It was within the walls of Casino de Monte-Carlo that Lorenzo finally made his appearance, striding confidently through the vast building, not quite focused on anything, and yet seeing it all. Since leaving Italy, he’d done a bit of traveling while maintaining contact with the other Masterminds and keeping up with the inner workings of the Capecchi mafia. Herrero had had a fit when he’d heard the news of losing two mafia men, and so Lorenzo had sent Carmela to cool her father off. It had done the trick, for now, at least.
But the old man was the least of Lorenzo’s concerns, and he intended to enjoy himself over the next few days before the heist began. Sauntering up to the nearest barstool, the Italian took a seat and grinned broadly at the female bartender. Tall and well muscled, she was quite the sight in her snug uniform, blonde hair pulled back into a high ponytail atop her head, showing off her sharp features and dark chestnut gaze. She didn’t shy under his look but smiled in returned and asked for his order. Giving it to her, he spoke with her for a while, eventually learning when she’d be off work and setting up a time for them to meet later. With his evening plans settled, he allowed her to get back to work and turned back to the casino’s floor and surveyed the crowds.
A few faces that passed were familiar, but his expression didn’t so much as flicker at the sight of them. They all seemed to be going about their own schedules, and Lorenzo wasn’t the type to interfere when it wasn’t needed. The sound of his drink being set down behind him had him turning and he slid a generous tip towards the woman behind the counter before standing and sending her a wink as he left, drink in hand.
They were under strict instructions to focus on business and business alone. Charles had no trouble focusing on the job at hand, because everything in Monaco that would distract conventional men, did not cause Charles to even blink. He hadn’t the time for frivolities, not when there was an act to uphold, one that took quite a lot of concentration given his naturally short temper and the very slight risk that a slip of the tongue could provide insight into the finely constructed mask of ambiguity that he had created.
He presented himself as a gambler, an investor -- it wasn’t a complete lie. He made an effort not to communicate with any one person twice. If you only encounter a fellow once, you’ve no reason or room to make any further investigation. This gave Charles a wide social scope of the event as he gambled and had fleeting conversations with as many different people as possible. This version of himself, the role he was playing, lent itself to more charm than he would normally exhibit -- he found himself biting back harsh criticisms that would usually be vocalised, physically forcing himself to be pleasant whilst maintaining distance. It was fucking painful.
Charles was rounding up his fourth deck of poker for the evening when he saw Lorenzo across the room flirting with the barmaid. Lorenzo put on this air that he was above his family, better than the cretins he’d brought into the world, but they’d all got it from someone - it was bloody clear who. Charles pocketed his handful of casino chips, pacing over to the Italian. “Well that’s definitely not what we’re here for.” Charles commented cooly, glancing briefly over at the toned blonde that was serving another customer who no doubt had the same intentions as Lorenzo.
















