Summary: Vittoria accompanies her father to the opening banquet at his newest hotel, and reminds him that she shouldn't be left alone.
āBut I donāt want it,ā she huffed and crossed her arms.
Admittedly, her posture was inappropriate for the setting, but thatās what he gets for taking me somewhere I didnāt wanna go! A black-tie event was never fun for her, but when Papa had to make an appearance and didnāt want women fussing over him, she was his date.
The Caesar Hotel was her Papaās latest finished project. The ceiling was high and bedazzled with small lights assembled in the pattern of constellations. Daddyās own touch. Carefully curated Roman statues and fountains were neatly arranged in the grand room. She could actually name the scenes and emperors the statues were depicting, a bonding activity she shared with her father. Gold weaved through the white and gray marbled flooring, which came at her own suggestion. It adds sparkle! The room was lavish and the people were having a grand time, while she however was not.
āYou donāt even have to eat the whole thing, just finish your vegetables,ā Papa said frustratedly, scraping the vegetables to one side of the plate.
āTheyāre wateryā¦ā she wrinkled her nose.
āVittoria, youāre not leaving this table until you eat all of your vegetables,ā he said with his I mean business voice.
āNo isnāt a word you say to me,ā Papa hissed before waving down Sawyer.
āI have some people to talk to. Stay with her until she eats all of her vegetables and then come find me,ā he said dismissively before leaning into Vittoria, āI will throw out that music box if you donāt finish them by the end of the night.ā
And with that last threat, he left. He gives up too easily, she thought bitterly. Her face brightened and she smirked mischievously. Sawyer thoughā¦would be a challenge.Ā
Sawyer proved, in fact, to not be a challenge. After just a few minutes, he was gone.
Vittoria, objecting to proper society standards, put her elbow on the table and leaned against it. She was bored and uncomfortable, and well, there was no one paying attention to her anyways. Sawyer was annoying but at least entertaining company. I canāt believe he left me! Her finger started making patterns on the tablecloth, triangle, square, heart. Heart, square, triangle. Trapezoidā¦
Her boredom went on until the table and silverware shook as a large stout man took a seat beside her. He unclasped the button of his suit coat and reclined against the seat, gripping his champagne and taking a polite sip. Vittoria stared at the man who had a nervous energy to him. Stress had stripped away the top of his black, now graying, hair and worry lines engraved in his round features. In fact, the man reminded her painfully of Mr. Bianchi with his olive complexion and dark eyes. Her heart hurt at the thought of the late elder and said a silent prayer for him.Ā
It was a sizable moment before he noticed her staring at him, and it must have caught him off guard because he gave a quiet shriek. āHello,ā she said.
When the redness left his face, he regained his composure and smiled back, pushing his small glasses back up the bridge of his nose. āWell hello. How long have you been there?ā
āIām not sure,ā she said honestly, āBut I was here when you sat down.ā
He laughed, āYouāre a quiet little thing. Iām sorry to have missed you.ā
āThatās okay. Iām small but Iām gonna grow.ā
āIād expect you to.ā
āMy Papaās a giant!ā she said, making a big gesture with her arms.
āIs he?ā the man chuckled.
āUh-huh!ā she said pleasantly.
The man looked uncomfortable, his dark eyes searching the room for her guardian. āWhereās your mother? I can hardly believe she left you all alone.ā
āMy Mamaās dead. Itās only me and Papa,ā she said as she took a dainty sip of her sparkling cider from her wine glass.
They offered her a cup, but she requested a glass. I want people to take me seriously.
If the man was red before, he turned ghostly white at his misstep. He nervously cleared his throat, āI-Iām sorryā¦ā
Vittoria shrugged. āItās fine,ā she said as she put her glass back down, āMy Papaās talking to very important people but I hadnāt finished my dinner so then he made Uncle Charlie babysit me but he went to get a drink because he doesnāt like me and is an alcoholic.ā
Heās not but thatās what he gets for leaving me! āOh my! All alone?!ā
Vittoria nodded sadly to gain some sympathy. āThat wasnāt very gentlemanly of him. And I doubt your father will be pleased. Itās wrong to leave little girls all alone," the man continued in admonishment.
āYes sir. There are perverts and predators everywhere!ā
The manās eyebrows raised but he nodded, āQuite right. Well tell you what, Iāll sit with you until your Papa comes back and if itās been too long, weāll go look for him. Deal?ā
āSay, how old are you?ā
āWow, so youāre in, what? Third or fourth grade?ā
āFourth grade sir,ā she said proudly, āI think. Iām homeschooled.ā
His eyebrows met his receding hairline. āHomeschooled? Well Iāll be da-, havenāt heard or met anyone who does that. Do you like it?ā
āWhatās your favorite thing to learn about?ā
Vittoria brightened. āArt! I love art! I do watercolor paintings and sometimes use glitter with them, when my Papa watches me so I donāt make a mess. He loves art too. Weāre a lot alike, weāre both curly blondes,ā she blabbed, āAnyway, when I went to real school I was the best artist in my class. I even knew cursive!ā
āWhat? Thatās incredible!ā he smiled, entertaining the child.
