• Complain

Maurizio de Giovanni - Blood Curse

Here you can read online Maurizio de Giovanni - Blood Curse full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. genre: Detective and thriller. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

Romance novel Science fiction Adventure Detective Science History Home and family Prose Art Politics Computer Non-fiction Religion Business Children Humor

Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.

Maurizio de Giovanni Blood Curse

Blood Curse: summary, description and annotation

We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "Blood Curse" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.

Maurizio de Giovanni: author's other books


Who wrote Blood Curse? Find out the surname, the name of the author of the book and a list of all author's works by series.

Blood Curse — read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work

Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "Blood Curse" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.

Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Maurizio de Giovanni

Blood Curse

I

Though no one could possibly know it, the last rains of winter had fallen that afternoon. The street surface reflected the dim glow of the hanging lamps, which dangled motionless in the now-still air. The only light still shining at that hour of the night came from the barbershop. Inside, there was a man polishing a mirrors brass surround.

Ciro Esposito possessed an iron sense of professional rectitude. Hed learned his trade as a child, sweeping up hair clippings by the ton from the floor of the barbershop that had once belonged to his grandfather, and later to his father. He was treated no better and no worse than the other employees-if anything, with an extra smack in the head or two if he was a second late in proffering the straight razor or a damp towel. But it had done him good. Now, as in the old days, his shop counted among its customers not only those from the Sanit neighborhood, but even those from the far-flung quarter of Capodimonte. He was on excellent terms with them; he understood clearly that men came to the barbershop as an escape from work and wife, and in some cases, from their political party, every bit as much as they did for the haircut and the shave. He had honed that very particular instinct that allows one to chat or to work in silence, and to always have something to say on whatever subject people liked to discuss.

Hed become quite the connoisseur on the topics of soccer, women, money and prices, honor and shame. He avoided politics, which had been such a minefield in recent years. A fruitcart peddler happened to complain about the difficulty hed been having obtaining supplies; four guys nobodyd ever seen in the neighborhood had demolished his cart, calling him a defeatist swine. Ciro steered clear of gossip, too. No point in running risks. He was proud in his conviction that his barbershop constituted something of a social club, which is why he was especially worried that last months incident might cast a shadow over his honorable establishment.

A man had committed suicide, right there in his shop. The man in question was a longtime customer, already a regular back when his father still ran the place. A companionable, jolly fellow, who never tired of complaining about his wife, his children, the money that he never seemed to have enough of. A civil servant; he couldnt remember what branch of government, if hed ever known at all. Lately, the man had become gloomy and distracted, and he didnt talk the way hed used to, nor did he laugh at Ciros renowned jokes; his wife had left him, taking the children with her.

It had happened that, as Ciro was carefully trimming the mans left sideburn with his straight razor, hed reached up and gripped Ciros wrist and with a single, determined jerk of the arm, hed cut his own throat, from ear to ear. It was pure luck that Ciros shop assistant and two other customers had been there to witness it, or hed never have been able to persuade the police and the investigating magistrate that it had been a suicide. Hed quickly scrubbed everything clean and the next day he kept the barbershop closed, careful not to breathe a word of what had happened. The dead man was from another part of town. That, at least, was helpful. In a city as superstitious as Naples, it didnt take much to get the wrong kind of reputation.

This is what Ciro Esposito was thinking about on this last night of winter, when he had finished cleaning and was getting ready to fasten and lock the two heavy wooden shutters that protected his shops front door. He was the only shopkeeper on the Via Salvator Rosa who worked this late. But his workday wasnt over yet. A man, murmuring a greeting under his breath, walked into the shop.

Ciro recognized him; this was one of his oddest customers. Lean, of average height, taciturn. Thirtyish; swarthy, narrow-lipped. Nondescript in every way, except for his green and glassy eyes, and for the fact that he never wore a hat, not even in the dead of winter. What little he knew about him only heightened the discomfort he instinctively felt in his presence. These were not times in which one could afford to displease customers, especially regulars, but this one, in particular, was no walk in the park. The man said good evening, took a seat, and closed his eyes as though asleep, bolt upright in the chair, as if embalmed.

Buona sera, Dottore, he said, using the classic term of respect for the college-educated. Whatll it be?

Just the hair, thanks. Not too short. A quick trim.

Yessir, Ill have you out of here in just a moment. Make yourself comfortable.

The man leaned back. He looked around quickly and Ciro saw him stiffen in alarm, holding his breath for a brief instant. Was it Ciros imagination, or had he looked at the chair on the far end of the room, the one belonging to the dead man? The barber decided he was becoming obsessed; he was starting to think that everyone who came in could see the bloodstains hed so painstakingly scrubbed away.

With a sharp sweep of his hand, the customer brushed aside the stray shock of hair that dangled over his narrow nose. He looked even more ashen by the light of the electric lamps, as if there were something wrong with his liver; his dark complexion verged on the yellowish now. The man heaved a sigh and closed his eyes.

Dottore, are you all right? May I get you a glass of water?

No, no. Just hurry, please.

Ciro started snipping away rapidly, starting with the hair on the back of the mans neck. He couldnt know what the customer, eyes shut tight, was trying so hard not to look at.

The customer could see a man, sitting at the far end of the room, head sunken between his shoulders, hands lying limp on his legs, a black cloth tied around his neck, his eyes fixed on the mirror on the wall. Just above where the cape was tied ran an enormous gash, like a smile scrawled by a child, out of which waves of blood were pumping rhythmically. From behind his clamped eyelids, the customer could sense the corpse slowly turning its head to look at him: the faint snap of the vertebrae in its neck, the damp slithering of the wounds twin lips.

What Id give to see how she likes it now, the slut. Now that shes deprived her children of their father.

The customer raised one hand to his temple. Ciro felt increasingly uneasy; there was no one on the streets at that time of night, and that good-for-nothing shop assistant of his had gone home long ago. What else could befall him? The scissors clipped away at an ever-faster pace. The man was holding his eyes shut tight, and the barber could see beads of sweat standing out on his forehead. Perhaps he had a fever.

Were practically finished, Dotto. Just two more minutes and well have you out of here.

From the far end of the room, the dead man was repeating his lament. In the street outside the wide-open door, silence reigned and springtime awaited. The air itself seemed to be holding its breath.

The customer could hear the scissors chattering away, like frenzied crab claws. He was determined not to listen. What do you expect to see, anyway? You wont see anything ever again. You wont see how that slut likes it, and you wont see anything else.

With a deep sigh, the barber untied the cape from around his customers neck.

There you go, Dotto. Youre all done.

After tossing a few coins onto the side table that served as a cash register, the man walked out in search of fresh air. He was having trouble breathing.

The humid evening embraced Luigi Alfredo Ricciardi, Commissario of Public Safety in the Mobile Squad of the Regia Questura, or Royal Police Headquarters, of Naples. The man who saw the dead.

Tonino Iodice had returned home from work to his wife, mother, and three children. It had been a terrible day. As he did every evening, he stopped in the atrium of the old apartment building in Via Montecalvario to don his mask, that of the weary but satisfied father and provider, a man whose business was thriving. He knew it was wrong, but it was for their own good. The last thing he wanted to do was to make them share his burden.

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «Blood Curse»

Look at similar books to Blood Curse. We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.


Reviews about «Blood Curse»

Discussion, reviews of the book Blood Curse and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.