The Midnight Masque
The shot rang out, its echo swallowed by the dense Venetian mist before silence resumed its reign. Ahead, in the labyrinthine alleyways illuminated by sickly yellow lanterns, Lavinia’s breath curled in the winter air as she darted past gondolas moored along the canal. Her feet—bare save for bronze-buckled slippers—splashed through shallow puddles, the silk of her teal dress dragging through the water, leaving streaks of darkened damp. The scent of brine and decay followed her every hurried step.
Behind her, the heavy thud of boots meant she had little time. Peering over her shoulder, she caught a glimpse of them—two figures cloaked in black, masked faces glowing faintly under the moonlit haze. Assassin-priests sent from the Consiglio. Their dark intentions bore down on her like a tightening noose. She clutched the red velvet pouch strapped around her wrist closer to her chest. They could not have it. Not this. Not what she had taken at great risk from the Palazzo Scarletti.
Lavinia’s dress, in the colors of the Carnival but custom-tailored to betray her rank, steamed slightly from her own body heat in the glistening, biting air. The teal velvet shimmered with gold embroidery along the hemline, and the elbow-length sleeves flared just above her wrists, the style reminiscent of somber Venetian grandeur. A black leather corset—an unconventional addition—hugged her waist, cinching the dress tightly, providing an odd flair of practicality in an otherwise archaic getup. The corset matched the slim black cloak fluttering behind her like an injured raven. The blade she had hidden in her leather jacket back at the masquerade was lost during her escape. All she had now was speed and the cloak of night—at least for a few moments longer.
A sharp right into a narrow Calle brought her behind a forgotten chapel, the faded frescoes crumbling on its façade. Lavinia flattened her back against the clammy wall, her heaving breaths quieter now, though her pulse thundered. Their footsteps grew louder. She could smell the incense on their robes, the dissonance staggering against her undercurrent of sweat and adrenaline. They passed her by, their shadows weaving like black specters down the canal’s edge. She exhaled and edged toward freedom, one slipper barely grazing the jagged cobblestone.
“The jewel,” a voice hissed from the darkness beside her. Before she could respond, a hand wrapped in red satin snapped out, clasping her wrist. Lavinia spun, eyes wide, heart lodging in her throat.
Before her stood Cosimo, whose face she hadn’t seen since she fled the Scarletti masques of power and violence four winters ago. The hard angles of his jawline were lit silver by the moon, though the blood trickling from a cut at his temple softened him just slightly. His outfit mirrored hers—the aristocratic combination of elegance and rebellion. A high-waisted black coat with brass buttons swept down over crimson breeches. Beneath the heavy coat, a loose white chemise breathed more freedom than societal strictures typically allowed. Beneath his leather gloves, she knew, lay scars from battles waged in shadows. He was exactly as she remembered him. Daring. Dangerous. Desperate. And heartbreakingly hers.
“Cosimo,” she whispered, choking on the rush of his presence. “Why—why are you—”
“Give me the pouch, Lavinia,” he interrupted, his voice cold, measured. “Their eyes are meant only for the prize. Hand it to me, and you can live.”
“The prize?” she retorted, her knuckles whitening around the pouch’s straps. Her brows knitted in disbelief. “You mean…this wretched heirloom? A trinket from the Doge’s hidden treasury? This isn’t about freedom for you, is it? You’re playing their game still!”
Cosimo’s eyes flickered, a storm raging behind their dark depths. “It’s more than a trinket, Lavinia. You should know that better than anyone. You stole it. Do you even understand why?”
She hesitated, breath caught in her throat. The truth webbed itself between lingering emotions and sharp truths. The artifact—the “Star of Aquila,” they called it—was more than a Venetian political showpiece. Stories spoke of its mythical origin, its ancient power to sway minds—or worse. Lavinia hadn’t believed in myths until she trailed corpses out of the scars the Scarletti left behind. Now, holding the pouch, she felt its weight, a warm pulse foreign to gold or jewels whispering at her palm.
“I didn’t steal it for them or for myself,” she replied finally, in a voice gentled by fear. “I’m trying to destroy it, Cosimo.”
He blinked, bemused for a second. Then his sword appeared in the lantern-light between them, its edge glimmering as he took another step forward. She staggered back against the dead embrace of a stone corner. The very canal behind her shivered in its half-frozen silence.
“You don’t understand the forces you’re playing with,” he murmured, a note of uncharacteristic regret tumbling from his throat. “The Star doesn’t belong to either of us. On my honor—such as it remains—surrender it, Lavinia. One of us doesn’t have to die tonight.”
“You handed me your honor—and your love—long ago, Cosimo,” she said, tears rivulets cutting into her soot-lined cheeks. “And I will never give this star to them, even when squeezed between betrayal and death.”
Somewhere distant, bells tolling midnight thundered across the fog-drenched city. Cosimo made his bid—thrusting forward with tight precision. She pirouetted, one foot grazing the cobblestones before planting squarely into his ribs, shoving him back. Whatever tenuous mercy and alliances had remained between them shattered in the vicious sound of blades meeting from the priestly shadows closing in.
The courtyards sang that night, though whether with love’s lament or destiny spinning darker webs would be songs Venice would not forget.
Genre: Historical Fantasy
The Source…check out the great article that inspired this amazing short story: Black Leather Jacket with Gray Turtleneck and High-Rise Denim Jeans: Chic Urban Style for Cool Seasons
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