Falcon's Angel

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Falcon's Angel Page 8

by Danita Minnis


  “Don’t you look at me that way, you liar!” Angelina wrapped her arms around her chest. “I could kill you for deceiving me.”

  “My name is Armand,” he said quietly.

  “Why don’t I believe you?”

  “He’s telling the truth,” the voice on speakerphone chimed in.

  “Who is that? Your partner in crime?” She looked past him at the speakerphone.

  “That’s Granger.” Tony took a step toward her, and said across his shoulder, “Shut up, Granger.”

  “Is it really? The so-called mute has a voice and a name after all, but still no earring. Well, Granger, how is your ear? Still bleeding, I hope!” She spat out towards the speakerphone.

  Her lover, the thief whose name she did not know, was slowly moving closer. She started to back away out of the bedroom.

  “That’s not a nice thing to say,” the speakerphone drawled.

  “Shut up, Granger!” they both shouted, turning toward the speakerphone.

  Granger shut up.

  Tony held up a hand, silently asking her to stay put. He stopped, leaning a hand against the doorframe. “Angelina, what are you talking about?”

  “You want the Stradivarius!” She jabbed her finger in the air towards the speakerphone, her next statement louder so Granger would hear. “He tried to take it from me that day. You’re working together.”

  “It’s not what you think. I’m trying to protect you.”

  “Oh, that’s original! You’re not trying to protect me, you’re lying. You lied about everything!”

  “No, tesoro, I didn’t lie about us. I love you.”

  “Great, just great.” The lament from the speakerphone rang out in the silence.

  Angelina looked into Tony’s eyes. She wanted to believe him. She wanted to rewind the last twenty-four hours of her life and go back to living with him, loving him, when she felt safe with him.

  But the proof of his deception was all around her. She was standing in the apartment he’d claimed to have missed out on. The detective’s words played over in her mind, a subliminal message.

  “No…” She shook her head. “I don’t believe you Tony, or Armand, or whoever you are. If you really loved me, you wouldn’t have lied.”

  “You know I love you. You love me, too. You feel it, like I do.” The calm conviction in his voice made her pause. But he moved towards her once again. “You’re mine, Angel, you always will be.”

  “No! I believe the detective. He said you wanted the violin!”

  “What detective?” He tilted his head as if he hadn’t heard her correctly and his eyes narrowed.

  She backed away. “You know what detective! He’s been trailing you for a long time. Detective Luciano Biagi told me all about you yesterday at the restaurant!”

  “What did he look like?”

  “Stop it! Will you please just stop the lies? It’s over, and I never want to see you again!”

  Angelina ran through the living room to the front door and turned the knob. But with the swiftness of a loping panther, Tony had reached the door. His hand above her head held it closed. He stood behind her hip to hip, his breath against her hair.

  “You don’t mean that. And I can’t let you go.”

  There was love and regret in those quiet words, filling her with a strange ache that she was horrified to recognize as craving.

  He kissed the top of her head and for just a moment, she leaned back against him. Why does it feel so right?

  She let out an agonized sigh. I’m in love with a master thief!

  Angelina pushed back, kicking him in the groin before she jerked the door open and ran.

  Blinded by her tears, she ran down the stairs, furious for being so weak, for wanting him so badly. For giving herself to him so completely. A horrible notion snaked its way into her thoughts. What if she never got her heart back now that she had given it to him?

  She didn’t know where she was going. She ran all the way to the first floor and then jerked that door open. She felt like running all night, until she was out of breath and couldn’t run anymore, couldn’t think anymore. She was running down the deserted Piazza Avellino when she heard him behind her.

  “That hurt, Angelina!” Tony sprinted towards her like a distance runner, his back straight and elbows bent, his long legs effortlessly closing the gap between them. “Come back here!”

  Angelina tried to run faster over the uneven cobblestones on the ancient street that hurt her bare feet. She ignored the pain because he was coming swiftly towards her and would soon overtake her. He was much faster and stronger. She had to get as far away from him as possible.

