Napoli del nord Scampia's hollow-eyed skyscrapers cast slim shadows over the old Fiat gliding through town. Alberta Tortoricci took in the grim vista as she headed into her darkest nightmare. By the time the real cops had arrived to escort her back to her home in Assisi the fake ones had pulled into the grounds of one of the area's many disused factories. The huge building was derelict and bare of branded signage. Buckled and broken chain-link fencing ran all around it. Dogs sniffed garbage and lifted their heads as they passed.
Alberta's hands had been tied and her mouth gagged. But they'd made no attempt to blindfold her. There was no need. She wasn't going to live to identify them.
They dragged her down the side of the old factory. Her feet slipped on sodden cardboard boxes that had rotted in the rain. A metal door jerked back in rusted spasms and they pushed Alberta into the cold, damp twilight of the factory. Grey light drizzled through dozens of small windows high off the ground. Across in the corner of the room, in soft silhouette, she saw a man sitting on a slatted fold-up chair.
'Buon giorno, Alberta,' said a voice that leached the blood from her heart.
She recognized it as Bruno Valsi's.
'Please, sit down. I've been waiting. Waiting five years for you.'
Valsi stood up and stepped away as his men forced Alberta down on to the chair. Unseen fingers refastened her hands around the back of it and then bound her feet to its front legs.
'I'm sorry to be so impolite, but you've got to be tied. Otherwise, the sheer amount of pain that I'm going to inflict upon you will throw you to the ground.' Valsi snapped his fingers, summoning one of the two henchmen who'd brought her.
Alberta never saw the hammer in his hand.
Without any backswing he crashed its flat metal head into her gums and teeth.
The shock was instant. A dull crack. An explosion of pain in her skull.
Pieces of broken teeth jammed at the back of her mouth. She had to swallow jagged bone in order to breathe. Other teeth were hideously bent back at their roots. Blood and saliva drooled down her chest.
'Cantante! ' spat Valsi. His eyes were on fire.
Alberta knew what was going to happen next. The police had warned her about it. She'd seen it in her nightmares. The hand of the henchman reappeared. His fingers fumbled in her mouth. And then, she felt the acidic tang of metal on her tongue. Pliers. She could see the end of them as he squeezed tight and pulled the tongue through her smashed teeth. Punishment for the cantanti, those who sang to the authorities, was always the same. They had their tongues cut out. Then, almost as absolution for the sin of speaking to the police, the sign of the cross was razored across their lips.
The pain was unbearable. Her vision fogged as a switchblade clicked open and the henchman sawed off as much of the pink muscle as he could.
'Vaffanculo! ' he swore as Alberta's blood spurted on to him. He slashed a crucifix across her skin, backed away and deposited the severed tongue in a handkerchief held for him in the leather-gloved palm of Bruno Valsi. Blood dripped and balled up on the dusty factory floor.
Valsi studied his new pink present, then folded the white cotton gently around it. 'Va bene,' he said unemotionally. 'Sal, bring me her present.'
The grey man at his side smiled and disappeared into the shadows.
'You like jewellery, don't you, Alberta?' Valsi grinned as he circled her bloodied face. 'Of course you do. All girls like jewellery. Well, you'll die for this piece – literally – it was designed just for you.'
Alberta Tortoricci couldn't see what they were doing. The room was too dark and her eyes were blinded by tears and pain.
'It's a special designer necklace.' Valsi hovered over her.
She was more frightened now than she'd ever been in her life. But she was determined not to show it. Alberta shut her eyes and tried to distract herself from what was happening. She conjured up images of her first day at school.
Blue dress, white top, hair in pigtails, new brown shoes.
'It's a necklace; our Frankenstein necklace.' He looped a thick steel collar around her neck. Wire flexes trailed from both sides.
Her first kiss – Roberto Bassetti, thirteen years old – his mouth tasted of liquorice.
'This jewellery is unique, Alberta, rather like the testimony you gave in court, you being the only witness against me.'
Valsi fell silent as he concentrated on fastening two bolts at either side of what were semi-circular steel strips that overlapped each other and had been punched with holes to accommodate the bolts.
First boyfriend – Armando Rossi, seventeen – they rode his Lambretta. She'd leaned her face against his back and wrapped her arms around his waist.
'Beautiful. Bellissimo. It fits perfectly. You'll look a dream. Well, my dream at least. You see, five years is a hell of a long time to think about revenge. Because that's what this is about, Alberta, revenge – pure and simple…'
First true love – Bernardo Santo – a man ten years older than her, a man who'd always smelled of forests, a man she should have married and had children with.
'Sockets, please.'
Wires were handed to two goons. Valsi squatted, so that he was at Alberta's eye level.
'I hope the voltage is good. We've rewired it especially for you. Too little and the current will cook slowly through your neck until your head drops off. Too much and it may explode. Pop! Neither is a nice way to die.'
Die!
Alberta's powers to distract herself were gone now. There was no past to dip into.
No more firsts to go through.
Only lasts.
The last moments of her life.
Valsi smiled in mock sympathy and touched her cheek. 'Hey, enough of these sad looks! You know you have to die, Alberta. I must show the polizia what happens when they exploit people like you. All informatori must know what awaits them if they ever try to do the same.'
Valsi paused and watched for fear on her face. He was saddened that there was none. Brave bitch. Brave, arrogant bitch.
'Sal, throw the switch!'
The air buzzed and hummed.
Alberta's body went into spasm. Her eyes bulged and her head sagged as her nerves became paralysed.
'Jesus, what a stink!' Valsi wafted a hand playfully in front of his face. The room filled with the smell of burning flesh. The henchmen coughed and laughed. Coarse, meaty sounds like they were choking on beer during a good joke. Alberta was dribbling blood.
But she still wasn't dead. Even as her internal organs baked from the electric charge, life still flickered within her.
Valsi squatted on his heels again. Stared into her eyes. 'Not long now, you're frying nicely.'
Alberta's skin was crimson.
Her flesh was starting to split.
Suddenly, a gush of blood and boiling stomach contents bubbled from her mouth.
One of the goons gagged.
Sal the Snake had left the electric box and stood beside Valsi. He shook his head and smiled. What a sight.
'She's dead,' said Valsi. 'Don't waste any more juice on the bitch. Sal, get her body out of here and destroy what's left of it. Set fire to it so the cops don't find any of our traces, then leave it where it'll be found within the next few days.'