They called her “Madame Zada,” a mystery at the end of the street. I only knew her as the woman on the porch with tired eyes. One day I brought her soup.
Then rice, pie, tea. For four years I showed up, even when she rarely spoke. Once, she told me, “You’re not like the others.” That was enough. Yesterday an ambulance came. “Natural causes,” they said. Hours later, a lawyer called: I was her sole beneficiary.
Her real name was Zada Delacroix—born in Marseille, once a dancer, later a choreographer and vineyard investor. Inside her house, time had stopped: velvet curtains, old photos, shelves of books. Vincent, the lawyer, handed me her will: the house, vineyard shares, a savings account. And a note: