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Authors: S. W. Frank

Tags: #Drama, #American, #African American

Associates (15 page)

BOOK: Associates
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He whistled as he walked the concrete courtyard, the presence of officers rushing to get a look at an alleged Mafia Kingpin felt at his back. His eyes took another look at the ugly red sculpture and come to think of it, the thing wasn’t as hideous as first thought. Maybe, the way light struck the corners to blur the harsh edges gave it a softer feel –whatever.

Emilio and his guard were at the curb being honked by PD to move from the No Parking zone as Alfonzo approached. He took up space in the backseat and burst into laughter, wishing he could’ve seen Mr. Johnson’s motherfucking face. “Ah, man, too funny. Let’s go Emilio.”

‘Let’s see how you
handle shit when it comes your way, Carl!’

 

                           
~

 

“Tony, I told you Chip wasn’t nothing but a piece of shit. I said it, didn’t I?” Tony’s woman repeated for the third time since last night. He stepped from the bathroom buttoning his shirt. “Yes, you did.”

“And now look. I have a business to run, there are little children who come to the studio for dance lessons baby. Ugh!” she exclaimed and rose from the corner of the bed shaking her head.

Tony tucked in his shirt and crossed the parquet floor to put his arm around her waist. When he kissed her neck she relaxed. He made her a promise. “I’ll fix this. Trust me.”

She spun around in his arms. The smoky brown eyes he loved so much, trusting and warm. “Baby, I trust you. It’s the people you deal with that I don’t trust. That guy whatever his name is…”

“Nico or are you talking about Sergio the snot-nose kid?”

“I guess it’s Nico if that’s his name. He looks like bad news. Baby, he gives me the chills.”

Tony rubbed her arms and smiled reassuringly. Sometimes she misread people. Because someone looked hard didn’t mean they were. Tony trusted Nico more than he ever trusted Chip. He’d taken a job with the spineless piece of crap because it was nearly impossible to find work when you’re a black man with a class C felony. Nobody cared if he acted in self-defense, all they saw is the conviction for second-degree manslaughter and the employment door was slammed in his face. The only places hiring an ex-con were minimum wage establishments or those non-profit groups run by good-intentioned people with records themselves. Problem is he couldn’t afford a damn thing on the well-intentioned pittance of a salary. The crime he committed to defend himself against a two-bit robber who happened to be white landed him five years in jail. Why? A black male with mixed-martial arts training was considered more lethal than a white thug seeking to rob somebody with a knife. All the education in the world didn’t matter. He’d had a good job as a draftsman for an engineering firm, and a new wife.  Upon his conviction, he lost everything. Two years in, his devoted wife skipped out and well the rest is history. 

The bouncer gig with Chip paid well and indirectly if it weren’t for the position he wouldn’t have met Tiffany. She was a senior in college, studying modern dance and answered an advertisement for a
dancer
. Tony took one look at the young woman and knew she had no idea the ad was for a stripper. She never made it inside the club to audition, instead he sent her away saying the job was filled and gave her a card with his number. “Give me a call if you don’t find anything and I’ll hook you up,” he told the girl.

A month later, she contacted him. She secured a job at a dance studio, loved it and wanted to personally thank him with dinner as she put it,
‘for
being nice.’

The dinner led to other dinners and Tiffany as the dessert. He still recalled the colorful candy sprinkles clinging to her breasts and covering her ass which he licked and ate like a kid tasting sugar for the first time.

Four years later, here they stood. An ex-con and woman who may have turned out like Nina but one
nice
act by a stranger changed the course. Yes, he loved his Tiffany, loved her more than any man should except he refused to get married again. He just didn’t believe in it anymore. Words spoken in front of guests and a priest don’t bind people, commitment does. She was the dancer leaving footprints on his heart. He’d make it right, put her life back on track and not let her enter the seedy confines of his world just like before.

He kissed her mouth and lingered there in a tight seal before pulling away just as a knock sounded at the door. “Let’s go lovebirds!” He heard Nico say and he took up Tiffany’s bag from the bed and together they strolled into the hall.

