mariah fell into her chair with as little grace as she could manage.
            “Good girl.”
            “I am not a dog.”
            “No. But neither are you a psychic.”
            “Teach me then!”
            “I’ve been trying. You refuse to listen.”
            “I don’t touch people!”
            “Pity. It seems we’ve come full circle, too.”




            Mariah groaned, on the verge of frustrated tears.
            “There has to be something else I can do! Something that doesn’t involve getting physically chummy with everyone who walks in the door!”
            “There are plenty of jobs you’re legitimately capable of doing. You’re the one who chose to take an interest here.”
            “I did Not choose this place! It was chosen for me by-”
            “-No! It was never her ‘choice!’ You have a whole world open to you. This was your choice. And you choose to be a failure at it.”




            “I am not a failure.”
            “Then prove it.”
            Prove it? When Christie should be the one begging her for… Oooooooh…
            “Fine. I’ll prove it. Help me find a way around it, help me succeed, genuinely, and I will make sure both you and Ruben keep your job when Delphine finds out her boyfriend got her best psychic pregnant.”




            She’d expected Christie to blanch, to gasp in horror, to blush and stammer or to fall to her knees thanking her for her generosity. Instead, like a Cheshire, her lips slowly curled into a smile.
            “About time.”
            “What?”




            “I’d almost given up hope that you’d offer to partner with me.”
            “I am not-”
            “-Without me, this place will wither away. Delphine’s abilities are too pathetic to sort through the real and the fake. Her eyes are closed to the truth of the world she lives in. Without you, the business remains undirected and without the reputation your grandmother gave it. The Institute would eventually close its doors, bankrupt and exposed. You along with it.”
            Mariah stared, jaw open, trying to follow Christie’s reasoning.
            “You need a real psychic to fake your way into a business that relies on your name. I need the business to give me a wider, more landed client base. It’s quite simple really.”




            “Why cover for me then? Why be so horrible to me? Why didn’t you just propose a partnership in the first place?”
            “Oh, don’t feel so special. I’m horrible to everyone. I hate people.”
            “Ruben?”
            “Even Ruben. He’s an idiot. Just a pretty one. Why didn’t I propose this in the beginning? Because the time wasn’t right. Why cover for you?” Christie paused, weighing Mariah in her gaze. “Because you’re my Empress.”




            “Your Empress?”
            Christie looked thoroughly provoked. “Yes! Like the card, stupid. I had you pull a card the first time we met, trying to see exactly what your influence on my life would be. You pulled the Empress. You’re my Empress. You will guide and lead not just me but all in the Institute. You know what to do without knowing how to do what you have to do, what you must do. You’re the exception to the rule. You’re in between my beginning and my ending. But you can’t be any of that, without me.”




            Head whirling, Mariah took a deep breath. She was missing something.
            “So you are offering to help me in exchange for me helping you?”
            “Yes,” Christie answered placidly.
            “Once again, why didn’t you offer to begin with?” Mariah was so weary of Christie that she’d also become wary of her.
            “Because I needed you to know just how much you needed me.”




            Sitting back hard in her seat, Mariah surveyed Christie.
            She was right. She really did need Christie. The Institute attracted truth seekers from around the nation, not just around town and she’d not be able to fool those she didn’t know very well. Christie would be able to weed out the fakers who applied to the Institute’s school, which would only raise their reputation. If Mariah could emulate Christie’s method, she’d be able to pass herself off much more credibly as she worked her way toward making the Institute great again.
            “Once the partnership has outlived its usefulness- As in, when one of us is no longer an asset to the profitability of the Institute- our agreement will automatically dissolve so neither holds the other back. How about it partner?”




            Christie’s hand was proffered. It was the first time Mariah had witnessed such a friendly gesture from her. It was also a reminder that she wanted Mariah to touch people. Fine.
            Spitting into her palm, she slapped it into Christie’s, holding on tight as she suppressed her gag reflex.
            “Because you need me. Partner.

-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --






            The trapeze artists were a little too good. They floated just a little too far across open space. They stayed suspended at the top of their arcs a few seconds too long. Their smiles were a little too bored. Their routine was a bit too complex. And it was freaking.Vivia.Out. And what was up with the floor?!?




            Was it a floor? Was it a pit? Would one of them fall with gruesome results? Or would the unfortunate aerial acrobat simply plunge, fading slowly as they fell forever? Or maybe they’d fall back through the ceiling like in those cartoons her dad showed her?
            However, even if one of them fell Vivia wouldn’t see it.




