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Authors: Nele Neuhaus

BOOK: Swimming with Sharks
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He let go of her hand and smiled again.

“By the way, you’ll find the restrooms by going downstairs from the foyer.” He winked at her one more time before opening the door and disappearing. Alex was stunned. She dealt with important and
influential people on a daily basis and had long stopped being easily impressed by them, but Nicholas Kostidis just managed to do exactly that.

 

Sergio Vitali entered the warehouse at the Brooklyn docks. The sign above the entrance door said Ficchiavelli & Sons—Italian Wine and Food Company. The last thing he wanted was another pointless discussion with his wayward youngest son, but Cesare had screwed up big time once again. Nelson had bailed Cesare out of jail that morning, and Sergio ordered him to bring the boy to Brooklyn. The offices, warehouses, cold-storage rooms, and loading ramps were deserted on this Saturday morning. There were three men waiting for Sergio in the front office. He greeted Silvio Bacchiocchi and Luca di Varese with a nod and scrutinized his youngest son, who looked back with a mixture of defiance and fear. He remained seated with crossed arms while Silvio and Luca stood up. Cesare was twenty-one, a handsome young man with the same blue eyes and sensual mouth as his father, but unfortunately, he didn’t have the slightest inclination toward any kind of work. In contrast to his older brothers, Massimo and Domenico—who both graduated from high school and college with determination and now worked for their father’s company—Cesare wasn’t particularly bright. Besides that, he had an unpredictable temper that got him into trouble. Sergio was often forced to use his connections to help Cesare. Over the years, he’d donated large sums of money to seven different schools in hopes his son would at least manage a high-school diploma, but all his efforts were in vain.

“Hello, Cesare,” Sergio said. He was not in the mood to deal with this spoiled brat.

“Hi, Papa,” Cesare responded.

“Stand up when I talk to you.”

Cesare raised his nose and remained seated. Sergio’s expression turned as cold as ice. His cheek muscles tensed. Silvio Bacchiocchi was particularly familiar with this expression and he feared it. Silvio was in his late forties, blond and blue-eyed like so many of his Northern Italian ancestors, and had a tendency to gain weight. He had worked for Sergio for twenty-five years. Thanks to Sergio, he’d become a wealthy man, and he showed his gratitude with unconditional loyalty. No one who knew the friendly and constantly cheerful Silvio would have thought it possible that he managed his boss’s business fearlessly and with a iron fist, stopping at nothing.

“Come on, stand up when your father talks to you,” he said to Cesare, who obeyed reluctantly. Sergio looked at his son and noticed his runny nose and the thin layer of sweat on his forehead.

“You’re using that goddamn stuff again, aren’t you?” he asked. Cesare rubbed his hands nervously and wiped them on his jeans while evading his father’s gaze.

“Answer me right now!”

“Sometimes. But not much.”

That was a lie. Sergio had seen enough cokeheads in his life to recognize the tell-tale signs of abuse. He wasn’t even surprised. Behind his loud mouth and his brutality, Cesare was a weak person.

“You got yourself arrested, you idiot! Why didn’t you run away?” Sergio was enraged at his stupidity. “You actually still don’t get it? Your last name is Vitali. You know what that means. Why didn’t you throw the stuff away once the cops showed up? The press will jump on this, and once Kostidis gets wind of it, no one will be able to help you. You’re such an idiot, Cesare!”

There was complete silence in the small office. Cesare’s dumb, confused grin made Sergio even more furious. Kostidis had been after Sergio for years and was only waiting for a weakness, the slightest mistake, or a moment of foolishness—something like this—in order to strike.
Sergio knew all too well that Cesare’s mindless behavior could shake his well-established power structure. When it came to assault, the cops sometimes turned a blind eye, but dealing drugs was a crime they addressed with full force. As a result of the fanatic mayor’s tough policies, drug dealing was almost considered worse than murder, and even small-time crack dealers from the Bronx or East Harlem were severely punished.

“Silvio will get a lawyer for you,” Sergio said to his son, “one who has no ties to us. Then we will see what he can do for you. If the cops dig in their heels, then unfortunately there’s nothing that I can do.”

“What does that mean?” Cesare’s grin vanished.

“That you’ll go to the slammer for a while.” Sergio stood up. It was pointless to talk to the boy any longer. He turned away.

“Hey!” Cesare grabbed his father’s shoulder. He quickly turned around as if electrified and pushed his son away. The disgust in Sergio’s eyes made Cesare back off. He had never seen his father so furious.

“Papa,” he began, “you can’t let me—”

“I’ve given you every conceivable chance,” Sergio said, trying hard to keep his composure. “I hoped that you’d grow up one day and understand what life is all about. But instead you get into fights like a child, snort cocaine. You drink your life away. You’re getting dumber by the minute. I despise stupidity. It’s the worst thing on earth.”

Cesare’s face turned red, and he clenched his fists. His father was the only person on this planet he feared. But he hated him to the same degree.

“Don’t act like you’re a saint!” Cesare yelled at him. “Do you think I don’t know how much money you make with this stuff? You don’t give a crap!”

