The soothsayer again put a fat and not too clean finger down on the upturned face of a card.
“There is something here I do not understand; something which I miss when I look at you as I am now looking at you. It is something you always wear—”
She gazed searchingly at Sylvia, and her eyes travelled over Mrs. Bailey’s neck and bosom.
“I see them and yet they are not there! They appear like little balls of light. Surely it is a necklace?”
Sylvia looked extremely surprised. Now, at last, Madame Cagliostra was justifying her claim to a supernatural gift!
“These balls of light are also your Fate!” exclaimed the woman impetuously. “If you had them here—I care not what they be—I should entreat you to give them to me to throw away.”
Madame Wolsky began to laugh. “I don’t think you would do that,” she observed drily.
But Madame Cagliostra did not seem to hear the interruption.
“Have you heard of a mascot?” she said abruptly. “Of a mascot which brings good fortune to its wearer?”
Sylvia bent her head. Of course she had heard of mascots.
“Well, if so, you have, of course, heard of objects which bring misfortune to their wearers—which are, so to speak, unlucky mascots?”
And this time it was Anna Wolsky who, leaning forward, nodded gravely. She attributed a run of bad luck she had had the year before to a trifling gift, twin cherries made of enamel, which a friend had given her, in her old home, on her birthday. Till she had thrown that little brooch into the sea, she had been persistently unlucky at play.
“Your friend,” murmured Madame Cagliostra, now addressing herself to Anna and not to Sylvia, “should dispossess herself as quickly as possible of her necklace, of these round balls. They have already brought her ill-fortune in the past, they have lowered her in the estimation of an estimable person—in fact, if she is not very careful, indeed, even if she be very careful—it looks to me, Madame, as if they would end by strangling her!”
Sylvia became very uncomfortable. “Of course she means my pearls,” she whispered. “But how absurd to say they could ever do me harm.”
“Look here,” said Anna Wolsky earnestly, “you are quite right, Madame; my friend has a necklace which has already played a certain part in her life. But is it not just because of this fact that you feel the influence of this necklace so strongly? I entreat you to speak frankly. You are really distressing me very much!”
Madame Cagliostra looked very seriously at the speaker.
“Well, perhaps it is so,” she said at last. “Of course, we are sometimes wrong in our premonitions. And I confess that I feel puzzled—exceedingly puzzled—to-day. I do not know that I have ever had so strange a case as that of this English lady before me! I see so many roads stretching before her—I also see her going along more than one road. As a rule, one does not see this in the cards.”