            Beside her, Dove gave an exaggerated yawn.
            “Oh, don’t be such a ninny,” Dove said
            “I am not a ninny,” Vivia parted her fingers just enough to peep through to prove she wasn’t scared.
            “Then put your hands down, ninny.” Dove replied. “The circus isn’t going to let them fall. They’re wearing harnesses that will stop them and there’s a net to catch them.”




            “There are? I don’t see nothin’.” Vivia looked wildly about for strings, wires, steel beams, anything that might prove the flyers were being protected.
            “Of course you don’t see them! Duh! If you saw them it would ruin the illusion,” Dove was thoroughly exasperated by now. “I know they’re there because they hafta take care of their employees. Besides, if one of them died, Taylor would hafta arrest them for not being responsible enough.”
            Vivia glanced down to where Taylor sat sandwiched between her new bestie, Mom, and her new girlfriend, someone or other, it might have rhymed with mess, or maybe it was Beth, Heather? She was called Something anyway, and was slightly mollified. Taylor had a way about her that brought calm out of chaos. Like the day when dad brought his new girlfriend over? Wow, that was- What was that word Dove just used? Losin’? What would ruin losing? Wasn’t that already kind of no fun?




            “-Besides,” wait. Dove was still talking? Vivia had missed most of it. She’d better pay attention again or Dove would get grumpy. “There’s no other way those people could do half of what they’re doing if there wasn’t something holding them up. I mean, he could have dropped her! As it is, he only caught her at the very last second. I bet he could have broke her back.”
            Sparing a glance at the black pit, half afraid to see someone still falling through space, Vivia could see Dove’s point. How’d that guy get the lady there? Then she remembered.
            “Ceeven says it’s magic.”




            Eyes nearly rolling out of her head, Dove scoffed.
            “Ceeven believes in the Sim in the Moon, too.”
            “But even Abyn says this circus has magic!”
            “Oh! Well if Abyn says it…”




            “I like Abyn.” Smiling, Vivia turned to the girl sitting between her and Ceeven. Abyn had been allowed to tag along so Mariah could get to know her sons new best friend better.
            “I only like her because she made Ceeven shut up about that stupid Poppy,” Dove snorted. “I mean, look at how she’s dressed! And her hair!
            “She is pretty isn’t she?”
            “No, Vivia. And she’s dumb. Why else would she hang out with Ceeven?”
            “That’s not nice.”




            “I don’t care about being nice to her. Besides, what kind of name is Abyn? It’s a perfect name for someone who hangs out with our baby brother with frumpy, too big, ugly clothes, who doesn’t brush her hair and who believes in magic.”
            Vivia scratched her head. “Well, she said her mom was a real airy fairy. So maybe she named her? And then it would be a magic name!”
            “No, Vivia,” Dove sighed. “Fairies aren’t real. Magic isn’t real. Abyn is dumb. And ‘Airy Fairy’ is just another way of saying someone is kinda stupid. ”
            Vivia frowned at her sister’s assessment.




            In front of them, the lady did a flip over her bar before launching herself toward the other.
            “Well, I like her,” Vivia stated firmly. “I think she’s nice. And I think having a fairy mom would be cool. And I think it’s great Ceeven has a new friend!”
            Beside her, Dove cracked up.
            “Says the girl who has never met a stranger!”




            Vivia was puzzled. How could you meet a stranger? Once you met them, didn’t that make them your friend? When she couldn’t work herself out of the knot she reverted to happy thoughts about Ceeven and Abyn as the two male flyers reappeared.
            “Maybe one day they’ll get married!”
            “Oh, PlumbBob Viv!” Dove blurted out.
            Vivia cast a wary eye at their mother. She’d never heard Dove swear before.
            “Mom doesn’t care,” Dove snipped defiantly. “Besides, I’m almost a grown up now. I can say it.”
            Still frowning, Vivia nodded a little.




            “Now they’re just juggling themselves,” Dove grumped under her breath.
            Vivia watched the three tumbling over each other in the air. They kinda were juggling themselves. Like three balls. Sometimes people were cannonballs. But snowballs were her favorite ball. Maybe it would still be snowing when the show was over. Then they could have hot chocolate!
            “Maybe those two getting married would be a good thing,” Dove finally piped back up.
            “I think it would be wonderful,” Vivia gushed, abruptly brought back to the present. “But you’ll have to be nice and not scare her away.”




