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Re-cap: The dominoes are beginning to fall. The violence of the Twin Cities has reached even the top criminal bosses who rule the cityâs underbelly. Criminal boss and owner of the city ports, Francis Foxman, was stabbed several weeks prior and the assailant still remains at large. Not soon after this during a meeting meant to unite the powerful Romano Family and Campana Family through the engagement of Fortuna Romano and Ambrose Campana, both dons of the Families are stabbed under mysterious circumstances. Despite being caught up in all of this chaos, Cadence Morello still finds time to visit the Sognare and dreams of Alma, the pianist who treated an orphaned Cadence kindly only to disappear many years ago. [https://sixchanceshome.files.wordpress.com/2023/02/15.png?w=1024]
TWIN CITIES, GEMINI
âWhy arenât you saying anything, huh?!â
Thuds resounded through the near-empty casino.
âYou just said you were going to talk!â Another thud. âA minute ago!â Thud. âSo why!â Thud, thud, thud. âAre you so damned quiet?â There was a monstrous roar. âTalk, dammit!â
Whistling, Cadence watched as a man was sent flying through the casino hall and crashing into a billiard table. The cue balls lined up on the tableâs surface exploded upwards and ricocheted off of nearby poker and roulette stations which sent black and white poker chips clattering onto the waxed floor.
âTalk,â Carl had said, but Cadence presumed that the beaten man didnât have enough teeth to talk at this point.
The man who was now draped across the billiard table let out a croak as if in agreement with her thought.
âYouâre making a mess, Carl.â Francis stood beside Cadence while inspecting one of the cue balls that had hurtled towards him amidst his brotherâs tantrum. âIs this any way to treat a guest at our fine establishment?â
Carl whipped around with a glower. âWhat? You want me to get him a chair?!â
Francis smiled. âWell, we could certainly do that. He may not be able to stand with what we have planned for him for the rest of the day.â
Carl arched a brow and then smirked. He signaled for the group of men and women lounging at the mini-bar at the opposite corner of the hall. Two of the men rose from their positions, one picking up a chair from a nearby table and the other grabbing the croaking man off the pool table. Utilizing a level of teamwork worthy of a cricket duo, they threw the beaten man onto the chair and dragged him in front of the brothers.
âAnd here, by âguestâ I was hopinâ you were referrinâ to me.â Cadence chortled and bent down to pick up one of the poker chips that had rolled over to her feet. She glanced at the man that had been dragged in front of them and resisted a grimace. She could barely make out his eyes beneath all that purple and red. âIs it always this excitinâ when ya guys are openinâ a new business?â
âOh, youâd be surprised.â Francis set the cue ball onto the poker table behind him.
Allen sat at that table shuffling a deck of cards with a v-cig in his mouth. âDonât break any more equipment, Carl. Replacing itâs expensive.â
Carl wiped his bloody fists on a towel provided by one of his men. âCome on. We can replace things, Allen. But we canât replace blood.â
Something twisted in Cadenceâs gut at his statement. The memory of Oliveâs words and the look in the kidâs eyes on that morning the previous week.
Guilt.
Damn, that kidâs self-deprecation was infectious.
Allen rose from his table, pocketed the deck of cards, and walked over to stand beside Carl. Although Allen was smaller than Carl, he held a pressure that was ten times as suffocating. The seated man shrank into himself as that pressure weighed him down.
âIf I heard you correctly over Carlâs shouting earlier, you would be Mr. Luigi, right?â Francis asked the man as he pushed between his brothers wearing his usual calm smile.
Out of all of them, Francis had always been the most mild-mannered one. Whether it was delivering business deals to executives or delivering orders to underlings, he always spoke politely and respectfully. Back in the day, sheâd joke around with Carl that if Francis or Nico ever stepped foot out of the city, people would assume they were from the good walk of life. Francis had dropped into their conversation to point out that Cadence herself could appear as anyone she wanted so she had the upper hand in that case. But appearances were deceiving.
âWell, am I correct that you are Mr. Luigi?â Francis pressed calmly. âJust nod your head yes or no.â
Luigi swallowed and nodded slowly.
It seemed as if he thought Francis was a ray of mercy.
âWe see you here quite frequently, Mr. Luigi,â Francis continued. âAnd weâre quite familiar with the large debt you owe not only to us but also to your bookie. But, since you also happen to be bringing in a large sum of patrons from your other gambling nooks, weâve been turning you a blind eye. I understand how this is easy for you to interpret as giving us the slip butââ
âWho was it that told you to jump my brother, huh?!â Carl roared, grabbing Luigi by the throat. âAnd donât you dare tell me that it wasnât you! We have witnesses pinning you on the damned scene!â
âI donât know!â The man sobbed, spluttered. âIt wasnât me! It wasnât!â
âThatâs not a name!â
âPlease, believe me! It wasnât me!â
Francis straightened himself and glanced at Carl. âWhat do you think, Carl? Does Mr. Luigi here seem to be telling the truth?â
âWell, I dunno, Francis.â Carl sneered. âYou got an idea?â
Francisâs smile thinned. âHow about this, Mr. Luigi. How about we resolve this with a simple request. If you do one small thing for me, weâll let you go. Donât worry. Itâs not anything big. Itâs the sort of thing youâd try to do if you maybe had just a little bit too much to drink. How about it?â
Luigi nodded fiercely.
