The gipsy woman shook her head pityingly.
“Ah, lady! We don’t know ourselves! It comes to us suddenly. Like a flash of light we see your future—then it fades. It’s a sixth sense that’s given to the poor gipsies. They’re born with it, and they can’t explain it any more than you can explain the breath of your body.”
“I’ve often heard of this sixth sense,” whispered Daphne to Lois.
“Sometimes we feel what’s going to be, and sometimes we see it,” continued the gipsy, fumbling with something in her lap. “We can’t tell beforehand which way the knowledge will come.”
“What’s that you’ve got there?” asked Veronica sharply. “Is it a crystal?”
“You’re right, lady. It is a crystal, and a wonderful one too. My grandmother got it from—but no! I’d best not be telling that. I wouldn’t part with it, lady, if the Queen offered me her crown in exchange. Take it in your hand! Look how it sparkles! It doesn’t often shine like that—only when someone with the sixth sense holds it.”
“I’ve sometimes suspected that I possess psychic powers!” murmured Veronica complacently.
“Would you like to learn the future, lady?” queried the gipsy. “Then hold it so, in your hands, for a minute. Now it has felt you and known you, and it will tell—oh, yes! it will tell!”
She took the crystal again, and turned to the companion who squatted beside her on the floor.
“Zara! Look what is coming to the lady,” she commanded softly.