It was cooler out here on the balcony. Myrissa drew in a lungful of fresh night air. Her head felt a little clearer, but she was still angry. Still hurt and confused. She sighed gustily then let out a startled shriek when a voice addressed her from the adjoining balcony.
“Couldn’t you sleep either Donna?”
She whirled around and looked over the railing that separated their room from the one next door. Syr Cabrini lounged in a chair, his bare feet propped up on the balcony wall. As she faced him he rose to his feet, seeming to loom over her. Madre, he is tall, Myrissa thought as she looked up at him. He was also, oh Madre, Myrissa felt her cheeks flood with hot colour, scandalously underdressed. Naked in fact. She drew her eyes up his body, from his bare, muscled chest to his black eyes. It was too dark to truly make out his expression but she could see the flash of his white teeth when he grinned at her. He lifted a bottle of wine and waved it at her.
“Perhaps you’d care to join me for a drink?”
Myrissa was about to offer a curt refusal. Ross Cabrini did not seem the type of man with whom it was safe to drink. In fact, he didn’t strike Myrissa as being safe at all. She suddenly thought of old Sister Galini at the convent and felt an inappropriate urge to giggle.
“A lady never...” Sister Galini preceded every sentence with those words, or so it had seemed to Myrissa and her schoolgirl companions. She could see her now.
“A lady never accepts a drink from a naked stranger.”
Myrissa knew she had been a sore trial to Galini, taking every opportunity to defy the elderly sister. Her acts of defiance had not been great in the scheme of things but they had been the only autonomy she had at her command during the three years she had resided at San Selmo.
Myrissa hesitated. So Ross Cabrini was naked. Gloriously naked, a voice in her head chortled gleefully. There was something coiled and dangerous in the deceptively lazy way he watched her now. However, he had made her laugh and there had been moments tonight when he had appeared almost kind. The thought of returning to her room, the room where she had left Luis sleeping in the darkness he feared so much... More hesitation. It wasn’t like her to dither so. She weighed her options. She really didn’t want to return to her room just yet. Perhaps a drink was exactly what she needed right now? Deciding that she could handle Ross Cabrini if the need arose, Myrissa gave him a speculative look. Perhaps she could get him to talk about Brasada.
“Yes, alright,” she agreed. She hitched up her robe and clambered over the low railing onto the balcony next door. Syr Cabrini watched her without moving as she walked towards him, then he flashed her another smile and pulled out a chair for her. She plopped herself down and took the bottle he offered, raising an eyebrow at him.
“No glasses?” she asked.
“I’m afraid not.”
She wiped the neck of the bottle on her robe, aware of his amused regard, then tilted it to her mouth and took a long swallow. It was a Meicán red; strong and dry it slid down her throat and settled warmly in her stomach. She passed the bottle back to him.
“There’s not much left.”
“Don’t worry,” he said. “There’s more in my room. I’ll fetch another bottle.”
“Perhaps you should fetch yourself some clothes as well,” Myrissa suggested. “You’re improperly dressed for company.”
He raised one dark eyebrow. “I’m devastated. Women usually prefer me naked.”
“Really?” said Myrissa coolly. She ran her eyes down his body, glad that the night hid her flaming cheeks, before shrugging. “I’ll just have to take your word on that.”
Ross’ mouth twitched. “I’ll get the wine,” he said. “And some trousers. But no shirt. It’s too hot. However, if it makes you more comfortable feel free to remove some of your own clothing. That way we’ll both be improperly dressed.” He turned and re-entered his room. Myrissa smiled to herself taking another swallow of wine. Despite her better judgement she found herself liking Rossarian Cabrini.
Almost.
When he came back out onto the balcony he hesitated, but instead of sitting in the chair beside her, he went and leaned against the wall that overlooked the street. He had pulled on a pair of loose cotton pants, holding another bottle in his hands which he raised in a salute to her before he took a drink.
Myrissa tilted her head to one side, watching him. In the moonlight his spiky, fair hair seemed almost silver, the contrast with his dark eyebrows and black eyes more pronounced than it had been in the brightly lit ballroom. His skin was pale, so different to Luis’s golden flesh or her dusky colouring. Beneath the moonlight it gleamed like marble. It seemed as though he was almost shining... Realising she was staring, Myrissa lowered her eyes and cleared her throat.
“Syr Cabrini,” she said.
“Ross.”
She looked up at him again.
He smiled. “Call me Ross,
“Then you must call me Myrissa,” she replied automatically.
“I’m honoured,” he said dryly.
She drank some more wine, finishing what was left in the first bottle and wondering if she could approach him about Brasada. She decided on an indirect attack; some casual conversation, a bit more wine. She’d soften him up, she could sense his interest in her and although she wouldn’t encourage him there was no reason why she couldn’t make use of it and when he was relaxed, slip under his guard. Unfortunately she was finding it difficult to focus. Ruthlessly she forced down the image of all that muscled nakedness. She was a married woman, for the Madre’s sake! And Luis Alvarez was a husband to make other women weep with envy.
Still...a cat could look at a king. There was no harm in looking. Concentrate, she chided herself, gathering her unruly thoughts.
