Next Year in Havana

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Next Year in Havana Page 35

by Chanel Cleeton


  He’s so still he could be a statue.

  I didn’t come here for company, and if I’m honest, I’ve more than had my fill of Americans. I take a step back, and then another, about to turn around, when he turns—

  Oh.

  Oh.

  The thing about people telling you you’re beautiful your whole life is that the more you hear it, the more meaningless it becomes. What does “beautiful” even mean, anyway? That your features are randomly arranged in a shape that someone, somewhere, arbitrarily decided is pleasing. “Beautiful” never quite matches up to the other things you could be—smart, interesting, brave. And yet . . .

  He’s beautiful. Blindingly so. Shockingly so.

  For a moment that stretches on and on, I can’t look away.

  He appears as though he’s been painted in broad strokes, his visage immortalized by exuberant sweeps and swirls of the artist’s brush, a god come down to meddle in the affairs of mere mortals.

  Irritatingly beautiful.

  In that moment, I hate him just a little bit. He looks like the sort of man who has never had to wonder if he’ll have a roof over his head, or if his father will die in a cage with eight other men, or face a firing squad, or had to flee the only life he has ever known. Surely he’s never held his murdered twin in his arms, blood spilling over that pristine tuxedo. No, he looks like the sort of man who is told he is perfection from the moment he wakes in the morning to the moment his head hits the pillow at night.

  He’s noticed me, too.

  Golden Boy leans against the balcony railing, his broad arms crossed in front of his chest. His gaze—piercing blue eyes—begins at the top of my head, where Isabel and I fussed with the style for an hour, cursing the absence of a maid to help us. From my dark hair, he traverses the length of my face, down to the décolletage exposed by the gown’s low bodice, the gaudy fake jewels that suddenly make me feel unmistakably cheap, as though he can see that I am an impostor and he is the real deal, to my waist and my hips, lingering there.

  A tingle slides down my spine, goose bumps pricking my skin.

  I take another step back.

  “Am I to call you cousin?”

  I freeze, his voice holding me in place as surely as a hand coming to rest possessively on my waist, as though he is the sort of man used to bending others to his will with little to no effort at all.

  I loathe such men.

  His voice sounds like what I am now learning passes for money in this country: smooth, crisp, and devoid of any hint of foreignness—the wrong kind, at least. The kind of voice that is secure in the knowledge that every word will be savored.

  I arch my brow. “Excuse me?”

  He reaches between us and grabs my hand, his skin warm, his thumb rubbing over my bare ring finger. His touch is a shock to my system, waking me from the slumber of a party I tired of hours ago. His mouth quirks in a smile as he looks up, his gaze connecting with mine, little lines crinkling around his eyes. How nice to see that even gods have flaws.

  “Andrew’s my cousin,” he offers by way of explanation, his tone faintly amused.

  I find that most rich people who are still, in fact, rich, manage to pull this off, as though a dollop more amusement would be atrociously gauche.

  Andrew. The fifth marriage proposal has a name. And the man before me likely has a prestigious one—is he a Preston, or merely related to one, like Andrew?

  “We were all waiting with breathless anticipation to see what you would say,” he comments.

  There’s that faint amusement again, a weapon of sorts when honed appropriately. He possesses the same edge to him everyone here seems to have, except I get the sense that under all of that seriousness, he is laughing with me, not at me, which is a welcome change.

  I grace him with a smile, the edges sanded down a bit. “Your cousin has an impeccable sense of timing and an obvious appreciation for drawing a crowd.”

  “Not to mention excellent taste,” he counters smoothly—too smoothly—returning my smile with one of his own.

  My breath hitches.

  He was handsome before, but this is simply ridiculous.

  He leans back against the stone railing once more, his long legs crossed at the ankle. My gaze drops to the soles of his shoes, to the scuffs there, seizing on that imperfection.

  “True,” I agree. I have little use for false modesty these days; if you’re not going to fight for yourself, who will?

  “No wonder you’ve whipped everyone into a frenzy,” he replies, appreciation in his gaze.

