
- Lolade Alaka

- Mar 21
- 27 min read
Clair’s message did not disturb Saoirse’s certainty, and that was because she had no certainty left to disturb.
No, it troubled something far older and smaller than certainty. Something she did not have language for, lying there in the dim blue hour beside a sleeping husband whose hand had fallen heavy across her thigh as though even unconsciousness could not forget possession. The phone’s silence after the buzz had become charged in her hand on her chest, like an object in a room after a glass has shattered and been swept away.
She lay still a moment longer, listening to Roman breathe. The sea beyond the shutters was not yet visible, only audible in its slow black movement against the rock below. Her body ached with that deep, private soreness that came after nights with him when she could not tell whether she had been loved or overrun. The two sensations lived too close together now. She had stopped trying to separate them.
Her eyes remained open.
And because she did not want to look too directly at the new message, not yet, not while he was there beside her and the room still smelled faintly of sex and salt and his skin, her mind moved elsewhere in the way frightened minds sometimes step sideways into old corridors just to avoid the one immediately before them.
Before Roman, there had been years in which no one expected anything graceful from her. That was the first fact.
No one called her quiet like it was a virtue, or mistook her stillness for depth. It was simply the way she had learned to move through rooms that were not built for her. She had been shy in the practical sense, not the decorative one. She was the sort of girl who folded herself small at the edges of gatherings and left early enough that no one had to watch her say goodbye.
Even at university, where people liked to pretend youth made everyone equal, she carried a private caution in her body, as if the world might turn without warning and leave her standing in the wrong doorway with no explanation.
She had not thought of herself then as damaged, only easier when quiet.
London had suited that version of her in some ways because it was indifferent. Indifference was easier than scrutiny. In the flat she shared during her last year of university, the windows sweated in winter and the kitchen always smelled faintly of wet dishcloth and over-boiled pasta, but no one watched her too closely. Her flatmates rotated in and out of romances and deadlines and political awakenings, mugs multiplied mysteriously, milk vanished, the boiler clicked like an irritated throat. She had liked the anonymity of that. She liked being one pale girl among many lives, carrying library books to her room and making tea badly and pretending not to hear when couples fought through the wall.
Nina, of course, heard everything.
Nina heard tone shifts over the phone. She heard swallowed words. She heard what Saoirse was trying to brighten over with a laugh, and would say, with almost infuriating gentleness, You don’t have to sound fine for me, you know. But Nina lived between cities. She had family everywhere and was often two hours by train and several emotional climates away, in a life that always felt slightly fuller, warmer, and more peopled than Saoirse’s own. Nina had cousins and school friends, exes she still loved a little, and women who borrowed her earrings and called her at midnight and expected to be answered.
Nina loved Saoirse sincerely, but from the middle of abundance. Saoirse loved Nina from the edge of things.
As for Sinead, that was something else entirely.
England had taught Saoirse the geography of estrangement almost better than it had taught her literature. London for school, Newcastle in memory, and Belfast before that, though Belfast belonged less to memory than to atmosphere like rain on old wood, her parents’ nonexistence so absolute it had become mythical, her grandmother’s hands red from washing up, the particular Sunday silence of small houses.
Sinead remained in that other northern life she had never quite shared with her except by accident of blood and legal obligation. They spoke rarely and badly. Sinead had a way of making even ordinary concern sound like accusation. You eating? You sleeping? You still writing all that stuff? Beneath every question, there was always another one, unasked but audible enough: And what good has any of it done?
So Saoirse learned to edit herself depending on the audience.
With Nina, she was brighter than she felt. With Sinead, flatter. With university friends, quieter than bright girls were supposed to be. With men, if she could manage it, agreeable just long enough to be left in peace.
It was old weather in her nervous system. The kind of thing you stop naming because it has always been there.
At the residency in Madrid, before Roman, she had begun to imagine a different sort of life, one in which no one was looming. It had been enough to feel almost radical. The city was clean in a way London rarely was. Even the winter light there looked curated.
She lived in a narrow apartment with two other writers, one Catalan novelist with dramatic hands and a weakness for borrowed scarves, the other a Chilean essayist who smoked on the tiny balcony and said very beautiful, very useless things about loneliness while asking no questions at all. Saoirse liked both of them in the shallow, merciful way residency people like each other, intensely for six weeks, perhaps, and then never fully again.
