The Inheritance: Chapter 5 - Part II (Updated 11/14)

<< < (17/36) > >>

eefje00704:
Ah computer trouble, we all have our fair share of it, good luck with it!

CuriousSimmer:
The Inheritance
Chapter 2 - Part XI
January 1962



The following day I went to Judith's and was surprised to find a moving van in the driveway, and boxes of things being packed into it. One of the movers said that the lady of the house was inside and I let myself in.

"Judith?" I asked, and she looked up from where she sat. "Can I come in?"

"Why not?" she asked bitterly. "We're going soon anyway."


I sat down opposite her and said, "I'm sorry, Judith. I didn't...I had to protect my daughter."

Judith gave me a kind smile and reached across the table to pat my hand. Only then did I notice the wild look in her eye. "It's all right, dear. None of this, and I mean none of this is your fault. I should have known all along..."

I held her hands between mine and squeezed them, feeling her own anguish. "Judith, talk to me. What's happened?"

"It wasn't Donovan," she said simply. She was silent for a moment, and then she began to tell me a story...


"We had a lovely little cottage in Ireland, near the border. It wasn't much, but it was enough for the three of us. David and I were very dedicated to the peace process, and we would have regular meetings between sympathetic types of all stripes--British, Irish, it didn't matter.

One of these days, we were getting ready for a meeting of the minds. I was out, tending the garden, and David was getting things ready inside--or so I thought--with the help of Donovan's girlfriend, Jennifer Boyle. Oh, they weren't a serious item--not as serious as the papers suggested after the--but they were going steady, you could say. Donovan was out, getting groceries, but was walking home when it happened. He told me he was walking through the back yard and saw what happened through a window."


"While I was out in the garden, my husband, the pig, put the moves on poor Jennifer. Bless her heart, she didn't know what to do..."


"Other than push his lecherous arse away, of course. Donovan said she gave him a good shove and really embarrassed him."


"David, the Don Juan he thinks himself, was upset and they tuffled. Donovan said he had her by the throat and then she began to choke."


"Not such a brave man was he after that, no: he moved away, insisting that she was faking it. But as she continued to choke..."


"...he could see that this was not an accident that he could just explain away."


"The poor girl died, and for what? Because she bruised my lecherous husband's pride. He panicked and did what he thought he had to: began to cover his tracks. He hid the body in a wardrobe..."


"...went out into the shed and got one of the bombs he had confiscated while patrolling the border, and wired it there. And just before the English delegation was set to arrive, it went off."


"Several men ran in to look for Jennifer; my husband, who had escaped, said he had been unable to find her. I know now that this was all cover for his crime. And all those men died trying to save her, not knowing she was already dead..."


"When did you find this out?" I asked gently, offering her my kerchief. She dabbed her eyes gratefully.

"Donovan told me yesterday, after you sent Josephine away. He said that his father had now cost him two girls--two opportunities to find love, you know?--and then told me what he saw. And Elizabeth, I know he was telling the truth. A mother knows."

I nodded my head. "Yes, she does." Just then the door opened and I turned to see David standing there. I stood up; I didn't know what I could do, but I could at least try to defend myself if I was standing.


"What are you doing here?" he demanded.

"Visiting your wife," I said coolly. "And where is young Donovan?"

"Who knows what kind of trouble he's getting himself into?" David asked casually. "Not bothering your daughter anymore, is he?"

"You bastard." I turned to see that Judith had stood and was inching forward. "You lying, murdering bastard!"


"I beg your pardon?" asked David, trying to seem collected and cool, but we could both tell that he was suspicious.

"You killed Jennifer Boyle. You blamed it on Donovan and told me what to tell the police, not to protect us but to protect you. You would have our boy accused of a crime that you committed!" spat Judith.

"Why you..." said David, striding forward.

"Not so fast," I said stonily, mustering all my bluster. "I know the whole story and I've phoned the police. Unless you want them to find two more of your victims here, you'll stand back. And you'll have to kill me to get to her."

"This is none of your business," said David.


"When lying murderers go free, that's everyone's business," I said, not knowing where I was getting this bravery.

"Oh, stuff it. Judith, get your things. We're leaving now."

"No," said Judith. "You're leaving. Donovan and I are staying."

"Judith, you are my wife and he is my son, and you will do as I tell you. Now, get in the van!"

"No!" Judith shouted. "You get in the van and go far, far away. Don't ever come back."

"Judith--"

"I'm calling the police," she said. "We'll see what they say when they here that you're the one that murdered Jennifer Boyle and all those people who went in to save her, not Donovan?"

David took another step as Judith went to the phone. I moved with her, picking up a skillet out of a moving box and watched him closely. I would defend Judith if I had to, I knew.

Luckily, David knew it too. He turned and left.


I hurried to the porch and watched as he climbed into the moving truck. It roared to life and he was gone.

Judith came out on the porch and put her arm around my waist. "Thank you, Elizabeth. If not for you, I don't know if I could have done that."

"You'll stay, won't you?" I asked her, putting my arm around her shoulder. "You and Donovan?"

"I think I'd like that."

CuriousSimmer:
The Inheritance
Chapter 2 - Epilogue
January 1962


That same day...


"You'll regret this," Eva Giorelli shouted at her uncle as he left the house.

"No, my dear. You think you're the fox, but you are but the hen. You see, it was you who greased the step that caused your aunt's accident. You are unwise to attempt to blackmail me, for I have an alibi."

"Where are you going?" she called.


"I'm going to the office, then I'm calling your mother and telling her to come and pick you up. You are no longer welcome here," said Giovanni. With that, he turned on his heel and began to cross the street.


"Uncle, wait!" cried Eva--but Giovanni didn't listen...


...much to his detriment.


And that was the last any of us saw of David O'Reilly for a long time.

At the Moretti villa...


I arrived home to share the news with Dante. He was glad to have the affair sorted out and promised to talk to the police about keeping an extra close eye on the O'Reilly house in case David tried to come back.


I looked over the living room of the villa in which I had lived for so many years and for the first time in months felt completely content. Yes, my daughter was in Switzerland, and my younger son was out running around, but my family still felt complete.


Night fell over the hills of Italy, and as Dante wrapped his arms around me and we settled in for a quiet night together with the children, I knew that there was nothing that we could not face together. But as Abraham Lincoln once said...


...a house divided against itself cannot stand.

To Be Continued in
Chapter Three

Daizzie21:
Amazing! Great Story. :)

Glamily:
i love it!! its soo kool!

Navigation

[0] Message Index

[#] Next page

[*] Previous page