  I arch my brow once more, for a moment feeling as though I have indeed gone back in time to when I was a different person, my problems far simpler. To when I enjoyed flirting with men on balconies and in ballrooms and the like.

  “Me?”

  He chuckles, the sound low and seductive, like the first sip of rum curling in your belly.

  “You know the effect you have.” There’s that admiration again. “I saw you in the ballroom.”

  How did I miss him? He’s not the sort of man who blends in with the crowd.

  “And what did you see?” I ask, emboldened by the fact that his gaze has yet to drift.

  “You.”

  My heartbeat quickens.

  He pushes off from the balcony railing, taking a step toward me, then another, and then another, until only a foot separates us, his golden, blond frame looming over me.

  “Just you,” he says, his voice barely loud enough to be heard over the sound of the ocean and the wind.

  His eyes are the color of the deep parts of the water off the Malecón.

  “I didn’t see you.”

  My own voice sounds husky, like it belongs to someone else, someone who is rattled by this.

  My gaze has yet to drift from him, too.

  His eyes widen slightly, a dimple denting his cheek, another imperfection to hoard, even if it adds more character than flaw.

  “You sure know how to make a guy feel special.”

  I curl my fingers into a ball to keep from giving into temptation, to keep from reaching out and laying my palm against his cheek. “I’d venture a guess that you have plenty of people making you feel special all the time.”

  There’s that smile again. “That I do,” he acknowledges with a tip of his head.

  I shift until we stand shoulder to shoulder, looking out at the moonlit sky. He gives me a sidelong look. “I imagine it’s true, then?”

  “What’s true?”

  “They say you ruled like a queen in Havana.”

  I have no time left for such frivolities. Over a year ago, I would have accepted the distinction as my due. Now—

  “There are no queens in Havana. Only a tyrant who aims to be king.”

  “I take it you aren’t a fan of the revolutionaries?” he asks, interest in his voice.

  “It depends on the revolutionaries to whom you refer. Some have their uses. Fidel and his ilk are little more than vultures feasting on the carrion that has become Cuba.” I walk forward, sidestepping him so the full skirt of my dress swishes against his elegant tuxedo pants. I feel him behind me, his breath on my nape, but I don’t look back. “Batista needed to be eliminated. In that, they succeeded. Now, if only we could rid ourselves of the victors—”

  I turn, facing him.

  His gaze has sharpened from an indolent gleam to something far more interesting. “And replace them with what, exactly?” he asks, his tone silk sliding over my bare skin.

  “A leader who cares about Cubans, about their future. Who is willing to remove the island from the Americans’ yoke,” I say, caring little for the fact that he is an American and acknowledging the line that has already been drawn in the sand between us. I am not one of them and have no desire to pretend to be. “A leader who will reduce sugar’s influence,” I add. “One who will
bring us true democracy and freedom.”

  He’s silent, his gaze appraising once again, and I’m not sure if it’s the wind, my imagination, or his breath against my neck, but goose bumps rise over my skin again.

  “You’re a dangerous girl, Beatriz Perez.”

  My lips curve. So he asked someone for my name.

  I tilt my head to the side, studying him, trying desperately to fight the faint prick of pleasure at the phrase “dangerous girl” and the fact that he knows my name.

  “Dangerous for who?” I tease.

  He doesn’t answer, but then again, he doesn’t have to.

  Another smile. Another dent in his cheeks. “I’ll bet you left a trail of broken hearts behind you.”

  I shrug, registering how his gaze is drawn to my bare shoulder.

  “A proposal or two, perhaps.”

  “Rum scions and sugar barons, or wild-haired, bearded freedom fighters?”

  I laugh. “Let’s just say my tastes are varied.” I turn so it’s no longer just his profile that’s visible to me. “I kissed Che Guevara once.”

