Matthews.â
Heâd called her Jolly. Only her friends and family, small though it was, namely me, ever did that. My auntâs proper name was Juliet, though she claimed no one but her mother had ever used it.
âWell, then,â I said, considering my words carefully before I voiced them, because this was a situation I recognized was fraught with sudden danger. âWell, then, Mr.â¦?â I paused, waiting for him to remind me his name was Chad Prescott though I remembered it perfectly well. But he did not remind me, he simply stood there, arms folded now across his chest, all manly-man in a white polo shirt and pale pink bathing shorts, though had you asked me earlier how a guy in pink shorts could look masculine I would have laughed in your face.
âIâll have my attorney send you the appropriate documents,â he said, turning and speaking over his shoulder, dropping his card on the hall table as he left. âI shall expect you to be gone by next week. Please leave everything as you found it.â
âThe dog and the cat and the bird as well?â I was steaming with the heat of sudden anger. And, I admit it, fear. Because what if he was right and the villa did belong to him? I would regret having sold my little flat in London and all dreams of sunny South of France would be just dreams again.
âTake the animals,â he called back. âI do not want them around.â
I yelled back, âThis is my house, mister, and thereâs nothing you can do about it.â
âYes, there is,â he said and he sounded so calm, so collected, while I had fallen to pieces. I feared he was right.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
âOf course the villa is yours,â my attorney, James Arnold Long, said in his usual calm, controlled, nothing-will-ever-get-to-him voice that Iâm sure he uses on all his usually upset and irate clients. After all, heâs the one who has to sort out their problems; they canât have him getting upset and irate as well.
âHe claims he has papers to prove Aunt Jollyâhe calls her thatâgave him the villa.â
âAnd when did she supposedly do this?â
I could just imagine old-lawyer-Long, with his half-specs sliding down his nose, flipping through the papers on his desk, probably doing at least two things at once as I knew he usually did, instead of concentrating on my problem, which was now a major problem.
âI mean, heâs a doctor, a surgeon, he has documents,â I said, sounding feeble and feminine and a bit lost. Actually, a lot lost. I was in love with a villa. It was mine.
âDid he give the documents to you, or at least copies?â
âWell, no.⦠But he seemed very sure of himself and his position as owner.â
âGive me his phone number and his e-mail address,â Long said. âIâll take care of him.â The lawyerâs voice was firm, determined; he knew his rights, that was his job, after all. âNow you just go about your business, your life, as normal, let us take care of Dr. Prescott.â
I clicked off the phone and went and sat on the terrace, for once not seeing the beautiful view in front of me. I was too in my own head, even when the Siamese jumped onto my lap and settled down as though she now owned me. The dog sat panting at my feet, big brown eyes fixed anxiously on my face, no doubt taking in my worried expression.
Verity was staring at me too, all indignant. âWhat was that about? What does he mean, itâs his villa?â
She looked so skinny and bedraggled, ready to stamp her foot in the good old-fashioned classic manner of outrage. I shrugged, assuming a nonchalance I did not feel.
âThe lawyer tells me itâs all nonsense. Of course the villa is mine. Heâll sort out this Dr. Chad Prescott.â I grinned at her. âWhat dâya think, in his pink shorts?â
Verity sighed. âCute,â she said. âLike