They all performed seriousness differently.
One man wore black turtlenecks and spoke of exile as though it had happened personally to him in four separate countries. A woman from Dublin weaponized brightness and asked aggressive questions at every seminar to prove she had one. Another poet who was soft-faced, sweet, mostly harmless, once told Saoirse at breakfast that her work made him feel as if someone were trying not to scream in another room. She thanked him because she did not know what else to do.
She spent much of that winter in small galleries and public readings where people clapped politely and then drank warm wine while pretending the evening had mattered more than it had. Her poems landed strangely in those rooms, too careful in some places, too exposed in others. She was not one of those young women who arrived already aflame. Her talent was quieter. She wrote as if standing just outside the thing itself, watching it happen and trying not to be noticed by it. Her tutors at university had called the work controlled, precise, disturbingly mature for your age, which made her feel both proud and vaguely accused.
She had not expected the residency, which may have been why it felt less like triumph and more like a reprieve.
The email arrived on a dull March afternoon while she and Nina were sitting cross-legged on the carpet of Nina’s first “big girl” South London flat, eating toast directly from the pan because neither of them owned a toaster that worked. Saoirse read the message twice before saying anything, the words “merit-based placement” and “winter term in Madrid” blinking quietly on her screen as though they had mistaken her for someone more serious.
Nina snatched the phone from her hand, shrieked, and began making extravagant plans about cheap flights and scandalous Spanish poets while Saoirse sat very still beside her, trying to calculate what it meant in the quieter language of survival.
What was left of the inheritance her grandmother had left her, the last careful act of a woman who had worried about her long after death, would stretch a little farther in Spain than it would in London. Long enough, perhaps, for a year of writing without panic. After that, she imagined she would return, find some polite job involving books or students or translation, something that allowed evenings for poems no one paid for. It did not feel like a grand future, only a narrow bridge across the next few years of her life.
But when Nina pulled her into a fierce hug and shouted, “Madrid, Saoirse, can you believe it?” She laughed too, because sometimes a narrow bridge was enough reason to cross an ocean.
When had she stopped thinking about money so completely?
The last time she could remember trying to pay for anything was years ago, not more than three months after meeting Roman. They were together as she stood at the counter of a small shop near his Madrid apartment building, her card already in her hand. It was just a notebook and a pen, the sort of purchase she had made a hundred times without thinking.
The shop assistant had begun wrapping everything she’d touched in soft paper and into a shopping bag, when Roman gently patted Saoirse’s hand away.
“I’ve got it,” he said, as if clarifying something administrative. “They’ll sort it out.”
“It’s fine, I can—”
“I know,” he said gently before a small pause. “It’s easier.” He glanced at her briefly, and that was all.
She hesitated for half a second. Then she slipped her card back into her bag and went with him. He nudged her out of the shop with no explanation or visible transaction beyond the quiet understanding that the exchange had already been absorbed somewhere beyond her.
Now, she couldn’t remember the last time she checked the balance of her own account, or if she still had one.
In those days before Roman, she’d believed writing might save her from becoming too legible. Not save her financially, of course. She knew enough about the world to understand that poems did not rescue anyone from rent. But writing gave shape to the parts of her that otherwise remained fog. It let her decide where to stop a sentence, move pain into lines and line breaks and little white silences she controlled absolutely.
On good mornings, she wrote at the residency desk in a pair of socks with holes in the heel and felt lucky. On worse mornings, she carried her favorite notebook to bars or museums or churches and sat where no one knew her enough to interrupt the rhythm of her thoughts.
That had been the life Roman interrupted. A life with no witness, but also, no curator.
She had not been happy all the time. She had been lonely in ways she did not discuss, and hungry often enough to make coffee feel medicinal, and frightened occasionally by how easy it was for days to pass without anyone touching her shoulder or saying her name. But she had still belonged to herself in those small, unimpressive ways that only become visible later, after they have been traded in.
She used to choose things without noticing she had chosen them. Which café, which poem to read aloud, whether to answer Nina now or later, whether to go home to the residency kitchen and endure the performative talk of other young writers, or keep walking until the city dimmed enough to feel like hers. She used to disappear by intention.