  The midnight street darkened even more. A shadow fell over the moon and she looked up. There was a black fog overhead, hanging so low in the sky it came almost to the apartment building windows.

  ‘Margaux…’

  She stumbled, looking around for whoever had called the name. Someone had spoken in her ear, but no one was there.

  “Angelina! Stop!” Tony was gaining on her, she had to run.

  “Signorina Natale! In here!”

  A Fiat was at the curb with its rear passenger door open.

  Detective Biagi waved to her from the front passenger seat. She didn’t think twice, but jumped into the back seat and slammed the door behind her.

  She was pushed back onto the seat when the car lurched away from the curb.

  There was a loud thump on the back of the Fiat. She turned to see Tony on the hood, shouting at her to get out of the car.

  Angelina put her hands over her ears to block out his shouts. Someone was sitting next to her in the back seat, but she couldn’t look away from Tony.

  “What about him?” The man next to her asked.

  Detective Biagi glanced out the window at the sky above, thick now with the fog blacker than night. “He’s not going to be a problem.”

  Detective Biagi nodded to the driver and the car swerved with such force that Angelina was pushed against the person sitting next to her. She had a terrifying view of Tony being thrown backward against the sidewalk headfirst. He lay still on his back.

  “Stop! He’s hurt!” Angelina screamed at the driver, but he didn’t stop the car. They were speeding away.

  The black fog descended on Tony, obscuring her view of him. “What is that? What is it?” She tried to open the passenger door, pushed against it, but it was locked.

  The distance between her and Tony on the dark street grew until she couldn’t see where he lay anymore.

  In this old district of Naples, there were no street lamps, no traffic lights. There were no rules in this section of the city. Tony could be killed laying there at the side of the road.

  She turned to Detective Biagi. “Stop!”

  The car’s engine sputtered. They coasted until the driver got the engine started again.

  The detective turned. “Jacopo, put her out before she…” His eyes traveled over her in compassion, as if she’d breached social etiquette. “…Upsets herself,” he finished quietly. He faced forward in dismissal.

  Angelina stared at his dark ponytail, speechless, and then felt a pinprick on her arm.

  She turned just in time to see the man sitting next to her put a needle away in a leather case. When the man turned facing front, folding his hands in his lap, done with her, she saw the gold earring in his ear.

  Angelina tried to lift her hand to pull at the dragon loop, but it wouldn’t move. Her body felt weighted down, as if something heavy rested on her chest. She could only move her head now, and turned it slightly, an arduous task, it felt filled with water.

  Hardly able to keep her eyes open, Angelina tried to get a look at the driver, who remained silent throughout this high-speed getaway. Her last thought before she lost consciousness was that his ear was no longer bleeding.

  Part II

  Awakening

  Carlo and Margaux

  Chapter One

  Rome 1790

  He was running down
the piazza.

  It was dark and he couldn’t see anything but her lithe figure ahead of him—a white, incandescent blur running straight down the open pathway.

  His peripheral vision faded. He couldn't see any of the buildings on either side, but he knew that they were there.

  Her bare feet made no sound on the cobblestones as if they too were swallowed up by the darkness closing in around her, encroaching on the light that was hers, his love. Only the sound of his heavy breathing reverberated in his ears.

  A feeling of dread hung over the repeating tableau, as always, he knew this, even in the dream state.

  She was running from him, they had quarreled and she was upset. But he had to bring her back. She was in danger. He was almost there. Very soon, he would be right behind her. He must get to her before she did this thing.

  He could see the back of her head now, could almost touch the black shining waves dancing behind her while she fought to stay ahead of him, and out of reach. He felt the familiar satisfaction as he gained on her, the assurance that he would overtake her, save her.

