A cold sweat erupted over my scalp. “Excuse me? Colin lives there? In the flat I’m going to be staying in?”
“Yes. They’re very close—Miss Dubose has always been like a grandmother to him. She just dotes on him—he even calls her Nana.”
I couldn’t imagine stony-faced Colin calling anyone by such an endearment. I, for one, had always been Madison to him, a solid brick wall I wasn’t ever likely to scale.
Arabella continued. “Sophia, Colin’s grandmother, owned the flat. When she died, Colin’s parents inherited it. But even when she was alive, Sophia allowed Miss Dubose to live there. They were great friends since before the war. Miss Dubose never married, you see, or had children, so she more or less adopted her best friend’s family as her own. When she went into hospital last month and her doctors told us to prepare for the worst, she asked that Colin move in so that they could spend more time together and he could help get her finances all settled. That’s his specialty, so it made sense.”
“You said she wasn’t in the best of health. So she’s ill?”
“No specific illness, but she’s ninety-nine. Her heart is weak, and her doctors say her body is beginning to shut down. She looks rather good, however. One would have to examine her very closely to agree with them.”
“So Miss Dubose, the nurse, Colin, and I will all be living in the same flat. Together.”
“Precisely. And George, too, don’t forget. It’s a very large flat, and Colin works extraordinary hours, so you’ll probably never run into each other.” She stopped talking as if there wasn’t anything else she needed to explain.
“And you didn’t think to mention this to me before—like when I agreed to come here in the first place? What did Colin say when you told him?”
Arabella kept her eyes on the road in front of her and remained silent.
“Seriously? You didn’t tell him it was me?”
“I told him that a freelance journalist I’d hired to interview Miss Dubose would be staying in one of the spare bedrooms for a fortnight or so. He didn’t have a problem with that.”
“But you didn’t tell him it was me.”
She shook her head. “It didn’t come up.”
“Imagine him not jumping to the conclusion that it would be someone he knew during his university days.” I rolled my eyes even though she couldn’t see me.
Her shoulders sagged slightly under the leopard-skin print. “It’s just that Miss Dubose was so insistent that you stay with her, and it would have been too complicated asking Colin to leave. It’s only a couple of weeks—maybe more if you’d like to stay longer. Surely you two can be cordial for that long.”
I pressed my head against the back of the seat and briefly closed my eyes. “Hopefully, he won’t remember me. I haven’t even thought about him in the last seven years.” That wasn’t completely true, but I would never tell that to Arabella. She had one of those overactive imaginations that created stories where none existed. I always told her that she was unsuited to her role as an editor and should have been writing cozy mysteries instead.
“So Colin has no idea that I’m about to show up on his doorstep.”
“It will be such a surprise, won’t it?” she said.
I shook my head with emphasis. “No, it will be a disaster. I think he dislikes Americans. Or maybe it’s Southern Americans.”
Arabella laughed. “Don’t be daft. Miss Dubose is a Southerner, too, remember—and Colin adores her.”
I didn’t want to admit that I was intrigued by this Southern centenarian and the fact that we were distantly related and would be meeting for the first time in London. I didn’t want to know that Colin adored her and called her Nana. I wanted to turn back to the airport and return to the stable, uneventful life I’d made for myself in New York City, following in the footsteps of my aunt Cassie. Although she was in advertising and I was a freelance journalist, we’d both wiped the red clay of small-town Georgia off the bottoms of our shoes to start new lives in the big city. She’d lasted ten years, and I had every intention of breaking her record.
Arabella turned toward me with a wide grin. “This will be fun.”
“Or not,” I suggested, my words swallowed by the sudden rush of wind as the little car gathered speed and hurtled us down the highway as Arabella pressed the accelerator.
I closed my eyes and smelled dog breath and fur as the wind whipped at my face. No matter how terrifying this drive into London with my friend behind the wheel might be, it would pale in comparison with Colin Eliot’s reaction to seeing me at his front door.
CHAPTER 2
When we’d made it inside the city limits and the increasing traffic slowed our progress, I released my tight grip on the door handle. Arabella’s windblown hair was approaching steel wool status, and George looked as if he’d been electrified.
Arabella reached into a large purse on the floor by my feet and pulled out an Hermès scarf. As she tied it attractively around her head, she said, “Colin’s mother, Aunt Penelope, is eager to meet you. I think she’s a bit worried about you living with Miss Dubose, but I assured her that I knew you well and that you’re trustworthy and kind. That did make her feel better, but at some point, we’ll have to arrange a visit.”
“Sure,” I said. Though I’d seen them only from afar, I vaguely remembered Colin’s parents as seeming elderly to me seven years ago—at least ten to fifteen years older than the parents of the group of friends I hung out with