âAre you sure, Mr. Luigi?â Francis pressed. âWell, while it is a small task, if you canât do it then weâre going to have an even longer talk afterwards.â
âI-Iâll do it!â Luigi stammered, spitting out blood. âWhatever you want me to do to someone, Iâll do it! Whatever it is!â
Carl exchanged a look with Francis before he barked out a laugh. Francis remained smiling.
âOh, Mr. Luigi, this isnât something weâre asking you to do to someone else,â Francis explained. âThis is something weâre asking you to do to yourself.â With that, Francis pulled out the cue ball heâd picked back up from the table a minute earlier and held it out to the man. âThink of this as a pill of truth. Swallow it whole, and weâll believe you and let you walk.â
Luigiâs eyes widened as he stared at the ball. âB-But thatâsâthatâsââ
âYou accepted, Mr. Luigi. A deal is a deal.â
Francis handed the cue ball to Carl who then began to slowly force the thing into the manâs mouth. Gagging and screaming followed.
Cadence felt a bit bad for Luigi. She could tell he was lying. Probably took the job out of desperation for money. Desperation made people irrational and stupid. But at the same time, part of her was a bit happy at his suffering. That was probably because to her the Foxmans had a specialâ
Bah.
She was getting too worked up about this. It wasnât like any of this involved her anyways. This was strictly a Foxman issue. And Francis was fine, soâ
Those are impressive mental gymnastics, came Oliveâs thought paired with sarcastic mental clapping. Gauging by his demeanor, Cadence assumed that this was not an intentional synchronization. The synchronization was light, so she could only tell that he was eating breakfast and that he felt uncomfortable with his situation. He was not visible to her. So, youâre really doing it then. Thought you were friends with them.
Sure, weâre friends. Doesnât mean I gotta always meddle in his problems and stick by his side. Weâre grownups. Friendship is different when ya reach a certain age, Cadence returned. A smile tugged on the corner of her lips. Which is why enjoyinâ your little friendship breakfast hang out with Claire should be a priorityâ
Annoyance bled out from their connection. We arenâtâ
Man, weâve synchronized twice today already, kid. I know weâve been gettinâ along real swell lately butâ
âYou seem to be in a good mood, Cadence,â Francis said suddenly, drawing Cadence out of her internal conversation. âNever thought you to be the sadistic type.â
During her spiel with the prince, Carl had ordered some of their men to drag out âMr. Luigiâ to the back room where Cadence presumed additional hospitality would be offered.
âSaints, I wasnât the one makinâ mincemeat with my fists,â Cadence quipped. âIâm a lover at heart.â
Carl scoffed, wiping his knuckles off with another towel. âYou just donât like gettinâ your hands dirty.â
The entrance doors to the casino abruptly flew open, and a woman wearing a fedora stepped in. She rushed to Francisâs side. âBoss, the police commissario is here,â she stammered. âHe wants to speak with you.â
âTell him to buzz off,â Carl muttered.
âHe insists,â the woman pressed. âSays itâs important.â
Allen turned to the woman causing her to stiffen. But he brushed past her, walked over to the poker table, and sat back down slowly. He gave a puff of his v-cig and began inspecting the cards again.
Allen really didnât know how to treat a woman. Well, he didnât know how to treat anybody.
âI ainât a fan of âthe lawâ seeinâ my face,â Cadence said, pulling the bill of her hat down low, âso Iâll be makinâ my exitââ
The large wooden doors to the casino blew open without warning.
Cadence immediately snapped her ringed fingers and transmuted the form of one of the brothersâ men over herself. Francis glanced at her briefly before turning to face another one of his underlings who had rushed in from outside.
âSorry, boss,â the man panted. âThey wouldnât listenââ
Francis nodded. âItâs alright, Clarence.â
ââAlrightâ?â A scoff resounded from the door. ââAlrightâ? What about the current state of things makes you think itâs âall rightâ?â
In stepped a group wearing familiar uniforms. Gray button-ups with billed gray caps and gray slacks. Very gothic in Cadenceâs opinion. Matched the policeâs state in the city perfectly. In front of this gray uniformed group stood a man in a suit. His dark brown hair was slicked back, his sharp eyes piercing through the square glasses that rested on his hawk nose.
Commissario Vincente Giustizia. The police commissioner of the Twin Cities of Gemini.
Cadence had purposefully stayed as far from his as possible not only at the dinner party with the Romanos and Foxmans but also in general. She didnât trust law enforcers and trusted corrupt law enforcers even less.
Not talkinâ about you, Jericho, Cadence thought just for good measure.
âCommissario Giustizia,â Francis greeted the man with a practiced smile. âWhat do we owe the pleasure of seeing you today?â
âOh, trust me. If itâs a pleasure, itâs only for you!â
Cadence resisted doing a double-take. Francis and Carl exchanged looks. Allen remained impassive.
âI mean, look at all this.â The officer stomped over to Francis, gesturing wildly around him. âHow did this building even get approved by the city officials? What licenses do they actually have to run this establishment? And their restaurants? And their bars?!â
For a man who was rumored to be cool, suave, and level-headed, Vincente sure enjoyed shouting maniacally.