Nico as usual, drove in silence, stopped at a deli to buy them coffee. He had tea and ordered sausage rolls to go along with it for everyone and climbed inside dispersing the bags. The girl Tiffany didn’t eat pork he found out as she sniffed the food, turning it over, thanked him for nothing and passed it to her man. She drank the coffee though and he constantly noticed she snuck peeks at him and he found it funny, because it’s apparent she didn’t trust many people and he didn’t blame her. A person must earn that respect.

The car ride with Sergio was always full of chatter. Music didn’t silence the guy either and Nico couldn’t wait to be done with his company. The damn youth was worse than Darren and Aaron put together –and they were a handful!

 

 

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

 

Shanda entered Sophie’s home holding the handle to Carlo’s infant seat and rolling her shoulder to prevent the diaper bag and her purse from dropping. Voices raised in confrontation from Nico’s rowdy boys assaulted her ears and she rolled her eyes. Those kids needed an ass-whipping!

Her high heels clicked on the polished floor as she walked in the direction of the sitting room. Lo and behold, a pregnant Ari was stretched out, comfortably reading from her device, oblivious to her sons raucous.

Shanda put the bag near a high back seat, placed a sleeping Carlo down on the floor and then sat. Ari hadn’t looked up, although Shanda suspected she was aware of her presence. Shanda didn’t like the haughty bitch, something about the attorney rubbed her the wrong way. “Where’s Sophie?” Shanda asked breaking into her read.

Ari took her time to respond. She looked at Shanda, decked out in a designer outfit. Everything about the Brooklyn chick was right in your face. She wasn’t shy about showing her cleavage and in the tight fitting dress she gave the viewer an eye full. “Hello Shanda.”

“Hi Ari.”

The wild teens came shooting past and Shanda jerked the baby back before they tripped and fell atop her son. “Don’t you see there’s a baby here?”

The boys returned and apologized, “Sorry Shanda.”

Ari went back to whatever she was doing without answering as Aaron dropped to his knees to look at the child. “He’s getting big. He’s going to look just like Uncle Geo.”

Darren agreed. “Yep, big head and all.”

Their mom said something in Italian and they were looking at Shanda smiling. Shanda wondered what the fuck she said and decided she better learn the language because they might be laughing at her and she wouldn’t even know it. “What’s so funny?”

“No, my mom said the baby is cuter than Uncle Geo.”

“Oh.” Shanda relaxed, but not for long because the twins who had the youthful physique of miniature Nico’s were up and at it again, wrestling near the sofa, putting each other in headlocks and shit while their mom ignored them. Shanda’s eyes bulged wide in disbelief at Ari, was the woman crazy? She stood up and was about to take the child upstairs for some peace and quiet when the front door opened and thank goodness Giuseppe entered.

“Bella, you look nice.” He was in front of her taking his son from her hands. “He sleeps, no?”

“He won’t for long in this racket.”

Those damn boys came running out to greet their Uncle. Punching at his arms as he held her son and she relieved Giuseppe of the boy before the miscreants caused an accident.

I’ll beat their ass myself
, Shanda fumed silently.

“Buongiorno Ari,” Giuseppe exclaimed as he caught the boys around the neck and dragged them toward their mother. They tried to break his hold and pummeled him from both sides but Giuseppe’s muscles were locked and he didn’t let go. 

“Buongiorno Giuseppe, come stai?”

“Buona. Quando si ha questo bambino?”

“Spero presto
.”

The bitch was showing off.  She was nice to Giuseppe, all smiles and shit and this pissed Shanda off more. Giuseppe released the boys and everyone was laughing as if roughhousing around a baby was super –fun!

Shanda returned to the room and angrily occupied the cloth seat she only minutes ago vacated. “Giuseppe, I’m not going. Forget it, apparently your mom’s not here.”

“Leave the baby Shanda, we’ll watch him,” Ari volunteered with her fake ass.

