
The train pulled into the Gare de Lyon with a shriek of brakes and a cloud of steam, and for a moment I thought time itself had stalled with us. We stepped down onto the platform — myself, the Queen at my side, Ishy Belle clutching her dress like a beam of light, and Rosa Lynn with her ribbon tied neat, eyes already wide with the sights of the city.
Paris, 1924. The air smelled of rain, tobacco, and fresh bread, all tangled into one. The boulevards stretched out like veins, glowing under the lamps. Jazz spilled out of every doorway, brass and piano chasing each other through smoke. The city was alive, not as a backdrop, but as a body we had just stepped inside.
The Queen moved through it like she had been here all along. Her pale hair caught the light of the café lamps, her luminous skin turning every head that passed, though she only had eyes for Rosa Lynn, who clung to her hand as though she had known her forever. Ishy Belle shimmered faintly, her glow bending in the reflections of the Seine, a spirit-child walking among mortals without disguise.
We wandered into Montparnasse where artists and poets argued over wine and absinthe. Hemingway hunched at a table with a notebook, his eyes cutting toward us but saying nothing. In a smoky corner, Picasso laughed too loud, sketching strangers on napkins. The Queen tilted her head, amused, her hand tightening around mine as though to remind me that she saw through the illusion of genius.
We took the girls into the night air, across the Pont Neuf where the Seine curled like a silver snake beneath us. Rosa Lynn’s ribbon danced in the wind; Ishy Belle leaned over the rail, her glow mirrored in the river. The Queen bent low, whispering to them both, her voice soft and fierce, a promise only they would understand.
And when we reached the Place du Trocadéro, the Eiffel Tower rose against the stars, lit in a geometry that seemed both steel and scripture. We stood together — myself, the Queen, Ishy Belle, and Rosa Lynn — not as visitors in 1920s Paris, but as something eternal. A family carried across lives, across centuries, across myth itself.
Paris roared around us, but in that moment the city was silent. The only truth was the four of us, standing as if we had always been there, as if time itself had bent to make room.
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