It’ll never work, Giulietta Moretti
…
I knocked on Juliet’s door and before I could speak, she told me to go away. In my book that was an invitation to go in.
I closed the door behind me. She was lying on the bed staring at the ceiling.
“I thought I told you to go away.” She gave me the go-away look.
I sat in the chair beside the bed. The hotel must have thought someone would want to read in peace in their room, otherwise, I didn’t see the point. “Why is it everywhere I go these days, you’re there.”
“We’ve had this discussion.”
“I haven’t got an answer yet? My problem is that I have a suspicious mind, and generally I can see conspiracies before others. You being here has conspiracy written all over it.”
“I was not responsible for crazies like Larry or that Vittoria singling me out to cause others grief.”
“You’re the wrong place wrong time kind of girl? Or has your brother got himself into another jam?”
“No. He’s safe. And I thank you for getting him out of the mess he was in. That was my fault, and I won’t let it happen again.”
“Then how did you get involved in this mess?”
She rolled sideways to look at me. Perhaps she shouldn’t, I could see the tear tracks. She had been crying, though I’m not sure why.
“A phone call. My real name is Giulietta Moretti, and the woman who asked for me by that name sounded like one who had been ringing a great many of them. I just happen to be in a certain Italian town at a certain age, and she said she had something that might interest me. Call me dumb, but after the life I’ve had, something sounded better than nothing.”
“Changing your name no doubt improve your prospects, like an alias. Is this Giulietta Moretti a doctor also?”
“She could be, with a forged certificate, but I wasn’t going to play that card. I was working with dead people, so I didn’t think it mattered. You can’t kill dead people, Evan.”
“Unless they rise from the dead and try to kill you.”
She looked at me strangely.
“Don’t worry. Different lifetime. I like your real name by the way. It has a lovely ring to it.” And I had no idea why I said that. “Perhaps I should stop calling you Juliet. We digress. Continue.”
“I met her in Milan over coffee and she said if I could find the relative documents I might be her missing daughter, and if I was, then I might be an heir to a Count’s estate. She said she had once worked in the residence, and had a relationship with the Count, and the countess didn’t know about it. He was, she said, very discreet.”
“Of course, he was. You can imagine just how discreet he would be. A house full of pretty servant girls, for him it would be a smorgasbord. You went along with the plan?”
“Of course. I found my birth certificate and some old photos of my mother and I, who looked nothing like the woman who called me, so I took them and then asked her what her game was. When she looked at the photos, she said the woman was a friend of hers who worked at the residence, and that she had given me to her to look after, and being the bad mother she was, basically abandoned me. Well, I told her where she got off and left.
“A week later she turns up again, and tells me I am her daughter, and shows me another birth certificate and photos of her, my mother and me at the residence. It’s possible she was telling the truth, so I decided to run with it. She said that the will was going to be ratified, what is not a few days’ time and that I should wait for her call to come and stake my claim.
“The moment I did that, my life went crazy, and then you turn up and people are shooting at me. I was glad to see you again, though.”
“Is that it?”
“Basically.”
“It’s a good story.”
“It’s a true story.”
“It’s a story with elements of truth woven into another story, the story that lives between the lines. I’ll tell you what I told Francesca out there. I live in a world of lies and deceit, and smoke and mirrors. I was taught by the best not to believe anyone or anything. Or trust anyone. If you want to have any chance of seeing me again, you better be prepared to tell me the whole truth, irrespective of what you think I might think. Hell, you’re the most confusing, irritating, aggravating, person I’ve ever known.”
“That far under your skin, eh?” She smiled.
“You’re still on the top of my list. Don’t push it. You’re going to help me sort out this mess tomorrow and then you and I are going to have this out.”
“What if I say no?”
“Do you have a death wish?”
“Maybe I like dancing with the devil.”
Shook my head and stood.
“It’ll never work, Giulietta Moretti. Never.”
© Charles Heath 2023