Read Avarice Online

Authors: S. W. Frank

Avarice (17 page)

He gave her a kiss which silenced her complaints. “I made a promise to you Ari and I plan to keep it. Trust that I will love.”

Her eyes were tender. “I trust you.”

“Bene.” His mouth twisted in a naughty grin. “Wear nothing. I would love to have dessert when I get home.”

She winked and then he was gone.

Not long after, braving the frigid wind, Nico stood at the door of Bianca’s villa waiting to be let in. Finally, the door opened and he saw Bianca. Her eyes were wet as she framed the entryway. There wasn’t the pleasant welcome he’d become accustomed to.

For some inexplicable reason h
is mind drifted to the night he’d come to Bianca’s door and her coded plea for his assistance. “Ciao Nico.”

Her
eyes flicked left, almost like a flare sending up a warning. Bianca spoke, yet there was a quiver that told him something was amiss.

What danger, this time waited behind that door?

Too many burdens he carried, yet soon Tony would arrive to assist in lightening the load. However the responsibility of family would remain foremost.

Nico sought to cleanse his corrupt soul but in trials saw the Butcher’s hand through child eyes as he fought to lift his head from icy water. But the memories
were from infancy, pictures stored in his brain that through time he saw often.

The vile man he made The Butcher
out to be over the years was replaced by an image of his mother. Why had this come to mind, he wondered?

Then he recalled the conversations with Vincent and the brotherly laughter when he recanted what The Butcher had done.

“Ah, Nico, he has yet to beat you. Why do you make these things up?”

“You don’t believe me?”

“He has never tried to drown you in ice water. Do not speak crazy.”

“I’m telling you it happened Vincenzo, vaffanculo stronzo!” he recalled shouting at his brother.

They were at Sophie’s home that day and she became concerned. She went to her brother and he too denied Nico’s charges of such abuse. Lies he had thought as a boy. Sophie he realized became kinder to him. She became almost like a mother. But could she have pitied him? Was any of what he said real, the abuse part that is?

The Butcher was ruthless but Vincent said he loved them as if they were his sons and taught them how to kill but never physically abused them -at all.

The fragments of the past were multilayered. What Ari spoke was true. To have a bright future, the past must have a spotlight. His protection from bad memories had become a mental prison until he faced the trauma.

Gasping and choking from the water, breaths hoarse, long and shrill similar to an asthmatic Nico fought for air
in his mind. Bent over with his hands on his knees wishing death on himself is probably when he died in infancy at the hands of his mother. The dreams which sprung forth in intervals to spark hope were life, except he wasn’t meant to live, was he? A mother who birthed him had foretold his fate. It was she who tried to give him a watery grave!

She appeared from his dreams at the door and fired, but quicken actions from Bianca prolonged death once more. The struggle of women was halted when Nico seized a hand brandishing a weapon and raised the arm high. Shots in rapid
recession blew apart the ceiling as a mother screamed, “Die my son. You and your father must die!”

He shoved Bianca clear of the danger, lifting easily the light body. Soldati who were assigned to guard Bianca filed through the doors at the sound of gunshots. The aided their mistress off the floor.

“I should have killed you the first time woman. You are not my mother!” Nico snarled as the other hand took hold of her throat and began to squeezed the life out of Sabrina.

Clarity was in the malicious eyes. She was not blind he saw that now. A fool he was but not one more death because of his folly would lie on his conscience. Spittle and blood ran from the evil woman’s lips. His present to family was ridding them of another threat to their existence.

War with me...I dare you.

Weakness of mind will not be
an inheritance any longer.

Death to the enemies of my family.

Kill a treacherous mother!

Sabrina became string. Her arms dropped to her side and the gun hit the floor. Muscles of a killer had coiled so tight, veins ran like vines from his neck and fingers.

“Nico…Nico….” He heard at his back.

He listened because there’s a woman whose voice sounded similar.

Ari?

“She’s dead Nico…she’s dead…you can let her go darling.”

Ari?

His fingers loosened and he turned thinking he’d gone mad to hear her voice. Thankfully he had not.

She walked tentatively into his arms, hugged the shit out of his waist and then began to sob. “I love you…it’s over Nico…it’s over.”

Over her head he saw Bianca, tears flowing without shame. She lived and there would not be a repeat of Vincent. The pressure eased away.

“I’ll take care of this, go Nico,” Bianca said. “Go home with your wife.”

Ari was sad but had not lost her senses. Like a cat taunted by yarn she seethed. “Stay away from my husband bitch…do you understand me?”

“Sí,” Bianca responded. “Capisco.”

She watched the couple exit. She had yet to tell Nico, maybe one day they will speak of truths. Sabrina had notified the Segrete of her confession. The entire bonding ritual she orchestrated by her betrayal. As the guards cleaned away the body and spilled fluids she leaned her head in abject misery to the wall. She would leave this place. She had no other choice. The promise she’d given Nico was broken. What cruelty to love again and have it unrequited?

What vicious joke reversed a surgeon’s work to give her Nico’s seed to carry?

Sabrina had sought to ruin family’s unity. But, she would not win. She’d enlist her father’s aid. Nico will never know of this child she carried…this gift she would love.

