Eight years before

Dumbrăvița (Timiș) , Romania.

There was the fire.

They walked through the smoke under a blanket Pietro had taken from their bed.

Everything was black, and it seemed that the heat was about to melt everything. Their caravan had turned into a death trap made of white-hot steel. They couldn't reach the door but—somehow—Pietro managed to break the little window near the kitchen table and shout at her something she didn't really catch, but then he pushed her, so she understood that he wanted her to climb first.

With his help, Wanda scrambled up and rolled outside, cutting her legs and feet on the broken window glass. She found herself in the wintry night, and she was alone.

She immediately swung her gaze back at the window of their little caravan, realizing with a jolt that the blanket was still covering her head. Pietro hadn't been under the blanket, and now he was still inside.

"Pietro!" she shouted with all the strength of her lungs. Her brother's name travelled in the cold night air and the silence that followed froze her. Scrawny, invisible fingers closed around her throat.

Get out of there, she kept thinking. Come on, Pietro, get out of there. Please, Pietro, please. Please, please, please brother, get out.

Something exploded in the back of the caravan. Wanda covered her mouth with both hands.

She lifted her eyes to the black sky: stars were nowhere to be seen for the smoke that surrounded her, but she imagined she could see them anyway.

Let him live, she prayed. Let him live and I'll never ask for anything else ever again in my whole life. Even if we should no longer be together, even if I won't see him ever again, please, please, please let him live.

Someone must've been listening because Pietro rolled from the window and fell on the grass. He coughed as if he was about to choke and his gaze was fixed on something that Wanda couldn't see. Maybe, she told herself, he was still looking into death's eyes.

Holding her brother's quivering body in her arms, Wanda gazed in confusion at the ambulance as it approached the camp.

Then she looked at him again, as if to be sure that it was real, that Pietro was truly alive.

It worked, she thought.

He was hurt, he was burned. But he was there in her arms, and he was alive.


There was the fire.

Pietro didn't remember how they reached the hospital.

He remembered the blue and red lights whirling on the camp's burned caravans. He remembered the paramedics as they tore off his clothes and poured cold water over his body. They kept asking a lot of questions and snapping fingers in front of his eyes.

He should have answered something, but he couldn't remember what. He could barely recall the sound of his voice. Besides, the only things he could think of were Mom and Dad.

He had gone back for them. He had tried so hard to wake them up. He had shaken them violently, but they hadn't responded, not even with a grunt or a moan. Their arms had fallen from the bed as lifeless as those of his sister's dolls.

But the curtains were already on fire and within seconds almost everything in that damn caravan was burning. He had to leave. He had to.

He knew he was at the hospital, but he didn't remember getting there.

Pietro didn't dare to look at his burns. Clutching the edge of the blanket tightly, he could pretend to hold his sister's hand, and feel a bit better. She was there just a moment before—he had felt her hand, heard her voice—but now she was gone. They must've taken her away. He flinched, terrified at once that she might be mad at him for not being able to save their parents. But he had no time to panic. The world turned white, then red, and then everything whirled until only a pitch dark remained.

That darkness wanted to swallow him. He grabbed the mattress, desperately trying to resist—to not fall into it.

But the pain became too fierce, and Pietro lost his grasp.


They took them to the hospital in Timişoara.

Wanda shared a room with four other children, but her brother was not among them.

Pietro had burns on his left arm and part of his torso. They were keeping him in another ward for forty-eight hours, if not more. She missed him already, but above all she was scared to death that his condition might worsen. The doctors told her not to worry about that. It's only a precaution for the toxic gas he breathed, they reassured her. But she couldn't sleep anyway.

She had never slept far from him in her life before. Actually—even if they had separate beds—they still used to sleep in the same one almost every night, entwining their limbs in a way that was inscribed in their bodies from a time they couldn't remember anymore, and when the summer's heat wouldn't allow that closeness, they'd sleep together nonetheless, lying shoulder to shoulder or back to back, so that there was always a part of his body, small that it was, touching hers—a knee, a shoulder, or even a lock of hair.

