From Mangia to Murder (A Sophia Mancini ~ Little Italy Mystery)
From Mangia To Murder
By Caroline Mickelson
From Mangia to Murder
By Caroline Mickelson
Kindle Edition
Copyright 2012 Caroline Mickelson
Published by Bon Accord Press
All rights reserved
Cover design by Laura J Miller http://www.anauthorsart.com/
Formatted by Iron Horse Formatting
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the prior written permission of the copyright owner of this book.
This e-book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This e-book may not be resold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, place and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
Dedication
Dedicated with much love to the memory of my grandfather, Raymond J. Minchella. The son of Italian immigrants, he was devoted to his family, proud to be an American, and kind beyond measure.
Table Of Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Acknowledgements
About The Author
Chapter One
“Murder looks like our best option.” Sophia Mancini pushed away her plate of cold, uneaten pasta. Murder was on her mind, not marinara. “I’ve been over this in my mind a million times, Angelo. We definitely need to add it to our list.”
Her older brother let out a slow sigh and rubbed his eyes. “Murder is so complicated. There are so many details to keep track of and you know it’s going to trip me up.”
“I’ll be right there with you.” Sophia reached over and squeezed his hand. “If you can’t get back on the police force this is your next best option. I can handle the details until you can take over, and no one will be the wiser.”
“So you’ll be the brains of the operation? And what does that make me? Just a pretty face?” He pushed back from the table, frustration etched on his face.
Sophia poured more Chianti into her glass and then refilled her brother’s. “Don’t sell yourself short. Before the war, you were a fine police officer and everyone here in Little Italy knows that.” She took a sip and quickly replaced the glass on the table. The wine tasted bitter, but she knew it was just her own gnawing worry that was ruining an otherwise fine bottle of vino. “The Nazis are to blame for your injuries, not you. But it’s your fault if you don’t sit down, get serious, and help find a way out of the mess we’re in.”
She waited while he settled himself across from her once again. He drained his wine glass and poured another, a sure sign that he was as worried as she was. Angelo wasn’t a drinker. But he was a man in a bind--a man who stood to lose everything he cared about in the world if they didn’t come up with a plan within the next twelve hours.
“Remind me what we’ve got so far, Sophia.”
“Theft, burglary, blackmail -- the usual. But if we throw murder in, I think it will really boost our reputation.” She met his gaze and winked. “It will give everyone something to talk about, anyway.”
Angelo didn’t respond to her attempt at humor. This serious, sad man across from her was altogether different from the young, happy, confident man who’d shipped out to fight with the Allied forces five years ago. Home four months now, he was struggling with a head injury that had obliterated his short-term memory and ability to retain details.
He’d shipped out a married man with a beautiful, young, pregnant wife he loved beyond reason. He’d come home a widower.
What little Angelo hadn’t already lost, he now stood to lose. In twelve hours they needed to be in court to fight his in-laws for custody of his son. He needed a plan for his new life that would satisfy the judge and allow them to keep Luciano at home with them.
“Face it, Sophia, the Burkwaites have more power and more money than we’ll ever have.”
Tears pooled in Angelo’s eyes.
Anger burned in Sophia’s heart.
She grabbed her brother’s arm and shook him, desperate to snap him out of his sad state. His helplessness scared her more than her own rage did.
“Listen to me, Angelo, Charlotte’s family has all the money and power they need to threaten us, that’s true. But we can give Luciano all of the love and devotion he needs. He’s your son, Angelo. He needs you to fight for him.”
She held her breath and waited for an answer. A single tear slid down his cheek.
“It’ll just take time before you’re ready to rejoin the police force,” she continued. “Until then, you can do this. We can do this.”
“Okay, Sophia, you win.” Angelo squared his shoulders. “I’ll do anything to keep Luciano at home with us.”
He refilled his glass and raised it.
Sophia grinned and raised hers.
“Alla famiglia,” they toasted in unison. To the family.
“You’ll be with me every step of the way?”
She nodded. “Just like always, Angelo. I’ll be right next to you or,” her spirits restored, she couldn’t resist teasing him, “a step ahead.”
“And with your plan the Burkwaites will never get custody of my son?”
“If they do, it will be over my dead body.”
“Let’s hope it doesn’t come to that.” He flashed a smile that reminded her of the carefree pre-war brother she’d always counted as her best friend. “Now let me hear your plan again from start to end.” He reached for a notebook and pencil. “You talk, I’ll write.”
Sophia smiled. “You know, Angelo, this murder business could actually be kind of fun, if we do it right.”
***
“All rise for the Honorable Judge Mathias Hellerman.”