She remembered one particular evening from that winter with absurd clarity. The memory rose whole, complete with the smell of wet pavement and wine and old wool. She had left a reading early because one of the men there had insisted on explaining her own poem back to her, and she could feel herself becoming impolite.
Outside, Madrid was cold in a dry, elegant way that made London’s damp seem vulgar. She crossed the street to a small bar where the lights were low and kind, and no one needed anything from her immediately. She had ordered one glass of red, opened her notebook, and written down, without much thought, a sentence about snow as a form of mercy.
No one had yet come over or decided that her stillness meant something rare. She had simply been there. Twenty-one, tired, underdressed, a little guarded, trying to make a life from paper and rented time, carrying inside her the old education of girlhood: be quiet, be small, be useful, be grateful, do not ask for too much, leave before anyone can leave you first.
And then, someone had begun to watch her as though she had already entered an important story.
She had been sitting there perhaps twenty minutes before she noticed the man across the room watching her in the patient way of someone studying a painting whose technique he had not quite deciphered.
Later, she would understand that it was the way she listened when people spoke nearby, from a quiet habit of mapping the air around her before moving through it, that had caught his attention first. Most people mistook that kind of stillness for shyness. Roman did not. He recognized it immediately for what it was.
+
He had knocked twice already.
The water kept running, and she still hadn’t answered. Roman swore under his breath before kicking the bathroom door open with that terrifying quiet that always hollowed her bones.
She was crouched on the floor against the far wall, her arms wrapped around her knees. He let himself exhale because, for a split second, he thought she might’ve fainted and hurt herself. His eyes moved quickly, following the direction her eyes were pointing toward, across the room to the vanity, the porcelain basin as pale as her skin, the phone resting face-down on the brown marble counter.
He stepped inside, crouched beside her, and took her chin in his hand.
“Saoirse.” His voice was controlled, but something beneath it simmered. He inhaled slowly through his nose. “Come with me.” She did not move. “Saoirse, come.” The command came softer this time, too soft.
He helped her to her feet, wrapping a pristine white towel around her shoulders. His hand lingered briefly, as if confirming she was steady again. Then he brushed the nightstand as he pulled her toward him, sliding the phone safely away from the edge of the counter before guiding her back into the bedroom.
He made her sit on the edge of the bed and studied her for a moment longer, as if deciding whether the disturbance required intervention or simply time. He didn’t want chaos.
“I’m not chasing this,” he murmured, making her skin flush with shame. “If something is wrong, you’ll bring it to me once you’re calm.” He didn’t wait for her response. Whatever had shaken her would surface eventually. It always did.
He left the room, left her to self-regulate.
When the door clicked shut behind him, the bedroom seemed capable of swallowing a person without him in it. It was quieter, yes, but not calmer. The air still felt wrung out, heavy with everything that had not been said. Her hands rested in her lap, clenched tightly together as the towel slipped from her shoulders.
She stared down at the floor, at the edge of the rug where it met the cold stone tiles, at the fine threads along the border, at one corner beginning to fray. It seemed absurd how quiet the room was, considering the chaos in her head.
Her skin still ached where he had touched her last night. Her throat ached from the words she had not spoken. Eventually, she rose and crossed the room slowly, as though made of glass and ghosts.
Her phone was still on the bathroom vanity. She went and picked it up, unlocked it, and opened her notes. There, half-written, sat the message she had begun drafting for Clair. A response she had started that year but never finished, never sent. She saw the red dress at the dinner party. It all felt like something from another lifetime.
She hesitated for a second before pressing delete on the old draft, then she went to the wardrobe and took the light silk robe from its hanger. Her hands had learned the habit of it. She slipped it on and tied the sash. The silk settled over her shoulders like a small correction that made her feel marginally more composed. Like someone who still possessed the ability to make choices, however small, however similar it was to what Roman would choose.
Saoirse had not truly slept, but morning crept slowly into the room, the light cautious of disturbing her. She curled into the chaise by the window, still wearing the robe. Her body ached. Her eyes were swollen from tears she had not bothered to wipe away. Outside, a small bird landed briefly on the stone balcony railing before lifting away again.
From downstairs came the quiet movement of boxes. The staff was already packing.
She stood again, restless, joints stiff, legs unsteady beneath her. Passing the gilded mirror, she caught sight of herself. Her soft hair was tangled, eyes rimmed red, a faint bruise darkening along her thigh where Roman’s fingers had pressed too hard in the night.