How weird it was not feeling that anymore.

Wanda couldn't even explain how that made her feel: it made her sad in an unknown way; it made her sick to her stomach. So she spent that first night of severance staring at the ceiling, and when the grey sky finally announced the dawn and a new day with it she sat on the corner of the bed, knees pulled to her chest.

Another whole day, maybe even more, before she could see him again. Wanda sighed, overwhelmed with the awful feeling that something bad was supposed to happen, and that she was—somehow—responsible.

She shrugged her shoulders in an idle attempt to leave those dark thoughts behind her.

We will be fine, she told herself. Maybe, if she repeated it often enough, it would come true.


His body was icy cold. He tried to open his eyes, but he was too weary. He couldn't move. He felt like he was freezing and burning at the same time, and all of a sudden he persuaded himself he was still in their caravan. His parents grabbed his legs. His mother was crying. Her beautiful green eyes filled with tears as she begged him not to leave. His father was staring at him wide-eyed in disbelief at his own son being such a coward.

I tried, he cried. I tried, I swear. I'm sorry, Mom, I really am. I tried, Dad, I tried.

He was burning; still he had never felt so cold in his whole life.

Suddenly, he was awake. He could see that it was still night. Or night again? He had no idea how much time he had slept. Wanda was standing near the door, staring at him—her eyes wide open, her breath fast: she seemed scared to death.

"Wa...—" he tried. It was less than a whisper, but she heard him anyhow.

"I was going to call someone. You were crying. Does it hurt, Pietro? Shall I call the doctor?"

He scarcely managed to shake his head, shuddering at the thought of the doctor touching his body again. He only wanted to have her beside him, but he couldn't find the strength to talk. He slightly raised his right hand, and she came to him. Luckily his sister never really needed words to understand him.

Wanda curled up at his side and kissed him on the corner of his right eye, wiping away a tear with her lips. Her hand ran softly through his hair.

"You're shaking," she remarked, with a worried tone of voice. "I think I should call someone."

"Don't leave," he stuttered. His teeth chattered. He felt like he was lying on a sheet of ice.

"I won't. I promise." She kept caressing his hair. "Everything will be fine."

He didn't know how much time they stayed like this, silently lain on that bed, waiting for his sister's forecast to finally become real. He must have started crying because he realized that Wanda was wiping his tears away.

"I tried," he sobbed. "I tried, but they… Mom and Dad, they… they died, Wanda. They're dead."

Wanda recoiled a little as she used to do when he would say something prohibited, like a curse.

They became silent again, trying to realize what that really meant—to be orphans, to not have a family, to not have a home anymore.

She finally moved, doing her best to hug him without touching anywhere he was hurt. Clung to one another, they wept together—for a minute or an hour, Pietro couldn't have told. And while they cried everything started to vanish, mercilessly swept away by their tears: their mother's voice and her soft songs; their father's laughter, as mighty as thunder; the sun sparkling on the water of the pond in which they had recklessly jumped so many times...

The black thick smoke of the fire had swallowed everything they held dear and now there was nothing left but the two of them: two lost, damaged little souls.

Now they only had each other.

They were still crying when she kissed him.

She kissed him on his forehead first, then she kissed his eyes, his ears, his chin.

Pietro felt the warm dampness of her lips upon his and opened his eyes, a bit baffled. Her kiss was gentle, delicate, almost weightless. It was a magic balm that immediately calmed their sobs.

"We'll fix this," she whispered. Her lips were so close to his that he breathed the words that came out of them. "We'll fix everything and we'll be fine."

Pietro nodded lightly in complete trust. He felt exhausted. Darkness approached him again and this time he had no strength left to fight. So he welcomed it, and he wasn't afraid: his sister was there, and he knew that she would have even walked in his dreams, if he'd needed her to.


The moonlight hit her brother's hair making them even more silvery than usual.

Pietro had fallen asleep and had finally stopped shaking. Wanda sighed, relieved: maybe he wouldn't feel pain for a few hours.

He had been so brave, her baby brother.