  I can’t tell who is more surprised by the announcement. I don’t know why I said it, why I’m sharing a secret not even my family knows with a total stranger. To shock him, maybe; these Americans are so easy to scandalize. To warn him that I am not some simpering debutante, that I have done and seen things he cannot fathom. And also, perhaps, because there’s some power in it—the lengths to which you will go to secure your father’s release from Guevara’s hellhole of a prison, La Cabaña. It makes a good story, even if I inwardly cringe at the young girl whose hubris made her think a kiss could save a life.

  Whatever arrogance I had, Fidel whittled away.

  “Did you enjoy it?” Golden Boy asks, his expression utterly inscrutable, a clever and effective mask sliding into place. I can’t tell if he’s scandalized, or if he feels sorry for me; I far prefer their scorn to their pity.

  “The kiss?”

  He nods.

  “I would have preferred to cut his throat.”

  To his credit, he doesn’t flinch at my bloodthirsty response.

  “Then why did you do it?”

  I surprise myself—and perhaps him—by going with the truth rather than prevarication.

  “Because I was tired of things happening to me, and I wanted to make things happen for myself. Because I was trying to save someone’s life.”

  “And did you?”

  The taste of defeat fills my mouth with ash.

  “That time, I did.”

  The problem is that the wave of power brings another emotion with it, the memory of the life I couldn’t save, of a car screeching to a stop in front of the enormous gates of our home and the door opening, my twin brother’s still-warm, dead body tumbling to the ground, his blood staining the steps we once played on when we were children, his head cradled in my lap while I sobbed.

  “Is it as bad as everyone says?” he asks, his tone gentled to something I can hardly bear.

  “Worse.”

  “I can’t imagine—”

  “No, you can’t.” I take a deep breath, the cool night air filling my lungs, staving off the panic creeping toward me. “You have no idea how fortunate you are to be born in this time, in this place. Without freedom, you have nothing.”

  He doesn’t take his gaze off me, the solemnity in his eyes speaking to the sort of man he is. The understanding there surprises me and gives the impression that, despite the differences in our nationalities and stations in life, we might be more similar than I originally thought.

  “And what would you tell a man with only a few minutes of freedom left?” he asks.

  “To run,” I reply, my tone wry.

  A ghost of a smile crosses his face, but it’s obvious he isn’t buying what I’m selling, and I like him a bit better for it, for seeing past the facade.

  “To savor the last few minutes he has,” I answer instead.

  I know a thing or two about cages.

  He nods as though he can read the truth in my answer.

  Who is he?

  Part of me wants to ask his name, but my pride holds me back a bit. And if I’m being completely honest, it isn’t just my pride—it’s my fear.

  Such luxuries have no place in my life at the moment.

  I blink, only to be greeted by an outstretched palm, waiting for mine to join it.

  “Dance with me,” he says, and even though the words are phrased as a command, the question contained there is what strikes me the most—that and the earnestness.

  I swallow, my mouth suddenly dry, cocking my head to the side, studying him, pretending my heart isn’t thundering in my chest, that my hand isn’t itching to take his.

  “Now, why does that feel more like a challenge than an invitation?”

  The music is a faint hum in the background of the evening, the notes drifting out onto the balcony.

  “Will you dance with me, Beatriz Perez, kisser of revolutionaries and thief of hearts?”

  He’s too smooth by half, and I like him far too much for it.

  I shake my head, a smile playing at my lips. “I didn’t say anything about stealing hearts.”

  He smiles again, that full wattage hitting me. “No, I did.”

  Do I really even stand a chance?

  He steps forward, obliterating the space between us, his cologne filling my nostrils, my eyes level with the snowy white front of his shirt. His hand comes to rest on my waist, the heat from his palm warming me through the thin fabric of my dress. He takes my hand with his free one, our fingers entwined, our bodies closer than I normally dance with men I don’t know.

  What is happening to me?

  My heart turns over in my chest as I follow his lead, as the music fills me. Unsurprisingly, he’s a natural, confident, elegant dancer.

  We don’t speak, but then again, considering the conversation between our bodies—the rustle of fabric, the brushing of limbs, the fleeting touches that imprint themselves upon my skin—words seem superfluous and far less intimate.

