and nine.
The audience was getting up again. Daisy's response, with those brief words dictated from the heart, had struck deep into the viewers.
Jenny Lio and Isabella Larini took an enthusiastic look at Sebastian. On the monitor, the authors wrote more and more pressing messages.
We're about to hit the big time. Come on, come on, come on! Let's make it round, so tonight we'll toast with Moet & Chandon surrounded by fancy sluts and faggots!
Sebastian passed the palm of his hand over his sweaty brow. It was time to use the heavy artillery.
Daisy felt his evil look on his face. She was frightened by the next question, which turned out to be a masterpiece of wickedness.
"Did you love your father too, Daisy?"
The girl became earthy. How could they do this to her? How could they afford to name her father?
"Well, Daisy?"
She didn't say anything. She tried to chase away the memory of her parent, but she couldn't. She'd never got over the trauma of suicide despite years and years of therapy.
The show's judges, pressing her with no humanity at all, brought it all back, and Daisy relived the horror that stained her childhood. She saw her father again dangling from the tree with his eyes slit open staring into the void, his tongue dangling inert on the side of his lip, his neck stretched, his cervical vertebrae broken. He never really saw it, but he always imagined it that way.
"Well, Daisy?"
Daisy heard her mother screaming and calling someone a bastard. She distinctly heard Adiano's cry of pain, even though her brother wasn't there, and she thought she was going mad.
"So? Tell us about your father…"
"Enough! Enough!" she shouted as if she had been seized with hysterics.
"Enough! Enough! Enough!"
Suddenly, a deaf thud made the trellis that supported the stage lights vibrate. The steel mounts where the strobe lights were attached jumped off. Another thud was heard.
The spotlights exploded one after the other between flashes of white light.
The stage jolted, as if someone, or something, was pressing in from below.
A pylon suddenly tilted down, tearing the electrical wires. Sparks crackled from the bare wires. The bolts gave way. The pylon fell to the ground dragging cables and reflectors. Daisy screamed when the pylon hit the jury table.
Jenny Lio heard a thunderous blow. She had been grazed by the pylon. A cable waving like a snake, crackling with energy, struck her in the face. She fell to the ground unconscious. The 20,000-volt discharge burned her face, leaving a gash on her neck, while her right ear had shrivelled to a steaming black stump.
Isabella Larini was lying on the ground. She was screaming in pain because her right arm was trapped under a corner of the pylon. The unnatural position of the limb suggested that it was a horrible fracture.
Circe was sitting there, unharmed. Covered in blood, not hers.
Sebastian's sight made her scream with horror.
The head of the jury was lying on the table, his back crushed by the pylon. Blood was dripping on the lit screens. Her eyes
were still and staring wide open on the monitor, where the historic record of ratings was flashing.
Next Generation was interrupted at 10:35 a.m. on Thursday, November 19.
Death brought the share to forty-nine per cent.
7
Like every morning, Greta Salimbeni entered the studio wearing one of her severe grey suits.
Dr. Salieri's assistant was able to change the general impression people made of her. Greta could appear icy, winking, surly, or sensual, all without being aware of it, as if the virtues and flaws were only in the eye of the beholder.
When she started working in the studio she was a young married woman, but disappointed by marriage. One recurring thought was that she would soon become the lover of her boss. But Salieri was in love with his wife. And a good marriage was a necessary balancing act for someone in the psychiatric profession.
Those who treated men's psyches had to maintain a private life without conflict and tension, or else they would dump their frustrations on their patients.
Greta was in love with the doctor, but she didn't want to be a second choice. This is why Salieri remained a pure and simple erotic fantasy.
Greta opened the door to let the patient in.
Adriano Magnoli entered and renewed his gaze on the porcelain that embellished the study.
"Hi, Adriano" greeted Salieri, raising an eyebrow, the concentrated expression of those who study the patient down to the smallest detail.
"I'm sorry about what happened” said quickly the boy.
"Yes. It wasn't a good time” Salieri said, crossing his arms and pushing his shoulders to the back of the chair to relieve the body, which had been immobile behind his desk for too many hours.
"You will tell me everything calmly. Sit down."
Adriano sat resting his elbows on the inlaid table. He nervously rubbed his hands, his expression full of guilt. The psychiatrist noticed some red bruises on the boy.
"I'm so sorry. But I'm better now."
"Your marks are left” noted Salieri pointing the pen at Adriano's wrists.
"If that's why, they're on my ankles too” said Adriano, raising one knee to lift the flap of his trousers and lowering one sock. The skin underneath showed a purplish bruise.
"During a crisis, it happens to attack people” noted the doctor scribbling a note with a nervous handwriting.
"I shouldn't have bitten him. But I wasn't myself."
"How long did they keep you in bed?" Salieri asked, turning on the computer.
"Two days. The straps on the bed were leather, and I got so nervous. That's why I was left with the marks."
"Three weeks in the psychiatric ward. Must have been tough, boy."
"When the pylon collapsed on the stage, I thought Daisy was impressed, too, and that's when I went out of my mind."
"Do you want to talk about it?" Salieri asked, sliding his mouse lightly over the mat, his eyes on the screen following the arrow pointing to a folder to open.
"I would, but I remember almost nothing about that night” Adriano clarified. "They say, however, that I went downstairs into the living room. Everyone was shouting about what was happening on television. At that point I became aggressive, but that's what they believe."
"So, why did you rage against the guests who were watching your sister on TV?"
"Because I saw bits of coal raining down in the room. Yes, I remember that. I threw myself at them to protect them. I wanted to prevent someone from getting hit."
"You also pushed your aunt, who fell on the floor, right?"
"Yes. Unfortunately, yes. She hit her head, but I swear I didn't want to hurt her."
"I know she wasn't hurt, except for a bump, and I know she defended you to the very last moment so you wouldn't be committed. She said you were very upset about the incident on stage."
"I don't know. I… I just know that I didn't mean to hurt anyone."
"The bite on the nurse, remember?"
"Not much. Again, I wasn't well. They wanted to take me away, but I didn't want to, and that's when the whole mess happened."
"I've seen the medication packs, you haven't been taking them regularly, Adriano. That's why the hallucinations came back."
Adriano, clumsy, nodded with an air of guilt.
"Tell me about Daisy, rather. How is she?" Salieri asked, opening the file he was looking