Cadence had heard many things about Vincente from the people of the city. That he was a handsome gentleman, that he was kind and considerate, that he was fighting for a safer city against the darker underworld. But people of that underworld knew the truth about him. And as Fortuna had so eloquently put it years ago, he âwas a soulless, greedy pig who would bend over backwards for money only to flaunt it on women half a second later.â
Carl glowered, taking a step forward.
Francis held up a placating hand and stepped forward himself. âIf you want our licenses, Iâd be happy to provide them, Mr. Giustizia, as long as thereâs probable cause for it. That is the law which Iâm sure youââ
âThe law?â Vincente huffed. âThe law? I am the law! Iâm more of the law thanââ
âWhyâre you here?â Allen asked plainly. âIf you donât give us a reason and continue to make a scene before our business opens then youâll have to arrest yourself for disruption.â
âArrest myself?!â
What a funny person.
For a moment, a laugh tickled Cadenceâs throat. But even though she did not allow the laugh to escape, Vincente whipped his head in her direction.
âYouâare you laughing?â
âUh, no, of course not. Sorry, sir,â Cadence responded, voice deep and gravely. She coughed and slammed her chest with her fist. âBad cough. Tryna quit smokinâ but itâs givinâ me a hard time.â
Vincente scrutinized her.
Something about the manâs gaze made her skin crawl. It was almost familiarâthe feeling. She couldnât quite place it. An unpleasant nostalgia. A memory was on the very tip of her tongue. One of the others. Before she could reach out to any of them, he looked away from her and the itch faded.
âWell, you do have a point. My apologies.â Vincente cleared his throat, straightening his uniform. âThat isnât like me, is it?â He glanced back at the officers behind him who shook their heads with a collection of âNo, chief âs. âI shouldnât have been so straightforwarââ
âYou still havenât answered our question,â Allen said. âWhy youâre here. Did Fortuna or Cavallo send you? Or are you here to complain about not receiving your pay off from Ricardo? Iâm sure you know why that paymentâs late.â
âYou know why Iâm here,â Vincente replied, pushing his glasses up the bridge of his nose.
âThis is about what happened last week. The unfortunate circumstances that fell on Ricardo and Mr. Campana,â Francis concluded. âIf youâre here to look into our involvement, you wonât find anything. We werenât there on that night. And weâve been in good business with the Romanos and wouldnât dare to disrupt that.â He frowned, eyes hardening. âTo even think that weâd raise a hand towards someone who weâve been working with for years is an insult.â
âWhy donât you look into the Campanas?â Allen asked loosely, still not looking up from his cards. âHeard their don is already making a speedy recovery. Suspicious.â
Vincente didnât acknowledge the man and instead placed a hand on Francisâs arm. âLook. Iâm just here to ensure nothing else happens. For your sakeââ
Several of the Foxmansâ men stiffened at this and directed their steely gazes towards Vincente.
Keeping his smile in place, Francis held up his hand to keep them at bay. He then grabbed the officerâs resting hand. âCommissario Giustizia, while your concern is warrantedâ¦â Tightening his grip, he removed Giustiziaâs hand from his arm. ââ¦your accusations and suspicions are not. Frankly, I find them very rude.â
Vincente rubbed his hand once Francis released it. He took a moment to study Francis long and hard, and Francis held his gaze in turn. Finally, the police commissioner turned on his heels and signaled for his officers to leave. He left a beat afterwards, stating rather ominously that theyâd be seeing each other again soon.
âWho does that bastard think he is waltzing in here like that,â Carl spat once the doors to the casino had slammed shut. âBet those damn Campanas are tryna get that guy to plant something on us or somethinâ.â
âRicardo owns him, not the Campanas,â Allen corrected.
âStill!â
âSeems like suspicion is cominâ in from all angles.â Cadence sighed, shaking her head. âIt was pretty awfulâthat night. Canât get his body outta my headâRicardoâs, I mean. It just didnât look right.â
âYeah, always thought the mean old bastard would outlive us by at least fifty years,â Carl grumbled.
âStop talking like heâs dead,â Allen interjected. âHeâs in good hands with old man Fabrizzio.â He grunted. âThough I feel sorry for his bill.â
âHowâs Fortuna, Cadenceâ¦?â Francis asked suddenly.
âYa know her. She knows the bossâll pull through so sheâs not even sheddinâ a tear.â Cadence chuckled. âShe may have been a bit cold in the docâs waitinâ room that night, but she really does appreciate the flowers.â
Carl turned with a grimace. âYeah, well, good.â
âAnd is Fortuna the one that sent you here, Cadence?â Allen asked without hesitation.
âCome on, Allen. Thereâs no need to bully Cadence,â Francis sighed. âShe may be many thingsââ He paused to chuckle at his own joke. ââbut sheâs a friend first and foremost.â He turned to her, wearing his usual smile. But his eyes were as hard as steel. âRight?â
ââCourse, I mean I canât forget all the stupid stuff weâve done together.â Cadence spread her arms wide. âYa know, after Fortuna and Ambrose started gettinâ along together, I thought everythingâd get sorted out⦠Thought itâd even somehow sort out your bad blood with the Campanas too.â
There was a long stretch of silence before Allen waved his hand of cards in the air. âLetâs play a round.â
âA round of cards?â Cadence huffed, feeling the corner of her mouth tug upwards as Carl joined his older brother at the table without question. âNow?â
âWhy not?â Francis asked, joining Allen at the table too. âTheyâre always interesting, arenât they?â
âInterestinâ?â Cadence arched a brow. âYa mean interestinâ in how we all end up somehow havinâ royal flushes at the end?â
Francis offered a musical chuckle in response.
