Lawless

Lawless by Jessie Keane Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: Lawless by Jessie Keane Read Free Book Online
Authors: Jessie Keane
Tags: Fiction, General, Mystery & Detective
taught her everything, even how to shoot. She remembered how he’d taken her hunting rabbits on farmers’ fields, and how she had treasured that time alone with him.
    Now, her heart was broken. He was gone.
    A sleek Bentley paused alongside the limo, heading in the other direction. Her eyes caught and held the stare of the man sitting behind the wheel. Even sunk deep in grief, she was arrested by how amazingly handsome he was: dark-skinned, black-haired. And his eyes were a startlingly clear bright blue – but they seemed full of some private pain.
    Then the limo edged forward and the man slipped out of her line of sight. She turned to look back, but he was gone.
    Maria was taking her hand, squeezing it. Bianca snapped back to the present, looked at her sister-in-law, the poor cow.
    ‘He’s in a better place, you know. Tito, I mean,’ she said.
    Bianca took her hand away.
    A better place?
    She knew that plenty of people would think Tito was destined for hell, particularly the one who’d killed him. And she wanted to know who that was; she was desperate to know who the bastard was who had robbed Tito of his life and brought such devastation on her family. Adopted or not, she had absorbed the culture she’d been taken into. She was a true child of the Camorra, and that was a proud and unforgiving heritage.
    When she found out who was responsible, she would have her revenge.
    She swore it.

12
    It was freezing cold and windy as the mourners filed inside the church. Outside, some brave early daffodils were being tossed in the breeze and flattened into the muddy soil. It was scarcely warmer inside the building. The atmosphere was grim. The organist was playing a dirge, appropriately sad for a Requiem Mass.
    Many had come to pay their respects, because they had to. The Danieris expected it. Tito might be gone, but there was still Vittore; there was still Fabio. Failure to attend would be noted, and frowned upon. Everyone knew that.
    Loitering outside were a couple of plain-clothes policemen, noticed but ignored by the bulk of the mourners. The police had only recently released the body, and ‘enquiries were ongoing’ into Tito’s murder. But so far no one had been arrested and everyone knew that the police wouldn’t dig too deeply or trouble themselves too much: obviously it was another gangland killing, one of many that occurred every year around the city, nothing too remarkable.
    Bastards , thought Bianca, walking up the aisle beside Maria, both of them curtsying and crossing themselves before the altar before joining Mama in the front pew.
    ‘Where have you been ?’ demanded Bella of her daughter.
    Bianca squeezed her mother’s hand. ‘Sorry. Traffic. Got held up.’
    ‘Have you seen Fabio?’
    ‘He’s just arrived, we saw him as we came in. He’s . . .’ Out there, unloading the coffin.
    Bianca couldn’t bring herself to say the words. They choked her, cut off her breath. All the way here, she had felt sick with horror. Traffic slowing the cars down, holding her up, had been yet another twist to the torment, prolonging this when she just wanted it to be over.
    She thought then, very briefly, of the man’s face, the one in the car going in the other direction. Dark skin, blue eyes, something autocratic in his bearing . . .
    ‘Fabio’s a good boy,’ said Bella.
    Bianca came back to the here and now. Her mother was still talking about Fabio. ‘Good’, in her opinion, was pushing it. Fab had a certain laddish charm, but he couldn’t pass a mirror without kissing it. ‘Good’ wasn’t a word she would ever associate with him. He’d bullied her all her life, hated her on sight. He wasn’t ‘good’ at all. But Mama Bella was nodding, affirming her opinion of her youngest son to herself.
    She looks exhausted , Bianca thought, feeling the emotion of the day rise up and almost stifle her. She was glad of the thick black veil she now wore pulled down over her face, identical to her mother’s. It hid the

Similar Books

The Dopefiend

JaQuavis Coleman

Scramasax

Kevin Crossley-Holland

Do Or Die [Nuworld 4]

Lorie O'Claire

Club Prive Book V

M. S. Parker

Runaway Actress

Victoria Connelly