MasukValentina
Past
I watch out the window as the second moving truck pulls out of the driveway of the house next door. The driver takes the turn a little wide, and the front tire jumps the curb before he's out of our private little cul-de-sac. The house sold a few months ago, and I've been keeping an eye on all the construction. I even snuck over a few times to have a look around, but my dad doesn't know about that. I'll have to pretend I'm seeing everything for the first time when we go over to meet our new neighbors later today.
Through my binoculars, a birthday gift from Dad, I zoom in on the movers carrying box after box into the house. I even get to look inside some of the rooms as a legion of workers unpack all the nice, new things. Downstairs is easier to see into since the windows are floor to ceiling. Upstairs, I can almost see into one of the bedrooms.
Movement along the path from the swimming pool to the detached and much smaller cottage catches my eye, and I turn to see two blurry figures. I adjust the lens and focus on the pair.
One is a woman with long dark hair walking a few steps ahead of a boy who is carrying two boxes so big, he can barely see over top of them. The woman laughs when the boy stops, puts the boxes down, and blows his hair out of his eyes. His hair is as black as hers and cut close to his head except for the top, which is long enough that it falls into his eyes.
I've never seen eyes that color before. They're the most beautiful turquoise, bright, like the sparkling water of the ocean at my favorite beach in Cancun. With his tanned face and dark hair, they're striking.
He's not Cielo, the son of the family that's moving in. Cielo is fourteen, and this boy looks much older.
He bends down to pick up the boxes again but then stops, straightens, and looks straight at my window. I gasp. He can't see me, can he? We're too far apart. Even so, I swear those eyes are staring right at me. Maybe it's the sun, or maybe I moved and it glinted off the binoculars? I freeze, not sure what to do. Before I can decide if I should duck down out of sight, he shifts his gaze to the boxes, lifts them, and continues toward the small cottage.
The sound of a car door closing has me swinging the binoculars back to the street. A black car parks at the curb. The windows are tinted so dark I can't see in.
The driver climbs out and opens the door at the back. A man steps out. He glances at the house, then turns to extend his hand to help a woman out. They're dressed like they're going to work or a party or something. Not for moving.
I watch the couple. They look up at the grand house set on a hill, which used to look like ours, but is so much bigger now and prettier with everything being so new. They smile but not to each other. Just at the house.
When the other door at the back opens, I anxiously zoom in to see Cielo, the boy who will be my neighbor. He's two years older than me. When Dad told me who was moving in, I secretly wished he were a girl because we'd probably become best friends then, but he's not. Still, since his is the only other house for miles, it makes him the only kid around. The parents of my few friends from school don't like to drive their kids out this far and Dad doesn't like me going to anyone's house unless he's met them. He's pretty weird about it. But the neighbors built a swimming pool, so Cielo will have to do.
And who knows? Maybe we'll be best friends after all. Dad says to give him a chance, that not all boys are annoying. I'm not sure about that, but the swimming pool with its glistening water does make me want to try. It's been a really hot summer.
"Tina?" Dad knocks once on my door then opens it.
I jump, turning from the window. I want to hide the binoculars behind my back because we have discussed what he calls me being nosy and what I call curiosity. My teachers tell me curiosity is a really good thing to have. I'd remind him of that, but I am kind of spying and I'm too late to hide them because they're hanging from my neck.
He gives me a look but smiles, which means I'm not really in trouble. "What did I tell you about spying?"
"I'm not. I was just watching the movers."
He raises his eyebrows.
"Fine." I slip the binoculars off and drop to a seat in the bay window. It's my favorite spot for reading and now, neighbor watching.
"Ready to meet the Riccis?"
I smile wide, jumping to my feet. "Yep! I'll grab the welcome cookies." I baked them with Tonia, our cook and housekeeper and the best second mom anyone can have. Most of my friends had nannies forever, but I have always had Tonia. I hurry to the door, and Dad scoots to the side.
"You're wearing your bathing suit?" he asks as I run down the stairs of our house.
There are six bedrooms upstairs. One for my dad and one for me. Tonia lives with us, so she has the third, and the other three are just empty all the time. We never have visitors.
My father is an only child, like me, and both his and my mom's parents are gone. I never got to meet any of them, and it upsets Dad when I ask about them, so I try not to.
We could move to a smaller house. We don't need all the space. But Dad told me once how much my mom loved it. She decorated it herself.
I think he still misses her. I know he does, in fact. I don't remember her, so I don't. It's weird, maybe, to not miss your mom, but I never knew her.
"Just in case they invite us to swim," I say. "It's a hot day."
"Tina. They'll be busy moving in. You'll need to give them their privacy until they're settled. We're just going to say hello. I'll introduce you, then we'll be on our way."
Dad knows the Riccis. He is in talks about a business deal with Sullivan Ricci, the dad, and he met Mrs. Ricci at a business dinner.
"I know, I know," I say, charging toward the kitchen, where Tonia holds out the cookies she put in a pretty tin box for me. "Did you save me some?" I ask. I only got to nibble on one when they came out of the oven, and it burnt my tongue.