She bit her lower lip, smiling, remembering the incredulous expression on his face when Mom had finally given up and had answered the question they'd unrelentingly asked every day for months.

Thirty seconds are not enough to make you the oldest twin anyway, Pietro had muttered, resoundingly failing to hide his disappointment.

"Yes, they are" she whispered to herself—like all times—and kissed him one last time on his right messy eyebrow.

A sound at the door.

Wanda jerked her head toward it: a man in a black coat stood there.

It should have been creepy to be observed by an unknown man in the middle of the night, but the way he was gazing at them—calm and somewhat natural—made Wanda more curious than fearful.

Once the man noticed that his presence wasn't a secret anymore, he didn't seem worried at all. Instead, he looked straight into her eyes. For a moment Wanda thought he was about to open the door and enter. But when she got up he turned on his heels and walked away.

She stayed still for a few minutes, confused, rubbing her eyes and constantly glancing at her brother. She didn't want to leave him but, despite the violent shudders that were still running through his body now and then, Pietro was soundly asleep and didn't seem likely to wake up soon. So Wanda eventually surrendered to curiosity and left the room, searching the corridors in the hope she would find the stranger in the black coat.

§

The following afternoon, urged by the news she had to tell Pietro, Wanda rushed into their room completely oblivious of the mysterious man in the black coat's existence. When she saw him there, standing just in front of the bed where Pietro had fallen asleep again, a cold shiver ran down her spine.

"What are you doing in here?" she hissed, trying to keep her voice low so as not to wake her brother.

The man turned, gazed at her, and then brought his eyes back to Pietro.

It wasn't uncommon to find people staring at Pietro. It was because of his hair, mostly. Even the doctors made comments about it: she heard them talking about a "genetic peculiarity" and other stuff she didn't understand, nor care about. For her part, she just loved his hair. It wasn't grey, but not exactly white either. It was a light shade of silver—almost like snow hit by sunlight—and she had been jealous for a long time when they were little, for she hadn't that colour as well. They were twins after all. They were supposed to share everything, even their looks—only they did not. They were as different as night and day.

But puzzled looks weren't the only things she and Pietro got used to: they had also known how mean people could be towards Romani kids—especially when a kid looked different, like her brother. Freak, they'd called him.

Monster.

Hands on her waist—just like her mother used to do when she was angry—Wanda came closer. She was about to speak again when he said, out of the blue:

"You must be Wanda."

She couldn't help but open her mouth, completely baffled. She definitely didn't see that coming.

"Pietro will be fine soon, so don't worry."

Wanda shook her head and crossed her arms.

"I know he will," she replied. "Doctors said he won't even need a skin transplantion—or something."

He laughed a bit at that and then told her the right word—transplantation. She waited for him to go ahead, to say something else, but he remained silent and continued to gaze at Pietro.

Her brother could seem very frail, slender as he was and so unnaturally pale. Of course, Wanda knew better. She knew perfectly how wrong that first impression was, and how agile and strong and hyperactive her brother actually was. But now, lying unconscious, hurt and drugged, even paler than usual, Pietro was vulnerable for real, and that gaze fixed on him was disturbing her. It was only a look, and she knew looks couldn't harm people, yet her instinct was urging her to do something—to protect him.

She climbed onto Pietro's bed and sat next to his legs, so as to obstruct—at least partially—the man's view.

That awakened him from his trance.

"See, dear," he explained, "your parents and I, we… we used to be friends." He sighed, looking away for an instant. "We all lived in Nuremberg back then. But that was so long ago. We were your age, maybe just a bit older."

Wanda didn't say anything. A lot of questions came to her mind but at the same time she felt like she shouldn't ask them. The man's eyes wandered from her to her brother. His look expressed an honest sorrow.

"I grieve for them."

"How do you know us if we've never met before?" she asked abruptly, ignoring his last sentence.

"Because we have met before. I was in Iasi for work and I knew that your parents were not far, so I passed by. You were not three years old yet, if I'm not wrong." Then he smirked at Pietro. "He was... inexhaustible. Is he still that way?"