  The thing about collecting marriage proposals is that people assume you’re a flirt. And perhaps I was, once, long ago, but now, it feels unnatural to play the coquette. I am somewhere between the girl I was and the woman I want to be.

  The song ends and another begins with far too much speed, the dance equal parts stretching for eternity and ending with a blink. He releases me with a subtle heave of his shoulders, the cool air between us, my fingers missing the twine of his, the shock of his absence surprisingly sharp.

  I tip my head up to look into his eyes, steeling myself against the onslaught of flirtation that is likely to come, the invitation to lunch or dinner, the compliments about my dancing, the heat in his gaze. I have no use for romantic entanglements at the moment, even though part of me thinks I would very much like to be temporarily entangled with this man.

  He smiles. “Thank you for the dance.”

  A glimmer of something that might be regret flashes in those eyes—or perhaps it’s my own imagination—before he inclines his head and turns back for the ballroom.

  I watch him walk away, rooted to the spot, my heart hammering in my chest, secure in the knowledge that he will turn around and look back at me.

  He doesn’t.

  I turn once he’s disappeared back into the ballroom, into the world where he clearly belongs. I stare at the swaying palms, at the water, attempting to get my traitorous heart under control. Minutes pass before I’m ready to return to the ballroom, to the glittering chandeliers, the harsh glint of the other guests. The world where I will never belong.

  I pass through the balcony doors to find Isabel standing off to the side, Elisa nowhere to be seen.

  “She wasn’t feeling well,” Isabel says when I ask about our sister’s whereabouts. “Ju
an took her home.”

  A waiter approaches us with a tray of champagne flutes in hand, more waiters around the ballroom doing the same thing. A murmur resounds through the ballroom, whispers tucked behind cupped hands, names on everyone’s lips, the calm before a scandal breaks.

  Curious as to the piece of gossip they’re all eager to seize upon, I scan the crowd, looking for Golden Boy, looking for—

  He stands next to the orchestra near the front of the ballroom with an older couple and a woman.

  Oh.

  Oh.

  There’s no point in dissecting her flaws, for I fear it would be a useless endeavor and do me no favors. It’s clear as can be that her family did hail on a great big ship at this nation’s founding, that she’s stunning with her blond hair and delicate features, the perfect complement to his golden looks. Her gown is the height of fashion, her jewels certainly not paste, a pretty smile affixed to her face.

  And who can blame her for smiling?

  I join the rest of the ballroom in lifting my champagne flute and toasting the happy couple, as the bride’s father announces his daughter’s engagement to Nicholas Randolph Preston III. He is not just a Preston—he is the Preston. The sitting U.S. Senator rumored to have aspirations of reaching the White House one day.

  Our gazes meet across the ballroom.

  How could I not see this coming a mile away? In the end, life always comes down to timing. It’s New Year’s Eve, 1958, and your world is parties and shopping trips; it’s New Year’s Day, 1959, and it’s soldiers, guns, and death. You meet a man on a balcony, and for a moment you forget yourself, only to be reminded once again how mercurial fate can be.

  I drain the glass in one unladylike gulp.

  And then I see him—the one I came for—and nothing else matters anymore.

  A different sort of awareness hums through my veins as I spy a man in the corner, standing on the fringes of the party, Nicholas Randolph Preston III a ghost of a memory.

  This man is short and stout, his hair balding at the top, his nose better suited to a larger face. He wears his tuxedo like it’s strangling him rather than as though he was born to it. Through the research I’ve done, I know he’s invited to these parties for one reason and one reason only: His wife is the darling of the charity circuit, her maiden name whispered with reverence throughout the ballroom. He clearly prefers the comfort of the shadows, every inch of him reinforcing the intelligence I’ve received. He’s a man who isn’t afraid to roll up his sleeves and dirty his hands, who enjoys moving world leaders around like they are pieces on a chessboard, wiping the whole lot of them out with a crushing and fatal blow.

 

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