            There was a split second where Vivia worried Dove might take her suggestion wrong, but instead she turned to grin at her.
            “You might be right,” she conceded. “And even if they don’t get married, at least Abyn is better than Poppy. No one can tease him about Abyn being imaginary.”
            Vivia’s heart swelled. It always made her happy when someone else wanted to see someone else happy. Or was it that she wanted… oh, forget it. Dove was promising to be nice!
            “No one can tease him. Or her. It’ll be wonderful.”

-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --


Huge huge thanks to the simmers who provided my Trapeze Artists! I had a ton of fun dressing them up and playing with their hair and then throwing them around like rag dolls. Lol.
So Thanks to HeatherFeather for Moze Diffy!

Thanks to Skyegal19 for Cooper Starling!

And thanks to Toxi for Alexei Cuckobell!

Since the crowd is huge (*GASP*kaffkaff*UNDERSTATEMENT*kaffkaff*) The Spot My Sim feature is up on the bloopers tab, as well as the trapeze artists’ full routine (and an actual Blooper!) I didn’t add a huge number of sims to the crowd this time. But if you're still looking to Spot Your Sim in the crowd, there are opportunities to come.

Ignore the physics defying ropes, please. A physicist I am not. lol

Anyway, as to story. Hinthinthinthinthint. That’s all you’ll get. While most of the hints are for much later on, there are one or two up there for the present. And of course, which ones are red herrings? =D After that, Dove is a work in progress. She loves Ceeven dearly and is extremely frustrated at how he opens himself up to criticism. Kids just don't deal with frustration well.

I probably don’t need to explain why this one took so long to get out. Haha. But a funny did happen while I worked on it. A horse named Sunny tried to eat the shirt off my back. No joke. My son is still laughing that horse Sunny then got mad at this Sunny when he found out my shirt wasn’t made of apples and sugar cubes. How rude of me! Lol

Friday, May 20, 2016

Chapter 3.17- Half Answer


            “The Sun upright-Oops. No. It’s only upright to me. Okay. The Sun reversed in this position-”6 weeks of studying the tarot through the classes Appaloosa Plains Spiritualist Institute offered were nearly at an end. Approaching the lessons in much the same manner she’d approached high school projects had taken Mariah far. Even if she failed this test spectacularly she should still receive a passing grade.




            “The Hanged Man before an Outcome of The Ten Of Swords suggests the querent realizes they need to let go, but are frightened that by doing so it could spell the end-”
            This would be a lot easier if Christie would stop drumming the table top with her fiery fake fingernails. Clickclickclickclickclick. Over and Over. Mariah entertained a brief vision of pulling them out of their sockets with pliers while taking a deep breath between cards. It also would have been much easier had Christie allowed Mariah to lay the cards out. Christie had shuffled them. Christie had dealt them. And when she laid them out she’d laid them out so they were upright to her and upside down to Mariah.




            “However, after every ending is a new beginning. The beginning suggested by the Ace of Wands, clearly a pregnancy, could mean that by letting go of their fears regarding becoming a parent, the querent will gain a sunrise brighter and more vibrant than the sunset they are currently witnessing.”
            Christie said nothing at Mariah’s conclusion.




            And continued to say nothing for far




            far




            far




            too long.




            “Mediocre. Though you passed the exam, you lack depth and clarity. Your reading was flat and uninspired.” Christie deigned to speak at last.
            “But it was correct. As I understand it, The Institute, by my Abuella’s instructions, really only uses Tarot to supplement readings. If my reading lacks depth and clarity, my sight will make up for it.”




            “Your grandmother mentioned nothing, not one word, about you having a gift of sight.” Christie had taken to drumming her fingers on the desk again.
            “Abuella wouldn’t have confided in anyone like you.” Mariah snorted back.
            “Ha!” It was Christie’s turn for derision. Her nostrils flared, malice glittered in her eyes, her cheeks quivering with her finally exposed anger. “As if she needed to ‘confide’ in anyone! It’s all in her papers and diaries written for anyone with eyes to see. Not one of her prophecies says you have any abilities at all. As far as I can tell, you’ve nothing more than a head for business and a lucky hunch. But you’ll be exposed one day. Not just as a fraud of a psychic but each and every one of your sins will be in a spotlight seen across all of SimNation. Delphine and her flatterers might choose to interpret the entry differently, but I have no need for such rudiments. I know because I have Seen it!”
            There it was. Christie’s jibe had found its target. Mariah could feel the blood drain from her face, but was careful to keep her incredulous expression in place. Still, Christie seemed to know her work was nearly done. In an instant she had transformed back into her usual unperturbed self, sinking deep into her seat.
            “You should ask Ruben about Sabria’s papers, find the entry regarding yourself,” she said as carelessly, low and quietly as ever. “It’s all in the library. After that, you have the rest of this week off. When you return, you’ll report to me for your 8 weeks as an apprentice before Delphine will allow you clients of your own. Congrats, Mariah. I’m your mentor.”

