#I THINK THE WAY THEY SPACED OUT THE MEMBERS ARE THE UNITA
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
POWER OF DESTINY OH MY GOD I GOT GOOSEBUMPS
#GUYS. NO. BAD SQUISHIES MMMMMMMM#I THINK THE WAY THEY SPACED OUT THE MEMBERS ARE THE UNITA#LIKE DAEHWI SEONGWOO JISUNG#THEN PANDEEP AND JAEHWAN#2PARK AND MINHYUN#AND THEN CLOUD NIEL#OH MY GOD GUYS#IM SCARED#kaitlyn.txt
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
Scacchi
Rating: M (nothing particularly crazy, but it’s still related to BBP)
Characters: OC’s: Giuseppe Giovanna, Vittorio Pesca, plus a few extras. Mentioned: Don Giorno Giovanna/Reader, Fugo, Narancia, Mista.
Summary: Giuseppe learns how to play the game.
Alternatively: Pesca doesn’t approve of sheltering who he considers to be the “heir” to Giorno’s empire and takes matters into his own hands.
Word count: 1.8k
A/N: One of several Giuseppe-related OCtober writings that I’ll be sharing in the next few weeks. This takes place about 15-16 years after BBP, so Giuseppe is a teenager and it would basically be taking place around his “part” (as some of you have come to call it :-D ). For context: Giorno and the Signora have discovered that against their wishes, their son has managed to secretly join Passione (more on that in another snippet, and know that Giuseppe’s “uncle’s” aren’t any more pleased). Unfortunately they all have to deal with some other mess happening in the city, and the only relative around to spend time with Giuseppe is Pesca, who I have yet to fully introduce in BBP. I hope you’ll enjoy this interaction between them!
some translation notes;
trisoru (’tesoro’ in Siciliano), Matri/Patri and Matre/Patre (mother and father, in Siciliano and Napulitano, respectively), Se (yes, Siciliano), La Famigghia (the family, Siciliano), prozio (great-uncle in Italiano: referring to Don Arnaldo from BBP).
One of the soldati entered the room, Giuseppe in tow. “I hope your trip was pleasant, Signore Pesca. Things are a bit… disorderly here at the moment,” he added, casting a wary, sideways glance at his charge.
Giuseppe’s greeting was less effusive. Passione’s princeling was in a sullen mood, furious that he had been ordered to stay home while his father and trusted men sought out the current threat. “You need to stay home, where it’s safe, trisoru,” you had insisted. “These are unsettling times.”
None of this satisfied Giuseppe, Pesca noted. Perfect on many accounts, but still a child for all that, still inexperienced in the ways of this world. “Giuseppe,” he called. His nephew looked over sure enough. “Seeing that we’re stuck here together, perhaps you’ll be a dear nephew and entertain me to a thrilling game of scacchi? For old time’s sake.”
Giuseppe fixed him with a wary stare. “Chess? My homework sounds much more interesting.”
“Not interesting to you? I suppose it’s only natural when you’ve never beat me. Do continue with your studies.” Pesca raised his book, smirking in safety behind the pages.
His comments pricked Giuseppe’s pride, just as he expected. “Very well then, Uncle. Fetch the board and pieces—this time I mean to actually beat you.”
They set the chessboard on a wooden table in the center of the room, a handsome piece of furniture that was undoubtedly carved and toiled over by some craftsman in the city. Pesca knew his cousin-in-law liked to patron the local artisans. Giuseppe had already moved his first piece on the board—’Grob’s Attack,’ Pesca thought with amusement. Most would consider it a mark of daring youth, a move that was as bold as it was foolish. Willing to risk it all for the quick kill. Giuseppe’s bodyguard Affogato sat in a chair beside his charge, watching as they played.
Pesca responded in kind, setting his Queen’s pawn two spaces forward. Later, when all the pieces had cleared the way and Giuseppe reached for the Queen’s Bishop, Pesca hummed and shook his head. His nephew paused and quirked a brow at him. “This is an interesting opening, dear nephew, but I wouldn’t do it in the future.” He offered Giuseppe his most disarming smile. “You’re just as bold as your Matri and Patri.”
“So I’ve been told,” Giuseppe returned warily. “...My mother says that you let her drive your car when she was twelve.”
“She’s a very good driver. She’s good at plenty of things, actually. A clever woman. Do you heed her advice?”
The boy pushed a tuft of dark blue hair away from his eyes. Pesca noticed that the dye had yet to fully wash out. “Of course I do. She’s my mother.”
“And yet we find you here, already a fully initiated member of your Patri’s gang.” Pesca blinked at the board before moving his knight. “If I remember correctly, your beloved parents had every intention of shutting you out from either organization. Were they heartbroken when they found out?”
Giuseppe flushed. “I’ve told you already, it was the right thing to do. I can help them.”
“Se,” Pesca returned in his rough Siciliano. “And in doing the right thing, you’ve also uncovered a new plot to dispose of them. It’ll make for an interesting family story in the future, and I’m sure your children will love to hear of how you managed to save us all… assuming your Matri and Patri ever let you set foot outside of this house any time soon.”
