I get dressed. Angelo takes a shower. âGotta wash off that fucking fancy Oak Club,â he grumbles as he turns on the water.
I put on sweats and head into the living room, thinking about room service, when the phone rings. I frown at it, not sure what to do, since Iâve never actually heard it before, but decide to go over and answer.
âAh, yes, Mrs. Fabbri.â I smile to myself. Thatâs Angeloâs last nameâthey must think weâre together. âYou have a visitor down at the front desk. He says heâs your father.â
My blood runs cold.
âMy⦠father?â
âYes, maâam. Shall I send him up?â I canât speak. My mouth opens and closes. How did he find me here? What the hell is he doing, showing up at our hotel at eight in the evening? âMaâam?â
âYes, uh, yes, send him up.â
âGladly. Thank you.â The front desk manager hangs up with a click.
I stand there, feeling overwhelmed, and a sense of panic starts to rise in my chest.
Dad knows Iâm staying in a hotel with Angelo.
Panic turns to horror.
Dad knows Iâm , in a room, with .
The terror overwhelms me and I canât move. I canât do anything but stare at the door. Dadâs coming, right now, heâs coming. Right after I had sex with Angelo, my Dad is coming to visit, and I donât know why. Iâm so afraid of what heâs going to say and what heâs going to make me think, and I suddenly want to call the front desk back and beg them not to let my father come up here.
But itâs too late. I hear footsteps outside above the drone of the shower in the other room.
He knocks twice and I move forward woodenly.
âHello, Sara,â Dad says, and I open the door a crack. âI wasnât sure youâd let me come up.â
âDad. How did⦠what are you⦠whatâs happening right now?â
His lips press into a tight line. âI told your friend Robyn that thereâs a medical emergency and that I needed to speak with you right away. She told me that youâve been staying here, at this hotel.â
. Shit. âIs there an emergency. Is Momâ?â
âNo, Sara, everything is okay. Except for you.â
Iâm so mad I could scream. âYou lied?â
âNot exactly. There a medical issue, and besides, I did what was necessary. You werenât at your own apartment. I checked, multiple times, and you simply werenât there anymore. I had to find my own daughter.â
âDad, you couldâve just asked me.â
âAnd, what, let you mislead me?â
âFunny, considering.â
He gives me a harsh smile. âWe need to talk.â
I swallow a lump in my throat and step aside. Dad breezes into the room and looks around. Iâm suddenly very aware that Angeloâs been using the couch as a bed. Thereâs a folded blanket, a few pillows. Itâs obvious Iâm not alone in here, and I can feel Dadâs disapproval growing.
âCan I get you something?â I ask, feeling stupid and not sure what else to do.
He slowly turns to me. âYouâre staying with him, arenât you?â
âItâs not what you think.â
âTell me what to think then.â
I clear my throat. How can I explain this to him without sounding insane? âYou know the case Iâm working on is dangerous.â
âI was under the impression that itâs unsavory. But dangerous?â He makes a face. âWhat have you gotten yourself into, Sara?â
âAngeloâs just⦠heâs a friend and heâs helping me. Heâs keeping me safe.â
âOh, honey, this is unacceptable. Itâs simply unacceptable. How could you?â
âDad, please, before you rush to judgmentââ
âYouâre staying in a hotel room with a goddamn , Sara. My daughter, my only child, is sharing a bedââ
âWeâre not sharingââ
ââmy only daughter is living with a goddamn gangster. Tell me why I shouldnât be upset. This is embarrassing. This is mortifying. Can you imagine how this is going to look?â
I open my mouth to apologizeâ
And stop myself.
Why the hell do I care how itâs going to look? What does it matter to me if Dad is embarrassed? So what if his judgmental asshole friends at that snooty horrible club think his daughter is a tramp or whatever. None of that matters, not anymore.
âThis is my decision. This is my life. If you donât like it, you can walk out of that door.â I stand aside and gesture. âGo ahead. Leave.â
Dadâs face twists with rage.
Iâve never stood up to him before. My headâs dizzy and my heartâs going on overdrive. Iâve never wanted to deny him, and for so long I thought my father was perfect, or at least that he knew the right way to live. I thought if I could only meet his exacting standards, Iâd finally be happy. I wanted success and money and prestige and everything heâs managed to build, and I wanted his love and approval.
