Mafia And Maid: Chapter 40
Mafia And Maid: A Mafia Romance
âCamillo!â I shriek. His body freezes. And rough hands yank him back.
âYou animal!â a woman yells. âHarold! Oh, Harold, are you okay?â
âYouâre psychotic!â another man says. âHe just attacked him!â
âYouâre going to regret this,â Harold wheezes, gripping at his throat. âNot even your thugs can protect you now.â
âThrow him out of here!â my mother demands.
I start to rush toward him, but Reagan snatches my arm, her nails digging into my skin. âJust let him go. This is Daddyâs funeral, for Godâs sake. If he canât behave, of course heâs going to be thrown out. Donât cause any more of a scene by running after him, Rosa.â
My step falters, and Iâm frozen in place, unable to know what to do for the best.
Everyone is speaking in shocked whispers, and my mother is dabbing at her eyes.
Camilloâs eyes drop from my wide eyes to the ground. And he doesnât protest as heâs hauled away from the scene.
***
The last few days since the funeral have been exhausting. Iâm in the kitchen, doing the washing up. For someone whoâs grieving, my mother seems to be throwing quite the event tonight.
âHurry up, Rosa. We donât have all night, and weâre running out of clean dishes.â
I wince at the sharp voice of my sister, and I canât help the bitter thoughts from skittering through my mind. This is why my mother has staff. Why am I doing this? But thatâs done nothing to stop my mother and sister from coming in every ten minutes with a new demand. As I scrub at a stubborn stain on a coffee cup, my mind wanders over whatâs been said since the funeralâ¦
âYou should be thankful weâve havenât disowned you after what he did.â
âYou canât be thinking of leaving, surely? Mother needs your support while sheâs grieving.â
âWell, if you really want to make up for what that thug did at the funeralâ¦â
The porcelain cup clatters into the sink as I startle.
âRosa! I heard a crash! Is everything okay?â
âYes, i-itâs fine.â
âThose were a gift from your father!â My motherâs cry fills the kitchen as I wince. âYou stupid girl! Do you know how hard itâll be to replace it? How could you be so thoughtless?â
I swallow as my eyes drop to the ground. Her heavy sigh reminds me of when I was a child. One wrong step and Iâd be met with a lecture about how no one would love me if I couldnât do and say the right thing.
âI see some things havenât changed,â she snaps. âSee that itâs tidied up and replaced. I have guests to deal with.â
Sagging against the counter, I make a start on the next stack of cups.
After finishing all the dishes an hour later, I make my way up the stairs. Each step feels like Iâm being dragged down, like overcoming a mountain with rocks attached to my ankles.
Softly, I open the door and scan the room for Ethan. His small body is engulfed by the blankets, the teddy bear brought by Camillo snuggled close.
My heart clenches. My phone sits on the nightstand, untouched. The text I sent Camillo after the funeral still remains unanswered. The small little check mark tells me heâs read it at leastâread that Ethan and I have to stay here a little longer as my mother still needs me. The ache inside me as I stare at the phone, willing it to light up, is too pronounced, too physical as I rub at my sternum.
For days now, Iâve wanted to call him. To hear what happened at the funeral to cause him to act like that. To know if heâs okay. But that unanswered text has stopped me, and I donât know how to fix this thing between us.
Whatever rift has grown between us is wedged in place. A short time away from him, and heâs probably realized heâs better off without such a mess up like me. So, despite the despair that shreds my insides, I flip my phone over.
There are a few texts from Juliana and Cate asking when weâll be back and talking about setting up activities for Ethan to do with the other kids once weâve returned. But I canât answer them right now.
I squeeze my eyes shut as I curl up on the bed, careful not to disrupt Ethan. Hugging the pillow, I feel the emotions drag me under.
âHow Grayden ever put up with you is beyond me.â
âHow selfish can you be? Mother is grieving, Rosa, and youâre just worried about some thug.â
âAre you sure you want to have another piece of cheese? Everyoneâs watchingâ¦â
The words swarm around me, each slicing against my skin until Iâm bleeding raw. Every single one tearing away whatever armor Iâve built up over the last few months.
Of course, theyâre right.
I am nothing.
Not to them. Not to Grayden. So, why would someone like Camillo see me differently?
Smothering a sob into the pillow, I press my face into it further.
The fantasy of what I thought I could have with him shatters into a million pieces before I can stop it. The foolish brief flicker of hope that Camillo would want me snuffs out like a precarious candle in a hurricane.
The radio silence is enough for me to take a hint. All those tender moments with him, the way he accepted me and Ethan so completely, are blown away. The soft whisper of needing me, wanting me, swirl around me before stabbing at my heart repeatedly.
I always knew it would happen. A man like Camillo would never want something so broken like me for long. Iâm not the person who soothes those demons that roar to life in his head; I cause reasons for them to flare up instead. It was only a matter of time until he realized this.
I wanted to believe he didnât think like that. But another painful stab squeezes my heart.
Pulling my head away from the pillow, I stare up at the ceiling. Loneliness gnaws at my stomach, sharpening the bile and acid that bubbles within. I havenât eaten much since the funeral. Iâm trying so hard to remember to use the techniques I learned at therapy, but the tutting responses from my family every time I so much as sip a cup of tea are making it so hard. Not talking to Camillo only adds to the anxiety, turning anything that touches my tongue into ash.
For once, I thought I was enough. He made me feel like I was worth something.
Just Rosa. As is.
But Iâm wrong.
A bitter laugh leaves me as I swipe at my eyes. If thereâs anything Iâm good at, itâs being wrong, being inadequate, being the problem. At least there I excel. Itâs the only thing everyone can seem to agree on.
I press a kiss to Ethanâs forehead and lie back down, trying to distract myself from the darkness sinking into me as my eyes drift close.
Maybe in another life, things could have worked out. Maybe if Iâd had more time to win him over, to transform myself into something he wanted to keep, to show him just what I have to offer, and to tell him Iâm not afraid of him the way others areâ¦
But what good would that do? The thought in my head doesnât sound like me, but its hold on my mind is too hard to ignore.
It wouldnât change anything.
âRosa!â Itâs Reaganâs voice. I furiously swipe my tears away. Any sign of weakness, vulnerability from me, and theyâll pounce like the vicious animals they are, ripping my already tattered and worn away shield to shreds. âYouâre needed downstairs, Rosa!â
Slowly, I open the bedroom door.
âFinally! I thought I was going to break a nail pounding on your bedroom door. You canât just sneak off like that. What if someone needed something?â She tuts loudly. âYou canât expect me or our poor mother to deal with anything while weâre grieving. Itâs really quite selfish of you, you know. So, hurry up.â
I spare Ethan one more glance before I slip out the door and past Reagan without a word. Seen and not heard, thatâs how I survive here. Thatâs how I please them. Take up as little space as possible and hope I can melt into the walls.
And I hate myself for it. I hate myself for not being stronger, for not being able to stand up for myself. But itâs so hard. Itâs not just a case of thinking it and doing it. Because every time I try to defend myself, my mother and Reagan make it seem like Iâm being selfish and self-centered and only thinking about myself. And anything I say in my defense just makes their barbs worse.
I just canât win with them. Deep inside me, I know what theyâre saying isnât true, but that they think it in the first place stabs at me and makes it so difficult to stand up for myself. I know itâs what the therapist terms as self-esteem issues, but right now, I donât know how to get back on trackâback to a place where Iâm stronger again.
Itâs like flipping a switch. The routines of the woman I once was click back into place. And the woman I was becoming with Camillo and his family vanishes like she never existed at all.