She looked like someone who had survived a war she had never agreed to fight. She touched the bruise, the fading red splotch, once, lightly, as if confirming it belonged to her.
She bathed and changed into something soft and simple again, a grey linen dress with long sleeves and a high neck. She did not bother with makeup or brushing her hair. She did not want to perform today.
Because earlier, in the bathroom, with the door quietly locked and the water running in the sink, she had done something she knew Roman would not like. She had called Clair Neumann.
The call had been brief. Clair answered on the second ring.
“Saoirse?” Her voice held a mild surprise. “Well. That’s unexpected.”
Saoirse had leaned against the marble counter, gripping the edge of it with one hand. “I’m sorry,” she said quietly. “I hope I didn’t wake you.”
“You didn’t,” Clair replied. “And even if you had, I’d have survived.”
There was a pause, during which time Saoirse almost hung up. “I read your… messages,” she said finally.
Another pause, this one more attentive. “Ah,” Clair murmured.
“I didn’t mean to disappear,” Saoirse continued softly. “Life just… became very full.”
Clair’s voice warmed with something dry and gentle. “That tends to happen when one marries a Suarez.”
Saoirse tried to smile but could not quite manage it. “I’m happy,” she said quickly.
Clair did not contradict her. “Good,” she said instead. A beat passed. Then Clair added, lightly, “I remember thinking you listened to him even when he wasn’t speaking. Has anyone ever told you how closely you watch him?”
Saoirse felt her throat tighten. She had forgotten how clearly Clair had seen her. “I should go,” she whispered.
“Of course,” Clair replied. “Saoirse?”
“Yes?”
“I only wanted to check if you were still there.” The words lingered for a moment between them until Saoirse ended the call.
She stood there, the phone still in her hand, with the faint, irrational sense that she had done something that would push Roman away. She quickly slipped the phone onto the counter to distance herself from it with a small, instinctive caution she couldn’t quite explain.
She stood very still, as though waiting for the room itself to react, the rush of the running tap numbing her.
Standing in the bedroom now, the memory of that sentence still hovered faintly in her mind. I only wanted to check if you were still there, clashing with her current need to calm herself so she could return to Roman calm.
Her time was up before she could manage it. Portia came into the room.
“Signora,” she said gently in accented English that still sounded Italian if you didn’t listen well enough. “Signor says you should meet him in the conservatory.”
Saoirse nodded once. She walked slowly, deliberately, like a ghost dragging the weight of memory and dread down the polished floor. Each footstep echoed more loudly than it should have barefoot.
She reached the conservatory doors when the sunlight had fully spilled in, illuminating the marble floors and manicured greenery.
Roman sat at the long glass table, a small espresso steaming in front of him. He didn’t look up right away, but when he did, he smiled. She stepped in like a woman walking into a performance she hadn’t rehearsed for. The door clicked shut behind her, and Roman gestured to the seat opposite him with a flick of his fingers.
“Sit. You haven’t eaten.”
Saoirse walked over and lowered herself into the soft, cushioned dining chair. A maid appeared like clockwork with a delicate breakfast tray of croissants, soft-boiled eggs, and some fruit. Her stomach recoiled at the sight of it all.
Roman watched her. He picked up his demitasse and took a long, slow sip of espresso. He reached into his pocket and pulled out a small, dark velvet box, placing it before her on the table.
“Open it.” She did, with fingers that felt too light. Inside lay a brilliant, pale pink diamond ring, princess cut. “It’s new. I had it made for you,” he said.
For a second, something unguarded moved through her. At first, it was careful gratitude, but she had learned to offer that for the things that passed through generations before her, those pieces, like the diamond and sapphire bracelet, that came with history and expectation already set into them.
So she shifted into something smaller and more immediate. This ring had not belonged to anyone else. It had not been chosen by a woman she would never meet, or worn before she was even born, in rooms she had never seen. It had been imagined for her, measured to her hand, brought into existence because he had thought of her and decided it should be.
“Thank you,” she whispered, and meant it.
Roman’s gaze flicked briefly to her hand, as if already seeing it on her finger, already placing it into the rooms where it would be read. What he saw was a day in their Barcelona family villa months ago, when he opened their bedroom door quietly on his return from a fortnight-long trip.