-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --






            “I’m sorry,” Ruben, the librarian for The Institute’s modest collection of books, repeated. “But I’m not supposed to give students access to Mrs.Guerra’s archives without a note from their teacher or mentor.”
            Still frustrated that there were now two people in her world who could see straight through her, Mariah wasn’t about to back down. This poor kid was about to feel her wrath.
            “Listen, I am not just a student asking out of curiosity, or with intent to make them public, or who wants to destroy them,” Mariah’s teeth were barred and Ruben had taken several steps away from her. “There are papers in there directly related to me. Me! And I want to see them! Now!”




            “I’m sorry-” he dared to say again, rolling his eyes.
            “-Fine. You want to play that way? I own this library. Own it. It’s mine. And because of that, I own those papers. They’re mine. Want to get nit-picky? I own you! Want to keep your job? Bring.Me.Her.Papers!”
            Ruben stared slack jawed, eyes round with wonder. He’d finally woken up enough to stop apologizing, though not enough to move.
            “NOW!” Mariah barked making him gasp before scurrying off. Mariah snorted before following him, taking the box he finally produced to a desk to examine it’s contents.




            It took her several minutes to figure out just what a large task she had in front of her. The box contained about 10 volumes filled with the familiar cramped and elegant hand of her grandmother. The books were organized almost like diaries, with entries of visions and prophecies dated chronologically. She’d have loved to ask Ruben for guidance whenever he’d come near to dust or pretend to straighten the books, but he glared at her each time she met his eye and she figured she might not have made a friend of him.
            The sun was low in the windows before she finally found what she was looking for.
            “Of the second generation, born of great love, a daughter will arise. Dark and suspicious, her passions will be applied to my greatest work. Her efforts and skill will make the center rise as the morning sun. Notoriety will ensure her work lasts.” There followed a date, the day she’d walked in to find Delphine waiting on her then the words “Before Lunch.” Mariah Renee Sixkiller had been written in another hand, slipped into the margins beside the too short entry.




            Mariah quickly read the next few pages looking for more. However, Christie had used the word ‘entry.’ Single not plural. Perhaps this half answer really was all there was to it.
            This brief note made by that old witch had caused such a stir within the walls of The Institute? The idea made Mariah roll her eyes. The thought that this small passage had made such an impact on her own life, however, wasn’t so easy to put aside.
            Psychics, Seers, Mediums? They were all the same; Con Artists out to make a quick buck. Every one who’d put any stock into her grandmothers words was a fool. But the biggest fool of them all was Mariah. After all, she’d played right into it.

-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --






            Dove and Vivia’s giggling made her smile. The girls were having a fantastic time tearing her jewelry box apart in search of accessories for their Spooky Day costumes.
            “I know sweetie,” she tried to soothe Ceeven. “Just hold very still and try not to squint so I can get it.”
            Tiger Ceeven had an eyelash threatening to undo her careful make up job.
            “I’ll try, Mama.”
            “Tha’s it! I need it.” Vivia exclaimed. “Oooh, where’s the other one?”
            “Sorry, Mama.” Ceeven murmured gently. He’d jumped at his sister’s outburst making her finger rub under his eye.
            “It’s okay. It didn’t smudge too bad. I’ll be able to fix it in a jiffy.”
            “Have you seen other one for this?” Dove chimed in.
            “I dunno. Nooo, I don’ think so. It’s pretty though. Ask Mom.”
            “Nah, I’ll look again.”
            Curiosity finally got the best of Mariah. “What are you two scavengers looking for?” she asked as she put the finishing touch on Ceeven’s stripes.




            “This,” Vivia turned, presenting a white glove to her mom.
            Mariah wanted to laugh. “What do you need my white gloves for?”
            “Duh, Rabbits has paws that match their fur! See my boots?” Vivia held a leg out, wiggling her footwear to make sure her mom wouldn’t miss them.
            “Ah! I see. Well, if the other glove isn’t in there, I’m not sure where it might be,” she answered, slightly concerned. “Dove? What is it you’re looking for?”
            “Earring.”
            “Could I see which one? I didn’t know I had one missing.”




