My Best Man by Andy Schell (top 10 novels TXT) ๐
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- Author: Andy Schell
Read book online ยซMy Best Man by Andy Schell (top 10 novels TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Andy Schell
โThis sounds like the McCarthy stuff that happened in America,โ I tell her.
โJoseph McCarthy,โ she says with contempt. โYes. And Hitler. But we had lots of McCarthys and Hitlers.โ She rises from the table and goes to the counter, where she takes two ripe peaches and cuts them into chunks. She transfers them into a bowl and pushes the bowl toward the back of the counter. She then slices the kernels off two ears of corn and cuts some potatoes, including a sweet potato, and adds them all to the pan. โThey donโt know what they do to the family,โ she says, slicing a piece of squash into chunks. โMy dear Graciela was an artist,โ she says through slightest tears while putting the squash in with the rest of the ingredients. โWhat do they want with an artist? A sweet girl who sells her little paintings down on the Caminito? What possible threat is she? After her father disappeared, she paints what she feels in her heart. She paints these people, los desaparecidos, as angels that sacrifice their lives for the rest of us. She paints them leaving their homes, their cars, their jobs, their families, to fly to heaven. For this they kill her.โ She stands in the kitchen, shaking her head.
โIf they killed these people,โ I ask, โwhy are they called the disappeareds?โ
She sits at the table with me. โI have no answer. I only know that Gianni and Graciela were killed because my brother told me so.โ She takes the bottle of wine and refills our little glasses. โMy brother was an officer in the navy. He had enough connection to know. He would not tell me how it was done. Only that it was. Nicolo will not forgive his uncle. He believes his uncle is guilty of their murders, even though it was not at his hands and he learned of it after. Guilty, because he does not speak. Does not speak to tell the truth and make a stop to what was happening to so many people.โ
The garlic, onion, meat, and vegetables are creating a delicious scent of steam that mixes well with the taste of the wine. I want to take off my shoes, stay, and eat. โAnd you, Mrs. Feragamo? What do you think?โ
โI think that my family has seen enough pain,โ she says, stalwart. โI cannot allow you to hurt my son. I will continue to protect him.โ
โHow? Heโs a grown man, senora.โ
She stiffens, changes expression. โI do what I must. I think that you should leave,โ she says, rising from the table.
Her word choice hits me. โHow will you continue to protect him?โ I ask, staying put.
โI will make sure he does not receive your calls . or your letters.โ
โ
I spring from my chair. โIs that what youโve been doing?โ I ask incredulously.
โYes, it is,โ she answers, her head held high in a righteous pose.
โThose times I came to the house you didnโt tell him?โ
โNo.โ
โAnd when I called?โ
โNo,โ she answers, still in her pose.
โThe letter did you send it back unopened?โ
โYes.โ
โNicolo never saw it?โ
โNo.โ
โGod, I canโt believe this!โ I shout. โYou sabotaged me. You havenโt even heard my story, and you sabotaged me!โ
โI did what is right for my son,โ she answers, resolute. โNow leave this house.โ
Iโm enraged. โWhat the hell are you trying to do? Disappear me?โ
She looks horrified. โLeave now!โ
โHow dare you. What makes you any different than the Argentinean government?โ She gasps, but I furiously charge on. โYou think you know whatโs best for Nicolo, for me? You think you can your own clandestine outcome?โ
โLargo de aquf!โ she hisses, running to the door. โLargo!โ โNo!โ I yell, my legs shaking with anger. My face is white hot and my brow is twitching in spasms, but I refuse her order to leave. โIโve heard your story. Now youโll hear mine!โ
โOne minute then I will call the police!โ
I spew it out fast and furious. โIโm from a very wealthy family. And when my father died, he put a provision in the will that I had to be married by my next birthday if I wanted to collect. Itโs a lot of money. A lot. And Iโve decided I want it. Is there anything wrong with that?โ
โHonest money or dirty money?โ
โMy family is honest. And the girl Iโm marrying knows about Nicolo. And sheโs willing to marry me in order to help me get the money. Is that bad?โ
โYou are marrying for love or money?โ she demands. โBoth. Iโll use the money to pay off Nicoloโs school loans. Help him perhaps even youmget back to Argentina. Give him whatever he desires in life.โ
She brushes back her hair with her hand and answers indignantly,
โYou hardly know my son. He needs love, not money.โ
โIโm offering him both.โ
โBy marrying someone else? You are playing Nicolo and this girl for being fools! I do not believe that you truly love either of them as much as you love your money, or you would have been honest with my son from the beginning. You are selfish. Your thinking is twisted.โ
โAnd what about yours? Have you learned nothing from your government, Mrs. Feragamo? How awful has
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