  Just when he was about to touch one midnight lock of hair trailing behind her, the blaze sprang up ahead, as it had countless times before. The fire fed off the very air around it. Unrelenting, it reached to the sky in triumph and lighted the piazza with its hellish glow.

  He called out to her to stop, but she never slowed. She ran right into the conflagration, killing him all over again. The fire enveloped her, closing around her like a fiery curtain, instantly consuming her white light. She was gone, and he knew the anguish of having lost her once again.

  The shock was fresh, no matter how many times he witnessed it.

  As before, he tried to step back from the burning heat and flames licking at his bare feet. There was a terrifying moment when he thought he wouldn't be able to stop. The momentum of his run made him stumble and lose his footing as he attempted to reverse his forward motion, and not follow her into the inferno.

  He was falling backward, his feet came right up from underneath him. When he went down with a sickening thump against the cobblestones, a blinding jolt of pain rang through his skull.

  “Margaux!” Carlo Francis Falco, the Marchese of Mariano, bolted upright. The blaze was still before him. He was still trying to save her life. He groped at the sheets and tensed when a small, soft body hugged his back.

  “Shh, Carlo.” Arms wrapped around his waist.

  He relaxed against her, rubbing the back of his head gingerly where it throbbed.

  “Always the same spot?” Rosa murmured thoughtfully.

  “Dottor Molinieri cannot explain it. The man is going to bleed me dry.”

  “Amore, he is on a quest for an answer.” She swatted away his hand and started to rub the base of his skull.

  Carlo grunted and put his head in his hands. He didn’t trust himself to speak further on the unexplained pain he always experienced upon waking from the nightmare. He had finally lost his patience with the physician and refused treatment, preferring to endure the ache in silence. He had vowed never to mention it to the doctor or his father again.

  It was strange that he did not feel himself, as in the dream. When he ran after her through the night, he had a different awareness. He wasn't Carlo then. He could never remember who he was in the dream once he woke, but he knew who was running from him in anger, his love. He had never quarreled with her.

  Rosa brought a golden hand up to his brow, smoothing it out. He was angry, and sorry for it. She didn’t deserve this.

  “It has been one year since Margaux’s death, and you are still dreaming of her,” she said.

  “It is just a nightmare. It will pass.”

  “Will you take it down?” Her eyes were on the painting above the marble fireplace. Its gilt wood frame gave off a soft glow in the candlelight.

  “No.” He didn’t know how long he stared at the painting of him and Margaux on that white powdered sofa with blue velvet cushions, their heads bowed together, forever in hope, in love. It must have been too long because Rosa was glaring at him.

  He lit the lamp on the nightstand with a shaking hand, and then sat on the edge of the bed in the halo of light.

  Rosa followed him to the edge of the bed and wrapped her legs around his waist. Her spiked nipples pressed against his back. “It is an obsession.”

  Whether Rosa was talking about the painting or the dreams, he couldn’t deny it. His broken heart welcomed the visions and the chance to touch Margaux once more. It was as if he were waiting for her to come back from the grave. That she hadn’t done so yet was maddening.

  Carlo ran a hand through his hair. He would sleep no more this night.

  Rosa nipped his shoulder, and he was thankful he had woken. The moon directly above his balcony lit the sandstone until it glittered. There was still time, but not an abundance of it.

  Adrenaline pumped through his veins and into that part of him that Rosa worked now. He would give her what she wanted, but this energy was not for her. It was as if he really had been running through the night, to Margaux.

  “You see, this is for me, not your beloved Margaux,” Rosa whispered in his ear.

  Carlo turned, gently pushing her back onto the bed. “Such anger,” he said against her lips.

  He wasn’t sure anything could banish the shade of his dead fiancée, but he was certain it would take more than Rosa and her ample curves.

  He entered her slowly, testing her moist folds inch by inch, and giving to her what he should have given Margaux long ago. If he had, these visions would be much more to his liking.

