“Her headaches are gone, but it’s our only victory. In the end, I’m unable to help her. I’ve enlisted aid, yet we have no answers,” Aunt Evelyn replied. “The fault is mine. I promised to help you, and I failed. I don’t know how to proceed.”
I placed my hand on her arm. “Together, we’ll figure it out somehow.”
She smiled, though not as confident as that evening in my apartment, and covered my hand with hers. “Yes, we will.”
Squeezing her arm for comfort, I turned to my uncle. “How is Jack doing?”
“He and I are meeting up in Monaco in a week. He has a job there shooting very beautiful and important people.” His phone buzzed and he picked it up. Judging by the smile on his face, it could only be the man he loved calling. A glowing red thread snaked out of the phone, traveled down his arm, and connected to the left side of his chest.
Uncle Michael excused himself to take the call.
“Did you see that?” I asked.
She tilted her head. “See what?”
“The red thread on Uncle Michael. When Jack called, it popped out and connected to him.”
Aunt Evelyn pursed her lips. “Clairvoyants cannot see red threads.”
“I know, but I did see one. It connected to his heart. How is it that I could see it?”
Her fingers gripped the top rail of the chair. “I don’t know. Everything about your situation is unprecedented. I’m questioning what I thought I believed to be immutable.”
My aunt, one of the steadiest people I knew, held on to the chair as if it were a lifeline. While I craved change and rebelled against anything contrary to my desires, Aunt Evelyn revered tradition and devoted herself to her clairvoyance. Seeing her doubt was unsettling. What was she thinking? In her place, I would wonder if I had made the right choices, if my beliefs had barred the possibilities presenting themselves to those bold enough to grasp them.
Uncle Michael returned from his call with Jack. With the phone tucked away, I couldn’t see the thread anymore. “He’s settled in and suggested we stop by after Monaco. He’s been in Paris numerous times, but he’d like to see you two again.”
My aunt recovered and mustered a smile. “It’ll be good to see Jack. I’m sure he’ll want to see the tea shop.”
“He’s offered to take promotional photos for your website or future advertisements.”
She narrowed her eyes. “It is supposed to be a nice visit, not work.”
Uncle Michael held his palms up. “It was his suggestion. Of course, if you give him a tin or two of his beloved tea, he wouldn’t object.”
“He’s just as bad as you are.” Aunt Evelyn shook her head. “You found a good one, Michael.”
“It was actually Vanessa who did. She introduced me to Jack. Thought we’d be perfect for each other.”
I preened at the compliment. “You are—I was right.”
“You’re lucky it worked out,” my aunt said.
For her, love was sacred and yet unattainable. Before Marc had returned, I believed it too. Now I was convinced that my instincts were right: she and Girard belonged together. No one should be alone unless they desired it. But she moved to Paris for Girard, and for herself. I would text Marc tonight for an update and to tell him what happened yesterday.
“With risk comes reward, Auntie. As an entrepreneur, you know this well,” I said.
She sighed. “Yes and, lately, too well.”
“What is happening with the tea shop?” Uncle Michael asked.
I listened as my aunt informed him about the boycott and a few other challenges she neglected to tell me: nasty rumors defaming her character, some of her suppliers dropping her, extra repairs, delayed shipments, and miscommunication and errors with the ads she purchased in local papers. I felt like a child watching two adults speak.
My uncle frowned. “Does this boycott have traction?”
“I find myself standing outside my shop more often, trying to draw customers in. The foot traffic in the market is there, but they’re not coming in. They visit everyone else.” My aunt sounded worried, more worried than she had ever revealed to me. “I was closed again today. With the current climate, I can see people getting behind the boycott. I could lose my suppliers. No customers and no stock means no business.”
“Evelyn,” he said, embracing her. “I don’t want you to fail, but the family back home will be there if you need to return.”
She lowered head. “I can’t. Even if the business collapses, I’m staying here. There’s nothing for me in California.”
“You thought all this through, haven’t you?”
