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Authors: Lynda La Plante

BELLA MAFIA (47 page)

BOOK: BELLA MAFIA
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In the hope of getting his car fixed quickly, Pirelli prom-

ised to pass the papers to the right department. Then he saw the name.

The driving license particulars were in a neat, clear print. The car had been rented by Luka Carolla.

Through the window Adina watched the car pause yet again. Three times it had cruised past the villa gates. This time it turned into the drive.

A young man wearing dark glasses and a navy blue suit stepped from the Alfa Romeo, walked casually up the steps to the porch, and rang the bell. Then he pressed his face against the stained glass, trying to see into the hall.

"Who is it, Adina?" Graziella made her way slowly down the stairs.

"Shall I answer, signora?"

"Yes, yes, quickly."

Graziella turned to look up the stairs. Luka remained on the first landing, peering over the banister.

The man leaned against the doorframe and smiled at Graziella. "Signora Luciano, allow me to introduce myself. I am Giuseppe Rocco. My father was a great friend of Don Roberto. May I come in? Thank you, thank you ..."

Graziella could not recall the young man's father, but she gestured for him to follow her into the living room. She offered sherry, coffee, or tea, but he refused. He sat in the center of the sofa and placed his expensive leather briefcase on the floor beside his highly polished black shoes. His eyes, behind the dark glasses, roamed everywhere while his lips continued to smile.

"Sadly, my father died more than two years ago. I now work for the Corleones; I handle their real estate business. May I give you my card, Signora Luciano?"

Graziella gazed at the neat white card, then tapped it against her hand. "If you have come to discuss business, then you must speak with my daughter-in-law. Are you interested in leasing the factory? Is that why you're here?"

"Pardon?"

Graziella blushed. She was uncertain of Teresa's plans, so she quickly changed the subject. "Are you sure I cannot offer you tea? Some lemonade? I made it myself."

"Thank you, a lemonade would be most refreshing."

Left alone, Rocco was like an eel, slithering around the room, picking things up, turning over papers. Then he walked out into the hall.

The stairs creaked. Luka winced and slipped into the nearest room. Rocco almost caught him; he knew someone had been on the stairs, and he paused, listening. Rocco moved quickly to the study and had the audacity to try to enter, but the door was locked. Again he listened intently at the foot of the stairs, then walked into the kitchen.

Graziella was startled by his sudden appearance. "You've met Adina, my housekeeper, Signor?" She handed him the lemonade, unable to recall his name.

"Giuseppe Rocco." He smiled and sipped the lemonade. "This is very nice, refreshing." He stared at Adina, then back to Graziella. "Is your daughter-in-law at home?"

"Teresa is at the tile factory. If you would like to leave a message, I will make sure she receives it."

Rocco smiled and put his half-finished lemonade on the wooden table. "What time is she expected home, Signora Luciano?"

"Maybe five o'clock, maybe later. She is very busy."

"Then perhaps you would tell her that I called and that I would like to talk with her as soon as possible. My clients are the purchasers of the villa, and they would like to discuss immediate occupancy. Thank you for seeing me and for that delicious lemonade."

He removed his glasses. His eyes were strangely unfocused, with deep red pressure marks around the sockets. He replaced the glasses quickly, and with a small bow and a slight click of his polished heels, he saw himself out.

After watching Rocco drive slowly away from the villa, Luka turned from the bedroom window and noticed the big bed with the wooden posts, draped in a dust cover. He recognized it as the room where the two little boys had been murdered. His body tensed, the adrenaline pumping through him, making him as alert as a cat. He moved quickly and silently upstairs to his own room, his breath hissing through clenched teeth.

He unbuttoned his shirt and eased the bandage from his shoulder. The scab was larger than the bullet hole, but the swelling had subsided, leaving only a dark bruise over most of his shoulder. He flexed his muscles and felt the stiffness of his fingers. The shoulder had bothered him since it was broken when he was a child. Now it felt as if small grains of sand were grinding together, but it was healed well enough to leave the bandage off.

He searched the room for a small pair of scissors. Then, watching his actions in the mirror, he began, clumsily, to cut the stitches. Suddenly he whirled, scissors raised in a reflex gesture of protection, but he dropped his arms immediately when he saw that it was Graziella who had entered the room.

Her arms were full of clothes. "I'm sorry. I didn't mean to startle you. These are for you. They were Michael's."

She put the clothes on the bed and turned to him. A drop of blood trickled down his arm from where he had cut the first stitch, and she hurried to him with motherly concern.

Luka sat at the kitchen table while Graziella and Adina fussed with hot water and antiseptic. Adina cut the stitches, using a razor-sharp kitchen knife, then pulled the thread away with tweezers. He clenched his teeth as he felt each stitch go, and tears smarted in his eyes. Finally he felt a pad with cool disinfectant cream placed on the wound, and Adina cut strips of adhesive to hold it in place.

When he was bandaged, Graziella cupped his face in her hands and gently kissed his forehead. "What a brave boy you are. It's all over now."

Slowly Luka lifted his arms, slipped them around her, and rested his head against her breasts. Her hand stroked his hair with feather-light touches, and his grip tightened. He had never felt so safe, so protected, in his entire life.

Graziella's hand patted Luka's bare back, and she froze. Her fingers traced the scars; she released him to look at his back.

"My God, your back, what happened? Look, Adina, the scars . . . Mother of God, Johnny, who did this to you?"

Adina gasped at the sight, the deep scars crisscrossed in weals, rough where they ran together in ridges, leaving deep, stretched white lines.