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

 

 

 

Utter blackness exists when one cannot distinguish the barren tress or feel wet snow on slippered feet.
Cry rivers. Let the waters flow and merge with dried lakes, fill them until my sorrows drown...for I do not need tears in this black hour...strength por favore is what I require to save my own. "
Dammi la forza…aiutatemi
!" Sophie shrieked gripping and pulling with fierce determination to aid the soldati.

Cuts bled
down matronly arms as fluids ran unnoticed. The saints gave strength to a desperate mother; they gave hope that she could accomplish the impossible.


Santi aiutami
!”

Invisible hands gave aid Shanda was freed from the wreckage. What heartache it is to drag a lifeless body to a lap that had earlier
cradled children but now holds the dead. “
Lovely daughter I am your mother…I am tua madre in this last moment, por favore rest your head.”

The shrieks were impotence of all mothers who must live with memories of their young. For mercy has no ears, and is blinded by the power of death. Weak are the limbs, heavy is the heart.

She rocked the woman, running her hands along her arms. Blood poured from a cut on her forehead. There was not a whimper or moan. She’d died instantly. Sophie had witnessed such aftermaths of accidents like this before.

When she was a young girl, her cousin Antony died in a similar collision. She witnessed the incident, because it occurred outside of her school.

Her father sent him to pick her up.

Antony was seventeen.

It seems she was meant to outlive the young, even then.

 

 

 

 

***

 

 

 

Turn on the news. Find a channel. See the images of flashing lights in the night, police tape and mangled metal. Those are images on a screen, but real for Giuseppe
when he arrived outside the gates of his mother’s villa.

Fear is also real. It leaps higher than flames from a festive bonfire. An unafraid Don who slaughtered men was forced to feel its potency.
Initially he emerged from the car in a daze of denial. However, as he thought about his son and Shanda, his legs were swiftly moving.

Words in Italian were shouted as he ran to the ambulance and swung the door open. His legs bent to leap into the vehicle but hands grabbed at his arms, pleading voices of morning people asked him not to.

Why he wondered, why did they not let him go?

In anger he roared and they released their hold…up…up and in to the place where uniformed medical personnel put away instruments to save lives in medical bags.

None could look him in the eye.

None wanted to
receive a Don’s wrath.

None wanted to speak the words a Don already knew.

“Get out…leave me!” he shouted and they scurried through the doors, closing him in with his donna lying immobile covered in blood.

On
knees he went.

Giuseppe
dropped like a stone, shaking a death carriage on wheels.

“Donna…you leave again…dispiace…dispiace that I was not here to go with you,” he sobbed.

He touched Shanda’s cold cheek that was once warm. His finger traced her lips, remembering the feel against his in passion, still now and forever more.

How close he’d come to that elusive happiness his brother got to enjoy. His fingers had touched the fine silk of cloth called love. Whatever sins committed in his life, Giuseppe wished could be
undone for a chance to prove his affections were real for the mother of his son.

Then his hand touched her stomach. Gone, too was their unborn child.

Gone were possibilities.

Bereft, his dark head lowered to the railing and the man who never cried wailed like a baby being born.

Inconsolable…desolate in grief, a Don fell back against cramped metal seat to stare through air.

The hour stretched.

Death is forever long.

 

 

 

***

 

 

“Que?”

“Sí, Shanda’s car hit a tree. She is dead cugino. I am very sorry. I think its best you tell your wife. I cannot do it.”

“What?” Alfonzo repeated as if he hadn’t heard correctly the first time.
He anticipated a grave notification and had steeled himself for the role of grieving cousin when he was told about Domingo. This news about Shanda dying in a car accident was totally unexpected. The season wrought two funerals instead of presents.

“Geez, oh no…oh no!” he bellowed. Giuseppe must be distraught. He
leaned over with his head between his legs. “Oh geez…how do I break this to my wife?”

Amelda’s compassionate words came softly. “You will find a way.
I must go cugino. I must comfort my mama.”

Alfonzo let the wheels of the car bounce him like a ragdoll as he held the cell aloft long after Amelda disconnected. That painful ache going round and round never settled anywhere. Nah, he couldn’t go home and tell his wife her best friend was dead. Damn, he just couldn’t do it!

The wheels stopped spinning. A merry-go-round is what he’d been on it seemed. The driver never said a word. The shits obvious he’d arrived.

Songs that’s all he heard
; the saddest fucking songs ever.

He slumped
in the seat, dialed Giuseppe’s number and he answered immediately. They had this bond that grew so thick over the years that when one hurt the other felt it also. “I’ll be there grande fratello.”

“Grazie fratellino I do not know what to do…”

Alfonzo closed his eyes at the sound of his brother’s despair. “There is a boy who requires a father now more than ever. Hold him brother…feel his life and that of his mother. Together fratellino we will mourn. That is what our family has done and will continue to do.”

Giuseppe sniffled
. The volume and bass in his tone elevated. “Sí, hai ragione!”

“Hold tight, I’ll be there
the same way you come through for me.”

“Grazie…I must see my son.”

Alfonzo sighed, turned the handle and climbed out the car. Face the storm dammit. He stood erect, sucked in a deep breath and headed for the door.

 

 

 

 

C
HAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

 

 

 

 

 

The journal was bookmarked in several places. The urgent readings Selange wanted Alfonzo to look at first were highlighted. When the bedroom door opened she sat upright. “That was fast. Come here honey, hurry up and read this. You won’t believe this!”

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