* * *
Ensure your favorite authors get the support they deserve. Read this novel on Royal Road.
After the gameâafter Allen won three times in a rowâFrancis offered to accompany Cadence on the way back to her apartment. Sheâd moved again recently and Francis had stated he wanted to check out the front.
It took a lot of convincing for Allen not to send them off with five additional men. Cadence assured the man that she of all people knew how to get out of sticky situations and that she was sure to pass on the knowledge swiftly.
The two were strolling along the sidewalk commenting on their previous card game when Cadence spotted a familiar candy store coming up around the corner. A sign in the shape of a lollipop hung from its window.
âHey, Francis, ya remember when we used ta do a trio routine with Nico tâpull one over on that candy shop owner?â
âMr. Ferrari,â Francis recalled, glancing at the store in question. âYes, I do remember that. It worked like a charm. We ended up stealing two hundred cens worth of candy over the years. The cops wouldnât look into it, so Ferrari ended up putting up wanted signs he drew himself.â
âYeah, didnât he try ta put âem all around town or somethinâ?â Cadence threw her head back and cackled. âWait, I remember now. No oneââ
âNo one would let him put his signs up, so he ended up just placing them all around his store,â Francis finished. âAnd people started to think we were child candy brand models. It was funny until he adopted some dogs to sick on us.â
âSaints, donât remind me. Man, the look on his face when we made our last heist. Cleaned out his entire stock of candied nuts.â
âAnd thatâs how we discovered I was deathly allergic to peanuts.â Francis chuckled.
âYeah. Never seen Nico cry that much before in my life. I had ta practically drag the both of ya ta the docâs.â
âDonât know what was worse. The anaphylactic shock, meeting Doctor Fabrizzio for the first time, or Allen beating us over afterwards.â
âEh, Allen doesnât even come close to the doc. No offenseââ
âMatilda and her group remind me a lot of how we were before we started getting more involved in the city. Do you think a couple of years from now, sheâll also beâ¦?â
Huh? That was random.
Cadence turned to address the odd change in conversation but paused when she saw a familiar figure peering into the window of the candy store they had been discussing. It was the Sagittarian tourist from that night in the alleyway with Feliciano and two of Matildaâs girls.
âGive me a sec,â Cadence said, patting Francis on the back as she approached the tourist from behind. She cleared her throat when she was in front of him. âWell, talk about a twist of fate.â
The Sagittarianâs head perked up as he turned around. He squinted at her for a long and hard moment before he threw his hands up in the air.
âItâs you!â he exclaimed, suddenly wrapping Cadence in a tight hug. âMy knight from the night! Cadence, was it?â
Cadence was taken aback but returned the gesture with a pat on the back. âFor someone who doesnât know up from down, ya sure got a knack for rememberinâ names. By the way, whatâs your name?â
The man pulled away before dipping into a low bow. âI am Kuroihoshi Hideyoshi.â
Interesting customs.
âYour friend thereâ¦â The man popped up a beat after and seemed to register Francis standing behind her. With raised brows, he muttered, âIsnât heâ¦â
Cadence glanced back at Francis before placing a hand on Hideyoshiâs shoulder. âListen, Hideâcan I call ya Hide? Number one tourist experience be damned. Ya donât want to be barkinâ up that tree.â
âI swear that heâ¦â Hideyoshi rubbed his chin. He startled suddenly and whipped back to look inside the store. âSaints! Theyâre almost sold out.â He whipped around again and grabbed Cadence by the shoulders. âThe limited-edition Cioccolato bar! How can I call myself an extreme tourist if I donât get my hands one of these?!â
Extreme tourist? That sounded a bit familiarâ¦
âUh.â
Without another word, the man spun around again and dashed into the store. Cadence watched with mild amusement and confusion as the man began to shout ecstatically to Mr. Ferrariâs son who was currently manning the counter within.
âWhat was that guyâs deal?â Francis asked, approaching Cadence from behind.
âTouristy type,â Cadence explained as she nodded down the street and started walking again. âMet him a couple of nights ago while Feliciano was kickinâ him in.â
Francis frowned, falling into pace beside her. âDonatoâs son?â
âYep. Seems like heâs got a coupla screws looseâthe tourist, I mean. Directed him to the Sognare to keep him off the streets for a little whileâI mean, I do perform acts of kindness every once in a blue moon.â She chortled before she sighed. âThis city keeps gettinâ weirder and weirder.â
It was more like the world, actually, that was getting weird.
âThe Sognareâ¦â Francis frowned. Realization flickered in his eyes. âWait, Cadence, donât tell me that youâre stillââ
âWhat?â Cadence shrugged. âI gotta keep âem in business. âSpecially since Nico is off playinâ soldier, you and your brothers are rakinâ in business, and Fortuna is Fortuna. One of us has got ta stick to the roots.â
âNico is going to be back in town soon,â Francis murmured. âI almost forgot. Should we throw a welcome party for him?â
âNah.â Cadence waved off the idea. âYa know heâs not into that kinda stuff.â Plus, with everything going onâ¦
Francis seemed to consider this for a moment and stopped suddenly in his tracks. She turned to look back at him.