Wanda frowned and, without minding to answer, started examining all those elements: she knew mom and dad grew up in Germany, and it was true that they moved to Romania before she and Pietro were born. It made sense. They could have never remembered a man they'd met at three. Moreover, she couldn't find a reason why that man should want to lie to her.

For a while, he continued to stay silent. She didn't ask him further so maybe he just didn't feel the need to give her other information.

"But how rude of me," he said then. "I'm afraid I didn't introduce myself yet. My name is Max Eisenhardt."

The man got up and stretched out his hand to her.

Standing, he had Pietro clearly in his visual, and—again—he couldn't help but stare.

The man was sad for him, Wanda realized. Maybe because Pietro was hurt, or maybe because he was an orphan—or both. But, if that hadn't been completely absurd, Wanda would have said that what she was seeing in Eisenhardt's eyes wasn't sorrow, but a deep, painful sense of guilt.


When he woke, he saw a tall man in a black coat leaving their room. Still dazed with medications, Pietro turned his head, slowly searching for his sister. Wanda caressed his forehead.

"How are you feeling?"

"I don't feel much" he croaked. Then he cleared his throat. "Who was that?"

Wanda shrugged, passing him a glass of water.

"Dunno. He said he was a family friend."

Pietro frowned. He could be dazed but still that didn't make sense at all. A family friend that they had never met before? A family friend with a fancy coat?

"What did he say to you?"

"Not much," she answered. "He looked at you a lot and then said that I shouldn't worry because you were going to be well soon. I said I already knew that." She spoke fast, nervously, and that was so bizarre for his sister, considering that she was just doing what she would usually reproach him for. She wanted to tell him something, it was pretty clear, but she was hesitating.

"Wanda?" he encouraged her.

She sighed and lowered her gaze for a couple of seconds.

"Pietro…" she muttered eventually, "someone has come for us: a couple of policemen and a woman. They just spoke with the doctors and I… I wasn't supposed to hear, but I was accidentally there, and I did. They said they're taking us to an orphanage."

It was quite obvious, now that she had said that aloud, and still the thought never crossed his mind in those last days. Of course the gadjewould have never allowed them to simply go back at their camp, if it was still there, which—come to think of it—was pretty unlikely. As far as they knew, the fire could have burned everything down.

He could see in his sister's eyes that she needed to be reassured, that she needed him to do or say something, and he really wanted to behave like a big brother—even if he technically wasn't. He wanted it so badly, but he was only eleven years old, and nothing had ever prepared him for a situation like this. So, even if a comforting smile and a stupid phrase would have sufficed, he could do nothing but register that update with a nod, and ask: "When?"

She shrugged, shook her head, and said nothing.

§

In his short life, Pietro never really thought about what an orphanage should look like. As a matter of fact, before the fire and the hospital, he barely acknowledged that kind of place's existence.

They both agreed that a place full of children whose parents were dead couldn't be a cheerful one, but at least they were there together. Even if Wanda could have left the hospital weeks before him, Dana—the social worker assigned to their case—consented to let her stay with him until he was fully recovered.

Once there, they found out that it was exactly as bad as they'd expected.

The building was old, but not scruffy, and, aside from its quite sinister corridors—so long and white—its appearance wasn't too disturbing. What they found particularly creepy, in fact, was that composed ambience, that silence so unnatural for a place full of children.

And then—of course—there were the nuns.

Obviously they had seen nuns before. Pietro could recall at least three different times when they'd come to the camp, and he'd eventually found them pretty all right. They were easy going and even funny. One time a blonde middle aged Ukrainian nun had even played soccer with him. Butthese nuns... Pietro couldn't pinpoint what felt wrong about them, and yet he couldn't help but find them, if not frightening, at least somehow suspect—as if behind the courtesy and sympathetic smiles they wore all day, they might actually be willing to do the most atrocious things.

One of them had the pesky habit of grabbing his hand every time he would rub his left elbow—it was still bandaged and itched very badly. She smiled at him in a sly and childish way, and Pietro always expected her to say something like "gotcha!" as if they were playing tag. Instead, she said: "You should not do that, sweetheart," shaking her head a bit. She freaked the hell out of him. They all did.

