Twisted Hearts: Chapter 4
Twisted Hearts (The Camorra Chronicles Book 5)
Gemma 15, Savio 19
My head was throbbing and my vision kept turning black, but I fought against unconsciousness. I needed to be ready to fight. Fabiano slanted me a searching look. I gave a small nod even though it sent a stab through my brain. I could tell Fabiano was trying to loosen the cord binding his arms to his back.
I glanced toward the door when Remo and Nino walked in, led into the room by the traitors my mother had hired to do her dirty work.
Mother stepped up to Kiara and Alessio, Ninoâs wife and adopted baby boy, threatening them with a lighter. I hadnât been able to stop her from dousing them with gasoline earlier when several assholes had attacked me at once. âYou are going to put down all of your weapons, or theyâll both burn.â
âWe took their weapons,â Carmine said. If I got the chance, Iâd shove my knife into his traitorous throat.
âNo, no, you didnât. I know Benedettoâs sons,â Mother said with a smile that raised the little hairs at the back of my head. It was difficult to believe that his madwoman was our own flesh and blood, except for the horrid reminder of her having the same gray eyes as Nino.
âWe are your sons too,â I said, because she seemed to forget that little fact. Maybe we were fucked up, but a huge part of why was because of her. Reaching up, I lightly touched the side of my head. My fingers came away red. Fuck. Those assholes had hit me good.
Mother didnât even look at me. She had only eyes for Remo and Nino. âA gunshot could set Kiara and her boy on fire too. A little spark and everything goes up in flames, do you really want to risk it? Hear their agonized screams?â
Carmine took the guns from my brothers, and for the first time, a flicker of worry filled me. Iâd trusted in Remo and Nino finding a solution to this mess. They always did. They had ripped Las Vegas from the hands of unworthy men. They had fought for our birthright, for our territory, for our legacy when nobody had believed in the name Falcone. For a while Iâd been sure they were invincible. Many Camorrista still did. But there was one thing that had the power to destroy them and she stood in the middle of the room like a martyr.
âWhat did you promise them to do your bidding?â Nino asked.
Mother smiled. âMoney. Power. Revenge.â
âPower,â Remo scoffed. âDo you really think my men will follow either of you? Theyâll laugh into your pitiful faces and then smash them in. And even if you manage to seize power by some stroke of luck, you wonât have it for long. Luca will wipe the floor with assholes like you and just claim the Camorra for himself.â
âWeâll see,â Carmine said.
âHelp him to his feet,â Mother said, nodding at me but still not meeting my eyes. This was about her and Remo mainly. We all knew it. Remo was our fatherâs son more than each of us. Mother had been too weak to kill our father, the man whoâd tormented her, and so she tried to kill the next best thing: his sons.
One of the traitors grabbed my arm and tried to drag me to my feet. I headbutted him despite the following agony and was rewarded by the satisfying sound of his breaking nose. âGo fuck yourself, motherfucker.â I grinned when the bloody asshole pointed his gun at me.
Our mother waved the lighter. âI told you. Theyâll burn.â
I stood. I didnât want to be responsible for Kiaraâs and Alessioâs death. Pain shot through my ankle when I put my weight on it. I must have twisted it at some point.
âWhereâs Adamo?â Mother asked, flicking the lighter open, causing Kiara to flinch. Mother smiled manically.
âHe disappeared after you tricked him into helping you,â Nino said.
Adamo could be such a fucking fool. Iâd told him several times that he should stay away from our mother, but he wouldnât listen. He had to believe in the good in people. Maybe now heâd finally understand that most people were assholes. Remo and Nino always justified his stupidity because he was young, but when Iâd been sixteen, I hadnât been this fucking naïve.
âPoor boy,â Mother said as if she actually cared, as if she was capable of empathy. âHeâs weak, lost. He isnât like you or Benedetto.â She looked at Remo. âWhat about those kids and wife of yours, Remo? Where are they?â
Remoâs nostrils flared.
âEveryone knows about that kidnapped girl and those twins that look like you,â she continued. âEspecially that boy. Your spitting image. Your tainted blood.â
Everyone knew about Nevio. He was the spitting image of Remo and that wasnât where their resemblance ended. Mother didnât know it, but the boy who was most likely to continue our fatherâs legacy was Nevio. If she wanted our tainted blood to end, she would have to kill him.
Remo gave her a wide grin, full of maniac darkness. âYou know me, donât you? You really think I could ever have a woman in my life without killing her?â
Mother tilted her head and closed the lid of the lighter. âYou killed her?â
âHer and those useless kids.â
Mother didnât know any of us. She only lived for herself. We lived for each other. Each of us would die for the other. Remo would cut himself into tiny pieces before heâd hurt Serafina or his twins.
