that first brought the ancestors of these small creatures home to the Villa Romantica, then I owe her more than I can say.
Jerusha. Her name conjures up fantasies, images, scandals, love stories, and tragedy, though most of it has been hidden, or buried long ago. Now that I own her house, I shall make it my business to find out more about the fabled musical artist, singer, dancer, actress, and sex-symbol who captured Paris in the thirties, and who disappeared, forever it seemed, only a few years later. That is, after the death of her lover and his new mistress. Who knows, perhaps I should amend that and say âoneâ of his mistresses.
What was Jerushaâs life really like? Did she love the man? Was he her only lover? What happened to the children she was said to have fostered, even adopted? Were they simply whisked away when Jerushaâs world came tumbling down, and only the small animals, her pets, left to console her?
Jerusha is a mystery that belongs to the Villa Romantica, and now, therefore, to me, shared with my young guest, Verity.
Iâm sitting on the terrace, smoking a forbidden cigarette, forbidden by myself I might say, when I hear a footstep behind me. An arm snakes around and the cigarette is whisked from my lips before I can even protest.
âFilthy habit,â Verity said, dropping into the cushioned sofa opposite. âAnd itâll kill you in the end.â
âLike poison, you mean?â
She threw me a you-know-what-I-mean glance, then stubbed out the cigarette in the yellow ceramic ashtray labeled PASTIS , stolen in a moment of great daring from a cheap boulevard café in Marseilles. I treasured that ashtray and my own bit of daring and gave her a frown to show my displeasure.
âSo. What about you, now?â I said coldly. âI see the tears are finished. Are you all set to go back to that bastard you ran away from? Give it one more go, the way all good girls do?â
She said, âIâm no good girl. Iâm staying here with you.â And then she burst into tears again.
I should have kept my mouth shut.
Â
13
It seems now that not only am I stuck with a clutter of animalsâwell, that is, two and a birdâbut also a young and miserable runaway because in my heart I cannot get myself to ask her to leave, tell her to go find a hotel room, to get on with her life and not wallow in the sentiment of a terrible marriage to an oaf who treated her like dirt, and whatâs more, who stole all her money. Even if it was only two thousand, it was two thou more than she has right now, you can bet on that. Plus her jewels, which I hope were not old family stuff, inherited, and probably now destined for the pawn shop, never to be seen again. You can always buy new ones when you get the money backâearn it or whatever, the way Jerusha had, until her world fell completely apart much like young Verity, who had better quit her moaning, or else.
Oh God, how can I be so unkind? Is there anything more painful than a broken heart? Not when you are going through it, I remember that now.
âMy dear,â I said in my kindly old aunt voice. (I mean she is so young and I am, though I hate to admit it, now âin my forties,â but this is the role I seem to have been cast in at the moment.) âMy dear, you have to trust me.â
âWhy?â She gave me a long, weepy, upward look from reddened eyes. âI mean, why do I have to trust you? I trusted him and look what happened.â
âYes, well, of course, he is a man. Itâs different between us women.â
She stared at me. The sobbing stopped. At least I had silenced her.
We were sitting in the car, a newly rented Fiat, in place of the dead Maserati, and she was staring at the Villa Romantica like it was Draculaâs castle and I was maybe the vampire himself.
âWhy did you bring me here?â
âOh, for Godâs sake.â I managed to keep the snarl from my
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