Chapter 280: Memories II
Days passed.
Then weeks.
Alessio remained in the house, still saying nothing, his silence becoming a defining characteristic that the woman seemed to find more amusing than frustrating.
She would talk to him anyway, her voice filling spaces he refused to occupy with words, sharing observations and instructions without expecting responses.
“You hold your fork like it’s a weapon. That won’t do. Like this – see? Elegance matters as much as efficiency.”
“Your posture gives away your background. Stand straighter… People judge you in the first three seconds. Control what they see.”
“Respect isn’t demanded, it’s earned. But appearance creates the foundation. Dress like you deserve to be taken seriously, and people will treat you that way.”
Lessons wrapped in casual conversation, delivered while she ate breakfast or reviewed paperwork, never pressuring him to engage but making sure he heard.
And Alessio listened despite himself, absorbing information that contradicted everything his experiences had taught him.
Then one evening, she brought him to her study, gesturing for him to sit.
Men waited there – ten of them, all wearing expensive coats and hats, all carrying themselves with the kind of confidence that came from power rather than desperation.
“This is my organization,” the woman said simply. “The D’Rossi Mafia Family.”
The men nodded respectfully to her, their deference genuine rather than forced, their eyes showing loyalty that went beyond fear.
Alessio’s eyes tracked every detail, his analytical mind noting how they interacted – the casual way they talked with each other, the jokes mixed with business discussions, the way they treated their leader with something approaching reverence.
It was completely unlike the gang he’d built through violence and intimidation.
These people actually seemed to care about each other.
’A family…’
The thought emerged unbidden, carrying the weight of something he’d never experienced.
****
[Weeks Later – Evening]
The woman sat in her study, reviewing documents, her expression showing frustration with whatever she was reading.
Alessio stood near the doorway, having brought her the evening tea she’d requested, about to leave.
“I don’t even know your name,” she muttered, more to herself than to him. “Weeks of having you here, and you haven’t spoken a single word. Are you mute? Is that it? Did something happen to your voice?”
She sighed heavily, setting the papers aside.
“Well, whoever you are, you’re welcome to stay as long as you follow the rules. I won’t force you to–”
“Alessio.”
The word emerged quietly, almost whispered, breaking weeks of absolute silence.
The woman froze mid-movement, her head snapping toward him so fast it should have caused whiplash.
“…What?”
Alessio looked at her directly for the first time, his dark eyes meeting hers without flinching.
“My name… is Alessio.”
His voice was young, rough from disuse, carrying an accent that spoke of poverty and streets rather than education.
The woman’s mouth hung open, genuine shock breaking through her usual composure.
“You aren’t a mute?!”
Alessio looked at her like she’d asked the stupidest question imaginable, his expression clearly saying – I’m speaking right now, aren’t I?
“You– You little– Do you have any idea how ridiculous–”
She cut herself off, taking a deep breath, then started laughing despite her obvious frustration.
“Weeks! Weeks of me talking to myself thinking you couldn’t respond! And you were just… what? Enjoying the fucking show?!”
Her laughter faded into something softer and more genuine.
“Alright… Alessio… That’s a good name.”
She paused, her expression becoming more serious.
“And your family name? Your surname?”
Alessio’s face went carefully blank again, his voice emerging quieter.
“It’s just… Alessio.”
Understanding crossed her features, recognition of what that meant – no family, no history worth claiming, nothing but a street rat.
“I see…”
She stood, walking closer, her presence suddenly more commanding.
“So, little Alessio… do you know what a Mafia is?”
He shrugged, the gesture casual but his voice showing he’d been thinking about this.
“It’s just like a luxurious gang.”
“Wrong.”
The single word carried absolute certainty, her entire demeanor shifting to something almost stern.
“A Mafia is indeed a criminal organization. But it’s a type of organization that looks after its own… Like a family.”
Alessio said nothing, but his eyes showed he was processing and comparing what she was saying to what he’d observed.
He’d watched how the men worked – conducting business with serious faces, then joking around afterward like normal people.
Completely unlike the gang he’d been part of, where friendship was weakness and leadership came through fear alone.
These so-called Mafia people treated each other with genuine respect, looked out for one another, held clear loyalty to the woman not because they feared her but because they believed in what she represented.
The woman continued, her voice carrying the weight of tradition.
“Also, since the Mafia is a family, we all carry one surname.”
She placed her hand on his shoulder, the gesture carrying significance beyond simple touch.
“From today, your name is Alessio D’Rossi. You’re part of this family now. And that means we protect you, just as you’ll protect us.”
Something in Alessio’s chest cracked, walls he’d built through years of surviving alone showing their first fractures.
He nodded once, not trusting his voice, accepting the gift she was offering.
A surname.
A family.
And a place to belong.
****
Damian watched all of this with hands pressed over his ears, his entire body trembling, his consciousness rejecting what he was seeing even as it played out with perfect clarity.
’Stop… please stop… I don’t want to remember this…’
But the memories continued, the woman’s voice cutting through his attempts to block it out.
“Family means we honor our word. When you give your promise to another member, that promise is sacred. Breaking it means betraying everyone.”
“Loyalty flows both ways… You protect the family and the family protects you. That bond is what makes us strong.”
“Traitors are dealt with harshly… Not out of cruelty, but because betrayal destroys the foundation we’re built on. One traitor unpunished creates ten more who think they can get away with it.”
Lessons delivered over months, repeated until they became ingrained, shaping Alessio’s understanding of what organization could mean when it was more than just hierarchy enforced through violence.
She taught him to read, spending evenings with books spread across her desk, patience never wavering when he struggled with words that refused to make sense.
She taught him mathematics, showing how numbers could be weapons as effective as guns when wielded correctly.
She taught him about respect – how to give it, how to earn it, how to recognize when it was genuine versus when it was just fear wearing a mask.
And Alessio absorbed everything like someone dying of thirst finally finding water, his sharp mind recognizing the value of knowledge he’d never had access to before.
Damian’s face showed shifting emotions as the scenes played out – pain, recognition, desperate denial, his hands never leaving his ears even though the voices came from inside the memory rather than outside.
’I don’t want to see this… I know where this goes… Please, anything but this…’
But Alessio’s dependence on Nera only grew stronger with time.
She became the foundation of his life, the first person who’d ever looked at him and seen potential rather than just another street rat destined for an early grave.
He respected her in ways he’d never respected anyone, trusted her with a completeness that terrified him because it meant vulnerability.
For the first time in his life, Alessio D’Rossi had found a family.
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