Luka backed away, grabbing his shirt. "It was nothing—"

"Nothing? I have never seen such scars. What happened? How did you injure yourself like that?"

Luka tried to put his shirt on but needed Graziella's help.

She kissed him again. "It hurts you to remember, yes?" She began to button his shirt for him.

He nodded; then, feeling safer with his shirt on, he lied. "It was a water-skiing accident. I fell off and got caught in the propeller of the speedboat."

"Oh, you poor boy. You are lucky to be alive, no?"

"I guess so . . . yes, I guess so."

Graziella nodded her sympathy, then smiled. "You know, your hair looks like—Have you seen Rosa's hair? She cut it herself."

He smiled, and Graziella tutted. "You young people, when you've got something God gave you, you want to ruin it. Now, sit down, and let Adina give you a haircut."

Luka ran his fingers through his hair and gave a boyish laugh. Adina opened a drawer and brought out a pair of scissors and an old tablecloth. Graziella pulled out a chair.

"Come on, sit down, we'll make you look handsome; we'll cut off that color."

Luka asked Adina, "You know how to cut hair?"

"Oh,
si,
Signor Johnny, I have a sister who is a hairdresser, and I taught her everything she knows. Sit . . . See my hair? I cut my hair."

Adina's hair was what could only be described as a basin

cut.

Graziella gave him a wink. "I'll make sure she cuts it good. I'll watch, tell her what to do. I'll get Don Roberto's clippers from the bedroom."

Graziella was not gone more than a few minutes, but when she came back, she gasped. Adina had chopped off all the dye, leaving small sprouts of blond hair sticking up. "Adina, what have you done?"

"Cut the dye off, like you told me to."

Luka looked up, bits of hair covering his face and shoulders. "She's fast, I'll give her that."

The two old women fussed and argued while Luka sat passively, not even complaining when Adina cut his neck as she

shaved it. Then they stood back to review their handiwork.

Graziella blew the hair from his eyes. "I don't think you will like it, but when it grows a bit, you will. ..."

The three trooped into the hall, and Luka stood in front of the big mirror. There was no sign of any hair dye; in fact, there was very little sign of hair at all. Adina had given him what was virtually a crew cut, a very short, slightly lopsided crew cut.

"What do you think?"

Luka tipped his head slightly, then smiled a beautiful, slow smile. His pale blue eyes twinkled. "I think I look like I just got out of prison."

Graziella put her hands to her cheeks. She looked so upset that he bent and kissed her. She reached out and touched his hair.

"My son Michael was as blond as you. For a moment you had such a look of him, don't you think, Adina?"

Adina was busily trimming bits off her own hair. She turned, scissors in hand.

"Signora, would you like me to trim your hair?"

Graziella ran into the kitchen, squealing like a girl. "No, heaven forbid! One prisoner is enough!"

Adina caught Luka's arm and whispered, "If the signora asks you to go for a drive, refuse. She is crazy in the car; she has no license." She nodded, her lips pursed, and followed Graziella into the kitchen.

Luka giggled, stared at himself, then hurried after them, not wanting to leave them, wanting to feel their warmth, their affection.

He stood, smiling, in the doorway while they argued about which one was going to make his lunch. He went up and put his arms around Graziella from behind.

"We will sit in the garden, yes, Johnny?"

Adina hurried to get Graziella an old coat and brought another for Luka. "It's cold; you don't want to catch a cold. . . ."

He put the coat on and followed Graziella, then turned back to say, "I like my haircut, Adina; it's a very good, professional cut. Short, yes, but with great style."

Luka and Graziella sat side by side on the swing chair in the garden, both wrapped in their heavy coats. The ground was covered in white frost. Adina opened the kitchen window and heard them talking.

"I was just thinking, soon it will be Christmas." Graziella sighed.

"You like Christmas?"

Her eyes filled with tears. "I used to, with all my family around me. Now . . . what a terribly empty day it will be. No sons, no grandchildren . . . You see that big tree?" She pointed to a big elm. "That was where we would hang the lights, and Papa, when the boys were young, would creep out and hang their stockings in the tree. And on Christmas morning, oh, how they would run, shouting, calling up at our window that Santa Claus had come. . . . My grandchildren, too . . . This Christmas there will be no one waiting for Santa to come."

Luka took her hand gently in his and held it to his lips. "Don't cry, please don't cry."

From the kitchen Adina saw the gesture and smiled.

The women's first priority on reaching Rome was to sort through Sophia's stack of mail. Teresa needed no more evidence that her sister-in-law was in even worse financial trouble than she had stated.

They toured the workrooms, which lay as dormant as the Lucianos' warehouses in Palermo. Bales of cloth stood where they had been delivered. The machines were covered in dust.

Teresa carried with her the papers on the sale of the warehouse and asked Sophia about the other business Domino had cited. Sophia hesitated, then shrugged; why not let her see everything? She checked the drawer of the reception desk and found the keys.

"Follow me. I had no idea this place existed until my so-called partner showed it to me. It was apparently very lucrative, so it shows how hopeless I must have been as a businesswoman."

They crossed the yard to another small door. Rosa pointed to some men watching from the building opposite and snickered at their wolf whistles. Teresa turned sharply, looking from Rosa to the workmen.

"Rosa, don't encourage them."

Sophia smiled. "She's young. Besides, she looks very pretty."

"She is also still in mourning. Rosa, don't look."

Rosa gave Sophia a tiny wink and lowered her head modestly.

Sophia tried one key after another before she found the right one. Teresa was almost breathing down her neck.

"So this wasn't connected with your boutiques?"

BOOK: BELLA MAFIA
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