Sophia rose to her feet, along with the five other people in the courtroom. While the judge made a show of arranging his robes and settling into his chair, Sophia watched the Burkwaites from the corner of her eye. Their outwardly calm demeanor threatened her last nerve. She focused her attention on the portrait of President Truman above the judge’s bench. She needed to keep her wits about her.
After all, this was war.
As the judge reviewed his notes, she studied her brother. Angelo’s gray suit hung from his shoulders, giving him a slightly disheveled appearance. Why hadn’t she noticed that at home?
Not for the first time, she wished Angelo’s war injuries were visible. Walking with a limp would have been so much more understandable. It was his spirit that had been crushed, not his legs. The man with the dark circles under his eyes and the perpetually worried expression
bore little resemblance to the healthy, vigorous brother who’d enlisted days after Pearl Harbor was bombed.
Damn Hitler for what his madness had done to Angelo, and damn the Burkwaites for what they wanted to do to him now.
Sophia balled her hands into fists and tried to focus on what the judge was asking the Burkwaites.
“Your written request for custody contends that you feel your grandson Luciano is in physical danger if he remains with his father.” The judge looked over his glasses and studied Charles Burkwaite, Charlotte’s father. “Has the child been injured? I don’t see mention of any evidence to suggest he’s been harmed thus far.”
“If I may, Your Honor.” Mr. Burkwaite stood and waited for the judge to nod, granting him permission to continue. “We call our grandson Lucas. We don’t use his Italian nickname.”
Sophia ground her teeth. Nickname her third eye. The birth certificate in her pocketbook read Luciano Angelo Mancini.
“We believe Lucas is in danger every moment he remains in that house. His father is incapable of caring for a child. In fact, we believe that Mr. Mancini would himself benefit from receiving inpatient care at a mental facility. The only other two adults in the home are Mr. Mancini’s spinster sister, and his aged and senile grandfather. We don’t believe either of them are capable of properly caring for our grandson.”
Spinster? It wasn’t her fault that her fiancé, Antonio Cuccio, had met a woman in Paris who had shown him enough oo la la that he’d married her and jilted Sophia via V-mail. Yes, she was twenty-three and unmarried, but there’d been a shortage of eligible men for the last five years.
And Grandpa senile? Laughable. Kind, gentle, generous, loving, and sharp enough for Charles Burkwaite to cut himself on, that was Grandpa.
“Mr. Burkwaite, the court extends its sympathy for the loss of your daughter Charlotte,” the judge said. “However, unless you are able to offer me some concrete evidence that your grandson is not being cared for, I will have to dismiss your petition.”
“No one in their household has any means of employment. Lucas’s father is not well enough to work, and Miss Mancini quit her last job.” Charles Burkwaite turned to look at Sophia.
She opened her mouth to answer his challenge, but out of the corner of her eye she saw Angelo shake his head. He knew her so well. She’d almost taken Burkwaite’s bait. Her instinct was to defend herself by explaining that she had only left her job so a returning serviceman could have it back, but she’d have to trust the judge knew this already. She wasn’t the only woman recently out of a job. She clamped her lips closed. She would be quiet, for the moment anyway.
Charlotte’s father once again addressed Judge Hellerman. “My wife and I fear the neighborhood the Mancinis live in is questionable at best. Between their lack of income, the lack of mental health of the adults in the home, and their unsafe neighborhood, we feel Lucas should be raised in our home, where his mother would have wanted him to be raised.”
Sophia shot to her feet. The last place Charlotte would have wanted her son raised was with her snobby, emotionally distant, and deceitful parents.
“Your Honor, if I may-–“
“Sit down, young lady, until you are asked a question.”
Sophia sat. Her heart sank. She avoided looking at her brother. Heat rose in her cheeks and a healthy respect for the judge’s power tempered her tongue.
“Not another word from anyone in this room unless I ask a question. Is that understood?” He looked from face to face and waited for an objection that no one dared offer. “This is a custody case, not a criminal one, so we can forgo the drama. That said, a young boy’s future lies in the balance and these proceedings are therefore gravely important.”
The steady ticking of the wall clock was the only sound that dared disobey the judge’s demand for silence.
Judge Hellerman bent over the case file in front of him, both reading and making notes. After several excruciatingly long moments, he looked up. His eyes roamed the courtroom, silently assessing both families who laid claim to Luciano.
Luciano. Her heart was full of the boy. She loved him as if he were her own son. From the day his mother died, Sophia had dedicated her life to raising him.
“I have a few questions before we conclude,” the judge’s voice broke the silence. “Mr. Mancini,” he held up his hand and looked directly at Sophia, “and only Mr. Mancini. Please answer a few questions for me about your injuries.”
Angelo stood. “I’ll do my best, Your Honor.”