But the worst thing of all, undoubtedly, was that he wasn't allowed to sleep with Wanda anymore because boys and girls had different dormitories. They tried to be brave and not make a tragedy about that, but the way she looked at him when they had to leave each other for the night hit him so hard in his stomach he nearly threw up his dinner.

§

They needed a plan.

Wanda put her head on his shoulder, and didn't say anything.

Pietro gazed absentmindedly through the naked branches of the big tree at the end of the courtyard. "We need to be organized, that's all," he said, trying to convince himself that that would have changed things for the better. "We need to be precise. We'll report everything: our thoughts, our dreams… everything. And it'll be like having been there."

He waited, almost embarrassed for what he just said, expecting his sister to giggle and say "you dumbie!". Instead Wanda nodded slowly, remaining silent.

She was sad; they both were.

Sometimes, they just stopped doing whatever they were doing—eating, playing, talking—because they'd feel too sad at once for Mom and Dad. But that day she was sadder than usual: she was freaking out that they were going to lose each other. Moreover, she kept having horrible nightmares and blamed his absence for them. Maybe she was right, but there was nothing he could do to change that. He could only propose a silly solution, and hope that that would help a little.

"And we can pretend we're somewhere else," she said with a little voice. "What do you think?"

Pietro adjusted his seat on the old trunk.

"Of course." He smiled. "Where would you like to be?"

She pulled her head back to look into his eyes. A timid smile appeared on her lips.

"Paris" she said, and they couldn't help but laugh.

It was their father who had made up the whole Paris thing. Whenever he did something that would upset mama, he'd look at them, wink, and—whispering as if he was sharing a super-secret confidence—would say: "She'll forgive me when I'll take her to Paris." And then the thing kept growing all alone, and everyone in turn would promise someone else a Paristo make amends for something. They would even say it just for fun, because it was something that made the Maximoff family laugh out loud and that no one else could understand.

To think about the Paris thing now, knowing that Dad could not actually take their mother there anymore, was pretty gloomy. But, at the same time, Pietro felt that this would have pleased their parents—to know that they were laughing once again thanks to that, thanks to that little comfort that was their last estate, that little thing they could hang on to every time they'd need the strength to smile in spite of all that sorrow.

But Pietro thought big.

"I'll take you there for real," he announced. "When we're grownups and we're rid of this place, we can go there, if you still want to."

She stared at him without saying anything. For a moment Pietro feared she was about to cry. Then she hugged him, holding him tightly as if she wanted to prevent him being dragged away.

"I love you," she whispered.

"I love you too."

And, even if he couldn't truly understand it yet, he knew that from now on those words—those words they'd told each other so many times before—had just taken on an entirely different meaning.


They didn't see the black car entering the gates. They barely noticed the children's wave that passed by them, heading towards the windows.

"These ones are rich, I tell you that" a little girl said.

Wanda couldn't care less. They had been there for more than a month now and she'd finally found a kind of serenity, a balance in all her overwhelming emotions. She only cared about spending with Pietro all the time that she could. The rest of the children couldn't understand or accept that they preferred passing all their time by themselves, and so they just despised them. It was not that she and Pietro never played with some of the others. Before the fire, for close as they were, she'd never been so reluctant to part from him.

In fact, she'd spent countless afternoons playing with her friends while Pietro played soccer or whatever. More than once she'd spent whole hours having no idea where he was and it hadn't been a tragedy; on the contrary, she kind of liked when they were together again at dinner and they'd talk until they'd fall asleep. But now—now every hour of separation seemed unbearable, her nights were never-ending and full of nightmares in which she was gazing at the little smoking window of their caravan—only Pietro never came out of it. So, when in the morning he was finally in front of her again, and she could see him and hug him and hear the beats of his heart, there was nothing that could've diverted her attention—of course not a stupid couple of stupid rich people.

"Where are the twins?"

