This is a multi-part series about a widower who finds himself in possession of a mail-order bride.. who -- doesn't exactly turn out the way he expected. Gianna finds herself in a bad situation, and Anthony finds himself in a particularly sticky mess. How will the cards play out for this unwitting pair?
This chapter starts out a little slowly, but there is a bit of a non-consensual action near the end. Just a taster for what's to come!
All characters are 21 years and above.
Chapter 1
"If you step out of that door, you are no daughter of mine."
Gianna's hand froze on the door knob, warm tears rolling down her face. Turning around, she looked into a pair of emerald green eyes - eyes that had watched her grown all her life -- and saw only stone cold resolution.
"Papi," she fought to keep her voice stable. "I love you, but I am sorry. I will not marry Antonio Martello. I will not marry a man who I despise."
"Gianna, principessa. Enough of this talk of leaving." Gianna choked back a sob as her mother wrapped her arms around her shoulders. "Listen to your Papi. He only means the best for you."
"For me, Mamma? Or for this family?" She cringed as she saw the hurt spread across her mother's face but steeled herself as she glared at her father. "You only care about the status of our family! I am your daughter, not some commodity or step on the social ladder."
Gianna took an involuntary step back. The sun streamed through the stained glass windows over the arched doorway, illuminating the anger on her father's face.
"You have come of age, Gianna. It is time for you to marry," Mariella stroked her daughter's hair coaxingly.
"Mamma, Antonio is a monster. His wealth is built on the backs of those under his employ. Giuseppe has been toiling to raise his young children since his wife died, even with that bad leg of his. He needed his wages, but Antonio cheated him of it before casting him out."
"Nonsense!" Gianna winced. Gabriel Delucca had always been a loving father but in his anger, each word hurt as much as a slap on her face. "Antonio is one of the most influential men in Barri and Giuseppe is but an elderly widower with a weakness for a bottle. To think you would listen to the ranting of a drunk! Did I raise you to be an idiot?"
"You raised me to be a human being, with a conscience!" Gianna cried as she flung her suitcase to the ground in a temper. Drawing herself to her full height, she looked up at her father. "I would sooner stay single than marry him."
"You preposterous little-" her father burst into a coughing fit as he shook an angry finger at her.
"Gabriel, calm yourself," Mariella walked over to her husband, clasping his white face with one hand as she patted his back with the other. Gabriel sighed as he leaned into her caress. He sat heavily down on the sofa and pulled her along with him, clasping her hands in his own.
"Fine," he sighed. "But Antonio will not be pleased. We will need a reason to decline his proposal in a way in a way that does not offend him." He looked at Gianna thoughtfully. "You will travel to England and join The Little Company of Mary."
"A convent?" Gianna's heart sank. "Papi, I don't want to be a nun."
"Well, what do you propose?" Gabriel's voice was thick with bitterness. "No man in Barri will risk offending Antonio with a counter proposal."
"There is something," Gianna smoothed her gown nervously, digging her fingers into the soft velvet fabric. "I have a job offer, Papi. To be a governess for a family. In America."
"America!" Gabriel spat, as though the word was an expletive.
"Yes, Papi," Gianna hurried, her words tumbling out in a rush. "I have my savings-"
"You will go to the convent or you will marry Antonio!" he roared, clenching his fists as he sprang up. He glared into his daughter's red eyes. "And that is my final say."
"Final say?" Gianna's voice was bleak and echoed thinly in the great room. She turned to her mother who sat silently on the sofa. "Mamma?"
"Cucciola mia, you must listen to your father," her mother refused to meet her eyes.
Her mother's reticence pushed Gianna's temper over the edge. "I will not live a life as a mindless prisoner, I will not become you -"
Gianna was thrown back by the force of the slap, its sound lingering in the deafening silence that followed. Her cheek throbbing from the impact, she realized the shock and rage she felt was mirrored in her father's face.
"Gianna," Mariella ran towards her daughter but was stopped by her husband. Gabriel's mouth was set in a thin line, his chest heaving.
"Papi," Gianna whispered, her hand to her face in an attempt to absorb the blow. She watched as her father strode to the door, and flung her suitcase out.
"You are no longer welcome in this house."
"No, Papi," Gianna ran to him, her hands clutching urgently at his coat lapels. He shoved her roughly in the direction of the door.
"Leave."
Mariella's voice rose in a wail in the background, but all Gianna could focus on was her father's impassionate face.
"Papi, please. No," she protested wildly, as he grabbed her by the arm and pushed her out. "Papi!"
Gabriel held out a restraining hand. "Don't call me that. From this day forth, you are no longer my daughter. I, Gabriel Delucca, am childless."
"No," Gianna whispered as the door slammed in her face. She knocked desperately, her fists thumping painfully against the study wood.
"Papi! Mamma!" There was no response. Gianna felt the earth falling beneath her feet.
"Papi! Mamma!"
"Gianna?"
A voice broke into her frenzied train of thought.
"Good heavens, Gianna! Stop that."
Gianna sobbed uncontrollably. Her heart clenched, the pain coursing through her veins like poison.
"Gianna! Oh godamnit, WAKE UP!"
Gianna sat up straight in bed, her eyes blinking at the sudden brightness. Her breath escaped in gasps as she took in her surroundings. She was lying on a thin mattress in a dingy little bedroom. A soft ray of light broke through grime coated windows, illuminating the specks of dust floating about her worn copy of Anderson's Fairytales on her bedside table.
"Are you alright?" a tentative voice asked. She turned and saw a slight Chinese woman sitting next to her, concern apparent in her almond shaped eyes.
"Feng Ling," she croaked, her voice heavy with sleep. "I'm fine, it was... just a nightmare."