Lisa and the other nanny were there, standing just by the doors. But over the years, he had learned to open doors without the little domestic clatter that announced a man’s presence before he had chosen to be seen.
The bedroom was warm with late morning light. The coastal sunlight came differently from anywhere else. It carried a dry, pale brightness that made fabrics glow and softened the edges of everything it touched.
He stopped just inside the threshold, and for a moment, he did not move.
Saoirse was sitting against the headboard, one knee drawn loosely beneath the thin white linen that had slipped down her shoulder. Her light, copper hair, still slightly tangled from sleep, fell over one side of her chest in a heavy wave. She looked exactly as she often did in the first hour of the morning. She looked soft, pale, almost translucent in the light.
But there were two small bodies with her.
One of the twins was tucked against her chest, his round cheek pressed into the hollow of her collarbone as she held him securely with one arm. The other sat in the bassinet beside the bed, kicking softly at the embroidered blanket with the slow, uncoordinated determination of a child still discovering her limbs.
The room was quiet except for the soft, breathy sounds babies made when they were content.
Roman felt something inside his chest shift in a way that was both familiar and still faintly unbelievable. For a second, just a second, he allowed himself the indulgence of standing there without composure.
The sight was… absurdly perfect.
Saoirse’s skin was the cool porcelain tone he loved so much. Now, he couldn’t wait for the Capri sun to fade from it. Pregnancy’s brief softness was passing, leaving her close to lean again, delicate, almost glasslike in the morning light. Her freckles were faint across the bridge of her nose, her lips still full from sleep.
She looked like a painting someone had left unfinished in a quiet museum.
And those children, his children… Roman had built companies that moved sovereign capital across continents, negotiated with men who controlled global utilities, and dismantled competitors who believed themselves untouchable. He had spent most of his adult life inside rooms where nothing mattered except leverage and patience.
Yet none of it produced the strange, private satisfaction that lived in moments like this. He had chosen her, and she had given him this.
Back in that room, when Saoirse looked up, sensing him, her eyes were clear, pale grey, open in the way that had first disarmed him years ago as they lifted immediately to his face. The expression that appeared there was so simple it almost made him smile. It was relief and warmth, the quiet certainty that the person she most wanted to see had entered the room.
“Roman,” she said softly, careful not to disturb the baby in her arms. That small shift in her voice when she said his name.
He stepped forward slowly. Outwardly, he remained exactly what he always was. His expression did not betray the flood of satisfaction he felt looking at the three of them. But internally, the thought returned, the same one that had been repeating itself with increasing frequency since the twins were born. Extraordinary luck that he had managed to secure something far more fragile than power ever was.
Saoirse adjusted David slightly in her arms and smiled up at him. “Look at them,” she whispered, as if she had just discovered them herself.
Roman came to the side of the bed. He looked first at the children. David blinked slowly at him with heavy-lidded seriousness, while Mariana, in the bassinet, watched everything with bright, curious eyes. They were both healthy, strong, and perfectly formed, perfectly resembling them both.
Then he looked back at Saoirse. His hand reached out and brushed lightly through her hair, smoothing the loose ginger strands back from her temple. The gesture was gentle, the same slow, rhythmic motion he used whenever he wanted to steady her attention.
Her eyes followed his hand instantly, exactly as he expected. His mouth curved slightly.
“You’ve been busy,” he said quietly.
She laughed softly, the sound warm and unguarded. “I woke up, and they were already awake,” she said.
He studied her for another moment. He was immensely proud of the children she’d given him, but what pleased him most was the way she looked at him. Even in that peaceful domestic moment, surrounded by the small chaos of infants and blankets and morning light, her gaze still carried the same uncomplicated admiration that had first captivated him.
Roman had never pretended to himself that admiration did not matter. It mattered a great deal. He leaned down slightly and touched the top of David’s head, then glanced toward Mariana’s bassinet.
“They seem satisfied,” he said.
Saoirse’s smile deepened. “They are.”
Roman straightened again, his expression settling back into its usual calm. But inside, beneath that calm, the feeling remained. He had expanded an empire in the external world. But this quiet room, this woman looking up at him with complete trust, these children who would one day carry on the legacy, this was the part of his life that made the empire worth continuing.
He left for Geneva two days after that, but when he returned again, she was waiting for him. She was always waiting for him.