“Correct,” Sergio said, looking at him coldly, “but I’ve never used it myself, and I have definitely never let myself be caught with drugs by the police. That’s the difference.”

“What am I supposed to do now? I’m your son! You have to help me!” Sheer panic shone in Cesare’s eyes. He’d been dead certain that his father only had to make some phone calls to straighten things out.

“I’ve come to the painful conclusion that all of my efforts to make a sensible human being out of you are a waste of time.” Sergio’s voice was gruff with contempt. “You don’t even consider for a second that you have endangered all of us. I don’t feel like rescuing you anymore. All that I have ever received from you in return was ingratitude. If you don’t want to follow my rules, then don’t expect me to help you.”

The corner of Cesare’s mouth twitched nervously. He was freezing and sweating at the same time.

“When they send me to prison,” he said, giving his father an anxious glance, “and ask me about you, then I’ll tell them everything I know.”

Sergio’s expression turned to ice. Silvio and Luca exchanged a troubled glance. That was the worst thing he could possibly have said. Cesare suddenly realized that he had made a huge mistake. His last remnant of confidence fell away, and tears sprang into his eyes.

“Papa!” he cried. “I didn’t mean to say that.”

“But you just did.”

“I would never do anything to hurt you!”

“That’s not possible.” Sergio grimaced. He smiled contemptuously. “You have never cared for anything but women, drugs, and fistfights. Just keep on like that.”

“Papa!” Cesare whined. He stretched out his hands. “I’ll never take drugs again, I swear to you! Please, don’t go! I’m your son!”

“Unfortunately, you are. But I have to leave. I have appointments.” Sergio looked at his watch. “Luca, you come to the city with me. I still need to discuss something with you.”

Sergio scowled at his son.

“You’ve failed to understand my most important rule, Cesare.”

“Rule? What do you mean?” Cesare nervously looked back and forth between his father and the other two men, who were standing next to him with blank faces.

“Don’t shit where you eat.”

His father’s uncharacteristic outburst of vulgarity made Cesare wince.

“Keep me posted, Silvio,” Sergio said and left the room accompanied by Luca. Cesare sank down in his chair and began sobbing.

 

Luca di Varese sat down next to his boss in the back of the limousine. He sensed what Sergio wanted to talk to him about. Luca was a silent and slender man, thirty-eight years old. He came from the South Bronx and was orphaned at the age of four when his parents died in a building fire. His mother was the cousin of Sergio’s wife Constanzia. Sergio had gotten to know the child and noticed his intelligence. He sent Luca to a good school, paid for his college degree in business administration, and made him the CEO of the Crown Regal Corporation at the tender age of twenty-six. This corporation managed all of the hotels and casinos that Sergio owned throughout the country, but the illegal part of his business was also embedded in it. Luca di Varese supervised illegal gambling, prostitution, and drug dealing for his boss, as well as laundering the funds that came from these lines of business.

“This boy is turning into a serious threat,” Sergio said after a while, shaking his head pensively. “He can’t stay in the city under any circumstances.”

“You really won’t help him?” Luca asked.

“Of course I will,” Sergio sighed. “I hope that I can straighten out this matter by the end of today. As soon as the charges against him are dropped, he must get out of here for a while. I’ve thought about Europe.”

“He could work for Barandetti in Napoli,” Luca suggested, “not for us, of course, but in fish wholesale or his warehouse. Drive around a forklift. Things like that.”

“Call Michele. If he doesn’t have anything for him, try Stefano Piesini in Verona. It wouldn’t hurt Cesare to spend a summer working in a vineyard.”

Luca nodded. They sat silently in the back of the limousine.

“However, I doubt that he’ll stay in Europe for the whole summer.” Sergio’s voice had a gloomy undertone. “His mother will take him in again. As usual.”

He turned his head toward Luca and looked at him sternly.

“I will say this only once and only to you, Luca”—his voice was quiet—“but if the situation arises, I expect that you will not hesitate, not for one second.”

Luca looked at his boss without flinching.

“I don’t care whether he is my son or not. I will sacrifice him before he causes me serious trouble with his stupidity. Do you understand that?”

Luca nodded.

“Will you promise to take care of this personally?”

Luca di Varese’s face didn’t reveal what he thought about his boss’s decision. He didn’t ask any questions or try to put in a good word for Cesare. Luca’s loyalty was unconditional, devoid of criticism.

“I promise, boss.”

 

Alex was drenched through to the skin when she returned home with her groceries late that afternoon. She placed the four grocery bags on the kitchen table and transferred their contents to the fridge. It was totally empty, as usual. Sergio had actually planned to spend the day with her, but then another appointment had gotten in the way and he had someone
drive her home at nine thirty. Whenever Alex came from his Park Avenue apartment to her place in Greenwich Village, she felt like Cinderella, and she was annoyed that she didn’t have time to look for a nicer place. She lit a cigarette and thought about the past evening. She grinned as she remembered the many admiring and curious looks. People were curious because Sergio Vitali only had eyes for her the entire evening. Half of New York was surely speculating about who she was and what kind of relationship she had with Sergio. It was simply unbelievable how far she had made it! She felt like she was walking on air. The ringing of her cell phone startled her out of her thoughts.

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