“They will. They have to.”
“Must they?” Pesca asked with a tsk and a scandalous tone. “I would be careful with that. Don’s and Signora’s do not like receiving orders, least of all from children. Your Matri is a Signora, a principessa of one of the oldest criminal organizations in this world; she knows a great deal more about these sorts of things than you do. Your Patri, on the other hand? Why, he’s the Boss of all Bosses, made himself a conqueror at the age of fifteen. They love you dearly and clearly gave the world to you, but I don’t think you’ll find them very willing.”
“They will be willing,” Giuseppe insisted, clearly shocked by this information. It was clear to Pesca that Giuseppe had never considered the possibility that his parents might lock him away for his safety and refuse him. “You don’t know them as I do.” Giuseppe took his knight and leapt over the pawns, letting the piece land on the board with a harsh thud.
Pesca shrugged at that. “Perhaps I’m still a stranger to the sacred love between parent and child, but I know what they are like. I know your Matri most of all. I know that she stole cars and sold them, that she impressed Don Vittorio Andolini with her thievery. She’s known danger from a young age, knows what it is like to run, to be hunted, to never be safe. I know that she is fierce. How else would Cosa Nostra bend so easily to her? The ‘Ndrangheta are half hers, considering her family ties to Don Arnaldo. She grieved for her father and schemed to protect you and your ridiculous Patri years ago—all when she was matched with a troublesome opponent. She’s not officially initiated in any gang, yet your Patri relies on her to no end. How do you suppose a woman like this will react when you come to her with a pleading child’s eyes and say, ‘Buongiorno Mamma, I have grown up now and would like to be recognized as a member of La Famigghia.’”
Giuseppe gave him a cold and hard stare. He looks so much like his father. “I am not going to plead to my Matre like a child. I am a young adult, with reasonable requests. I actually accomplished a decent amount of work before you discovered me and alerted them.”
“To be frank? You have too many requests, and as well as you did your job you can easily be replaced,” Pesca corrected. Good, that’s made him angry. It almost reminded Pesca of the times he teased you for having similar ambitions. This boy looks like Giorno but he acts more like his mother. “Don Giorno has plenty of soldati, and last I checked none of them add this much stress on those slender shoulders of his.”
“Think whatever you like, Zietto Vito,” said Giuseppe. “I can still prove myself to them. Signore Fugo said that if I wait, they will see that I’m not a child anymore and can listen like a respectful adult.”
“And you believe that? Goodness. Trust no one, dear boy. Not your strange padrino who wears that ridiculous suit, nor your false uncles or cousins or brothers. Above all, don’t hold to every word your parents say to you—they’re liars like the rest of us. And perhaps this wariness will dampen your gatherings or keep you awake for much longer than you’d like to be at night, but I’m sure it’s better than the never ending sleep that awaits us all.” He sighed and moved his Queen. “I am only your uncle though, only your mother’s lawyer. What could I possibly know that your padrino doesn’t? Still I’ll insist. If you really aren’t a child, you should know that one must make their own way in the world. I wouldn’t do as Signore Fugo says.”
“... What would you do then?” his nephew asked, leaning forward with interest.
“If I were in your position, I would simply sneak away from this city. Go south. These threats come from the Sacra Corona Unita in Puglia, and neither of your father’s forces from Campagna have enough men to deal with an organization from the east. I’d go to Sicilia first, rally the other factions of Cosa Nostra, and meet with your prozio in Calabria. You can start making moves once you’ve got the forces—”
“I have none.”
“You have a famous name and enough resources to tempt the men associated with Cosa Nostra... And even if you don’t, you’re a smart boy, you’ll figure out some way to procure funding.” Pesca flew a Bishop two spaces over. “You’ll need plenty of them, if you want enough men to overwhelm and absorb this new organization.”
“I still would need Patre’s help,” Giuseppe said. “I can’t make any actual moves without his approval. He’s—”
“You don’t need to make any moves, not right away. All you need to do is gather enough support for your Patri. He’ll join you at once.”
Giuseppe frowned. “You said Patri doesn’t intend to let me work with him. I’m still a child to him. He doesn’t entirely respect me the way he does any of his trusted men...”
Pesca shook his head. “A poor choice of words on my part. Ask Don Giorno, your father, for permission, and he’ll treat you like a child. Do you want to act on your father’s whims for the rest of your life? Now… if you left and bolstered his cause down south, in Sicilia? The men of Cosa Nostra only follow the strong, and that is what you’ll be if you can soothe out the wrinkles that stayed after your first birthday. That would prove you are your own man. Bold, reckless, a perfect followup to the infamous Don Giorno. Another conqueror.