“You’ve done exactly what was needed,” he said now in Capri, almost absently, continuing a thought he had not voiced. “Everything is… in place. Two healthy children and no complications that matter.” His tone remained even, but something in it softened just slightly, acknowledging a result he considered rare enough to note.
“I don’t overlook that,” he added, quieter now. “You’ve given me something special.”
She stilled. There was something in the way he said it, a kind of acknowledgment that felt… close enough to praise. For a moment, she didn’t breathe. It wasn’t the words themselves. It was the fact that he had said them at all, that he had marked it, her, the twins.
Her throat tightened, a small, unexpected warmth rising in her chest before she could stop it. It felt, fleetingly, like being seen in the quieter way that mattered more with him. It was the way he noticed outcomes, noticed her when something aligned.
His fingers tapped once, lightly, against the table before stilling. She lowered her eyes, afraid that if she held his gaze too long, something in her would give itself away too quickly and completely. He reached for his espresso again, as if the moment had already passed.
“They’ll do well,” he said like an afterthought. “There’s no reason they shouldn’t.”
She nodded, her fingers curling lightly around the edge of the ring box.
He didn’t say thank you, or I’m happy, or I love them. But those simple statements weren’t him. Something else in his steady, assured voice settled over her like a quiet hand. And she felt, with a kind of fragile certainty, that he was happy and he did love them.
“It’s appropriate that you return properly. There’s been enough absence. People will want to see that you’re still… here.” His eyes lifted back to hers. I only wanted to check if you were still there. “You’ll wear it to host the foundation gala when we land. I want everyone to see what we’ve rebuilt.”
Saoirse understood now as she looked at the gleaming gem again. The ring was gift, marker, and signal. Something that would speak before she did. She closed the box gently, her pulse faintly unsteady.
After their late breakfast, she stood before the mirror in their bedroom, her hair finally stretched and pinned thanks to Portia, her lips muted, her body enclosed in another silk dress, pretty as clouds. The ring caught the light each time she moved her left hand, a soft, deliberate dazzle that sat beside her engagement diamond and seemed to belong there already.
Her grandmother’s voice echoed faintly again. Anyone can love your laughter, but the right one will love your silence too.
Saoirse smiled at her reflection, lifting her hand just slightly, as though testing the weight of something she’d newly given away. She was silent and loved, in his way.
Old silver suitcases stood half-zipped near the staircase. The sea outside the windows was at peak brightness, depthless.
Roman had showered. He stood in shirtsleeves at the terrace doors, reading something on his phone, his posture untroubled by anything. Saoirse watched him from the edge of the bed, breathing in his scent.
Last night, she had spent the entire drive back from the villa party turning one question over and over in her mouth like a stone she could not swallow. The twins, Madrid, Barcelona. But she still could not bear to shift the air, not after the financier and the warmth in the car and the sex after and the Clair call and the ring. For the first time in months, Roman’s attention was steady and near, but she could feel too many variables tearing at the tenuous balance.
He turned from the terrace. “You’re quiet,” he said.
She gave a small shrug. “Tired.”
He studied her face for a beat longer than usual. He crossed the room and sat beside her on the bed. Close, but not touching yet.
“What is it?” he asked. The gentleness made it worse because now she had to decide. She could say nothing and keep the warmth intact, or she could ask.
Her hands twisted in the fabric of her dress until she stopped herself and smoothed it out. “Nothing,” she said lightly.
He waited. That was his press, expectant silence. She swallowed.
“I was just thinking,” she began, and immediately hated the way her voice thinned, “About the twins.” She felt her pulse spike, waiting for the shift. It didn’t come. Roman didn’t withdraw, stiffen, or correct her. Instead, he leaned back slightly and reached for her hand.
“They’re well,” he said quietly. She searched his face. His expression was open, almost soft. “You think I’d let anything happen to them?” he asked.
“No,” she said too quickly.
He brushed his thumb once over her knuckles. “You don’t have to carry everything at once.” He reframed her maternal urgency as burden and positioned himself as the one who could carry it, and she felt the relief move through her body before she could stop it. He was not angry. She had not ruined the mood.
“I just don’t want them to think…” she trailed off.
“To think what?”