The question arrived from the corridor and, at once, all the children pointed their gazes toward the two of them. Wanda recognized Sister Amelia's voice, only there was an unusual urgency in the woman's tone, something unexpected that was spoiling her precious self control.

Pietro jumped to his feet, crossed his arms and yelled in reply: "We're not doing anything wrong!"

She appeared in the doorway and smiled.

"Of course you're not. But you have to come with me. You have visitors, children."

Pietro turned to Wanda with a disoriented look and she just opened her arms to confirm her own perplexity. Then she grabbed his hand while they followed the nun down one of the many corridors—the one which led to the entrance.

Wanda felt her brother's body going tense when they found themselves in front of that couple and realized that she, instead, wasn't surprised at all to see the man in the fancy black coat standing there, next to a thin tall woman wearing furs.

Unexpectedly, it was her brother who spoke first.

"Hello," he said.

"Hello, children."

The man came closer and stretched his arm to them while the woman, once given a proper look at Pietro, literally flinched as if she'd just seen a big rat running between her feet. She tried to hide it, but Wanda saw it nonetheless, and—she could tell it from the way his mouth twitched in a hate smirk—Pietro as well.

Someone said "Is everything ready?"—it was probably Mr. Eisenhardt's voice but she couldn't be sure because she was too busy gazing at Pietro for once without any clue of what he was thinking and, above all, what he was up to do.

But he just continued to stare into the woman's eyes, maybe to provoke her.

The woman touched lightly her husband's arm and whispered "I'll wait in the car." The man didn't reply, and did not even look at her while she turned on her heels and left the hall.

"Wanda," said Mr. Iacob, the orphanage's director. "Do you mind a word?"

She must've made a face—how odd it was not being called the twins as usual—because he felt the need to confirm it: "Yes, darling. Alone. Pietro can stay here, I'm sure Mr. Eisenhardt will be pleasant company for him."

She looked at Pietro who shrugged, lifting his eyebrows. He sat with Mr. Eisenhardt on the bench in the entrance, and she followed the director into his studio. Pietro didn't seem worried, so neither was she.

§

"They lost their daughter. It is a horrible thing to lose your parents, you know that well, but to lose a child—" Mr. Iacob paused, as though to strengthen the meaning of his words. "They feel ready to have another one now, another daughter. They'd like to have you."

Her mouth twisted in disgust for what she'd just heard. That had sounded so bad, so wrong—to take a random little girl in exchange for their dead daughter—and it made her terribly uncomfortable.

She took a deep breath and asked: "So Pietro and I are leaving with them?"

He moved on his chair as if it was suddenly burning.

"No, Wanda. They... they don't want the both of you."

Wanda couldn't hold back laughter.

"But think about that," Mr. Iacob went on, "he'll take you to a beautiful home, you have no idea, you have never seen a place like that. It's like a Royal Palace. And you'll attend the better schools, you'll have everything you ever desired."

She was almost having fun, for the whole thing was too absurd not to be a joke, and she wanted to play and see how far he'd take that. "And where's my brother going?" she asked. "To another family?"

"He's not going anywhere. He stays here."

Suddenly, she felt scared. His tone of voice had turned abrupt, she could perceive his hidden anger and she started thinking that he must've been serious, after all.

"That's ridiculous," she grinned. "Why would I do that? He's my twin brother. I'm not going anywhere without him, and you should really be ashamed of yourself for asking me such a thing."

"You have to go with them, Wanda. Mr Eisenhardt kindly offered to pay for anything your brother will ever need. Even his education. But he has to stay here. These are the conditions."

"You're insane," she hissed."There's no way I'm leaving him alone in this shithole!" Wanda said that curse and instinctively turned her gaze as she'd do if her mother was around.

"Don't you get it, child? It's not your choice. If you refuse, you won't see him again anyway, only that he'll be taken somewhere he won't have fun—I can assure you that. See, there are men... men who are not as generous and respectable as Mr. Eisenhardt is. You two are lucky. If you refuse his offer, you won't be happy for the next one who'll come for you. It could very easily be one of those men... men who like children, who like to play with them and do thingsto them, men who come here looking for young pretty boys—just like your brother."

