2P!Fem!Italy Ver.

10 min read

Deviation Actions

Fem-Italy-Mix's avatar
Published:
2.1K Views



    First Name: Lucretia

    Last Name:  Vargas

    Gender: Female

    D.O.B.: March 17th  753 B.C

    Age: 2761 (Appears; 23)

    Sexuality: Bisexual

    Description- Lucretia has a darker shade of hair color than her 1P, along with it being slightly shorter and somewhat more reddish. Her eyes are unmistakably deep brown that have some amber inside of them. Her skin is also considerably darker, suiting her hair that frames her face gracefully with a wild look to it. Still regaining that single, fragile curl this one is more of a weakness than a sexual pleasure. Her attire is somewhat similar to her 1P Counterparts, with the attire, its all either a burgundy or a sharper shade of red. With more black and red mixed in, her skirt is somewhat shorter and her top is more revealing to cleavage, to give a seducing quality to her. This Italian wears different make-up, darker shade of red with more eyeliner, she needs no blush and paints her nails either a bright red or a solid dark oak red, never black feeling that's too depressing in itself. Remaining at a height of five foot five, same as her 1P, she stays at the same weight, her bust the same but shown differently so it could be seen as larger but in actuality it is the same size.

    Personality- Like her new look, her outlook is darker, more twisted. Been more affected by all the bloodshed, losing so many people and having continued into war and seeing the terrible things that followed cracked her sanity. Something that could never be fully repaired, her heart not the main cause of pain but her mentality state, everything seeming more evil in the world, all light of good slowly vanishing, blinded by the darkness that surrounds her. When something doesn't go her way, she screams, she yells, she throws a royal fit. But if that doesn't work, next plan. Fighting, she'll kick, bite, punch, scratch, pull hair- all of that. No hit is too low, no form of injury is too much, once she gets angry her rage consumes her easily. Mind easily swayed, its a bit harder to take her out of this state, but surely not impossible, able to sweet talk her shes a sucker for that sort of thing. Although, you'd best be careful, Lucretia has a more edginess about her. Paranoia always around, shes able to keep light on her toes, suspecting everyone yet not brainless, shes acts coy to lure her victim/suspect in and then begins the interrogation, if it looks in the slightest that they could be trying to hurt her, trying to damage her more than she already is, then she'll attack. The testosterone in her, fuming almost at all times.

    Bio- Italy, officially the Italian Republic (Italian: Repubblica italiana), is a unitary parliamentary republic in Southern Europe. To the north, it borders France, Switzerland, Austria, and Slovenia along the Alps. To the south, it consists of the entirety of the Italian Peninsula, Sicily, Sardinia–the two largest islands in the Mediterranean Sea–and many other smaller islands. The independent states of San Marino and the Vatican City are enclaves within Italy, while Campione d'Italia is an Italian enclave in Switzerland. The territory of Italy covers some 301,338 km2 (116,347 sq mi) and is influenced by a temperate seasonal climate. With 60.8 million inhabitants, it is the fifth most populous country in Europe, and the 23rd most populous in the world.
    Nov. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Twenty-three years after Roberto Calvi's body was found hanging under London's Blackfriars Bridge, five people charged with the murder of the man dubbed ``God's Banker'' are on trial in Rome.

    Prosecutors Luca Tescaroli and Maria Monteleone have charged jailed mobster Giuseppe ``Pippo'' Calo, Ernesto Diotallevi and three others with murder. The trial opened in a courthouse bunker on the outskirts of Rome today. A 1982 inquest in the U.K. ruled Calvi took his own life, while a second inquiry a year later failed to establish whether it was murder or suicide. ``A dark and unsettling chapter of Italian and British history will be revealed during the trial,'' said Tescaroli, the lead prosecutor in the case, in an interview Nov. 4 in his Rome office. ``It was a big mistake to say that he committed suicide. We found evidence that proves that Calvi was murdered.'' Calvi, who earned his nickname working with the Vatican, was the chairman and chief executive officer of Banco Ambrosiano, Italy's largest private bank before its collapse after he died in 1982. He was 62. Prosecutors say they will show that Ambrosiano helped unidentified individuals launder money and was at the center of a web that included the Mafia, the drugs trade, and the Vatican.

    The trial has gripped the country because it may shed light on the role organized crime played in Italian life in the 1970s and 1980s. All the major national newspapers, including La Repubblica and Corriere della Sera, have run front page stories.`Many Interests' ``There were many different kinds of interests represented in Ambrosiano,'' said Tescaroli, whose small office is lined with stacks of court files. ``There was the Vatican, the Mafia, Freemasons and politicians. This trial is going to tell just a part of all of these stories.'' The Vatican, through a spokesman who asked not to be named, declined to comment. Nothing connects Calo to the crime, his lawyer Corrado Oliviero said after an initial hearing on Oct. 6. Calo, a convicted mob boss, is currently in prison. ``There's nothing that links my client to this crime, if it was a crime,'' said Carlo Taormina, Diotallevi's lawyer and a member of parliament for Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's Forza Italia party. ``It's still a hypothesis as to whether it was a murder. I've never been convinced.'' The others charged are businessman Flavio Carboni, his ex- girlfriend Manuela Kleinszig and Silvano Vittor. Vittor and Carboni were present in the courtroom, and Calo was video-linked from prison in Ascoli Piceno, Italy. `Clear Conscience' ``My conscience is clear,'' Carboni said in an interview. He shook hands with Vittor, who prosecutors say Carboni hired to accompany Calvi to London. ``I haven't seen him in 20 years. It would be rude for me not to say hello,'' Carboni said.

