"Think Twice" - читать интересную книгу автора (Scottoline Lisa)Chapter TenMary would have been mortified when Fiorella announced she wanted to cast off Judy’s evil eye, but she knew that their friendship was strong enough to survive a family exorcism. “Excuse me.” Fiorella glanced around the table. “Everyone but Judy must leave immediately.” “Why?” Mary asked, surprised. Her mother never made anybody leave when she was casting off spells. That was the kind of professionalism that ran in the DiNunzio women. “You must do as I say or I cannot help your friend.” “Maybe we should forget this,” Judy said. “It’s just a little headache, a sinus thing. I’m fine.” “No, you are not fine.” Fiorella shook her head. “I know better. Please, everyone, leave immediately.” “Mary has to stay.” Judy clutched Mary’s arm. “I want her here.” “She cannot.” Fiorella frowned. “Only you and I may be present.” Mary said, “She’ll take her chances, and everybody else can wait in the living room.” “I’ll be in the living room, no problem.” Anthony rose, but her father looked longingly at Mary’s mother, or more accurately, at the stove. “CAN I GET A MEATBALL TO GO, VEET?” “ Fiorella raised a hand. “Vita, before you leave, bring me what I need.” “ “Vita, the olive oil should have come first. Get me the olive oil.” Judy shot Mary a look that said, “ Fiorella frowned. “The olive oil must be the best.” “Is all we have, Donna Fiorella.” Her mother’s hands fluttered to her chest. “Is all we use.” “Leave, Vita.” Fiorella sighed heavily as her mother hurried from the kitchen. “Judy, place both hands on the table, with your palms down. Close your eyes. Mary, you, too.” Judy obeyed, but Mary tilted her head down and watched as Fiorella picked up the olive oil and poured some into the bowl. The oil spread over the water, forming a map of Italy, but that could’ve been Mary’s imagination. Fiorella said, “Judy, I’m preparing what I need to help you, but you must clear your head.” “My head is-” “Speak only when I tell you to. This is very important. Listen to me and clear your head.” Judy clammed up, and Mary watched as Fiorella stabbed the water with her scary thumbnail and swirled the oil and water together, though they didn’t mix. They were like, well, oil and water. “Now I will begin the prayer for you, for God to deliver you from the evil that threatens you.” Fiorella kept stirring the olive oil, making a culinary whirlpool. “I will say a secret prayer, known only to me. It will be in Italian, so you won’t understand it, but you are not meant to.” Mary suppressed an eye-roll as Fiorella reached over the table, made the Sign of the Cross on Judy’s forehead, and began praying softly, in dialect. Then she seemed to notice a stain on her dress, below her breast, and kept praying as she reached for her napkin, dipped it in a glass of water, and swabbed at the stain. When she had finally blotted it dry, she stopped praying. Mary frowned, disapproving. Fiorella couldn’t deliver a full-strength prayer if she was playing with her Armani. She wasn’t a witch queen, she was a designer fraud. “Ladies, open your eyes.” Fiorella’s lipsticked mouth curved into a smile. “Judy, you feel better now, don’t you?” “I do!” Judy blinked, then broke into a grin. “Thank you!” “Yes, thank you,” Mary managed to say, but now she was wondering about Fiorella Bucatina. And she worried that her parents were about to have bigger problems than mushy gnocchi. |
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