Paola is a woman full of want — deceitfully deep, the yawning crevice within her demanding its fill. As if by design so, too, is she a woman who knows just how to get what she wants…and a deft hand knew better than to speak aloud the object of its yearning. If it is their happiness she covets in earnest oath, then, it is in its opposite, Marcelo is certain, they will find lithe fingers picking like serrated pin against brass lock.
Their mouth searches for the shape of I am, but resists the curl of lip, the show of teeth; it’s a trap, ankle hovering inches from rusted metal ribcage…whetted sharp, broken clean by Paola’s silvered tongue. She knew their grief — she knew only their grief, and the strenuous lengths they crawled to sheen it anew, nurture it ample and demanding. It is an empty thing, this wish for happiness, from a girl who had taken saw to sternum…cleaved their heart from marrow dust and gazed upon its wreckage.
It was in no state to house such a tender things as happiness; had barred such scraps from sorrowful junkyard long ago. It would sooner die than bloom from Marcelo’s persistent ash.
To pretend at its existence is to play into her stony grip at their calf…so they endure the silence, stave the jaws of snare snapping bone.
“It’s Roman you answer to,” they refute into the slope of her back, bare where it flexes beneath movement, further, further, painfully far….
A dot on impossible horizon as she slinks into the backseat of shadowed beast, torn from reach as the engine purrs beneath their own loaned hood. They follow at a safe distance, parking away from the echo of orchestral swell inside, the staff busy stowing away jackets and lifting trains as Verona’s elite preen for the gaze of wealthy proprietor.
Marcelo’s jaw tics at the waver in her voice, an uncharacteristic panic whispered into ear…the sort they’d have wrapped beneath the bend of arm, pulling her nearer in the night, scraping teeth against neck to remind Paola what monster she laid with…what bite any fool who dared near enough to harm would surely suffer.
Instead, they scrub a palm over their chin, nod once…twice…to themselves.
“Affirmative, that’s my job.” And I’m the best at it, they don’t say, I would be nothing if I wasn’t. Because of Damiano’s rage, or Paola’s loss…Marcelo refuses to seek clarity, nor to offer any.
Though when her leg stretches from behind the black sheen of door, her hem falling loose down the slope of exposed thigh…they know. Fuck. They know.
It’s impossible to look anywhere but the sway of hips taking one step, then two — a groomed and polished lamb stepping into lions den. The animals lick their chops at her entrance; circle the stray who walks without suitor…ebon clad prey delivered on silver platter. So they think…
“Sufficient,” Marcelo answers briskly, teeth digging into the soft flesh of cheek. They wait until she’s passed through the threshold to step out of their own vehicle, bullet proof and detailed to Montague specifications. The door rattles on its hinges behind them, unconscious slam of force roiling forward. They don’t know what to do with their hands, suddenly; the memory of them wresting apart knees, guiding hips in their purposeful grip shutters punishingly.
They tug at their tie, pull its fit from where Paola had expertly tightened the knot, and barrel forward. They’ll be taking the staff entrance; the only time they shouldn’t be within direct view of Perdita and her languid dance across enemy line. They quicken their pace, roll their shoulders.
“Settle in,” they murmur into mic, waved forward by the soldato manning back door, “order a drink. Act like you belong with them.”
The ballroom engorges her. It is the kind of ornate extravagance that Rome loves, all gilded-glitter opulence and chandeliers as large as a king’s ego. Paola can almost make out the paintwork on the ceiling, swallowed as it is by arched windows along the upper floor where couples go to share a glass and trade secrets through touch of lips. Ivory columns line the sides, opening to side rooms for conversation, for a drink, for a deal.
The orchestra transitions to a song that excites the people around her, but she’s never heard it before. Should she know it? Should she dance? Paola swallows her nerves and steadies herself by Marcelo’s voice in her ear. Without the sharp edge of their gaze or the harsh set of their brow, she can almost imagine a warmth there. A tenderness she once knew, cherished.
Trusting the mic will pick it up, she mumbles into the mic: “Easier said than done.” But Paola obeys all the same.
Like a swan through water, she glides through the crowd and approaches the bar. The waiter is handsome, even beautiful. He pours a drink like creating art, fingers lithe and loved by his patrons. When he looks to Paola, she is relieved by the smile there. In a sea of haughty faces, his is the only one that puts her at ease.
Her smile back is genuine. “I’ll have a glass of champagne, please.”
She scans the room as she waits. Searches for a familiarly rough gait and immovably set shoulders. Marcelo should be here now. She wants, she realizes, to be found by them. She wants them to look for her, too.
The waiter returns with her drink, places it in front of her with that same smile. He’s flirting now; the recognition is dim, buried in the back of her thoughts when there are more pressing matters to consider, but she may be able to use it to her advantage yet. The staff have eyes everywhere, she knows. She was one of them not too long ago.
“I’m new in town,” Paola starts. “A friend of a friend brought me here and was supposed to meet me, but I can’t seem to find them. Maybe you can point me in the right direction of some excitement?”
She raises the champagne flute to her lips. Presses her mouth the glass and subtly — ever so lightly — presses her finger against nose.