Pride filled Sophia’s heart. Angelo stood before the court with a quiet dignity that the Burkwaites would do well to emulate.
“I understand you were injured in Europe,” the judge asked.
Angelo nodded.
“Can you please give me a brief understanding of the extent of your injuries?”
“Physically, I have recovered well, Your Honor,” Angelo said, his voice strong and even. “However, due to a head injury I suffered when my plane was shot down, I have sustained a short-term memory loss. Because the Nazis occupied most of Scandinavia, we had to find a way back to England before we were able to receive medical help.”
“A harrowing experience, doubtless.” Judge Hellerman folded his arms across his chest and leaned back in his chair. “Continue please.”
“Unfortunately, due to a broken arm, I was unable to be reassigned for active flight duty. My commanding officer assigned me to a support position.”
“He did this in spite of your head injuries?” Judge Hellerman raised his eyebrows.
“We were so short of men that there were plenty of things I could do even with an arm in a cast. Also, at the time, Your Honor, we weren’t fully aware of the extent of my head injury. You see, I have no cognitive processing difficulties,” Angelo explained, “but I do have difficulties with retaining details. About fifty percent of what I’m told doesn’t stay with me the first time I hear it.”
“You have no violent episodes?”
“None, Your Honor.”
“You are able to remember your late wife well?”
“Every moment we spent together, Your Honor.” Angelo’s voice was thick with emotion.
Tears pricked the back of Sophia’s eyes.
“You are able to operate a vehicle, and conduct yourself in a safe manner that endangers no one, is that correct?”
“Yes, Your Honor.”
Judge Hellerman took off his spectacles and rubbed his eyes.
Hope stirred within Sophia’s heart. Please, please, please, she prayed, please let this man make the right decision. It wasn’t a prayer that the nuns at St. Catherine’s would have approved of, but it was the most heartfelt prayer that Sophia had ever offered.
Silence filled the courtroom. Sophia struggled to sit still. She longed to look over and see how Luciano’s maternal grandparents were handling the judge’s thoughtful consideration, but she forced herself to stare straight ahead.
Her brother stood calmly and waited for the judge’s next question. She admired his composed exterior. Doubtless, the ability to keep control over his emotions was part of his police training, maybe his military training, but she knew he was as nervous as she was.
How much longer could his honor sit and sift through case notes? When he cleared his throat, Sophia practically jumped out of her skin.
“Clear the courtroom,” he instructed the bailiff. “Mr. Mancini, kindly have a seat. I would like to ask you more questions about the business plan you submitted.”
Charles Burkwaite, Sophia was pleased to notice, was turning purple. “Your Honor, I want to hear more about Mr. Mancini’s proposed venture,” he said.
“You are not the one who needs to be satisfied with Mr. Mancini’s plans. Wait in the hallway until I recall you.”
Sophia stood and scooped her pocketbook and gloves up from the seat beside her.
“Miss Mancini, be kind enough to join your brother at the table.”
“Yes, Your Honor.”
From the corner of her eye, Sophia watched as the Burkwaites followed the bailiff out of the courtroom.
Luciano’s maternal grandfather had power, wealth and untold influence in Harrison Heights, true. But he didn’t have the deep and abiding loyalty of friends and family in Little Italy, all the poorer he. Perhaps he didn’t realize the loving, nurturing environment and rich heritage that his grandson would lose if he succeeded in taking Luciano from their home.
But, then again, perhaps he did--which was exactly why she’d not let them win.
***
Twenty long minutes and twenty hard questions later, Judge Hellerman requested the Burkwaites return to the courtroom. He waited until they were in their seats before he addressed them.
“I’ve made a preliminary decision regarding the custody of Luciano Mancini.”
Sophia reached over and squeezed Angelo’s hand. Her heart raced. She took a deep breath.
“I will confess that on paper, it appears without question that the Burkwaites are in a position to give Luciano the best upbringing possible.”
On paper. That sounded promising. She exhaled.
“This morning, prior to actually meeting the parties involved in this case, I was leaning toward ...“
Was, was, was. Was leaning. Hope filled Sophia’s heart.
“... granting custody to the maternal grandparents. However, after meeting Mr. Mancini, I cannot question his very real devotion to his son’s best interests. While I do continue to have questions and concerns about Mr. Mancini’s medical condition, I believe that all of our returning servicemen should be given ample opportunity to readjust to civilian life. Their service to their country, and any resulting injuries, must not be held against them.”
The judge took a long moment to study each of those assembled. His gaze lingered on Charles Burkwaite who, Sophia noted wryly, didn’t even have the good grace to look civil. She took that as a positive sign.
“Therefore, for a conditional period of thirty days, I am going to recommend that Luciano remain in his home with his father under the following conditions.”