“Your Patri has suffered many losses in his youth. You might have noticed he’s grown an attachment to your Matri. If he finds that you’ve taken up his cause and put yourself in a vulnerable position, ordering around the men of Cosa Nostra—no doubt directing attention to yourself—and gone on the offensive, he’ll come and join you. When he meets with you, he will find a fierce and bold youth waiting for him. Not his son, but an equal. How can he help but name you his Underboss and heir then?” Smiling, Pesca took his Queen and ate Giuseppe’s King. “I hope you’ll still harbor some affection for me. And know that you impressed me by managing to last this long, even with an underdeveloped Bishop and godawful castling.”
Giuseppe stared at the board in disbelief. “My Queen–”
“You put her in a tight spot several moves ago. Do you not remember? My Knight took her.”
“What you said earlier... about my first move—”
“Ah! Remember what I said? Trust no one. Though I definitely recommend using a different opening next time. If you’re going to listen to anything I say, at least remember never to start with “g4” ever again.”
Giuseppe jerked back, gaping at the table and then at his uncle. Not ten seconds had passed before he frowned and shoved the board away, hard enough that a white knight and pawn flew across the room. One of the butlers grumbled as he shuffled around the carpet to return them.
“Giving up so soon?” Pesca asked, taking the pieces and setting them up once again.
He half expected the boy to saunter off, especially with the way he’d lectured and poked at him, but to Pesca’s surprise, Giuseppe leaned forward and shook his head.
“No.”
“I won’t be going easy on you,” he warned, “but I promise you’ll have much to learn if you decide to continue.”
Giuseppe nodded. “Teach me then.”
A/N:
Ah ! That’s teenaged Giuseppe for you. Very different from his parents, I think, but I love him all the same. He has much to learn. This is generally untouched from when I first wrote it, so I hope you enjoyed it in all its rough, out-of-context, first-draft-ish glory!
Honestly surprised myself with how much I ended up writing, but I was mostly just following these two; the way they bounce off each other made it easy to let the words go onto the page.
If you wanted to see what the board looked like towards the end of the game, here’s a bit of a visual:
Lots of ways that this could go wrong for Giuseppe’s pieces... I stand by Pesca’s advice though. If you start on white, avoid opening with the infamous “g4.”
#fun fact !!!#i used to play chess with my uncle and i'm actually very much like giuseppe so this was a fun way to revisit that#anyway i love giuseppe he's a little brat and he's got a quick temper and a quicker tongue and he still has much to learn#ocs#giuseppe giovanna#vittorio pesca#sidenote#i love writing these two together as WELL as the signora and pesca#they all just kinda come for each other's throats#but like... in a polite way#also yes giuseppe dyed his hair blue but that'll be explained in a different snippet#belated but uhhhh#oc.tober#previews
24 notes
·
View notes
Note
Can i request fluff with Diavolo pwease uwu Him being protective or something like that :3
AHHHH YESS A HUNDRED TIMES YESS. listen I love my sweet pink raccoon, here is some cute Diavolo fluff anon i hope you like it (。・//ε//・。)
boss's orders (Diavolo)
To say Diavolo was protective was an understatement. In fact, you'd already crossed out the definition of protective in the dictionary at Diavolo's villa in favor of scribbling his name in the new empty space. He was not amused, but Doppio certainly did a fair bit of restraining his laughter.
You'd find yourself being trailed by Doppio, assuring you that he was just trying to keep you safe.
"Boss's orders, _____," he said apologetically.
You could only huff, insisting that he stop following you from behind and just walk beside you. He was only attracting way more attention, after all, Doppio wasn't the most inconspicuous person in the world. Squalo and Tiziano had more luck though. You'd familiarized yourself with them, the only members of Unita Speciale that the boss would allow to guard you.
Whenever you'd find the pair of them lounging around the cafe you worked at, or whenever you'd catch sight of them around the street as they followed you while you went about your day, they could only give you a chagrined smile as they said, "boss's orders."
You understood the reason for his overprotectiveness. Diavolo was an extremely secretive man. You think of the 5 long months it took for him to deem you trustworthy enough to be allowed to roam free even after seeing his face. 5 long months of comforting him, reassuring him of your loyalty, and promising him that you would never dare reveal his identity to anyone. You kissed him gently, peppering his face with a dozen tiny kisses, as you said, "I'm not going anywhere, I'm not going to hurt you."
Your relationship with the mafia boss was strange to say the least. Unconventional was just putting it mildly. You know that him showing his face to you was a big step, a paradigm shift in your relationship.
Almost there, just a little bit more.
You sigh as you pluck the thermometer from Diavolo's lips. A frown was already making its way on your face.
"See, I told you, you were sick," you chided him gently. "Now stay right there, I'm going to make you some porridge."
"This kindness is unbecoming on you," he complained. "I don't pay you to dote on me."
"That's right, you don't pay me to baby you, so stop acting like one."
He was already trying to get up, obviously incensed by your teasing. See, he was already turning red.
"Oh no, you're staying right there Diavolo," you huffed, forcefully tucking the man back into his bed. You had a smug tone that made Diavolo want to lean over and kiss you just to wipe off the triumphant smirk off your face as you said, "boss's orders."
Ah, you got him there.
Perhaps you'd be able to scale the wall around his heart yet.
125 notes
·
View notes