The Fortune Teller

Semele opened her eyes and saw a myriad of emotions play across Theo’s face before his gaze shuttered and the connection between them was severed.

He backed away and gave her room to stand. Her legs wobbled, her whole world off-kilter. She had no idea how to handle the situation—she couldn’t find her voice.

“Forgive me,” he said, sounding like a repentant gentleman from the 1800s. His stilted manner made everything worse. She could barely focus on what he was saying. “I’m afraid I let myself get carried away.” He seemed to be waiting for her response.

“Me too,” she stammered like an idiot.

Before she could recover, he said, “Forgive me,” once more and strode off toward his father’s study. “Safe travels, Miss Cavnow.”

The door closed behind him with a definitive click.





Knight of Swords

After Theo’s exit, Semele crashed back to reality. Her first thought was of Bren.

How could she have done this to him? A flush spread over her as she pictured herself with Theo.

She berated herself while she waited for the courier to come pick up the crates. An endless hour of waiting. Nothing like this had ever happened to her before. She was half tempted to call Bren right then and confess.

Tomorrow marked their two-year anniversary. Now she had this—this nightmare, this shame—blackening everything.

A million times she questioned why he had kissed her.

Theo Bossard was a client. They had barely spoken the whole time she was here, and now he dared to leave her with that send-off? It wasn’t as if she could have a fling with a man who lived four thousand miles away, even if she weren’t with Bren—and she was.

The more she thought about it, the more she was convinced that Theo had seduced her for sport. If she hadn’t had that damn wine, none of this would have happened.

For the rest of the evening she tried to forget. She ate dinner back at the hotel without tasting a thing. She packed her suitcase on autopilot and then stood under the shower, eyes closed, hoping Theo’s memory would wash away with the water.

She didn’t know how she could tell Bren or how he’d react. The past year had been difficult for them. They had been about to move in together when her father died and they’d agreed to put their plans on hold. Bren had helped her through her father’s death and the rift that had occurred between her and her mother when, after the funeral, Semele had discovered the secrets her parents had been keeping from her.

She kept thinking at some point she and Bren would return to how they were their first year together, before her family had fallen apart. They had been “that couple” in the park on Sundays, lying on a blanket and taking turns resting their heads on each other’s stomachs, while reading books in the sunlight. They cooked dinner together, went grocery shopping together, and for Valentine’s Day they even took a couples’ massage class to learn each other’s pressure points.

All that had changed after the funeral.

Semele mourned by losing herself in her work. It was perhaps the biggest source of tension in their relationship. Bren tried to be patient. They still had their own apartments even though they usually spent the night together.

She knew talk of the future would come up again tomorrow night over dinner. And here she was, sabotaging everything.

Lost in thought, at first she didn’t register the strange noise outside the bathroom.

She heard the shuffle again and turned off the water. Someone was in her hotel room.

She stood paralyzed in the shower until instinct kicked in and she reached out to secure the bathroom lock.

She waited breathlessly, dripping wet, with her ear to the door.

Outside there was a sudden swoosh of movement and the quiet click of a door closing.

Frantic, she wrapped a towel around her body and looked for a weapon. She grabbed the only hard thing she could find—the hair dryer.

The adrenaline coursing through her was a rush unlike anything she’d ever felt before. She undid the lock and charged out with a scream.

The room was empty.

Still charging, still screaming—she whipped open the door and ran down the hall, clutching the towel around her while holding her hair dryer out like pepper spray.

The hall was empty too.

She stopped running and turned a full circle, then lowered the arm holding the dryer. She looked deranged.

An elderly couple stepped off the elevator, and the three stared at each other for an awkward moment. Then the old man gave her a wink.

With an embarrassed smile, Semele hurried back to her room, but not before hearing the woman whisper, “American.”

Semele locked the door and moved the dresser to block the entrance. If an intruder tried to come in again, they’d find a wall of fake oak. Still frantic, she checked her things and found her purse, wallet, computer, and iPad all where she’d left them.

She sat down on the bed and let out a shaky breath, trying to calm down.

Had she imagined it? Had someone been in her room at all?

At this point, she was willing to believe she had been mistaken.

It was almost eleven now and she had to be up early to make her flight, but she knew she wouldn’t be able to sleep. Between the image of Theo looping through her brain, her anxiety about Bren, and now fending off a phantom intruder with a bathroom appliance, she just wanted to get the hell out of Switzerland and go home.

She was about to turn off the light when she looked at her laptop and froze. Her computer was on, which was impossible. She had turned it off before she’d left the chateau. She remembered doing it in the kitchen. But now the screen was lit and staring back at her.

The manuscript file was open.

Someone had been looking at her scan. They knew she had a copy.

Semele stared at the ancient Greek script glowing on her computer screen like puzzle pieces waiting to be fit together.

This entire trip she had sensed an invisible shadow following her, and now it had showed itself. She didn’t understand what was happening. The only thing she was certain of was that this manuscript was more than it seemed.

Marcel had tried to warn her.





I must share with you my last days in Alexandria before I can tell you a different tale. For there is more to this story. My journey as a seer truly began when I read the Oracle’s scroll. The day Ariston gave me his translation was also the last day I would see him in Alexandria.

I found him waiting for me in the library, in a reading room that held works on anatomy. He was usually in that chamber.

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