āIām not much of an artist myself but I do know a neat little trick.ā
āItās called origami. Itās the Japanese art of paper folding,ā he smiled and reached for a napkin, āWant to see?ā
She nodded and scooted her chair forward eagerly. She was quite glad she did watch, because as he folded the corners together, it took the shape of a, āThatās a bird!ā she gasped.
āIt is!ā he laughed and flapped its wings, āDo you wanna try?ā
Vittoria nodded excitedly and for the next several minutes, she ended up making a mini zoo out of napkins she folded into animals. The man even played with her, his kindness extending even further. āYouāre a creative storytellerā¦ā he praised before he took on a reprimanding tone, āUnbelievableā¦ā
āWhat?ā she asked, her voice grew small and her brows furrowed worried that he was angry with her or she had offended him in some way.
āI have been so rude. I havenāt introduced myself or even asked your name,ā he grumbled.
Vittoria let out a breath she didnāt know she had been holding. āMy nameās Benjamin Nizzola, pleased to meet you,ā he said, extending his hand for a shake.
She smiled back at him, āYouāre Italian?ā
āYes,ā he coughed uncomfortably, retracting his hand.Ā
āI am too!ā she said, making him smile again and puffed out her little chest as she proudly began to introduce herself in Italian, āMi chiamo Vittoria! Vittoria Bor-ā
āBenny boy!ā chortled another plump man, who landed his meaty hand on her new friendās shoulder.
āHello Steve,ā he grinned, āFancy seeing you here.ā
āWell where thereās a party, so am I! Now, youāve got to come with me. I have someone to introduce you to!ā
Vittoria frowned, not ready to be left alone again. āActually Iām watching this, very polite,ā she smiled at that, ālittle girl until her father gets back. So if you could bring them here, Iād greatly appreciate it.ā
Steve scoffed, āOnly because I like you so much.ā
The man skulked off. āThank you Mr. Nizzola,ā she whispered.
āItād be an ungentlemanly thing to do to leave you alone. You seem to know your manners very well. Iām impressed,ā he complimented.
āI...my tutors teach meā¦ā she said nervously, remembering her late etiquette teacher.
āWell youāre an excellent learner!ā he complimented, a rosy flush returning to his olive cheeks.
āGrazie! Non ero un bravo studente prima, ma-ā she began before he cut her off.
āI apologize, Iām uh...third generation. I donāt speak Italian,ā he said uncomfortably, pulling at his collar.
Vittoriaās smile faltered for a moment. Every Italian man she had come across knew the language, her father had said all real Italians could speak it and- Vittoria Borghese! You didnāt speak Italian at first! Youāre still Italian! āThatās okay,ā she said comfortingly, āLearning new languages is hard. I remember when I moved to a different country, I didnāt know the language!ā
Mr. Nizzola smiled, āWell your English is very good and so is your accent. You sound almost All American.ā
Vittoria frowned. Almost? āDo you like it here in America?ā he asked, taking a sip of champagne and looked behind him for his friend.
No. āYes,ā she said pleasantly, āBut I like Italy more.ā
āThatās normal for most immigrants,ā he said off-handedly.
āLa gente in Italia era più gentile,ā she whispered, āBut what about you? Do you like it here?ā
āIn Garland?ā he asked, his glasses falling down the bridge of his nose again, āWell...Iām just visiting. I prefer to stay away from the city.ā
Vittoria nodded understandingly, āI know what you mean. It sometimes smells and itās too loud.ā
Mr. Nizzola was silent for a moment, his face taking on a worried expression as if something was haunting him. Mama looked like that when she worried too. āSir?ā
Whatever trance he was in broke, and he laughed, āSorry about that! Thinking about some old business!ā
As she was about to ask, he cut her off again, āNow this is a party and I donāt think the owners of those chocolate cakes are coming back, so whadda you say?ā
Mr. Nizzola pulled two of them towards them. Vittoria adored this man and wanted to be polite, but⦠āMy Papa doesnāt let me have sweets. Especially at night.ā
Mr. Nizzola frowned, āOh, Iām sorry. I didnāt know.ā
She hated the pity that laced his voice. āItās okay,ā she said, āBut he lets me have fruits.ā
āHow generous,ā Mr. Nizzola muttered under his breath before he put the champagne back to his lips.
āI like strawberries and bananas!ā
āWell those are some good fruits,ā he said, the disapproval leaving his tone.
