tell me you possess a generous spirit. Surely you can find it in the kindness of your heart to make a decision in my favor.”
“Why, all right. Of course I’ll accompany you,” she agreed. Then she leaned closer to offer, “But the mystic isn’t terribly frightening, really.”
With a nod to her brother, Nick held the drape aside and bade Signorina Rossini enter before him.
3
Within the tent, Jane Cova listened and rolled her eyes at the gentleman’s blandishments. Was his lady really wooed by such practiced flattery? She’d seemed to hang on his every word.
For a very different reason, Jane had done so as well. One could learn a great deal about a potential client by eavesdropping on what they said prior to entering the tent. With enough information, an entire fortune could be fabricated for someone, as she had cause to know. Not that her talent was all subterfuge.
The cobweb drape at the tent’s entrance fluttered. She prepared herself to greet the new arrivals, adjusting her head covering to partially conceal her youthful features. A few strands of her moon-colored hair escaped the wrap, but she didn’t bother to tuck them away. They would be mistaken for gray in dim light.
The betraying softness of her hands was carefully hidden with black lace gloves that left only her fingers bare. She rounded her shoulders to foster the perception she was wizened beyond her years. The crude corncob pipe she slid between her lips was unlit. It, too, was designed to age her and disguise her voice. It was effective, but holding the stem for any length of time was painful. Her lips were already bruised.
A male hand parted the drape, allowing some of the gloom inside the tent to escape. At the sight of those strong fingers, an odd awareness prickled over her. Uncertainty quickened her pulse. Inexplicably, her every intuition and instinct urged her to flee.
She flattened her palms on the table and half stood and then hesitated. Rarely did she gainsay such feelings. Still, she hadn’t yet earned the coin she’d hoped for today. She’d arrived late to the event and found the tents occupied with other vendors. Only when the prior inhabitant of this tent had recently vacated had she entered and begun to ply her trade.
The assemblage was wealthy and the evening young. What to do?
Before she could decide, her new customers came inside. Jane recognized the pretty signorina as an earlier visitor. Her color had heightened under her suitor’s attentions. But she was harmless enough.
However, the gentleman who shadowed her was a different matter.
His gaze when it met hers was a jolt to the senses. How unusual to encounter an Italian with eyes the color of blue mirrors. Heavily fringed with dark lashes, they reflected what he observed, giving away nothing.
Skin of golden olive marked him as a man of Italian blood. His strong brow, sculpted chin, and jutting blade of a nose marked him as obstinent.
Taken altogether, his features combined into a striking, if haughty, aristocratic face that sat atop a muscular frame. His height was commanding and surely reached to six and a half feet. Blessed with such a surfeit of good looks, he appeared a god among mortals.
“Leaving?” he inquired, noting her uncertain pose.
Jane faltered and then simply stared into those strange eyes. She stood frozen in indecision, knowing she looked the idiot. But she couldn’t seem to help it.
At her continued silence, the man’s brow rose in question. He’d politely seated his lady, fetched an additional chair for himself from somewhere outside the tent, and now stood patiently waiting for her to be seated. Perhaps he was accustomed to striking women dumb at first sight.
“I hope my gold will prevail upon you to tarry?” he asked gently.
The pipe slid from Jane’s slack jaw. She barely caught it before it bounced on the table. The mishap had the effect of pulling her eyes from his, thus breaking the spell. Her legs wobbled, forcing her to sit.
Embarrassed, she gathered her wits and straightened to find him seated, studying her.
Hoping to divert his attention, she began to caress the crystal ball before her. Though she didn’t really employ it in her trade, it helped foster the illusion in people’s minds that she was a gypsy fortuneteller.
“What are you called, mystic?” Nick asked. His Italian was shaded with a slight accent, she’d noted. But the language sounded comfortable on his tongue and was most likely his native one. His English was fluent but less certain. She guessed he’d been schooled in England or by an English tutor, at any rate. The commanding timbre of his voice indicated he was a man accustomed to having his demands met, which implied he was wealthy.
“Jane,” she replied.
He settled back in his seat with a smugly amused expression. “Jane the mystic?”
Signorina Rossini looked puzzled. “I thought your name was Madame Fibbioni.”
“Jane be me given name,” Jane lied, lapsing into the fractured cockney-Italian blend she’d developed for such occasions.
“Well, Madame Jane Fibbioni,” said Nick, “what is your usual fee for reading palms?”
The signorina answered for her.
“I tell me fortunes singly,” Jane announced, belatedly remembering to disguise her voice as a throaty cackle.
“Oh!” said Signorina Rossini. “In that case, I should withdraw.”
Jane drew in a breath of alarm. She couldn’t take him alone! The idea was horrifying.
A masculine hand over the signorina’s stopped her from rising. “Hold a moment. Would triple your fee convince you to make an exception?” he inquired of Jane. He lay the money on the table atop the beaded scarf she’d draped over it.
Jane stared at his coin in indecision.
“Is business so robust you can turn down such an offering?” he cajoled.
No, it wasn’t. With a sweep of her hand, she raked the money into the coin purse in her lap.
“Yer takin’ a chance lettin’ yer lady hear yer future,” she warned. “But if it’s yer wish, then oiyl see if the spirits be willin’.”
“Grazie. We shall await our fortunes at the spirits’ leisure, dear mystic,” he said.
“I make no claim to the title of mystic,” she told him with a shake of her head. “I be a simple teller of fortunes.”
“Do let her tell yours first,” encouraged Signorina Rossini. “It’s very exciting.”
Nick smiled down at her.
The pretty signorina hardly struck Jane as the type who would appeal to an earthy male such as this. However, he appeared to be truly under the spell of her attractions. His look when set upon her was hungry enough to make her own skin tingle under its indirect impact. No wonder the signorina had fallen for his honeyed words.
From the distance came the eerie sound of water being pressured through the pipes of the grand Water Organ in the garden for the guests’ amusement. Jane fiddled with the strings of the coin purse in her lap, loathe to begin what must be begun.
“Begin by placing your hand in hers,” the signorina prompted to Nick.
“As you command.”
His hand settled onto the scarf within Jane’s vision, palm upward. Something about the shape of those long, blunt fingers both repelled and compelled her. The blue pulse at the inside of his wrist throbbed warm and strong, his life force vibrant.
Beneath the table, she tugged the lacy gloves low. Nothing but her fingers must be bared on him.
Then she sat forward, touching. The tips of his fingers curled in response, brushing sparks over the tender underside of her wrist through the