The room darkened while the man spoke. She could almost see it for real—the walls and the furniture and the windows, all turning black—even if it was obviously only in her mind. Her body petrified while she tried to understand why some men should like children and what those things could have been. Her vision filled at once with images of her brother covered in blood, beaten, tortured—killed.

Things.

"But—" She choked back her tears. "Why? Why would you do this?"

"That is none of your business." He got up and placed himself at her right, resting a hand on her shoulder. "If you don't go now, I'll make him go."

"Don't!" she cried, "Please! Don't harm him! Promise me that he'll be safe if I—if I go."

"I do. I promise."

She felt her body being torn and rebuilt in a new way—a wrong one—but the only one that could have allowed her to stay still somehow responsive. She got up thinking about her nightmares, how scared she had been that Pietro could have been taken away from her: now she almost felt desperate for them, wishing them back, because the nightmare she was in now wouldn't end with the dawn, and was far worse than the others. Because it was her. It was her that was leaving him.

Don't make me do this, she kept thinking. Please don't make me do this.

But instead she only asked: "How?"

"I'll tell you what to say, don't worry about that."

She nodded. Her head moved like a robot.

She'd wished for Pietro to live. Her wish had been granted, and now she had to pay for it.


The man talked about soccer a bit, and then said something about his parents, that they were also dead when he was young, during the war. At a certain point he referred to a child, a little girl, and even if he didn't say it, Pietro felt pretty sure he was talking about a daughter—a daughter that was dead. In the end the conversation turned out to be odd and formal at the same time. Suddenly the man got up, said: "You will be fine" and went outside, probably reaching that wife of his. Pietro got up too, waiting for Wanda to come out, deadly curious to hear whatever it was that Mr. Iacob told her.

When the door opened he noticed that the nuns started behaving weirdly: they all approached him in a circle as if they wanted to start playing Ring Around the Rosie, and stared at him with worried looks.

Wanda came out with a shocked gaze. She was as pale as a phantom and though her green eyes looked at him, Pietro wasn't sure she was seeing him at all.

"Wanda?" he asked, and she shook her head, almost awakening from a weird dream. She lowered her gaze.

He tried to come closer, but someone grabbed him by his shoulder.

"Wanda is leaving, dear" said the nun behind him.

Pietro thought he'd asked the question, but that shocked what? never truly came out of his mouth.

"They want me as their daughter," his sister explained. Her voice was monotone, dead, and was sickening him more than what he imagined she was about to say next. "So I'm going with them. I want to have a family again."

She lifted her gaze at him again for a moment, as in an attempt to communicate something secret, but the astonishment in which he had fallen prevented him from reading her eyes—from understanding what she wanted to tell him. He looked at the director escorting his sister to the car and by now he was sure he was dreaming. Maybe he had just fallen and cracked his head.

The car door slammed, hiding Wanda from his view.

That finally shook him from his shock, as if a jet of iced water hit him on the back.

Pietro screamed her name, twisted like a wild animal to get rid of the hands grabbing his arms, and ran. He passed the gates, running as fast as he could, desperately calling for her, while the street between him and the car grew longer and longer.

Breathless and broken, Pietro fell down.

His eyes were full of tears and dust, his hands and knees bled. But he jumped to his feet once again: he had to reach her, he had to—

Someone grabbed his waist.


The noise of the car's engine wasn't intense enough to cover Pietro's voice shouting her name.

She grabbed her skirt with both hands, her eyes lost on the grey headrest of the seat where Mrs. Eisenhardt sat. She couldn't turn her head. She couldn't look into his eyes.

If I turn back to him I'm lost.

She regretted that. Years later, recollecting that memory, that missing piece revealed to be the cruellest torment.

Was he still on the doorway steps, shouting her name? Or was he running instead, trying to chase the black car in which she was leaving him? She would never know what he'd looked like, if he had tears in his beautiful blue eyes, if he was angry, or sad, or freaked out, or only broken, just like her.

She could only recall his voice.

A name—her own—shouted in the afternoon greyness, and nothing more.