            Dove joined Vivia in presenting her one sided find.
            Mariah blinked, frowning at the earring Dove presented. A teardrop shaped sapphire winked up from Dove’s hand. The set it belonged to had been in the family for several generations. If one of the earrings were missing Mariah would be super upset.
            “Oh. Well, I could look and see if they’re hiding in my jewelry box, or I could finish getting Dove’s hair fixed and we could start Trick or Treating.”
            Vivia and Dove stopped pouting immediately, both girls eager to beg for candy.




            The obligatory costume pic was hurriedly taken before the kids could begin their squabbling over where to start begging for candy in earnest. Delphine’s family had just adopted a new pony and the girls wanted to go there first to meet it. Ceeven was afraid of horses and would rather go to Taylor’s house first. Taylor might not be Roger’s partner any longer, but she kept up with the kids when she could and took an especial interest in Ceeven.
            Despite this, Mariah still couldn’t shake the feeling that Taylor disapproved of her. It was something she’d sensed long before he’d broken up with her and she was still baffled by it.




            Electing to go to Delphine’s first was the easy part. Ceeven clutched her skirts, turning around completely when the pony roamed too close to him. From out of nowhere he pulled out his still contentious doll, Poppet, hugging it tightly. At least she’d managed to talk him out of wearing his scarf with his costume. Though it had taken two weeks of begging to get him to agree it could stand to be washed.
            When Delphine finally appeared, Mariah had to hide her laughter. She was so used to seeing her in pantsuits and makeup that this casual version of Delphine was odd.




            Mariah had tried to give a friendly smile and wave when Taylor appeared at her door several streets and dozens of houses later. Taylor didn’t return the wave and looked at her so strangely she was finally forced to drop her hand without receiving any other acknowledgment. Maybe next year she could talk Roger into taking the night off to take the kids Trick of Treating for a change. At least they’d be able to finish soon. Taylor had loaded the kids buckets with handfuls of candy a piece.




            The kids had long been in bed. Despite her tucking them in, she was almost positive at least two of them were up munching on the mountain of sweets they’d just gained. Besides, the doorbell had only stopped its incessant ringing about 30 minutes ago. Mariah had turned tv on only for the noise. Her mind was too far afield to digest the romantic comedy she’d found. She really did need to contact Roger not only to see if he could Trick or Treat with the kids next year, but because it had been a couple of months since they’d heard from him and Ceeven had begun to fret over his absence.
            The doorbell chiming once again interrupted her thinking. Her porch light was off. It was after 10 pm! Who did these… Roger???




            She was so stunned she had no words as she opened the door.
            “Can I come in?” He asked brusquely.
            “Sure, yeah.”
            He stepped in and stood with his arms folded. The serious look on his face was so familiar to Mariah it almost felt like home. Almost. His eyes held none of his old warmth.
            “The kids are in bed-”
            “-I’m not here to see the kids.”
            “Oh,” a little thrill raced up her spine making goosebumps erupt on her arms. Did he mean… “They’ll be disappointed they missed seeing you.”
            “I can see them tomorrow.”
            “Oh! Wow! That’s great you’ve managed to get several days off in a row so soon after that camping… trip.” A lead balloon brought Mariah back to earth.
            “I don’t have ‘days off.’ I’m off the case, Mariah. I’m home,” he answered, a sharp bite in his words.
            She had no answer for such a sudden pronouncement. What happened? Had Tex been arrested? Was it all over?
            “And I’m not here to tell you that.”
            “Oh?”
            “Where’s Andre?”

-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --





Dundundunnn!!! Lol.
(Personal stuffs incoming: Skip if you’d like.)
That was a long delay between this and the last, my apologies. My excuse this time is a lot larger and more complex. Hubs had quite a health scare right around my birthday and thought he could ignore things. Turns out he couldn’t. (Of course. Silly men.) So we’ve had to overhaul our lifestyle which took a lot of time and effort. It was also really hard because his family is so far from supportive over it that they’re basically ignoring him. (Embarrassed. Seriously. I kind of hate them all right now.) Anyhow, they’re ass-y-ness has slowed things down considerably. But I think I’ve finally managed to drag hubs out of it enough that when we go to their reunion next month we can rub their faces in it pretty thoroughly. And! It means things finally settled enough that I could take a peek at Mariah and co. again. (End personal stuffs.)
There are some outtakes and trivia bits up on the bloopers blog (click the tab above, or HERE!) if you're curious.
As for the above, please ignore Dove’s magic hair changes. Lol. Aaaand ignore the upside down tarot cards Mariah read. That was just an “I’m shooting this Naow!” mistake. Ha!