BLURB:
Set in New York and Paris amid the glamorous and competitive worlds of art and real estate, Scorpio Rising takes the reader from the late 1940s to the 1960s through the tumultuous lives of its heroes.
There is Alex Ivanov, the son of a Russian immigrant and part-time prostitute. He yearns to escape his sordid life and achieve fame and fortune. His dreams of becoming a world-class builder are met with countless obstacles, yet he perseveres in the hope of someday receiving the recognition he craves.
Half a world away, Brigitte Dartois is an abused teenager who runs into the arms of a benefactor with an agenda all his own. When she finds out that her boss has an ulterior motive, she flees again, determined to earn her living through her art. This career brings her fame, but also the unwanted attention of her early abuser.
Monique Domovitch’s debut novel, Scorpio Rising, is a compelling tale filled with finely etched characters and a superb understanding of the power of ambition. Scorpio Rising promises to resonate with all who once had a dream.
There is Alex Ivanov, the son of a Russian immigrant and part-time prostitute. He yearns to escape his sordid life and achieve fame and fortune. His dreams of becoming a world-class builder are met with countless obstacles, yet he perseveres in the hope of someday receiving the recognition he craves.
Half a world away, Brigitte Dartois is an abused teenager who runs into the arms of a benefactor with an agenda all his own. When she finds out that her boss has an ulterior motive, she flees again, determined to earn her living through her art. This career brings her fame, but also the unwanted attention of her early abuser.
Monique Domovitch’s debut novel, Scorpio Rising, is a compelling tale filled with finely etched characters and a superb understanding of the power of ambition. Scorpio Rising promises to resonate with all who once had a dream.
BIO:
Monique Domovitch is the author of Scorpio Rising and
The Sting of the Scorpio. She also writes under the pen name Carol Ann Martin
for Obsidian, an imprint of Penguin. She is represented by Natalie Fischer of
the Bradford Literary Agency, and lives with her husband and her three dogs in
La Jolla California.
Monique
Domovitch was born the first in a family of ten children in a small town in
Northern Ontario, and maintains to this day that she was not harmed by the
experience. She attended The Sacred Heart Convent, an Ottawa boarding school
where she learned to keep her hands folded neatly in her lap and to smile
vaguely when people use profane language around her. Her first job was in
Montreal as a fashion model, and she is credited with inventing the famous
pouty pose that is now used by top models everywhere. She has turned thirty
nine again this year and pledges to do it over and over. Just like everybody else
in the world, she is working on a new novel, this one, her fourth.
ONLINE LINKS:
Website http://moniquedomovitch.com/
Blog http://moniquedomovitch.com/
Facebook
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Monique-Domovitch/257672814265720
Twitter
https://twitter.com/Moniquedomovitc
Goodreads http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5111708.Monique_Domovitch
a Rafflecopter giveaway***** 5 Star Review For Scorpio Rising
Have you ever had a dream?
Have you ever wanted something so bad that you would be willing to do almost anything to get it?
Have you ever felt hopeless?
Have you ever felt like you were so far down that you might never find a way back to the top?
What do you do when you find yourself at the bottom of the heap and your heart feels like it is broken?
Do you settle down and take what life throws at you or do you rise above it and conquer your fears?
Scorpio Rising is a book about life, struggles, and overcoming adversity. It is a book that shoots straight through your heart and shows that no matter how hard life gets you can either let it drag you under or you can rise above and come out on top. Monique Domovitch is a master story teller and builds such wonderful characters. She wraps you up in their stories until you can feel their pain, joy, and accomplishments. Scorpio Rising is an excellent story and one that I would recommend to anyone that loves to be drawn in from page one!
Chapter 1
1948
The days were getting
shorter. The boy looked up in surprise at the sky that had suddenly grown dark.
He pulled his worn sweater tight against the October chill, blew warm breath
into his cupped hands and hurried on. The newspaper bag strung across his
shoulders was almost empty. He no longer had to put it down at every street
corner to massage his sore back. He was almost home.
Alexander Ivanov lived at
the end of the world. To the twelve year old, that was exactly what Brooklyn
was; the end of the world. Maybe because the one time he had been to the
city—that was what he called Manhattan—it had taken forever on the subway.
Alex hated living
in Brooklyn, and never more so than when his mother talked about her youth in
Leningrad with tears running down her face. She would revert to Russian, which
he didn’t understand, but the passion in her eyes spoke more volubly of the
beauty of her old country than words could convey.
Every day on his way back
from school, weighed down by the load of newspapers, he passed the same dusty
old stores, their signs barely legible from the peeling paint; the same ratty
tenement buildings in which people suffocated in the summer and shivered in the
winter; the same old women in their ritual wigs and shapeless dresses, vacant
and blank expressions of hopelessness etched on their faces. Hopeless, that was
how he sometimes felt; and then he would remember Manhattan and feel better. If
there was one thing Alex wished for, it was to live in Manhattan. He yearned
for Manhattan the way his mother pined for her old country.