“Yes.” Aunt Evelyn straightened her posture. “I’ve made my decision. There’s no room for anything but success. I’m not going back, Michael. I’ll still visit, but Paris is my home now. I already started the immigration process.”
Another bombshell that I should have expected since she declared her move to be permanent. My aunt’s trust in my uncle was a testament to the strength of their friendship. They were best friends, but I doubted he knew about Girard.
“I was hoping your stay here was only temporary. A few years to experiment since you’re such a Francophile. As long as you’re happy, Evelyn, I’ll support you.”
I stood beside my aunt and placed my hand in the crook of her arm. “Don’t worry, she is.”
She might not be now, but she would be by the time I left.
Thirty-Seven
Happiness is a state of mind; however, just declaring yourself happy did not, in itself, persuade others, nor did it fool you. No one but you would know the lie, if you told it. Aunt Evelyn wanted to be happy. It was the reason she moved to Paris and chose this neighborhood. I had to help her.
I searched for an opening to speak with my uncle in private about my plans to reunite Aunt Evelyn with Girard. When my aunt excused herself to take a call from Ines’s mother, I took advantage of the situation and asked Uncle Michael to go for a short walk. He balked at the suggestion, but I convinced him that we wouldn’t cross any intersections and that fresh air was conducive to recovery. Besides, I needed to test out the cane and learn how to navigate with it.
“I don’t think Evelyn will be pleased.” He closed the apartment door behind us.
“She’s busy. As long as I’m being chaperoned, I don’t think she’ll mind.” I linked my arm with his. “Her whole life is in that store and she’s doing her best to save it.”
At six thirty in the evening, most of the shops were preparing to close. We went into an antique store, perusing antiques, furniture, and artwork. I took care maneuvering around the breakables with the curved handle of the cane. I was grateful for the extra stability that helped take the pressure off my sore hip.
“I warned her. Opening a shop is difficult even with support; then you add in a different culture, on a new continent, in a competitive city.” Uncle Michael picked up an old framed black-and-white photograph of an apothecary storefront. “It helps that she knows the language, but she’s all by herself here.”
“She has friends. She’ll be fine.” I set down a painted ceramic bird I had been examining.
“I have to admit, I had been concerned about how well you two would get along.”
Years ago, during one of my failed clairvoyance lessons, Uncle Michael had picked me up from Aunt Evelyn’s. He gathered a sobbing six-year-old and drove to our favorite gelato shop, where he listened to my biased version of how the lesson went.
“It was as bad as you expect. She’s a strict teacher; I’m a terrible student. I’m not like any seer she’s seen before. We argued, but when we weren’t bickering, we enjoyed one another’s company and ate the best food. We don’t see fortune-telling the same way, but I think it’s okay now. We’ve reached a truce, and all I had to do was almost die.”
I picked up the bird again and, on a whim, decided to buy it for Ma. It fit in the palm of my hand and was painted with a robin’s-egg-blue crackle finish. It would look perfect on the fireplace mantel next to the white ceramic stag she had bought from a local gallery. My uncle offered to carry it for me.
His manicured hand clutched the small bird. “I can’t imagine what you’ve been through.”
“I emerged relatively unscathed. Sure, my left hip is sore and I have this awesome scar, but I’ll take that over the alternative.” A married couple in their early thirties entered the antique store, a baby in the man’s arms. A red thread linked them both, heart to heart. Even when they wandered apart, they remained tied. Threads were everywhere. “I see red threads connecting couples now. I couldn’t do that before.”
Uncle Michael squinted at the people around him. “Well, that’s certainly new. When did it start?”
“When Jack called your phone. That couple with the baby has it too.”
“You seem sanguine about this new ability, unlike earlier. Is this something you want?”
“Yes.”
The answer came so naturally, I almost thought I hadn’t responded. I rejected fortune-telling because of the burden, embarrassment, and shame that came with it. Knowing the future held no appeal to me; however, my new aptitude didn’t terrify me. I wanted to learn more, what it meant and its scope.