âWhy donât you douse us with gasoline? That way you can guarantee we donât act out of turn and you can let Kiara and Alessio go,â Nino suggested.
Motherâs answering laugh raised goosebumps on my skin. I didnât even remember the last time that had happened. âOh no, no. I wonât let the past repeat itself. She stays. Youâll behave as long as she does. You donât want her to get hurt, do you?â
âWe need to hurry up here,â Carmine said, looking at Remo. âWe donât know if they didnât alert their soldiers. As long as they still live, every fucking Made Man in the city will follow their command.â
âOkay, this is how it goes, boys. I want you to cut your wrists, all right?â Mother said, sounding as if she was talking about our plans for the fucking Christmas holidays.
I scoffed. Did she really think weâd go down without a fucking fight?
âI should have killed you right after they cut Adamo out of you. Father wouldnât have stopped me. He would have found a new woman to terrorize,â Remo snarled.
Mother looked at Remo with a sorrowful smile. âAnd I should have killed you first, in your sleep, but I didnât know how strong you were. I do now, my son.â
âDonât call me that!â he roared, causing her to flinch.
âThis could have been over many years ago. It must end this way, donât you see?â Mother whispered. She opened the flap of the lighter. âAll three of you will cut your wrists now. Iâll wait until youâve passed out before I burn down the mansion and your bodies in it. If you donât, Iâll burn her and the baby right in front of you and have my men shoot you anyway.â
âYouâll burn them anyway. The moment weâve passed out, youâll kill them,â Nino said, and for once, his emotionless mask was gone. It was still strange to see fear on my brotherâs face when he hadnât been capable of any emotions for as long as I could rememberâuntil his wife, Kiara.
Our mother shook her head with a soft smile. âNo, no, sheâs a victim like I was, and the boy isnât yours, so he can live as well. We have to go but not them, boys, donât you see?â
She really thought she was doing the world a favor. She thought this was her task in life, when it was only her sick version of revenge on our father. âFuck, if Iâd known how batshit crazy you are, I would have killed you myself,â I said. I could have visited her in the mental institution Remo had kept her in these last few years and put a bullet in her head. For some reason, Iâd preferred pretending she didnât exist.
âSee?â she said. âItâs in you like it is in them, like it was in your father.â She regarded us. She motioned at Carmine, who handed Nino a knife. âEither youâll cut your wrists now, or Iâll burn them. Iâll count to three.â
Kiara began crying softly, rocking Alessio. She didnât deserve any of this, nor did the kid. They both had gone through hell in their past, had been brutalized by the people meant to protect them.
Nino cut his wrists, not taking his eyes off his wife and son.
âNo!â Kiara cried out, looking as if the knife had cut her flesh, not his.
âTwo,â Mother counted. âSavio, Remo.â
Remo grasped the knife with a growl and cut his wrists. Of course, he did. Remo had burnt for us before. Heâd die a thousand deaths if it meant protecting his family. Ninoâs gaze met mine and I knew what was coming. Now it was my turn. Diego and I had planned to visit a house party this weekend. Iâd looked at new cars. Nothing of that mattered today.
âFuck.â I closed my eyes briefly. Remo and Nino didnât fear death. It was their fucking disposition to have made peace with the inevitable end a long time ago. Iâd preferred to ignore the possibility of dying. It had been a distant concept that didnât concern me, even if Iâd killed many men myself.
âOne,â Mother warned. For some reason, Kittyâs laughter the last time weâd fought in the cage flitted through my mind.
I opened my eyes, tore the knife from Remoâs grip and slashed my wrists before I could lose my nerve and hate myself forever. Ninoâs expression filled with relief.
I looked down at my wrists, at the red rivulets dripping down my palms and fingers. The sight of blood had never bothered me, not its smell or sticky feel either, and it didnât today. Maybe I should have been scared of the unknown darkness ahead, but I felt a strange sense of calm. It could have been my head wound and the resulting dizziness, whatever it was: death didnât bother me as much as Iâd thought it would. And then everything went very fast. Suddenly Adamo barreled in, jabbing a knife into our motherâs back. We all sprang into action, overpowering the traitors.
When our mother took her last breath, killed by our knife, I could see peace descend on Remoâs and Ninoâs face.
Shoulders hunched, I perched on the edge of the sofa, staring at the angry red marks on my forearms from cutting my wrists. The Camorra doc had stitched me up and soon bandages would cover up the wounds, not the memories though.