Alex walked along Main
Street, where pickles marinated in barrels, salamis swung from hooks, and
sausages dried in their cotton bags. He was oblivious to the sights and smells
around him. One by one, he took the papers from his bag and with a quick
experienced motion, he threw them. His aim was almost perfect.
Tomorrow was collection
day. He would stop at each house along his route and wait while his clients
went to get their money. After making change, he would thank each one of them
politely even though most never bothered to leave him a tip. His work would
take him more than twice as long as on normal delivery days. Still, he looked forward
to it. Collection day was when he could go home, count out his profits and
decide how much of the money he could save. This week, if all went well, he
might reach the fifty-dollar mark in his bank account. Fifty dollars! It was a fortune.
He reached into his bag,
pulled out the last newspaper and aimed it with unerring precision at the
Kodesky's front porch. At that moment the door swung open and old man Kodesky
stepped out. The paper flew through the air like a projectile and landed with a
thud in the startled man's well-padded stomach.
“Hey, you no good little
piece of shit!” He waved his fist. “What the fuck do you think you’re doing?”
Alex did not hear a word. He was a million miles away, dreaming of the day he
would escape the hell of living at the end of the world.
Even now, two years later,
he could still remember every detail of his trip to Manhattan. After a long
subway ride, he had emerged in the city surrounded by skyscrapers so tall, he
could only see the top by looking up high and leaning back. People on the
street rushed about in the lightly falling snow, pushing and jostling each
other, their arms full of brightly wrapped packages. It was one week before
Christmas and there was a dizzying feeling of joy in the air. Alex was almost
drunk from the excitement. This must be
what Leningrad was like.
Deep in his dreams of
unlimited delights, he walked home. Three blocks later, Alex climbed the stairs
to the dingy one-bedroom apartment where he and his mother lived.
Before he was born, his
mother had tried to make the apartment look warm and inviting. She hung pretty
paper on the walls and crisp curtains over the windows. The furniture was
inexpensive, but attractive and functional. Whatever nesting instinct had once
inspired Marlena Ivanov's efforts had long disappeared. For the last twelve
years she had done nothing more to improve her home. Indeed, she had not done
even the most basic of repairs. Over time, the wallpaper had become worn and
faded. The curtains lost their freshness and the once attractive furniture
became old and shabby. The sour stench of poverty clung to the apartment like
old dirt.
Alex closed the door
behind him and dropped his canvas bag on the floor. He sniffed the air and
wrinkled his nose. From the kitchen came the smell of boiled cabbage.
“Is dat you Alexander? Vere vere
you? Is nearly six o'clock and dinner
is been ready for hour,” his mother's
heavily accented voice called out from the bathroom. “I getting ready to go
out. You vill ave to eat alone.”
Through the thin door came the sound of the toilet
flushing. A moment later Marlena appeared wearing a tight pink sweater set and
a black satin skirt. Her dark hair was freshly coifed, the marks of the bobby
pins still imprinted between each wave. Her mouth was painted crimson in the
shape Joan Crawford had made popular a decade earlier. From ten feet away the
smell of vodka on her breath was overpowering.
“Will you be coming home
by yourself?” asked the boy suspiciously.
“Vat you vant me to do?”
She picked up her purse abruptly and threw in her lipstick. “You vant to eat. I not do dis for me. A boy need food to grow big,
strong. Someday you understand.” A moment later, she was gone.
Marlena Ivanov was a
bitter woman. She made no secret of the fact that raising a boy by herself was
a heavy cross to carry; one she deeply resented. Alex sometimes thought his
mother hated him almost as much as she did his father. He had never seen his
father. He knew, only because his mother repeatedly told him, that Pavel Ivanov
had been a gambler and a womanizer. Whatever wages the man had earned, he just
as quickly spent on those two vices. The day Alex was born was the day Pavel
Ivanov decided that married life was not for him. He disappeared, leaving his
seventeen-year-old wife to deal with the struggles of working and raising a son
by herself.
After a dinner of cabbage
soup, Alex turned off the lights and climbed under his blankets. In the dark,
he could clearly see his mother's empty bed a few feet from his own. He turned
his back to it and curled up.
Hours later, the muffled
sound of laughter woke him up. The bedroom door swung open and the light turned
on.
“Turn dat off. You vake up
boy.” His mother ordered in a shrill whisper. The light flicked off. “Das better. I like dark.” She laughed.
“Now, come to Marlena.” Clothes rustled. From his cot, in the corner of the
room, Alex guessed every gesture, every movement. Old springs creaked. The
sounds were loud, magnified by the stillness of the night.
Alex covered his ears. By
trying hard, maybe he could keep the noises from reaching him. It was too late.