âCadence. Donât take what Allen said too seriously. About you being hired out by Cavallo or Fortuna. He just has to put up that front for the men. Honestly, you can just forget it ever happened.â
âAnd done.â Cadence snapped her fingers. âAnd should I forget what you said too?â
Francis shook his head with a wry smile. He stared off across the street before pulling out a v-cig from his pocket and igniting it with a flick. âYou ever think back and wonder how things wouldâve turned out if we made different choices? I mean, you always said you wanted to play on the Ophiuchian Way, and Carl and Allen wanted to open a bar of our own. Without all the extra things weâve added on the side, I mean.â
âNot really.â Cadence shrugged. âThat was a bit random, Francis. Whatâs got ya reminiscinâ?â
Francis half-sighed, half-laughed. He took a drag and then rolled the cigarette between his fingertips. âItâs nothing. Forget what I said.â
âAlready forgotten.â
They reached her apartment fifteen minutes later. Francis politely declined her invitation to stay for lunch and then headed on his way.
Not suited for this business, huh? Cadence mused, waving to him from her apartment window. As if anyone was suited for this business. People were just making due with what they had.
* * *
On the dawn after Ricardo Romano and the Campana head were attacked, Cadence had been called into Ricardoâs main office. With all of the chaos that had unfolded shortly after that night, Cadence was surprised at how swiftly things were dealt with.
Ricardo and the Campana don sent to their respective medical Conductors. Increased security for executives. A full investigation launched by the commissario that tore through both sides of the city. Not even a single drop of additional Campana or Romano bloodshed that night despite the circumstances. Not even a rumor of the events slipping out besides those who had attended the party and additional high-profile parties related to them. Really, the city was terribly efficient.
When Cadence had stepped into Ricardoâs office, she was rather surprised at her lack of surprise at seeing Fortuna sitting at her fatherâs desk. For anyone else to do it, it mightâve been seen as disrespectful or callous. But Fortuna was different. She was putting her foot down. Her position of power nailed firmly in place. A sign for the other caporegimes to lower their greedy eyes.
So much for family.
Cavallo had stood beside Fortuna with a steely expression, but Cadence didnât pay any mind to him. She approached the table swiftly.
âFortuna, is everythinâ allââ
âI have a job for you, Morello.â
Cadence had paused, spreading her arms. âAlready? Well, arenât we workinâ fastââ
âDonât look at Cavallo, Morello. I am the acting head,â Fortuna stated, folding her hands on the table. âAnd I am the one giving this order.â
Morello, appearances. Wernerâs voice had ghosted the edges of her mind.
Cadence had lowered her hands, folded them behind her back. Cavallo arched an eyebrow at her but she had kept her gaze focused on Fortuna.
âThe Campanas have already set their own paid police dogs loose in the city,â Fortuna had said. âTheyâre turning over every stone in sight to find the ones who did this. Starting with the Foxmans.â
âNow, I ainât one ta be involvinâ myself in drama and gossip, but that seems a little suspect, donât ya think? I know the Romanos and the Campanas have a good thing goinâ butâ¦â
Fortuna had held her gaze before speaking, âThe engagement between the Campanas and Romanos has obviously been postponed. Goodwill aside, we canât allow the Campanas to handle this investigation on their own.â
Saints, Cadence had thought. An entire engagement postponed just like that. Was the whole romance between Fortuna and Ambrose broken off with a snap too? All that love goneârather, put on holdâin an instant? Was there even any love to begin with, or were they both batting eyes at each other at face value?
But none of it had involved her. No use thinking about it.
It was then that Cadence had finally noticed the flowers sitting in the vase on the table behind Fortuna. âSo ya want me ta look into the Campanas? I heard their don is makinâ a fast recovery, so it does seem a little weird. âCourse, intentions aside, the idea that a don would knock himself into a hospital room just ta gain the upper hand does seem a bit extraâfor both sides.â âShe knew she had been rambling. Too much time talking to Atiennaâ âThen again, this city isââ
Fortuna had clarified after noticing Cadenceâs gaze: âYouâre mistaking my intentions, Morello. Yes, I want you to look into the Campanas, but I also need you to look into the Foxmans. One of them may have gotten their hands on a Diverger who was capable of doing something like that. I donât care about why someone did this. I want to know who. And how.â
âYa sure thatâs a good investment of time? I mean, they werenât even there.â Which made them even more suspect.
âMorello. You call yourself a freelancer, but a major source of your income comes from work from this Family. You are employed by us, Morello. Not the Foxmans. I hope you havenât forgotten this.â
Cadence had kept her voice even and a pleasant smile on. âHow could I? Black knight, right?â
Fortuna had only sighed. âAgain that âknightâ talk. Weâre a business, Cadence. The Foxmans are a business. Nico is an associate of our business and so are you. Weâre not children anymore. You could argue that we never were.â
Do people really say these things and think they sound cool?