“Did you enjoy the ball?” she asked.
He gave a soft snort of laughter. “Oh, immeasurably,” he said. “Wasn’t it obvious?”
“You seemed to enjoy the dancing,” Myrissa said slyly and he laughed again. “I don’t think
He bowed.” I am famous for my picano.”
“Famous? Or infamous?”
“Oh my infamy lies in an entirely different direction from my dancing,” he murmured softly.
Myrissa swallowed another mouthful of wine. Her mouth felt dry.
He grinned at her, another flash of white teeth, shaking his head. “She’s a cold bitch, that one.” He paused, the expression in his dark eyes turning opaque and distant. A faint smile twitched at one corner of his mouth. “Well, a bitch at least. Poor Nicky.”
Myrissa started. “What did you say?” she asked, her voice sounding high and strained to her ears.
“Are you all right
“Nicky?” she asked.
“Dominic Santorro – Nicky. I was speaking of his wife. Are you sure you’re alright? That wine can be rather strong if you’re not used to it.”
“I’m fine,” she snapped. Reaching out she snatched the bottle of wine from his hands. Their fingers touched and she saw Cabrini’s eyes widen. He released the bottle so suddenly that she almost dropped it. For a moment he stared at her. She could see a pulse beating hard in the hollow of his throat. Then he stepped back.
Myrissa wished she could see his face more clearly. She wanted to see if he was as unsettled as she was. Chiding herself for being so foolish she took another swig of wine. What she really wanted to know was why her husband was laying in the room next door, muttering Dominic Santorro’s name in his sleep.
“You were at Brasada with Luis, weren’t you? You and Nicky.”
She sensed him stiffen and draw away from her, just as Luis always did and it infuriated her.
“Why won’t anyone talk about it?” she demanded.
Ross turned his back to gaze down at the street below.
“Why don’t you ask Luis about Brasada?”
“Because he won’t talk about it,” she ground out.
“Then why the hell should I?” Ross said coldly.
Myrissa could see the tension in his back; that invisible wall that Luis was so good at erecting was evident here as well. She was tired of trying to breach it, Luis and Syr Rossarian Cabrini could stay in their little self imposed hells and rot. She rose from her chair and went to climb back over the railing to her own balcony when Ross’ soft voice stopped her.
“Myrissa. Maybe Luis hasn’t told you anything because he doesn’t think you’ll believe him.”
“What do you mean?”
“What happened at Brasada... It’s not...” His voice dropped to a whisper. “Madre knows, I wish I could just forget it all.” He gave her a twisted smile. “Some things just can’t be explained, not without the one doing the telling looking like the madman from a mummers tale. Think on this...”
Whatever he had been about to say was cut short as Luis screamed from the room next door, a hoarse cry that shattered the night. Myrissa lunged over the railing. Ross followed her. Luis screamed again as she tore the curtains open, letting the moonlight into the darkened room. He lay curled into a ball in the centre of the bed. Myrissa ran to his side and gathered him into her arms.
“Sshh, sweetheart,” she soothed. “Sshh, it’s only a dream.”
Luis was trembling, his skin damp with sweat. Myrissa heard Ross at the table beside the bed, striking a flint. He lit the lantern and the shadows in the room receded. Luis eyes were wide and dazed.
“You left me in the dark. You left me in the dark,” he said over and over but Myrissa could see that he wasn’t speaking to her. She glanced up at Ross, who only looked down at her without expression. She continued to stroke Luis’s hair. After a few minutes she felt him relax, the confusion clearing from his face.
“Myrissa,” he whispered and laid his head in her lap like an exhausted child. In another moment he was asleep.
Myrissa looked up at Ross again. “Tell me about Brasada,” she begged him. “How can I help him if I don’t know what happened?”
He closed his eyes. Myrissa could see a muscle jumping in his jaw. Then he opened his eyes again and spoke in a hoarse voice.
“You talk about Brasada as though it’s in the past, but it’s not, don’t you see? Brasada isn’t the past. It’s now.” His voice dropped so low she could scarcely hear him. “It’s forever.”
He took a step towards her. “You stupid little girl. You’re so far out of your depth here...” He closed his eyes and drew a ragged breath. “I should tell you to pack up and run, as fast and as far as you can. Forget Luis. Forget Brasada. Forget it all before it kills you...like it’s killed all of us. I would if I could but there’d be no point. Hell is about to break loose and there’s no where on this earth that’s far enough away to run to.”
Myrissa sat staring up at him in terrified incomprehension. Drawing a finger down her cheek, he straightened up and this time when he spoke his voice had returned to the dry, mocking tone he had used earlier in the night.
“I’m sorry. I frightened you. Forgive me. Perhaps I’m the one who has found the wine too strong.” He gave a crooked smile and turned away. When he reached the door he stopped and spoke again, softly.
“It’s been ten years. I never really thought Brasada was finished with us, but I hoped. I’ve never thought of myself as a fool either. Guess I was wrong on both counts. Madre help me, I was so wrong.”
He left Myrissa with Luis’s sleeping weight in her lap, trembling in the darkness and understanding even less than she had before.