The guilty stirring in his loins had already begun. His mind swirled in a mix
of emotions too strong for him to understand. Maybe if he thought of something
else. Yes, that's it. Think about
something else. Someday, I'll drive in from the city in a brand new Cadillac.
I'll show them all...
The next morning, Marlena
kissed the man goodbyee and turned triumphantly to Alex. “See dis?” She pulled out a ten-dollar bill
from between her breasts. “Dis can
buy food for whole week.”
Alex looked away, embarrassed
and ashamed, and returned to the picture he was drawing on the back of his
spelling book.
* * *
By the time he became a
teenager, Alex Ivanov believed his ambitions were just dreams. He still felt a
raging desire to be rich. Except for the endless stream of buildings he drew,
which everyone agreed were beautiful, he had no special talent. Other than the
goal of saving up a lot of money, he had no real plan.
Alex kept delivering
newspapers and watched his savings grow. At
this rate, I’ll never have enough money to move out of here.
He decided to look for
other opportunities. Soon, he found what he was looking for. He sold his paper
route to a younger boy for two dollars, the amount of a normal month's profit,
dipped into his bank account for another five dollars and invested in a
second-hand bicycle with a large wicker delivery basket. The next day he began
to work for Yonah Schimmel's Knishery.
From then on, every day
after school he raced down to Schimmel's and loaded up his basket with bags of
sweet smelling homemade knishes, jars of savory borscht and fine yogurts with a
crust of cream on top and packaged in drinking glasses. With a speed never
before seen from any of Schimmel's boys he raced through his deliveries until
Yonah came up to him one day. “What are you trying to do, boy? Get yourself
killed? Slow down,” he told Alex. “No sense in going so fast. Slow but safe,
that's the way to go.”
Alex nodded politely, but
just as soon as Yonah turned away, he jumped on his bike and sped off.
Alex was tall and well
built for his age. The years of delivering newspapers had helped develop his
once lanky frame into a strong, muscular body. His shirts, which were often a
size too small, hugged him in a way that exaggerated the ripples on his chest.
His hair was black and his eyes ice blue in a face that could only be described
as sensual. The sight of the young and virile teenager, slightly flushed from
carrying Schimmel's parcels, did strange things to his female clients.
Often, when Alex rang a doorbell,
the woman who answered appeared even more flushed than the delivery boy. Alex
smiled and greeted each client politely by name—“Good afternoon Mrs.
Zawisny”—and he would walk away with a fresh knish, and more often than not,
with a generous tip. Within one month, he had made enough money to cover the
expense of the bicycle, plus what he would have normally saved with his paper
route. Alex was beginning to feel like a rich man.
The way women reacted was
a constant source of amusement for Alex. Since he had started shaving the year
before, he knew the effect he had on the opposite sex. Still, he had no
interest in any of them, except maybe in Miss Mateus, his homeroom teacher.
Rita Mateus was a
big-busted brunette in her mid-thirties, with smoldering brown eyes that made
Alex blush when she looked at him. Sometimes he caught himself dreaming about
what he would like to do to her, given the opportunity. Never in a million
years did he believe the opportunity would come, and that when it did, it would
prove to be his ticket out of Brooklyn.
For months, and to his
great pleasure, every time he asked Miss Mateus a question, she would leave her
desk, come up to him, and as she bent over his books she would rest her ample
breasts on his forearm. One day, as he prepared to leave class after school,
she asked him to stay. For the next hour, Miss Mateus went over his homework
book, studying drawings one after another, while her breasts brushed against
his back, his arms and even his cheek. “You’re a talented boy. I love this
drawing of—what is it?—the Empire State Building? What do you want to be? An
architect?” The fourteen-year-old boy blushed and stammered a response, praying
the whole while that she would not notice the erection in his pants. Miss
Mateus—or Rita as she asked him to call her—noticed. Then she did the most
shocking thing. She put her hand right on top of the swelling in his crotch.
She looked at him with limpid eyes and said in a melting voice, “Why Alexander
Ivanov, you're not a boy any more. You're a grown man.”
The next day after school,
Rita invited him to her apartment. Alex raced through his deliveries faster
than he ever had and arrived at her doorstep in record time. She invited him in
and poured him a glass of Chianti. “What sign are you, Alex?”
He looked at her,
confused. “Sign?”
“What’s your birthday?”
“November fifteenth,” he
replied still perplexed.
“November, hmm? That makes
you a Scorpio.” She leaned forward and traced a lazy finger along his upper
lip. “Scorpio men are intensely passionate and ambitious. But beware a
Scorpio’s sting.” She smiled, and his heart skipped a beat. “But, you won’t
sting me, will you, Alex?” Before he could think of an answer, she rose and
picked up a deck of cards from the table. “Do you play cards Alex?” He shook
his head. “Well, you're going to learn.”