“That I left.” She remembered standing in her grandmother’s kitchen the week after the funeral, watching Sinead move through drawers, a stranger rearranging a house that wasn’t hers. No one had explained what would happen next. Things had simply… shifted. She didn’t want her children experiencing that feeling.
He looked at her for a long moment. “You didn’t leave,” he said. The words were steady. “They’re where they need to be.” A pause. “And you’re where you need to be.” There. Two structures and two balanced placements.
Her throat tightened because the sentence felt both comforting and narrowing. “Will they come to Madrid?” she asked softly, the question slipping out before she could edit it.
He held her gaze. “We’ll decide what makes sense,” he said. We. The word was deliberate. It sounded collaborative. It was not.
She nodded slowly. She could feel the edge of another question rising, When? How long? Why didn’t you say? But she saw the cost of pushing further. The cost was distance. She had tasted distance for months. She would not risk it now.
Roman watched the calculation cross her face. He recognized it the way he recognized stress fractures in negotiation, the moment resistance considered holding, then chose not to.
He shifted closer and cupped her jaw gently. “You trust me,” he said, but not as a question.
Her breath caught. “Yes.” The word came easier than she expected.
He kissed her forehead. “I’m not taking you away from anything,” he said quietly. “I’m bringing you into something.”
Her body leaned toward him without her permission. He lay back on the bed and pulled her with him. She went because warmth expanded around him like gravity. She rested her head on his chest, listened to his heartbeat, and let the question about the twins dissolve into the larger, softer hope that maybe in Madrid, he won’t travel so much, and maybe this closeness will last.
When she finally felt the calm unfurl deep within her… “You seemed unsettled this morning,” he said.
She lifted her head slightly, enough to look at him without fully leaving the shelter of his shoulder. She thought the danger had passed, that the bathroom and the call had dissolved into insignificance.
“I was thinking about the twins,” she said quietly.
He did not answer immediately. Then he shook his head once, almost absently. “No,” he said softly. “That wasn’t it.” The words were not accusatory. They were simply… certain.
Something tightened in her chest as the air thinned. His gaze moved across her face the way it did when he was reading a room in a negotiation, waiting to see what shifted under pressure. Her fingers tightened briefly against the fabric of his shirt before she forced them still again.
“It was nothing,” she said.
He watched her a moment longer. Then, almost lazily, he said, “Portia mentioned you’d been awake before the house.” A beat passed. “And the water was running for quite a while.” He said it the same way he might comment on the weather, a small logistical observation, nothing more, but the implication hung quietly between them.
Saoirse felt heat creep up her neck, and the quiet precision of his statement landed. Roman simply waited. For a few seconds, she thought he might press further. When he didn’t, she tried to imagine simply letting the silence hold, but the pressure inside her chest was already building, the same anxious instinct that always rose when she sensed him noticing something she had not yet explained.
“I spoke to someone,” she said suddenly. The words came out softer than she intended.
Roman did not move. “To whom?” he asked. His voice was calm, curious almost.
“Clair… Neumann.” The name felt strange in the room, but Roman’s expression did not change, so Saoirse rushed to explain before the silence could grow heavier. “She texted me last night,” she said. “I didn’t answer then. I only… called this morning. It was brief.”
Roman watched her the entire time, so she felt the familiar urge to justify herself further, to smooth the moment before it could harden.
“She just wanted to check if I was alright,” Saoirse added quietly. “That was all.”
Roman’s gaze stayed steady. For a long moment, he said nothing. Then he exhaled lightly and leaned back against the headboard.
“That sounds like Clair,” he said.
The simplicity of the response startled her. “You’re not… upset?” Saoirse asked before she could stop herself.
Roman glanced at her. “No.” Then he added, almost thoughtfully, “Clair has always felt clever about noticing gems no one else does.” His thumb brushed once along Saoirse’s wrist. “I imagine she noticed you.”
Saoirse lowered her eyes. “I didn’t tell her anything,” she said quickly.
Roman smiled faintly. “I didn’t think you would.” The warmth in his tone loosened the tightness in her chest at once. He brushed his thumb once along her jaw and pulled her back against him. “You don’t have to hide things like that,” he murmured. The sentence sounded generous, but after a moment, he added, lightly, “Though I would prefer not to have her analyzing my wife.”
Saoirse nodded against his chest. “Of course.”