âThings like this always come from the direction you least expect them to,â Fortuna had continued. âThatâs why they happen. I want you to keep an eye on the Foxmans. See if theyâre up to anything and what they were up to last night. It doesnât matter if you find it out as yourself or as one of the Foxmansâ men. The same applies to the Campanas. I want you to keep an eye on the acting head in particular.â She had then reached into the desk drawer, pulled out a case, clicked it open. âThis is the first half. Youâll receive the rest after you complete this.â
It had glittered alluringlyâthe stacks of cens all nicely wrapped up in a clear plastic packaging, all lined up in stacked up rows. The money Cadence had gotten from her most recent odd job swindle was nearing its end, and her monthly bills were coming on down the roadâ
And there Olive had appeared behind the Fortuna and the table looking at Cadence with an expression of both disinterest and judgment. A judgement that she felt curl up in her own chest.
âLook, the pay is swell and all, Fortuna,â Cadence had said, reaching out to close the case. âBut Iâm actually kinda booked at the momentââ
Fortuna had placed a hand above Cadenceâs, effectively stopping her from closing it fully. âYou have unusual monetary habits, Morello.â
Cadence had frozen, had released the case.
âSplurging half of your pay as you please and storing the other half in a deposit at the city bank,â Fortuna had said, pulling the case open again. âWhat exactly are you saving all that money for? No. Who?â
âFor myself, of course,â Cadence had returned smoothly. âYâknow Allenâs always preachinâ about savinâ up for a rainy day. Heard it so many times, thought Iâd at least try practicinâ in.â
Fortuna had seemed to consider this before chuckling and pulling the case back open. âThe owner of the city bank passed away a week ago. We were able to get one of our own into the vacant position. Weâve asked him to keep a special eye out on the accounts of the people who are associated with us. For protectionâs sake.â Fortunaâs smile had thinned then. âDonât you think you at least owe us something for the extra measures weâre going to ensure the safety of your funds?â
The threat had been clear. As clear as Oliveâs piercing green gaze.
Regardless, Cadence had taken two steps backwards and offered an overzealous bow. âOf course, my liege. How can I forget your wonderful generosity?â
Olive had grimaced and turned away.
* * *
Near the end of the week after her stroll with Francis, Cadence opted to forgo her Foxman investigation in favor of a Campana investigation. She reasoned that she wouldnât be able to get much from the Foxmans since they were too focused on their own personal investigation.
Unfortunately, however, the Campanaâs security had increased tenfold. They checked for conductors at the entrance to all of their establishments and even had the city police running around every block and checking every pedestrian in sight. It was as if the universe was directing Cadence in the Foxmanâs direction. At this point, it wasnât her fault.
Brushing these thoughts aside, Cadence made her way through the city and towards the Sognare. A soft tune was already drifting out of the bar as she approached. Her heart skipped a beat at the sound, and she continued further albeit a bit more slowly.
As she neared the entrance, the melody became clearer. Like water trickling down a stream into a still pool. The way of playâCadence recognized it. There was only one person who could play in such a melodic manner.
Taking in a deep breath, Cadence snapped her fingers. She did not need to check a mirror to see that she was now dressed in a crisp suit instead of a beat down oversized one.
She pushed through the entrance. The bartender didnât greet her as usualâbut this time it was not out of habit. This time his negligence of her arrival was due to his attention being drawn away to the center of the stage at the back.
Standing there beneath the spotlight in front of the old grand piano was a woman. A woman with short black curls, with pale ivory skin. Her small, thin frame was wrapped in deep black dress that glimmered with stonesâlike stars in the night sky. But even the stars paled in comparison to the glimmering smile the woman gave Cadence as she turned away from the instrument.
âAlmaâ¦â
Cadence drifted past the tables, nearly tripping over her own two feet as she neared the stage. Alma neared the edge at Cadenceâs approach and sank down to a crouch.
âHello, Cucciolo.â
Cadence extended her hand out to the other woman while taking a gracious bow. Alma accepted the gesture, bowed even more graciously, and pulled Cadence up onto the stage.
âMy, this is more dramatic than when you stopped by our hotel with flowers,â Alma finally said as she guided Cadence over to the piano. âYou still havenât told me how you found me. Weâd barely settled back into the city, and there you were with your roses. You left me so curious that I didnât have any choice but to accept your invitation to come here. Playing on my curiosity like that.â She tutted.
Cadence had known the exact moment Alma stepped foot in the city. It had been exactly one week prior to the Romano-Campana meeting on a sunny Tuesday morning. 8:09 am to be exact on Wernerâs watch. And while Cadence had known Alma was in the city the moment Alma had arrived, finding Alma had been an entirely different story. This was because, for these past ten years, Alma had been in the company of a dangerous party.
âWell, maybe if you swing by here tomorrow then Iâll tell you. Or the day after that. Or the day after that.â
Alma chuckled at this and looked Cadence up and down before the corner of eyes crinkled. âYouâve really matured so much since then. It feels wrong for me to keep calling you âCuccioloâ. I wouldnât have even recognized you if it werenât forâ¦â Alma trailed off, raising a hand to twirl a lock of Cadenceâs copper locks around her index finger.
âYou could call me darling instead,â Cadence suggested, resting her hands on the piano keys and playing a C major. âAnd Iâve been reading lately, so I hand my maturity off to that.â
A beautiful chuckle followed by a short musical staccato. Cadence returned the sound with a staccato of her own, albeit a bit faster.
