CASSIAN
We crossed the city line just as the sky turned the color of a bruise.
The apartnt door was locked behind us, and neither of us looked at the rearview mirror.
Looking back just made you want to slow down, and we couldn’t afford that.
I drove, and Julian took his spot in the passenger seat. It was the sa setup we’d had a hundred tis before, but I could see his shoulders dropping.
The tight, defensive look he’d carried for weeks was gone. He looked lighter than he had since the night of the truce eting.
I had the fake papers ready in the glove box.
I’d been hiding them for months, long before I even knew exactly when we’d need to run.
A man in my position didn’t survive without an escape hatch.
We drove through the night, moving from one small town to the next. We stopped at a miserable little roadside motel with peeling wallpaper and two narrow twin beds.
The mont the door clicked shut, Julian didn’t say a word, he just grabbed the fra of the second bed and shoved it across the carpet until it banged against mine.
He lay down on his back, staring up at the water stains on the ceiling. "Rember that diner?" he asked into the dark. "The first ti we ran. When we left your father’s place."
"You ordered everything on the nu," I said.
"I was starving."
"You ordered things you didn’t even like," I told him. "You didn’t touch half of it."
"I just wanted to see what it felt like," he said, and I could hear the grin in his voice. "To look at a page and say ’give all of it.’ It felt incredible."
I let out a low sound, almost a laugh. "You haven’t changed at all."
"I’ve changed completely," he said, his voice dropping into sothing quieter, more serious. "But not about that."
The next day was more of the sa.
We kept moving, Julian watching the signs and guiding us with that old instinct he’d picked up as a kid.
He knew how to drift through a town without leaving a footprint or making anyone rember his face.
At a greasy petrol station near the border, he walked back to the car with a folded paper map shoved under his arm. He didn’t need it; our burner phones were working perfectly.
"Force of habit," he said, completely unbothered when I stared at him.
I reached over, took it from his lap, and dropped it into the back seat. Five minutes later, while I was looking at the traffic, he reached back and stole it right back.
We hit the border checkpoint three hours later. The guard looked at our fake IDs, looked at my face, and waved us through without a second thought.
As the car rolled onto the new asphalt, a strange weight lifted off the dashboard. We managed to get a plane ticket with our fake IDs and finally left the country.
We had crossed a line, and the people on the other side had no idea who we were or what we’d left behind.
Julian leaned his head against the glass, watching the fields change. The light over the hills looked softer here, older.
"Italy," he whispered. He said it like he couldn’t quite believe the word was real.
He looked like a kid who had spent his whole life inside a small room and had just found out the front door was unlocked.
I took my eyes off the road for a second, just to watch him look at it.
The town was tucked between two great cliffs of grey stone, its houses stacked like crooked teeth rising away from the water.
We found a small place to rent on the high side of the main road, with thick white walls that felt cool to the touch and old wooden shutters that had been bleached by years of sun and wind.
You could sll the salt in the air before you even saw the beach. It ca through the vents of the car, sharp and clean, wiping away the stale sll of the highway and the old tobacco from Marceli’s office.
When I pulled the car into the gravel turnout beside the house and cut the engine, the sudden quiet was heavy.
For a long mont, neither of us moved. The only sound was the tick of the tal cooling under the bonnet.
Julian unbuckled his seatbelt and pushed his door open. He stepped out onto the crushed stone, his boots crunching loud in the stillness, and he just stood there.
He didn’t look at the house, or the luggage in the back, or the keys in my hand. He looked past the white roofs, straight out to where the blue of the sea t the lighter blue of the sky at the edge of the world.
It was a look I hadn’t seen on him since we were kids. It was the expression of a person who had spent his whole life looking at stone walls and iron bars, suddenly realizing soone had left the gate wide open. His shoulders, usually pulled tight and ready for a blow, dropped an inch.
"This is real," he said. He didn’t say it to , and he didn’t say it to the empty air. It was just a statent, a thought he had to put outside his own body to see if it would hold its shape.
I got out of my side and walked up until my shoulder was brushing his. The breeze was stronger up here, lifting the loose strands of his hair away from his forehead. "Yeah It’s real," I told him.
Julian turned his head to look at and smiled.
The bright coastal sun hit him square in the face, making his eyes look lighter, almost clear, and the green jade stone around his neck caught a spark of gold from the light.
There was no mask on him. The tight, careful lines around his mouth, the ones he used when he was trying to figure out what a Don wanted to hear, were completely gone.
He looked young. He looked bare.
"We actually got out," he whispered.
"We actually got out," I repeated.
Then he laughed. It wasn’t that small, careful chuckle he used to give the lower-ranking guys at the Lorenzo house to keep them happy, and it wasn’t the sharp, biting sound he used when he was mocking soone who deserved it.
It was a full, deep laugh that ca right from his chest, taking up all the space in the air between us without asking for permission from anyone.
He threw his head back a little, his throat long and smooth under the sun, and the sound of it seed to bounce off the white stone of the house and carry down toward the water.
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