She'd never liked January.
It was a long, cold, dark, bleak month. It seemed to stretch for infinity. It didn't hold anything fun. After Christmas and New Year, January turned up like the least favourite stepchild.
It was a bitterly cold day in central Italy. The rolling Tuscan hills, once lusciously green, were now covered with a blanket of thick snow. The clouds ahead were ominously grey and Sofia squinted out of the window and huffed, sending her glossy dark curls bobbing in protest. It was grey. Everything was bloody grey.
Her
heels click-clacked across the marble floors, echoing merrily as she strode through her palace. The staff weren't due to come back for another week or so. Sofia could be a slave-driver but she wasn't
that bad. The towering mansion that spilled out onto the grounds was perfectly quiet and why? Because she was the only one here.
That was just how she liked it. The house was so big, it was rare that she'd come across a colleague anyway but she knew Blake had a bad habit of raiding her wonderful wine cellar. All traces of the festive season had been removed and she'd spent most of the day stuffing tinsel and swags into bin bags. The only inkling that Christmas had even occurred were the boxes of presents in the hall and the faint scent of pine cones. Sofia wasn't really one for any sorts of social gathering. Christmas felt forced. She didn't want to sit around a table, pretending she was having a good time. She didn't want to fend off questions from her nonna as she wanted to know why Sofia hadn't gotten married yet.
It was enough.
With her foot on the first stair of the grand, sweeping staircase, a strange noise pricked her ears. It was almost dark know, dusk hovering just around the curve of the hills. Stepping backwards, she turned, straining her ears to find the source of the sound. Animal, mineral or vegetable? Sofia could have sworn it sounded like sobbing but who would break into her home to cry?
None of the wards had tripped and Collina Verde was positively dripping with them. Visitors very rarely made it to the stronghold. Deals were usually made in Milan, perhaps Rome, anywhere miles from here. Unless her ears were playing tricks on her, the trespasser…wasn't really a trespasser. He or she had been granted access and it sat a little uneasily on her shoulders.
Quietly as she could, slipped off her heel and padded barefoot through the
villa, keeping her back close to wall as she broke into a gentle jog. She was anxious but the pressure was off. Sofia knew it must be someone she or her grandfather was familiar with. There was no danger of any member of the Meer clan getting in without the wards screaming in warning first.
"Mannie?" The surprise was clear in her honeyed voice, her chocolate brown eyes wide as she drew closer to see him loitering in the
courtyard. She shifted. The last time they'd seen one another, she hadn't been at her best. Broken and lying in a hospital bed, her ego had taken a pounding. Swiftly, she drew closer, unusual concern etched on her pretty face as she saw his appearance.
Gone was the tanned and toned swimmer and in his place was someone who looked rather ill. Tired and drawn, he needed a haircut, a shower and a bloody good shave. Sofia wasn't one to entertain beards. Her footfalls were light as she frowned, pulling out a wrought iron chair and sitting down opposite him at the small table without a word of judgement. "Hi," she said softly with a small smile. "Do you want to tell me why you look like a Victorian street urchin?"
@Ermanno Tomassi