âI meant to ask when you visited,â Alma drew, âhow is Miss Agape? You must know her well now if the rumors that Iâve been hearing are true. She always treated me so kindly when I was working at the Casaâ¦â Another smile crinkled the corner of her eyes. âI wouldnât have been able to practice at the Sognare if she didnât give me the time off⦠and then I wouldnât have been able to meet you.â
âShe keeps trying to get me to join the Casa or one of her other clubs.â Cadence sighed, playing another C major. âSheâs always looking for profitââ
âDonât do that, Cadence,â Alma whispered, eyes wide as she cupped Cadenceâs cheek with her hand. âNot at the Casa or the clubs. Youâre too talented, too precious to me to do something like that.â
âHey, the workers at the Casa and the clubs are plenty talented.â Cadence chuckled, stroking a B flat. âI mean, Iâm sure they lost a lot of talent when you left. Agape complained about it all the time.â
Almaâs eyes suddenly lost their light. âSo, if you really do know Agape well enough for her to speak to you like that.â She pulled away her hand. âThen it really is true. You really have been working with the Romanos all these yearsââ
âNo!â Cadence shook her head. âI havenât joined with them. Iâm only working for them. Iâm not on any of their rosters or anything. Just odd jobs here and there.â
Alma remained silent.
ââ¦I only decided to stay with them because I knew one of the executives bought you out from the Casa de Bambolle andââ And she had needed the funds.
ââand gifted me to the Campanas. As some temporary truce,â Alma reached her own conclusion. âBecause one of the executives from the Campanas thought I was charming.â
Cadence stared down at the black keys in between all of the white.
âOh, donât look so sad, Cadence. Heâs been very kind,â Alma drew. âEnzo, the one who bought me. He was just a capo for the Campanas then but now heâs second in command. Truth be told, I hated him at first. I did everything I could to upset him. I broke his favorite vases, called him names in public, and refused to speak with him at home. But he was very patient and always paid attention to me. When he found out that I missed playing the piano, he bought one for me. When he saw me get frustrated playing a complicated piece, he bought me a teacher.â
I can do that too, Cadence thought. I can do that for you too. And then she thought of Fortuna and her bank account. Fortuna really knew how to hit it where it hurt.
âHe even rented a stage for me to play in front of an audience recently. Can you imagine that?â
âIt sounds like he certainly knows how to treat people.â Cadence faked a smile.
Almaâs eyes twinkled again but in a different way. âHe calls me his songbird even though I have a terrible voice. I thought he was being silly at first, but it turns out he really does think of me that way.â She glanced at the piano. âLike a bird in a cage. The only thing thatâs changed are the surroundings.â She turned back to Cadence smiling. âHe kept me in his villa in Cancer, did you know? Itâs a very beautiful country.â
âAlmaâ¦â
Alma shook her head. âMy feelings for Enzoâand Agape, the Campanas, and the Romanosâare still complicated, but I have a lot to thank them for. I mean, without the union between the two Families, I wouldâve never come back here. I would have never been able to see you again.â She stared at the piano. âCadenceâ¦. youâre special, you know that? You made me feel like I could do anything.â
Her words were like a dream.
Cadence felt her chest swell. âI guess I have a lot to be thankful for too. Since youâre here again. I⦠Iâve been making decent money here⦠and⦠maybe⦠I was thinkingâ¦â After this all settles down. âI could make a decent place for you here. Like your own piano playing jointâplace, I mean.â
âA place for me here?â Alma remained smiling but the light in her eyes changed. âThis city is as suffocating as I remember it. The skyscrapers remind me of the bars of a cage. It smells worse than before somehow, and thereâs trash everywhere. And then thereâs everyone elseâthose sad people clogging up the streets all thinking theyâll do something big someday.â
It wasnât that bad, was it? Cadence hated the place too, but sheâd grown up on these filthy streets. It wasnât quite home, per se, but it wasnât not-home either.
Cadence paused at her own thoughts.
Wait a moment.
Wasnât it just a couple of months ago that sheâd been dreaming about kissing the city goodbye? And playing on the Ophiuchian Way with Alma? But recently, she had been thinking that it wasnât too bad staying hereâthat it was bearable. What exactly had changedâ¦?
A cold began to creep up her spine as her mind drifted to the other five.
She was fickle. Thatâs all it was.
âCadence.â
Snapped out of her thoughts, Cadence looked back at Alma and found her frowning.
âSomethingâs happened, hasnât it?â Alma asked quietly. âEnzo has been distant these past few days. Cold. Stressed. Angry. He told me that the union between the Campanas and the Romanos was postponed, but he hasnât told me anything elseâ¦. Butâthis involves little Francis and his brothers, doesnât itâ¦? I overheard Enzo speaking with the other executives the other dayâ¦â
The Campanas were talking about the Foxmans? Did they suspect them? Or were they trying to frame them? Or?