“That’s okay. I don’t want anything to happen to my baby. Your boys play too rough.”

Giuseppe found this funny. “Donna, Carlo will be fine with Ari. She has been a mother far longer than you.”

“That doesn’t mean anything.”

There they go, talking Italian and laughing again
!

Sophie arrived at the right time because Shanda was about to leave.

It took a few minutes of coaxing from Giuseppe for her to relinquish her son in Sophie’s care with the wild twins in the house, but Sophie assured a worried mother she would take the child upstairs where it is quiet.

“Okay, then.” Shanda breathed.

As they were heading out the door, Ari politely said, “Have a good time you two.”

Oh shut the hell up bitch
!

 

           ~

The moon looked different Shanda noticed as she gazed up from the confines of the luxury chauffeured car, listening but not understanding a word spoken as Giuseppe conducted more business in their supposedly romantic night out. Giuseppe could turn on the charm when he wanted; flirt easily with women without care of her feelings. The pang of jealousy inched across her breast, or was it the baby milk? Shanda pouted because Giuseppe’s actions were confusing. He could make Ari smile with a simple Buongiorno, and show such love to his son and then turn into a
rock. She wondered how many women waited for his touch and what could she possibly give such a spoiled man.

As the car traveled along ancient streets from fairytale books, cobble and stone, she hadn’t noticed he’d put away his phone.

He watched her sad expression uncertain what he’d done to cause the woman’s melancholy mood. He put a hand on her exposed knee and she sighed.

“What is wrong?” he asked.

She shrugged, not willing to explain a woman’s jealousy and insecurity concerning a man.

The beams from the car which followed shone into the back window. Giuseppe’s fingers squeezed Shanda’s knee. “You do not like Ariana, why donna?”

“She’s a bitch.”

Giuseppe laughed. “You must get to know the women in our family. They make good companions.”

“I have a dog for that Geo. Ari always has her nose in the air and your mom caters to her like she’s a queen.”

“You are jealous.”

“No I’m not.”

“My mama enjoys having someone to dote on. It can be lonely for a widow in such a big home.”

Shanda hadn’t considered this. “I guess.”

“Ari is cranky because she is with child. Do you not feel empathy?”

“Not really, she got knocked up, she’s not ill.”

“Ah, Shanda, you do not need to take sides. I know you have a loyalty to your friend but that is not a reason to make an enemy of Ari when even Selange has called a truce.”

Shanda settled in her seat. Giuseppe struck a nerve. Perhaps he was right.

Soon they were
in the historical center of Palermo, on the Via Alloro the Foro Italico, which is the waterfront of the old town and going up to the Via Roma. The first street on the left near the Cross Vespers is where the restaurant was located. It was a cozy-but-elegant space on an unheralded piazza in the historic city center. The local seafood drew many there, as well as the superb antipasto cinque variazioni di crudo dal mare, which were five variations of raw delicacies from the sea. This wasn’t the ramshackle City Island eateries in the Bronx a guy took his date to, spent a few dollars and called himself a big spender. This restaurant was classy, clean and there weren’t any kids running behind their sloppily dressed parents picking their noses.

The maitre’d welcomed Giuseppe with a smile and a hearty, “Buongiorno Signore Dichenzo and Signora.”

Giuseppe nodded and soon they whisked away to a private table, where the manager appeared to personally greet his esteemed guests and recommend the course of the day. Complimentary wine bread and cheeses came in record time before they ordered and when the manager scurried away to supervise the meal, Giuseppe poured more wine and smiled at his donna. “The food here is delizioso.”

Amid the
warm and friendly atmosphere, the tension which existed earlier dissolved. They were in the heart of old Palermo, where long-standing traditions inspired conviviality. It was easy to relax in such an environment and she smiled across the table in his direction watching the color of his eyes as he talked about his love of food, told stories of his youth and laughed at fond memories. “My giovani cugini are much like me bella, they are boys exercising no restraint. Soon the world will seek to shackle them and I see no harm in letting them be free.”

BOOK: Associates
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