That night, Alex learned
two things: strip poker and the
grown-up game of sex. After that, the routine never varied. Every day after
school, Alex would hurry through his deliveries, spend a few hours with Rita,
and then rush on home.
It was months before his
mother noticed how late he was getting home in the evenings. When she asked him
about it, Alex brushed it off easily. “I go to the library and do my homework.”
Marlena chose to believe
him. “I no cook for you ven you
late.”
She's happy she doesn't have to worry about fixing my supper. Alex
told himself and swallowed the lump in his throat. Then he thought of Rita and
his heart filled with joy. I love Rita
and she loves me. That's all that really matters.
* * *
Every night, as soon as
Alex walked in the door, Rita pulled out the cards. It was her favorite
foreplay. In the beginning Alex invariably found himself losing and naked, but
in time he began to win occasionally. The promised vision of Miss Mateus
pulling off her bra was enough enticement to make him yearn to win. He
remembered the first time it had happened.
“You win, Alex.” Rita
pulled off her bra and stood triumphantly before him—the loser thrilled to be
vanquished. “You like my tits, Alex?”
“Oh! Yes!” he answered,
not daring to move.
“Touch them.”
“W-what?”
She came closer. “You
heard me. Touch them.”
Small beads of moisture
broke out on his upper lip. He hazarded a hand out to the soft mounds of flesh,
and thought he would come right then and there.
“Kiss them.”
He took a nipple in his
mouth and felt it harden. Rita moaned. It was too much. His erection, which had
been dangerously close to bursting, exploded in his shorts.
“Hey, sweets, the idea is
to keep a little for me.” Rita motioned him toward her bed. “Lucky you're
young. Let's see how long it takes to get you going again.” She cupped his
balls into her hands and took him in her mouth.
“Oh God, I love you,” he
cried out. He had never felt anything so delicious in his life. It was so good
it hurt. This time, he didn't come until Rita begged him to.
After sex, Rita liked to
talk. Surprisingly, she seemed to enjoy their conversations.
“I don't know why that
surprises you, Alex, you're a bright boy. With a mind like yours, you can do
anything you choose.”
I can do anything I choose. It was a staggering thought. Maybe he
really could be an architect. It was a dream he’d never dared voice.
The next day, Alex went to
the one place in Brooklyn he loved. At Highland Park, he climbed the hill to
the old reservoir, where he looked straight out to the skyscrapers of
Manhattan. He sat on the cold, damp grass and thought about what Rita had said.
He didn't want a job just for the sake of earning a living. What he wanted was
a position with prestige. He wanted people to look up to him with admiration
and respect. He wanted Rita to be proud of him.
His eyes wandered back to
the skyscrapers across the distance. Skyscrapers like those he dreamed of
building. From his position they looked like monuments. Monuments to the builder. His heart swelled. That was what he had
always wanted to do—build big important buildings like those skyscrapers.
Rita laughed when he told
her. “Be serious Alex. Why don't you want to be a plumber or an electrician? An
architect! That would take years of studying. I know I told you that you're
smart, but not that smart. Besides, sweets, you don't really expect me to wait
for you to grow up, do you?”
The words were like a
knife in Alex's heart, but they only made him more determined. Rita meant
everything to him. He would have to show her.
The relationship endured
until his senior year, when he was ready for college. One day, when he rushed
over after his deliveries, he found Rita in bed with another man. For a few
minutes, he hid behind the door and listened in horror as Rita said to this
stranger all the special secret things she had said to him. “That's it baby,
don't stop. You're the best, baby. The very best.” He heard Rita's familiar
moans rise until she screamed. Tears welled in his eyes. He closed the door
silently behind him and went home. All night he tossed and turned, shocked that
he could feel so much pain. Never again,
he vowed. No other woman is ever going to
hurt me.
The next day after school,
Alex went back to Rita's as usual, and made love to her as though nothing had
happened. Afterward he had a talk with her. “Rita, does anybody know about us?”
“Don't be ridiculous,” she
answered sharply as she straightened the seams of her stockings. She sat on the
edge of the disheveled bed and watched him covertly.
“I guess you'd be in real
trouble if anyone ever found out. Right?”
Rita adjusted the straps
of her brassiere and paused in her dressing, long enough to light a Lucky
Strike.
“You might lose your job,”
he continued.
She took a long drag on
her cigarette and exhaled slowly.
“You might even be
prosecuted for—what is it—something about a minor?”
She exhaled, blowing the
smoke in his direction. “What is it you want Alex?” she asked coldly.
He told her.
At his next report card,
Alex Ivanov was at the top of his class. He was accepted at NYU with a full
scholarship; he had seven hundred of Rita's dollars in his bank account; and
the pain of finding her in bed with another man was just a distant memory.
* *
*