Mr. Nizzola raised his hand and waved down a caterer carrying a tray of chocolate strawberries, taking two plates for themselves. When the plate was put in front of her, she smiled. āHere we go. You can peel the chocolate off and-ā
āThat's okay! Iāll eat it like it is!ā
Mr. Nizzola laughed and picked from his own plate. The next few moments were nice, and she had almost finished her entire plate when, āVittoria, time to go.ā
She looked up and grinned, āPapa!ā
But his eyes werenāt looking at her, instead at Mr. Nizzola with a hellish hatred. And when she looked over at the stout man, whose gaze had an equal mixture of terror and loathing, she cowered. Her Papa was never physically rough with her, but he grabbed her so harshly she cried out. It mustāve not been her fault she realized when he had pushed her behind him protectively but it still had scared her. Mr. Nizzola stood up defiantly, which did little good given that he was much shorter than her Papa. Her Papa was a broad imposing figure and the way he stood mimicked a bear rising in dominance. āY-you shouldnāt be here,ā Mr. Nizzola said, trying to make his voice sound courageous, āI-Italy. Youāre supposed to be in Italy.ā
Her Papa sneered and if it werenāt for Sawyer coming up and saying his name, reminding them there was a crowd, well...Vittoria wasnāt sure what heād do to Mr. Nizzola. āMrā¦.Mr. Nizzola taught me how...how to make p-paper cranes,ā she said in her tiny voice, āSee?ā
She held up the crane, trying to show her Papa she was in no real danger. But that just made the situation worse. His voice, usually angel-like, took the sound of a demon. āNever talk to my daughter again. Ever.āĀ
Mr. Nizzola seemed like a level-headed man but that apparently faded. āYou donāt deserve a child. You donāt deserve to be a father, not-ā
Papa stepped forward but Sawyer put his hand up, āYou said it was time to go. Itās nearly ten. Time for her to go to bed.ā
āYou should consider going back to wherever you came from,ā Papa hissed before swiftly turning and pulling Vittoria along with him.
She sympathetically looked back and gave a small wave goodbye. He was nice to me. But whatever was between him and Papa, soured the relationship. Mr. Nizzola looked at her and the familiarity of her family in her appearance ruined whatever friendship they had. He didnāt even smile at my goodbye.Ā
When they were in the limo, her Papa went off. āWhat did you two talk about?ā he demanded, his tone scarier then sheād ever heard it.
Vittoria immediately started to cry, āN-nothing Papa!ā
āNothing?ā he scoffed before turning his rage on Sawyer, āWhy did you leave her alone?!ā
āNo. No excuse could be good enough!ā he growled before turning back to her, āWhat did he say to you?!ā
āW-we only only t-talked about,ā she sobbed, āOrigami a-and art and s-school! Iām sorry Papa! I didnāt know!ā
āI donāt believe you. Thatās not all. What else?!ā
Vittoria was shaking, ready to throw up. āI-I told him Mamaās dead and I on-only l-live with y-you! But thatās it! I swear Papa!ā
āDid you tell him how she died?!ā
āLeonardo!ā Sawyer jumped in.
āNot a word!ā he snapped before grabbing her chin, āYou are to never talk to him again. Ever! Is that understood?!ā
Vittoria nodded. When she opened her watery green eyes, her Papaās softened. āOh Vittoria,ā he cooed, āIām sorry. But you have to understand that Iām very protective of you.ā
āI-is he dangerous?ā she hiccuped.Ā
Papa nodded. āYes. I was worried heād hurt you and that made me very angry. I shouldnāt have taken it out on you.ā
Heās not mad at me. He was trying to protect me! Her Papa pulled her closer, allowing her to snuggle under his arm. Vittoria relaxed, the stress leaving her body knowing that she wasnāt in trouble. āIāll make it up to you. Weāll go to the park tomorrow, hm?ā
As her Papa looked down at her, she saw out of the corner of her eye Sawyer looking on in disgust and pity. āOkay,ā she nodded.
When they returned home, he put her right to bed with the help of a sedative or two. Take a moment to decompress, to- āThat was a terrible decision.ā
He internally groaned. āA decision that wouldnāt have to have been made if you had stayed with her like I asked.ā
āYou didnāt ask, but thatās beside the point. You just had a very public confrontation with Nizzola. If something happens-ā
āNothing will happen as long as he stays away. The audacity of the man to even imply I shouldnāt have my daughter.ā
That alone made him see red. As a father who lost his own child, he could see where Nizzolaās rage stemmed from, but to insinuate he didnāt deserve Vittoria was unwarranted. After everything Iāve gone through, I deserve her most of all. Charles was quiet in the corner. āLast I heard, he had moved to a suburb in Hoboken. I donāt think he plans on staying in New York. Too many memories.ā
Leonardo nodded. For his sake, he should stay there.