Fantastick - Carolina -
Romeo had a routine: a double espresso at dawn, three hours of practicing the saxophone, and a long walk through the botanical gardens. It was there, amidst the oversized ferns and the humid air of the greenhouse, that he first saw Carolina.
They were an unlikely composition—the bold brass and the delicate silk. Friends called them "The Fantastick Duo," a title Romeo embraced with his usual flair. Fantastick - Carolina
Six months later, a man in a very loud linen suit stepped off a train in Florence. He carried a saxophone case and a single, perfectly preserved moth wing he had found in a botanical garden half a world away. Romeo had a routine: a double espresso at
He began to play. It wasn't a standard or a popular hit; it was a song he’d written just for the way the light hit her hair. It was low, slow, and slightly blue. Friends called them "The Fantastick Duo," a title
But like any good song, there was a bridge. Carolina received an offer she couldn't refuse: a two-year residency in Florence to restore a series of Renaissance banners. It was the opportunity of a lifetime, but it meant leaving the city, the garden, and Romeo.