"Of course, Tina." She shows me a small plate she set aside.
"Thanks!"
NicholasI need you.It's all it takes, and I find myself nodding and laying her down before I stand. My gaze hovers at her mouth, her little pink tongue darting out to lick those lips that taste so sweet. I undo two more buttons before pulling my shirt off over my head and taking in her full breasts with their hard nipples, the tiny gem sparkling at her belly button. Those white lace panties.I strip off my pants but keep my briefs on and lower myself onto the bed, setting one knee between her legs and sliding my arms around her, cupping the back of her head to kiss her as her arms close over my shoulders. It's when I taste the salt of tears that I draw back."V What is it?"She shakes her head.With a groan, I pull back, but when I move to stand, she closes her hand around mine. "Please don't go.""You're drunk, V. This isn't smart.""I need you. Please."Fuck. There it is again.I kiss her mouth, her neck, the hollow between her collarbones, one hand weighing her breast, fingertips
NicholasPastValentina nods off as Hamish maneuvers streets that grow increasingly quiet as snow blankets Boston. Hamish isn't only my driver. Nigella Gibson, my attorney, introduced me to him when I needed help with a situation that required special handling. He's been with me ever since. He doesn't ask questions, and he is trustworthy, two qualities I appreciate greatly.I have been back in town for a few days closing a deal. Running into Valentina Russo had been a possibility but not a probability. It hasn't happened the half-dozen times I've been here the last two years. I know where she attends school and the building in which she lives, but I haven't seen her apart from when I switch on the TV and find either Horatio Russo's or Sly Ricci's faces splashed across the screen detailing the latest in the embezzlement case. That's not to say I haven't looked for her.I am also well aware of the fact that she's still dating Cielo Ricci. That's been on the news too. The legal trouble R
ValentinaWhen I finally get to the ladies' room, I am grateful no one is inside so I can just take a minute to grip the counter and close my eyes as the room spins.It's all of what is going on. My father's trial, this new evidence that I know is going to change things, and on top of it, Cielo asking me to marry him tonight of all nights. That look on his face, like he got when he was a little kid, like he was celebrating. And I guess he was celebrating our would-be engagement even though I didn't say yes. He just didn't expect—and wouldn't accept—no.I should have pushed the ring away. Told him it wasn't right, that it wasn't fair to him.I force a deep breath in, open my eyes, and run the tap to splash water on my face.Before I get to, though, the door opens. I'm trying to fix my face when a male voice startles me, and I turn to find the man who was buying me drinks standing there."Hey, you okay? I feel awful," he starts, coming inside."I'm fine. This is the ladies' room. You sh
ValentinaThe noise stops for a moment, people seeming to freeze mid-sentence as he and I take each other in. His back is to the wall, a group of maybe a dozen men and women, all well dressed, sitting around him. Several bottles of champagne are turned down in their buckets and a waiter is serving what I guess to be espresso martinis to all but Nicholas, in front of whom the waitress sets what I guess to be a tumbler of whiskey.I haven't seen Nicholas Hendrick in over a year. He and his mother moved out of the Ricci cottage soon after he graduated college. They went to Atlanta, as far as I knew. I've only seen Nicholas in the news a few times since. I remember Mr. Ricci's surprised and irritated reaction when an investment firm had hired Nicholas. When he'd received his first promotion just two years later, Mr. Ricci had been outright angry.Actually, the whole of the Ricci family was not pleased, to say the least. The company Nicholas had found work with was run by a man Sly conside
ValentinaPastI never thought, not once, that the day Cielo proposed to me would leave me with a feeling of anything other than elation. Excitement. Exhilaration even.I never thought I'd say anything other than yes.When I met Cielo Ricci almost a decade ago, I always knew there would be something between us. Our meeting and the circumstances of it were somehow always leading up to this day, to the event that would follow.I stand in the lobby of my building and look down at the ring in the center of my palm, at the gleaming princess cut diamond on its platinum band weighing down my hand. It makes my stomach fill not with butterflies of excitement and anticipation of what is to come, but something else. Something anxious and a little like dread.But maybe that's because the day coincides with news leaked to the press of new evidence that incriminates my father in a scheme even more serious than what he is currently facing charges on. I wish Cielo had waited to propose, but he couldn
ValentinaA few days after my dinner with the Riccis, I decide I'm going to see my father whether he wants me there or not. I can't put off telling him about the engagement any longer. Invitations will begin going out within the week, and beyond that, I need him to explain his letter telling me to stay away.I walk into the prison, hearing the sounds of guards calling out, of heavy metal doors clanging open or closed. The smell of the place is stale, like body odor and old food, and the thought that my father will spend the next ten years in here is too much.I wait at the small table the guard had pointed to, jittery, anxiously bouncing my leg. At least he's in a federal prison so the offenders aren't violent. Or at least not as violent as they could be? I don't know. It looks pretty bad from my perspective.A door opens, and a guard walks into the visiting room. Following him is my father.He stops short because he was expecting his lawyer, not me.I stand up."Tina?" My father take