A tight sensation took hold of my chest, a mix of burning fury and numbing gloom. The former I could deal with, the latter annoyed the shit out of me. I glanced toward the corpse of our mother in the center of our living room. Sheâd invaded our home, our fucking lives, to kill us. Some people had mommy issues. That term didnât even begin to describe the kind of fuckery we had to deal with. This was the second time sheâd tried to kill my brothers and me. Our own fucking mother. Looking at her dead body now, I didnât feel anything but rage. When other people got that warm feeling when thinking about the woman who gave birth to them, for me, there was only darkness and pain. The last time sheâd tried to end our lives, Iâd been too young to understand or remember, but Remo and Nino had carried the baggage of that day with them. My brothers were everything for me, but even I knew both of them teetered on the edge of insanity. No fucking wonder when your mother slit your wrists and tried to burn you alive. That had been many years ago, and today sheâd tried again, and almost succeeded.
My brothers sought the closeness of their wives and children. Fabiano had left to pick up his girlfriend, Leona. Only Adamo and I were in our own bubble. Our eyes met, guilt and shame flashing across his face. Maybe he hoped for absolution, for me to walk over to him and tell him all was forgiven.
After the doc had bandaged me, I staggered to my feet, ignoring the stars dancing before my eyes, and headed toward the stairs.
I dragged myself into my room and fell into bed. Reaching for my cell, I considered sending Diego a text, but then I wasnât sure what to write. I didnât want him to think what happened bothered me, didnât want to appear weak in front of anyone, even my best friend.
Dropping the cell, I stared at the ceiling. The silence bothered me today, when it never had before. Usually, I would have gone out and found a girl to fuck, but I wasnât even in the mood for that. With slashed wrists and a head wound, I wouldnât be able to deliver a satisfying performance. Iâd probably pass out mid-fuck and bury the girl under my unconscious body.
For the first time in my life, I wanted someone at my side, if only for a few hours.
When I came down to breakfast, I heard Momâs sniffling. âThese poor boys,â she said thickly.
âThese boys are the men who rule over the West Coast with relentless brutality, Claudia,â Dad said. âThey survived Benedetto, theyâll survive this and probably get out of it stronger than before.â
âWhatâs going on?â I asked when I entered.
Nonna sat at the table, praying the Holy Rosary, her eyes squeezed shut.
Diego paced the room with a deep frown. Dad had his arm wrapped around Momâs shoulder who was crying, which didnât necessarily mean something horrible had happened.
Dad and Diego exchanged a look, deciding if this was something I was allowed to know about. Toni would give me the dirty details later anyway, but recently it annoyed me that my family still treated me like I couldnât handle anything.
âThe Camorra is under red alert because of an incident in the Falcone mansion,â Dad said.
âWhat incident?â
Diego took out his phone, checking his messages before he shoved it back into his pants. âNera Falcone tried to kill her sons.â
âAgain?â I gasped. âWhat happened? Did someone get hurt?â The stories of Mother Falconeâs craziness still made the rounds. When Benedetto had still been in power, people hadnât dared discuss the events, but since Remo had taken over, that had changed.
âShe had the support of a few traitors,â Dad said carefully. âWe donât know details yet, but Remo called for a meeting of every Camorrista in Vegas. Diego and Iâll have to leave soon.â
Diego nodded. âIâll grab a jacket.â
I quickly followed after him when he left the kitchen. âHowâs Savio?â
âI donât know. He hasnât written yet.â
I grabbed his arm. âDiego, are you stupid? You should ask him if heâs all right. Heâs your friend.â
Diego shook me off. âIf I do, that sounds as if I think heâs weak. Gemma, heâs my friend, but heâs also a Falcone. He and his brothers rule over the Camorra. He wonât tell me even if he isnât all right. And Iâm going to see them at the meeting in Rogerâs Arena anyway.â
I didnât get it. If Savioâs mother had tried to kill him and his brothers, that must have shaken him up, Falcone or not.
âStay out of Savioâs business, Gemma. I warn you.â
The moment Dad and Diego had left for their meeting, I rushed to my room and grabbed my phone from my sock drawer. Even though Savio and I didnât train together anymore, unless I accompanied Diego for his work outâwhich still happened occasionallyâI still had Savioâs number. Maybe Diego couldnât text his friend for some stupid testosterone codex, but I was a girl.
Before doubts could overcome me, I quickly typed in a message and send it off.
Hey Savio,
I hope you are all right. Iâm so sorry about what happened. If you need anything at all or want someone to talk to, I am here.
Kitty
In the beginning his nickname had bothered me, but it had grown on me, because Savio was the only one who called me by that name. When I didnât get a reply after a few minutes, worry filled me. Maybe Iâd crossed a line? Savio and I werenât really friends. We were⦠I wasnât even sure.
My phone beeped, almost giving me a heart attack. Stomach tightening, I checked Savioâs reply.
Thanks, Kitty. The only thing I need is that delicious almond cake your Nonna bakes. ð
I knew he was joking, but giddy about his reply, I headed downstairs. Mom had left to go grocery shopping. Whenever something horrible happened, she cooked up a storm as if delicious food could cancel out all the darkness in the world. Nonna was asleep on the sofa, the rosary still clutched in her hand. I went over to her and covered her with a blanket. She must have taken the news the hardest, after all, Dadâs brother was killed by traitors shortly after Remo came into power.