  Rosa wrapped her legs around him, already bucking against him. She was royalty, but the lust in her was handed down from gypsy ancestors, along with the fiery curls she tossed to and fro against the satin pillows. She was a generous and uninhibited lover. She gave him pleasure, yet when her lips found his, they became the full, velvety lips he dreamed of.

  Margaux’s lips. She had allowed him to steal a kiss in her mother’s salon, but it had not been enough to appease the raging desire he felt for her. How he wished he had taken her then, laid her down on top of the white baby grand and spread those milky virgin thighs, propriety be damned…

  Rosa’s keening escalated. She would wake the entire household with the base language her ancestors had used to curse their enemies.

  “Fuck me!”

  She could take it. Rosa was small in stature, but her body was compact. The elaborate gowns she wore hid a feast that would sate any man.

  He covered her mouth with his, deftly rocking against her healthy hips. She was ready, and he wanted to play the Stradivarius. He always felt closest to Margaux when he played.

  Carlo ran a hand down Rosa’s golden brown curves and between their slick bodies. Her legs flew wide open, giving him complete access to the greedy, little nub that waited between her thighs. He squeezed it and the curses she screamed into his mouth were those reserved for a most hated opponent. Her nails scraped down his back. They would have been airborne if he had not poured himself into her at that moment, impaling her.

  Impaling Margaux.

  He rolled off her and she fell against his chest.

  “I love your cock.”

  Carlo unhooked her arms from around his neck and rose from the bed. He crossed the room and lit the candelabra on the armoire. “You should be able to sleep now.”

  “Umm-mm, yes, but I will sleep here, with you.” Rosa leaned up on an elbow. Her breasts, heavy as melons, jiggled as she patted the bed in invitation.

  He wiped his face with the washcloth in the porcelain basin before turning to her. “You will go back to your room, Rosa Gisela.”

  Rosa sighed, and sat up. Her knees peaked the sheet until she kicked it off. Her legs were spread so that the burnished curls between her legs were clearly visible. Rosa’s hand traveled down. “Now you are mad at me.”

  Carlo picked up the robe she’d dropped by the door upon entering his room.

  Rosa h
ad wasted no time in seeking his bed with the excuse that she could not sleep. It was not wise, but she had come from the guest quarters in a far wing of the house. She had passed through the glass-paned corridor above the courtyard, clearly visible with her lamp.

  It was a wonder Otto, blind as he was, had not met her on the way. The old butler never slept and lurked around the grounds like a loyal hound.

  He walked over to the bed and held the robe out to her. “Cover yourself.”

  She came to her knees on the bed and licked his lips. “You would have let me stay if you had not dreamed of her.”

  Carlo draped the robe across her shoulders. “And have the Countess find your bed empty in the morning?” He helped her off the bed. “Is that any way to treat my visiting relations?”

  Rosa tossed flaming curls up and out of her face, her hands on her hips. With her hair tousled around her shoulders, the gypsy princess affected a hurt pout. It was a disturbing picture, but also a relief to see because in it he saw the truth. She didn’t feel anything for him, either.

  “My mother does not rise before noon.” She shrugged into the robe. “We are distantly related, Carlo, at best.” Her brown eyes flashed with the anger of being thwarted. “We have had so little time together and father wants to go home tomorrow.”

  The Bareschis should never have come. They had returned from their travels to spend the weekend at the Palazzo Falco. Her parents never knew how well they played Rosa’s game.

  In the beginning, when Rosa had tracked him down at the Falco stables, he had been a willing participant. She’d ridden her mare all that way with nothing but a long, flowing scarf under her riding cloak, and he had thought it would cleanse his soul of Margaux.

  But Rosa was not the lifeline he’d sought a year ago when he took her virginity, only a shorter route to hell.

  Carlo kissed her. “I’m sorry.”

  “For what?” She was Margaux’s age, but wiser, and not in a good way.

  Instead of explaining, he put an arm around her waist and walked her to the bedroom door. The corridor was dark and still.

 

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