I wanted to be worthy of my famous surgeon father.
Now all I want is to be left alone.
âYou donât understand whatâs going on here,â Dad says softly like a white-hot fire crackling through the room. âI , Sara.â
âYou know what?â
âI know that youâre pregnant.â
My mouth opens. I feel like Iâve been hit with a truck. I try to find words. But I donât know words anymore. I donât know how to move, how to think. My hands cover my belly instinctively and I try to make sense of what he just said but itâs like a black hole in my brain.
This canât be happening.
This isnât possible.
I havenât told anyone. Iâve kept this a total secret from my friends, from my employers, from absolutely everyone in my life. Nobody knows, not even Angelo, the father.
Except Dad.
âHow?â I whisper, and I feel like Iâm going to fall apart.
He sneers at me and shakes his head. âI ran into Dr. Bernetti at a conference a week ago, and you know what she said? She said, . I pretended like I knew what she was talking about, but can you imagine how I felt? I thought she must be wrong, she must be confused, but she wasnât, was she? My own daughter, pregnant. And I didnât know.â
Dr. Bernetti. Oh, god. My OB. And if my father wasnât sure before, I just confirmed it for him. She was the only other person in the entire world that knows. She happened to run into my father and one small comment, one tiny breach of ethics and trust, and nowâ
I feel like Iâm falling into a pit.
Dad comes closer. He looks like heâs ten feet tall and growing bigger. âYour life is going to end, Sara, and any freedom you once had is finished. You canât take care of a child and still work at Klein and Houndson, and forget about meeting with friends for drinks or going out to dinner or any of the other minor pleasures you might have in your life. Thatâs all gone now. You have no clue what youâve done. How far along are you?â
âAbout ten weeks now,â I whisper.
He groans. âTen weeks. My god. Youâre almost at the end of your first trimester for fuckâsâBut no, itâs not too late. You can still take care of this. You can solve this problem and you can still have the life youâve always wanted, if onlyââ
The door to the bedroom slams open and Angelo storms out. Heâs in a pair of sweats and a t-shirt, his hair soaking wet. â
,â he roars, and his eyes are wild as he advances on my dad. âNo, no, no, thatâs fucking baby, thatâs child, and youâre not going to make her anything you sick, twisted piece of shit.â
Angelo looks like a crazed rhino ready to charge.
My father stands his ground.
I stagger back, heart racing. Angelo stands seething near the bedroom door while my father tilts his chin up, his eyes gleaming horribly, an awful smile on his lips. I look between the two men, from beautiful and terrible Angelo to my father, the man Iâve always looked up to, always respected, my rock.
â
baby?â Dad asks quietly, and Angelo steps forward, hands curled into fists. âDo you really think you can claim ownership to something you accidentally squirted into my daughter? You have no rights to her and no rights to this baby. Youâll only drag them down to your pathetic level at best, killed at worst. Or perhaps dying now would be a mercy over letting you anywhere near my grandchild.â
âYou piece of shit,â Angelo snarls. âYou motherfuckingââ
âPlease,â I choke out. Tears roll down my cheeks, fat and hot. I donât remember starting to cry, but I canât stop it now. I manage to keep the sobbing under control, but the tears wonât stop flowing. âI didnât want you to find out like this.â
Dad seems surprised. His mouth opens, and he looks from me to Angelo and back againâand he laughs, a bitter and ugly sound. âHe didnât know,â he says. âShe kept it from you.â
Angeloâs jaw works. He stares at me now, eyes beseeching, pleading for something, but I donât know what.
âI didnât want to get you involved,â I say and wipe my face but it doesnât help. More tears replace whatever I manage to push aside. âI didnât think youâd want anything to do withâthis.â I put my hands over my stomach.
