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by the simplicity with which antiquity coexists with modernity here. Lera felt like a time traveller. It was easy to step off the busy highway of the twenty first century and get into the white-haired pre-Christian era.

      Cats roamed the ruins, and Lera, involuntarily, slowed down her pace as she stared at them. She will definitely, unavoidably approach the columns that had seen the change of so many generations! Absolutely! As soon as she gets rid of this Marco Guerriero, for whom it suddenly became necessary to speak like a Russian at this most inconvenient time.

      Her phone beeped, announcing it was eleven o'clock in Rome. Oh damn! She was gawping and now she was late! Lera ran towards the avenue like a hare, and definitely found the right café, it was only one there. It was quite large.

      Lera fell into it from a running start, like a stormtrooper into a bunker. The numbers "11:04" were on the clock behind the hostess counter. She turned to the receptionist, taking off her coat in the same movement.

      "I have an appointment with Signor Guerriero. Is he here? Can you show me?"

      The hostess nodded and motioned for Lera to follow her. She trotted after the receptionist, but when she took a step aside to point to the table where the man was sitting, Lera stumbled. Because the being who was sitting there definitely was a God.

      Marco was tall. Very tall. And dark skinned, with strikingly sharp features. His glossy black hair was neatly combed back revealing a high, prominent forehead. His bushy eyebrows were furrowed. He tapped a long elegant finger against his lips while studying the menu.

      He was so handsome that Lera almost felt herself suffocating. She had never seen such a beautiful person in her life. She could barely move her legs and walked towards Marco like a rabbit towards a boa constrictor. He would have made a suitable model for the ancient sculptors for the statue of Apollo. Lera was stunned by him.

      Until the man looked at her. His translucent ice-blue eyes burned with such undisguised anger that she was taken aback.

      ****

      Marco was furious. He ran shamefacedly away from the restaurant in Sant'Angelo, which hurt his ego. He couldn't stand being in the same room with this stray tourist. Him! Marco Guerriero, on whom women threw themselves in bunches. Moreover, even the long walk to his apartment in Flaminio had not cooled him down. Marco seethed, tormented by hot thoughts and anger.

      On New Year's Eve he had hoped to sit out at a restaurant where there was at least an illusion of being in some company. Well, Marco could not really celebrate the new year with his own assistant, honestly! Although, now it seemed to Marco that anything was better than sitting in an empty apartment listening to other people rejoicing. The emptiness would not leave him alone, pointedly demonstrating he had nowhere to go and nothing to do for now.

      The apartment greeted him with a booming echo, then silence. It was empty today. There were no women, no relatives, and no pets. Even Rosa, the housekeeper, had taken some free days and gone home. Marco threw his keys onto the console and went into the living room.

      He casually threw his expensive coat onto an even more expensive sofa, which was designed to perfection. The whole apartment was pricey and thought out to the smallest detail. And completely impersonal, like a hotel room.

      Marco snorted bitterly. There was no cup of half-finished coffee, no socks thrown on the floor. Rosa carefully cleaned up the traces of his stay in this place before leaving. It was like Marco had never existed at all. As if he existed only on the screen.

      He looked around and angrily kicked the coffee table to somehow disrupt this idyll. The table creaked and slid to the side; the echos quickly faded away. Marco stood for a minute, looking irritably at the walls and went to the bar for lack of anything better to do. There he found and uncorked a bottle of wine.

      Rome was blackening outside the window. Flaminio's obelisk pierced the darkening sky. The frozen Tiber loomed to the right. Today, Marco's beloved view from the window did not please him. With a chuckle, he caught himself thinking about summoning a call-girl. However, Marco quickly dismissed the idea, and scolded himself, deciding that he had not quite fallen so low – at least not yet.

      He wandered around the living room like a caged tiger. The wall clock showed fifteen minutes until midnight. New year is coming soon, and Marco had nothing to prepare for a celebration – his table was bare. Moreover, what sort of celebration would it be if he was alone?

      Marco came up with an idea: when he was a child, his mother had told him about how to attract good luck on New Year's Eve. She said it was essential to dress in red, throw out old junk from the window and eat twelve grapes while the clock struck. One grape at a chime.

      Marko didn't believe in all that nonsense, but today he felt especially saddened. Perhaps it was the wine that went to his head, but nevertheless for some reason, he stumbled into his bedroom. There was a photo frame of himself and Paola on the bedside table beside the huge bed. Marco thoughtfully rubbed his stubbled chin and, after considering it, took the photo out and tore it up into small pieces. Not because he hated the girl. He just wanted to make sure there would be nothing compromising if he threw the photo out of the window.

      Then he entered the dressing room and pulled out the first red object that caught his eye. It turned out to be a beautiful, large-knit sweater that his mother had made with her own hands. Marco put it on over his sports T-shirt.

      Then Marco forced himself to look in the far corner of the dressing room. Having decided, he reached onto the top shelf and took out an old, torn T-shirt that was faded, but very carefully washed and repaired. It was his favourite T-shirt which he wore when visiting his parents in the campagna. He had not lived with them since the age of nineteen, since he started studying.

      Two years ago, their house in the village was completely burned down. A remote area, an isolated house with almost no neighbours… His parents didn’t survive. It was fortunate that his brother was not there at the time. An old T-shirt and a vineyard taken care of by strangers were all that remained of that particular past. Marco had the house rebuilt rebuilt in detail, but it never again felt the same.

      Marco looked at the T-shirt for a long time, then he took it out of the dressing room, gathered the pieces of the photo on the cloth, and went to the kitchen. It was two minutes before midnight according to the clock. He reached into the fridge, picked out a dozen from a bunch of grapes, rinsed them, and placed them on the table. Some scattered, so Marco collected them in a pile. He opened the window, letting cold air into the apartment. Then he turned on the live broadcast from St. Mark's square in Venice and waited.

      Almost immediately, joyful voices came from the TV, announcing that the clock was about to strike. And it was true: the first "boom-m-m-m-m" rang out and Marco put a grape into his mouth. He desperately wanted good luck.

      He swallowed the grapes like a duck, without chewing, and with at last stroke, he finished the last of them. The sky lit up with bright fireworks. Marco grabbed the T-shirt and the scraps of photo and walked towards the window albeit reluctantly. He couldn't take his eyes off his burden. His fingers convulsively at the fabric.

      At the last moment, he scooped up the paper scraps from the shirt. Placing the cloth on the table, he threw the photo fragments out the window with no regret. There was no shame before Paola, but the desire to release the grief that had tormented him for two years gave rise to a bitter sense of guilt.

      Marco sighed heavily, lowered his head, stood there for a minute and finally slammed the window shut. He went into the living room, took the wine and sat down to watch "Christmas Holidays", the plot of which he already knew by heart.

      After half an hour, Marco realised that he was not looking at the screen. He turned off the TV and trudged into the bedroom. Stripped naked, he stretched out on the bed on top of the blankets with a sigh. Fireworks were booming outside the window, illuminating the room with coloured flashes.

      The sight of coloured confetti made from the photo flying out of his window rose before his eyes. Marco would soon be thirty-nine, many of his classmates were already sending their children to school, and he had just thrown his past affair out of the window.

      Marco rolled over on his side. "I wonder what that redhead is doing now? Probably dancing somewhere on the street,

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