This is a work of fiction and any resemblance by any character or situation to any actual person or event is purely coincidental. All characters presented in this narrative are over the age of 18.
CHAPTER FOUR - The Horror
"Out? You mean out of
prison
?" Gia asked in disbelief.
"Yes," Calvita Jones said quietly on the other end.
"Ma, how can that be possible? Geno was convicted of major violent crimes, for God's sake," Gia said. "Did he escape?"
"No," Calvita Jones said in a dead, defeated voice. "He just had a birthday."
"A
birthday
?" Gia responded. "They let prisoners out of freakin' Pemberton because it's their
birthday
?"
"They do when you're sent up as a juvenile and it's your 18th birthday," her mom said. "That's the law in fuckin' New Jersey. They consider him an adult so it's like the awful crimes he did never even happened."
For her observant Catholic mother to drop the F-bomb, it had to be serious.
Gennaro Millientello, "Geno Millions" to his fellow street hoodlums, had been sent away three years earlier to New Jersey's juvenile detention center in Pemberton for a variety of offenses, all of which had been under seal and protected from public view as records pertaining to minors are for all but the most exceptional and heinous circumstances. But Giacomo Jones knew what he did because Geno did it to Gia's best friend, and her testimony helped put Geno away.
Geno Millions had once publicly boasted that Gia was his girlfriend, something she had forcefully and steadfastly rejected. When she testified against him in the closed juvenile court proceedings, he warned that someday he would find her and make her pay. And now, through a quirk in the law, this known sociopath had walked free as a bird from incarceration. Bygones were bygones, all but forgotten in the eyes of the law unless he got back into trouble.
"Ma, does he know where I am?" Gia asked.
"Not that I am aware, Gia, but it probably won't take him long to find out. All he's got to do is look you up on Instagram to see pictures of you at Fulbright and your football player boyfriend," her mother said. Silence hung in the air for a moment.
"I'm catching the next train down to Charlotte. We gotta get a plan in place."
Gia remained quiet, thinking over how she would handle this and wondering what good having her mom in Fallstrom would do.
"Gia?"
"Yeah, ma, I'm here. OK, text me when your train's expected to arrive in Charlotte and I will either come up and get you or make arrangements to bring you here," she said. "I love you, ma."
With that she hung up and dialed Rance. He answered on the first ring.
"Hey, gorgeous, how's my room?"
"Um... great. Feels like you're all around me," she said nervously. "But hey, I just heard from my mom and I really need to talk to somebody..."
Rance could hear the fear in her shaky voice and knew something was seriously off. He sprang off the sofa in his apartment and began pacing.
"What's wrong, Gia?"
She told him the violent story about Geno Millions, about his abrupt and unannounced release from juvenile detention and how she's got to be on guard, even 700 miles down the Atlantic Coast from Pemberton, New Jersey, in Fallstrom, South Carolina. She told Rance that her mom was expected to join her in Fallstrom in the next day or so.
"Did he ever hurt you?" Rance asked.
"No, not physically. He terrified Ma and me, especially after dad passed. Dad was a Marine who could destroy a little street thug like Geno with his bare hands and Geno knew it. But he badly hurt a lot of people who were very close to me growing up. He's a violent psychopath and a sadist who's never happier than when he's causing someone else pain."
"I think I need to tell Hemp right now and have Athletics arrange for security around your apartment and the facility in particular," Rance said. "Do we know whether this Millions guy is on his way here, what he looks like and so forth?"
Unfortunately, Gia said, no one has any clue where he might be. There are no photos of him since before he got sent up to Pemberton. And with his record of carjacking, he could steal and drive two or three different vehicles on his way south.
"I know you're shaken up by this, baby, but you're going to be OK. If nothing else, you can just remain there in my room with my folks if there's a threat to you here," he said.
He continued: "Look, I am going to call Coach Hemphill and inform him of all of this. While I do that, I want you to talk to mom and dad, tell them everything you just told me. Dad knows lots of lawyers and law enforcement all over the South and he and mom might have some good ideas. If nothing else, I think it will help you just being around people. Soon as we hang up, I am going to text them both and let them know you need to talk, OK?"
"Mmm hmm," she said, nodding her assent.
"I'm glad you told me, Gia. I love you," he said.
"Love you too," she replied.
βββ
Callie Jones's' train from Newark had arrived at the Amtrak terminal on North Tryon Street in Charlotte at 8:20 p.m. on Sunday, about 20 minutes behind schedule. Gia and Rance were waiting at the arrival gate.
"Ma, this is Rance Martin, the guy you call my 'football player boyfriend'," Gia said.
A compact woman with alert brown eyes, curly salt-and-pepper hair, a perfect olive complexion and her daughter's brilliant smile, Callie looked upward at her daughter's towering beau and reached to hug him. Rance had to bend forward and squat a bit to accommodate that, but it was a warmer greeting than Gia had expected from her mom.
"Geez, Gia told me you were tall but she didn't tell me you were a mountain," she said with a chuckle. "Pleased to meet you, Mistah Rance."
Traveling light was not something Calvita Jones or anyone in the Bertolli family line had done. After all, it was Callie's grandparents who packed all they owned into a couple of large trunks and arrived by a transatlantic steamship in the United States from Sicily during World War II. Even Rance found the huge, 50-year-old suitcase heavy as he lugged it to Gia's Camry for the 70-minute drive back to Fallstrom that they'd have to make in less than 70 minutes for Rance to make bed check.
On the ride back, Rance drove while Gia filled her mother in on steps they had taken to protect themselves from Geno Millions should he show up in the Carolina Piedmont. Coach Perry Hemphill had persuaded the University Police Department to post an officer in a cruiser in the Honors College parking lot day and night. The athletics facility was already well-patrolled and under 24-hour electronic surveillance year-round and the police chief believed nothing further was needed there. Gia would have an escort from the athletics staff into and out of the facility, and an officer would be on hand to cover her comings and goings from the residence hall, which police considered a softer target for a potential killer.
For the first night, Callie would bunk with her daughter in her Honors College studio. After that, she would check into the Fulbright Alumni Center Hotel just a block from her daughter. Rance lugged Callie's massive bag into Gia's room, then sprinted to his car parked outside and sped away, desperate to make it to his apartment before a trainer or equipment staffer knocked on his door at 10. He arrived just as Jesse Torgerson, a student trainer, was walking up to his apartment.
"Right on time," Rance said. "Here, stick your head in the door to see that Hurley's here."
Jesse did. "'Sup, Jess," Hurley said, sipping an enormous Sonic milkshake and waving halfheartedly from the sofa where he watched the second half of the Sunday Night Football game between the Packers and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
"Cutting it close getting home from Gia's, bro," Hurley said.
Rance explained that he'd just completed a white-knuckle drive back from the Amtrak station in Charlotte to bring Gia's mom to campus. Then he filled Hurley in on the drama surrounding the release of Geno Millions and the security measures that were being put in place.
"Hm. Odd," Hurley said.