“You think too much when you wake up before me,” he said calmly. His tone had already shifted, the conversation gently redirected somewhere else, but a small part of her remained very still inside herself.
Roman’s hand moved to her hair, slow and steady. The conversation was over, and yet, even as she relaxed against him, she wondered whether he had truly learned something new… or whether he had already known exactly what he would hear before she said it. Because he didn’t ask what exactly had unsettled her. And yet somehow, impossibly, it felt as though he already understood more than she had told him.
He stroked her hair slowly. It was the same rhythmic grounding. He felt the structure settle with no force or raised voice required, just pressure in the right place.
The right place was her fear of coldness, her craving for proximity, her instinct to align, to belong to something.
In the late afternoon light, her breathing slowed. Outside, the sea moved indifferently against stone. Inside, the system completed as the discreet staff finished packing, suitcases closed.
In the evening, they would leave Capri, and she would tell herself she chose this.
The sea was unusually bright by sunset, as if trying to convince her she would miss it. She had fallen asleep at some point. For a moment, she didn’t remember what day it was. Then she did. She was returning with him to Madrid. The word settled in her stomach like metal.
Roman was fully dressed now, buttoning his cuff with the same calm efficiency he used before meetings in Madrid or Geneva. Her foreboding from last night had proven itself correct. The softness of Capri had drained from his posture over the last few hours. Just… gone.
He kissed her forehead as she sat up in bed. “It’s time to go,” he said. “Portia and the others will help you dress.”
Her phone was downstairs again. As she descended the stairs barefoot in a light crepe dress just glamorous enough to serve for a gala, the marble felt colder than it had a week ago. Her phone lay on the console, black screen waiting.
She picked it up.
For a moment, she pictured the nursery in Barcelona, filtered light through white curtains, Lisa and Lucia and the nurses moving softly, the twins still in sleep-warm states, their mouths slack, unaware of geography. Her thumb hovered over the contact.
Roman’s voice floated faintly from the entryway as he spoke on his own phone to Javier.
She could call just to hear them breathe and say she loved them. But something else pressed in. If she called, she might cry. If she cried, Roman would see it. If he saw it, the air would shift. If the air shifted, this closeness might narrow.
She lowered the phone, locked the screen, and set it back on the console. The choice felt like discipline. She picked it up again when she had composed herself, her eyes fixed on the diamond rings on her fingers, new and old, and the diamond-sapphire heirloom he’d given her for their last anniversary dangling on her wrist.
As they boarded the launch to leave the island, Roman placed his hand on the small of her back, and she leaned into it.
He did not drive today. Capri had ended.
Behind them, the cliff island remained electric blue and indifferent. Ahead of them, Madrid waited. And somewhere in Barcelona, two infants slept beneath ceilings their mother had stopped picturing before she spoke, without knowing she had just made a choice that didn’t include them.
When they arrived at the airstrip, the jet sat waiting. Javier was on the tarmac in his sharp, dark suit, tablet in hand, and no wasted motion. Roman was already elsewhere. He stepped out of the car and shifted, almost imperceptibly, into another dimension. His shoulders squared differently. His voice lowered in tone but sharpened in precision.
“Zurich confirmed?”
Javier nodded. “Signed at nine. Albrecht’s people are recalculating exposure.”
Roman smiled faintly. “Let them.”
They walked toward the aircraft side by side, conversation flowing without effort about liquidity, pressure points, names that meant nothing to Saoirse but carried weight in the air. She followed a step behind.
“Good evening, Señora,” Javier said suddenly, turning his head just enough to acknowledge her.
Saoirse blinked, caught off guard by the sound of her own presence being named. “Good evening,” she replied softly, a fraction too late. For a moment, she had been certain she had slipped entirely out of the frame.
Roman’s gaze flicked toward her, brief and unreadable, something faintly amused passing through it as if he had noticed the delay, the small startle. His hand brushed lightly against the inside of her wrist as they walked, an almost absent gesture that was more corrective than affectionate.
Then, he was speaking again. “Have them hold the line until we land,” he said to Javier. “No adjustments before I see the numbers myself.”
The conversation resumed without pause, shifting to Spanish as soon as they were settled in the plane’s cabin. She felt it as a physical loss, like stepping out of warm water into the wind. He didn’t look back to see if she felt it. He simply assumed she would adjust.
And she did.



