“Might I interest the young lady in red in a few curious trinkets?”
Startled from my reverie, I looked up to see the tall, elegant stranger once more.
“No, thank you, sir.” I shook my head. “I have no money to spare.”
The stranger stepped closer. In his gloved hands he held a flute, beautifully carved and polished to a high shine. Up close, I could see the gleam of his eyes from beneath the hood.
“No? Well, then, if you won’t buy my wares, would you accept a gift?”
“A—a gift?” I was hot and uncomfortable beneath his scrutiny. He looked at me as no one had before, as though I were more than the sum of my eyes, my nose, my lips, my hair, and my wretched plainness. He looked as though he saw me entire, as though he knew me. But did I know him? His presence scratched at my mind, like a half-remembered song.