    ``The defense denies that there is certain proof that Roberto Calvi was murdered or that there was a crime,'' Carboni's lawyer Renato Borzone said in opening remarks today. Kleinszig today denied any wrongdoing through her lawyer, Ersilia Barracca. Vittor said he had no hand in Cavli's death. Defense lawyers asked that the court rule that the prosecution's investigations haven't formally concluded, a procedural matter opposed by prosecutors that could end the trial and require a new indictment. The court will rule on the matter at the next hearing scheduled for Nov. 30, judge Mario Lucio D'Andria said. `Hidden Powers' It has taken prosecutors more than two decades to pull together enough evidence to bring the case to trial. Impetus came from a 2002 forensic report by German scientist Bernd Brinkmann, who said Calvi couldn't have killed himself and that he was murdered by strangulation. Defense lawyers today contested this report, saying that other scientists had come to different conclusions and that they would be called to testify. Prosecutors say they will try to show that the Istituto per l'Opere di Religione, commonly known as the Vatican bank, was used as an ``offshore'' vehicle by Calvi's Banco Ambrosiano to export money. ``The ties between Calvi and the Vatican were profound,'' said Ferruccio Pinotti, author of ``Hidden Powers,'' a book published in October on Calvi's death. In 1984, the Vatican agreed to pay $241 million to Ambrosiano's creditors, without admitting any guilt in the bank's failure. The Vatican bank faces no charges in the Calvi trial.

    Vatican bank head Archbishop Paul Marcinkus was a partner in the Bahamas-based Cisalpina Overseas Bank, founded in 1971, with Calvi and Michele Sindona, court papers show. Sindona was a banker linked to the Mafia who was killed by a poisoned espresso in 1986. The source of most of the money deposited in Cisalpina is unknown, prosecutors say, citing Bank of Italy inspectors. `Your Holiness' ``What is certain is that the Vatican bank acted as a fiduciary shield and hidden partner in a very complex financial construction,'' said a report prepared by Bank of Italy inspector Francesco Giuffrida dated Sept. 27, 2004. Pinotti in his book disclosed a letter Calvi wrote to Pope John Paul II on June 5, 1982, less than two weeks before his death, in which Calvi pleads for the pontiff's aid in saving Banco Ambrosiano. In the letter, Calvi said he had acted ``in the interest of'' the Vatican to finance and provide weapons for Poland's Solidarnosc labor movement and other anti-communist groups in the Eastern Bloc and in South and Central America. ``Your Holiness, the collapse of Banco Ambrosiano would provoke a catastrophe of unimaginable proportions and the Church would suffer the brunt of the damage,'' Calvi wrote. Pinotti said he obtained the letter from people close to Calvi's family. Calvi `Symbolic'

    The Mafia murdered Calvi because it no longer trusted him to launder their drug money, and because he had threatened to reveal their secrets, prosecutors say. Italian mobsters used extortion, usury, fraud and theft to siphon 28 billion euros ($34 billion) from legal businesses in 2004, an increase of 17 percent, according to estimates by SOS Impresa, an association that fights corruption. ``Since World War II Italy's organized crime groups have played a role that extends beyond the regions of their birth,'' said Paolo Pezzino, a history professor at the University of Pisa and author of ``Mafie,'' a 1999 book on organized crime. ``The Calvi murder is symbolic. He was at the center of a web of interests that tied the financial system to organized crime.'' Prosecutors condensed two-and-a-half decades of investigations and trials that produced 150,000 pages of information into their 316-page report dated Dec. 28, 2004. Tescaroli and Monteleone also built their case on new evidence, including testimony from Mafia turncoat Antonino Giuffre. Giuffre was head of the Caccamo clan of the Sicilian Mafia, known to insiders as ``Cosa Nostra.'' He was captured on April 16, 2002, and turned state's witness on June 19, 2002.``Within Cosa Nostra, we had some big laughs when we read the newspapers that gave the news that Calvi had committed suicide,'' Giuffre said on Dec. 4, 2003. ``Cosa Nostra's problems get resolved in only one way: by elimination.''

    A study of the history of the Italian Social Republic (1943-1945) reveals the importance of the experience of Fascist Syndicalism and above all National Syndicalism. During the preceding 20 years of Fascist rule, Fascist Syndicalism had faced notable difficulties, divided as it was between the need to defend workers and that of obeying the dictatorship; but following the fall of Mussolini and the military defeat of Fascist Italy, new opportunities appeared to present themselves. In 1943 Mussolini had called for 'socialization' as a means of fighting the anti-Fascist democratic forces. In this context, the ideology of National Syndicalism became the key feature of a project for the construction of a totalitarian state. In spite of the inevitability of defeat, the final phase of Fascism thus involved an attempt to win over the working classes in the industrial centres of northern Italy in order to establish them as the basis for a possible revival. In Italy, the evil eye is diagnosed by dripping olive oil into a vessel filled with water. If the oil conglomerates into the shape of an eye than the victim is considered officially cursed. Prayers are recited until the droplets of oil no longer create an eye shape.
© 2013 - 2024 Fem-Italy-Mix
Comments0
Join the community to add your comment. Already a deviant? Log In