I slipped inside the kitchen and grabbed everything for the cake. Iâd baked it countless times with Nonna, so I knew what to do by heart. Toni sent me a message while I waited for the cake to bake.
Please be at your phone! Did you hear what went on with the Falcones?
I called her. She probably knew the details nobody bothered to tell me. âSpill.â
âAdamo helped his mother escape the mental hospital she was in and then she ran away, and forced Savio, Nino, and Remo to cut their wrists!â
I swallowed. âWhat?â
âI couldnât believe it either. But Dad told me. Theyâre all wearing bandages over their wrists to cover the cut. Can you believe it? If I ever complain about my mother again, remind me of Nera Falcone.â The official version was that Toniâs mom had died in a car accident when in truth sheâd run off with a Frenchman.
I tried to imagine how Savio must be feeling now. His own mother had forced him to cut his wrist. That was barbaric and cruel. âAre you at the Arena?â
âYou know about the meeting?â
âHmm.â
âDad didnât allow me to come. He said Remo Falcone is going to make an example out of one of the traitors in front of the other men. Dad said knowing the Capo, there would be blood, vomit and piss to clean later.â
I shuddered. Iâd heard about the brutality of the Falcones but never witnessed it. âIâm baking a cake for Savio so heâll feel better. I wanted to take it to the Arena.â
Toni was silent for a moment. âDonât go inside. Just put it on his car, okay?â
âOkay. Since when are you the sensible one?â
âWhen Savio is concerned I have to be. You lose your head around him.â
The oven beeped. âIâm not losing my head. I have to go now. The cake is done.â
âI mean it, Gemma, be careful today, okay? You think Savio is a cute guy because thatâs the side of him you know, but heâs a Falcone and Dadâs been dealing with him for a while now. After what happened yesterday, Savioâs probably still on edge and looking for an outlet. Donât be that outlet.â
Toni sounded worried, but she really had no reason to. âItâll be fine. Iâll message you when I get the chance.â I hung up and saved the cake from the oven before it turned too dark.
Once the cake had cooled slightly, I put the slices into the biggest Tupperware container we had and went into the backyard. I grabbed Diegoâs old bike and headed out for the Arena. With a little luck, nobody from my family would notice my trip.
The parking lot in front of Rogerâs Fight Arena was crowded with cars. There were a few luxury models around, but I didnât see the copper Bugatti. Savio probably had a new car by now. I parked my bike in front of the entrance then hesitated. I couldnât leave the container in front of the bar.
I took out my phone and sent Savio another message, telling him that I was in the parking lot.
A scream rang out inside, causing me to back off a few steps and shiver.
âThis isnât a place for you, Kitty.â
I jumped and whirled around. âYou almost gave me a heart attack,â I said, pressing a palm to my chest. He must have used the backdoor. Facing Savio, my chest constricted. A bruise bloomed at the top of his head, and his forearms were bandaged, but these obvious injuries didnât worry me. It was the look in his eyes that was off, a lurking darkness Iâd never seen in them before. He wasnât smiling or smirking, only regarding me with mild curiosity.
âWhat are you doing here?â he asked.
Tugging a strand behind my ear, I held out the Tupperware container.
Savioâs eyebrows rose.
âAlmond cake,â I said.
He opened the lid and took a deep breath, then he smiled slightly. âDonât tell me you forced your poor Nonna to bake for me.â
I flushed. âI baked it myself.â
Savio grabbed a piece and took a big bite, then he nodded. âTheyâre very good. Baking and fighting, youâll make a man very happy one day.â
âI only want you.â
I hadnât really just said that, had I? Judging from the brief flash of surprise on Savioâs face, I had. Heat shot into my head. Toni was right. I lost my head when I was around Savio. My heart had been his for years anyway.
Savio closed the container, regarding me in a way I didnât understand. He leaned down and I held my breath. âNo, you donât, trust me. Youâre too young to understand what kind of man I am.â
âIâm not that young,â I said grimly. âIâm fifteen and a half.â
âFifteen and a half,â he repeated with a strange smile. He straightened and lifted the container. âThanks for this.â My eyes were drawn to the bandages around his wrists. Blood tinged them red.
âYouâre bleeding.â
Savio glanced down at his arm, and his expression darkened. âItâs nothing.â His voice held an edge despite the familiar smirk he gave me. âNow go back home.â
I nodded, backing away. It was obvious that he was suffering, and how could he not, but he wouldnât talk to me. Iâd done what I could. Maybe Diego could get through to him, but given my brotherâs lack of empathy, that was unlikely.