She held out her hand. âWhat do you see?â
The woman turned over her hand and studied her palm. She glanced up at Isabel and then traced the tips of her fingers.
âYou have an important job at a large company,â she began. âYouâll get a promotion and have an office with floor-to-ceiling windows and a glass desk. I see a shiny gift in your near future.â She looked up. âSomething bright and sparkly. It will not be expensive, but it will come to have great value.â
âThat sounds delightful,â Isabel laughed. âThank you, youâve made me happy.â
âWait, thereâs more,â the fortune-teller interrupted. âYou will fall in love with a French aristocrat and get married in an elegant château.â She leaned forward and grabbed Isabelâs wrist. âBut there is one short line in the middle of your hand. You must be careful. You will narrowly miss being killed.â
Isabel jumped as if she had been stung by a bee. She turned and saw Alec standing in front of a wooden chalet filled with gumdrops and candy canes. âI really have to go, Iâll lose my friend.â
âNow I have earned the money.â The fortune-teller tucked the twenty-euro note in her pocket. âBe careful and listen to what I said.â
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
âITâS A WONDER Parisians have decent teeth,â Alec said when she approached the booth. âThereâs enough sugar here to solve the national deficit in a third world country.â
âThe ricotta crepes with raspberry sauce were delicious.â Isabel smiled. âBut I couldnât eat another bite.â
She turned and caught sight of the fortune-teller and felt a slight chill. But that was ridiculous; nothing she said could possibly come true. She was an ordinary woman wearing a patterned scarf and felt coat.
âIâve always loved magicians,â Isabel exclaimed, walking to the next booth, where a magician was putting on a show. âMy mother hired a magician for my fifth birthday party and he made me levitate on a magic carpet.â
âI once saw a magician in the Marais turn a dog into a monkey,â Alec said, joining her.
âThat sounds impressive,â Isabel said.
âNot to the owner of the dog,â Alec mused. âHe wanted his dachshund back.â
The magician reached into his sleeve and pulled out a brightly colored bracelet. He placed three cones on a table and searched the crowd.
âMademoiselle will guess which cone the bracelet is under.â He pointed to Isabel. âIf you are correct, the priceless bracelet is yours.â
âI donât think so.â Isabel blushed. âPick someone else.â
âYou are a beautiful woman with special powers,â he said in accented English.
Isabel hesitated and her shoulders relaxed. It was Christmas and she was in Parisâwhy shouldnât she do what the magician asked?
âAll right.â She pointed to the red cone. âI choose that one.â
âIâm sorry, thatâs not the one.â He revealed the empty cone. âFor five euros you can choose again.â
âNo, thank you.â Isabel laughed. âThe bracelet is lovely, but I canât afford it.â
âHere.â Alec reached into his pocket and handed the magician a five-euro note.
Isabel studied the two remaining cones and chose the blue one.
âThe bracelet is yours.â The magician removed the cone and bowed. âMerry Christmas.â
âWhy did you do that?â Isabel asked as they walked toward the curb. âIf I picked the wrong cone, you would have paid five euros for nothing.â
âHe wouldnât let you choose the wrong one.â Alec ate a gumdrop. âThen the other tourists would leave. Now everyone wants a chance, theyâre determined to win on the first try.â
âIt is lovely, thank you.â Isabel glanced