âTheyâre not so little anymore.â Cadence threw up an easy smile. She had to find a way to steer Alma off this conversation quickâwait. ââAngryâ? What do you mean angry?â
Almaâs lips drew downwards. âThey own the ports now, donât theyâFrancis and his brothers? And little Nico is probably working with his father, and cute Fortuna is probablyâ¦â A hum. âI really did love when you would bring them by.â
âYeah, but Alma, what do you mean by angrââ
âCadence,â Alma said, âcan you do something for me?â
âAnything, Alma,â Cadence said before she could stop herself. She was being watched by some of the other five. She could feel their gazes prickling her skin, ghosting her consciousness.
The others wouldnât understand. The others werenât like her. They had all grown up differently than her. And that was fine. That was just the hand fate dealt them. There was no helping it. Yes, they wouldnât understand thatâ
âbefore Ricardo, before the Foxmans, before Nico, there was Alma. And before Almaâwell, Cadence didnât want to think of what came before Alma, so Alma to her really was the beginning. Alma, the pianist who would play a tune at the Sognare every Thursday night. Alma, the mysterious young woman who drew in all types of late-night walkers to the bar. Alma, who had beckoned an eight-year-old Cadence in from the cold winters outside with a pale finger. Alma who had ignored the words of protests from bar patrons and had allowed Cadence to sit at the table closest to the piano. Alma, who had taken Cadence into her small flat, not caring about how grimy Cadenceâs cheeks were nor how dirty her worn-down shoes were. Alma, who had taken Cadenceâs hand and twirled around her flat to music droning off the record player. Alma, who had given Cadence a home. No. Alma who had become home.
âIâm scared, Cadence,â Alma whispered, voice as breathy and lovely as always. âThe Foxmans must have something to do with whatâs going on. Could you look into it for me, please?â
Yeah. The universe really was directing her into the Foxmanâs direction. There was no helping it now.
----------------------------------------
( )
âItâs your move, Iota.â
âI know that, Tau.â
Conversing in a small room lit only by an assortment of wax candles, a man and a woman sat across from one another observing a game board on top of a stack of books. The man was wearing glasses and was dressed in a crisp suit. The woman was wearing a polka-dotted blue dress and had a red bandanna tied into a bow on top of her head. There were no windows present to provide better light nor were there any doors present to let in air, but this did not seem to deter the man and the woman at all.
The game board in question consisted of approximately 10 by 10 squares and was littered with small token-shaped black and white pieces. There were twelve white pieces left on the board and only two black pieces. It was evident who was winning.
After a longer beat of silence, the woman named Iota reached forwardâthe white snake-tattoo on the arch of her hand glowed in the candlelightâand moved one of the white pieces diagonally up and over the second to last remaining black piece. She tucked the black piece beneath her palm as she did so and dropped it on her side of the table.
Iotaâs opponent reached for his remaining black piece on the board and used it to jump across three of the white piecesâ
âDammit!â
Iota slammed her fist against the side of the makeshift book table, sending the playing pieces jumping into the air. She clicked her tongue and slid three black pieces over to the other man Tau. The man picked them up, removed the white pieces he had jumped over, and arranged the black pieces in their place on the board.
âForget it!â Iota snapped, slapping her hand onto the board. âWeâve been playing for hours.â
âSo youâre saying that I win the argument then?â Tau inquired, rubbing his wrists.
âOf course not!â
âWell, if we canât resolve our arguments with words, we play the game. Whoever wins the game wins the fight. If we donât follow this rule then weâd argue all the time and nothing would get resolved, and then we wouldnât get anywhere with anything. Thatâs the law and order!â Tau said, starting off calm and then ending irate. Pausing, he turned his head to the corner of the room that was clustered with piles of books and warmed by soft candlelight. A figure sat there, sitting in silence and reading a book. âIsnât that right, Theta?â
âAnd if the game remains unfinished then that means the fight wasnât important enough to begin with,â came the affirmation from the direction.
âThe children went looking for you again, Theta,â Tau said after a pause.
Iota glanced into the corner. âYour identity will be discovered soon, wonât itâ¦?â
âAnd then the city will discover us,â came the quiet reply. âYou sound like you donât like that idea, Iota. Is it that you want to remain hidden for the rest of our time here?â
Iota threw her head back as laughter wracked her body. âOf course not!â Her eyes went wide, and she slammed her fist onto the board sending pieces clattering to the ground. âIâm just dying to tear this city limb from limb.â Her legs began shaking. âIâve been waiting and waiting and waitingâwatching those ignorant bastards walk around this place like they own it and throwing around those modified conductors likeââ
âCalm down, Iota. Donât be rash. We donât want a repeat of what happened to the former mayor and the heads of the Families. When you act independently like that, you cause problems for the entire group.â
Iota shut her mouth immediately and grimaced. âSorry, Iâ¦â
âI understand your frustration, Iota, but we must be patient.â The flutter of a page turning. âThereâs no use rushing to the ending when the ending remains the same.â
âRight, âleader.â Patience I can do.â
Sitting in this room that had no windows and no doorsâno exitsâTheta smiled and continued to read in the dark.
âAh, yes, Alma. I used to play duets with her down at the Sognare. She had big dreams, that one. Very kind too. Took in some orphan a while back. Kid became attached to her hip. Alma always did seem a bit⦠off though. Anyways, I havenât seen them in years. I wonder what theyâre up to.â - Sebastian Faux, former player at the Sognare [https://sixchanceshome.files.wordpress.com/2023/02/16.png?w=1024]