âHow could you have known that?â he asks quietly. âThatâs my baby, how could you have thought I wouldnât want to be in your life?â
âIsnât it obvious?â Dad says before I can reply. âLook at you, boy. Youâre a walking disaster. Youâre a criminal and youâre basically one misstep away from being thrown in jail for the rest of your worthless life. Can you really blame her for want to protect her baby from you? Do you want your child to grow up with a father behind bars?â
âMy baby,â Angelo whispers. Heâs staring at me, ignoring my father, and itâs killing me, itâs like a knifeâs jammed down my throat and I want to scream it out but I canât. âYouâve known all this time, havenât you?â
I nod, lip trembling. âI thought I was doing the right thing. Not for me, but⦠for the baby.â
âOf course she did,â Dad says, coming closer. âShe wants to protect her child from you. Can you really stand there and say youâd make a good parent? Do you really think youâd be the father my grandchild deserves? You know what you are, Angelo. Why make things harder for her?â
Angelo stares at me for a beat longer before taking a step back. He turns to my father, and heâs trembling, his face red, barely holding back his rage. âYou donât know me. You donât know what I am.â
âI know that I can help my daughter more than you ever could. Iâve raised a child once already, and I can raise a second. I have money, I have security, I have stability. What can you offer?â
âI donâtââ Angelo starts and stops himself. âYou just told her you want to this problem. I know what that means. You want to kill my baby. Iâm the father. Thatâs my baby.â His eyes move to my stomach and his lips are pulled back.
But I donât want him to look at me, I never wanted this to happen. I knew putting off telling him the truth while also getting closer to him would backfire eventually, but I kept hoping something would happen to take the decision out of my hands. I kept thinking, maybe Iâll tell him, maybe Iâll let him find out, and it would be ugly and hard, but weâd get past it and move on eventually. Only I didnât know how heâd handle finding out the truth, and I was afraid that it would only push him away when whatever we have brewing between us is still so fragile.
I didnât want to risk losing him.
Now I see how stupid and naive Iâve been.
Angelo doesnât want to be a father. He barely wants to be a boyfriend. This man is wild, careless, beautiful and incredible, but also dangerous. Dadâs words keep playing in my ears. I donât want my child to grow up in the shadow of his gangster father. I donât want my child to visit their father in prison.
I want my child to have a future like mine.
âI can help you,â Dad says softly and puts a hand on my shoulder. I flinch, but I donât pull away. I close my eyes, crying. âCome home with me. Your mother and I are disappointed, but we love you, Sara. We can help with this baby, but only if you swear you wonât speak to this man ever again. Weâll hire nannies, weâll get you diapers and bottles and a crib, and you wonât have to give up your life for this baby if thatâs the decision you make. But please, honey. Let me help you.â
I open my eyes again and Angeloâs standing there, jaw tight, looking at me like heâs going to break.
And I know how he feels.
Because Iâm feeling it too.
I think Iâm going to crack open and shatter. Itâs like there are two halves of me, each fighting for control.
Thereâs the Sara Iâve always been, the rule-follower, the good girl, the straight-A student, the honor roll overachiever, the girl that wants to go home and sleep in her old bed and let Mom and Dad tell her what to do.
Then thereâs the new Sara, the one thatâs falling for this strange gangster, this violent thug, this clever and funny and gorgeous man, the new Sara that wants to be free of her old life, that wants to find something new and perfect and all .
Both parts of me want opposite things and I donât know how I can survive.
âThatâs too much,â I say and wipes my eyes. âI canâtâheâs the father. I canât just cut him off.â
âYou can,â Dad says. âIf you want your baby to have a chance, you will.â
âSara,â Angelo says, and he opens his mouth as if he wants to explain something, as if he wants to beg me to stay with himâand I want him to say it, I want him to ask me to stay, to ask me to give him a chance, to beg and plead and make me believe him, and if he does then I will, I know I willâ but the words dissipate and he only shakes his head. âDonât give up your life for me.â
My stomach twists and the tears come faster, heavier, thicker. I want to drown in these tears. The room blurs, and I never want to see the world again.
âSee, honey? Even he knows this is the right choice.â Dad steers me away toward the door. âCome on. Come home. Weâll talk about your options and weâll take care of everything. All you have to do is leave him behind.â
Leave Angelo behind.
The moment things were beginning to turnânow Iâm walking away.
But Iâm doing it for my baby.
I donât want this. If I could have it my way, Iâd stay here in this hotel with Angelo and explore this new version of myself thatâs only just beginning to blossom. I want to revel in freedom with him, in a physical and visceral experience Iâve never felt before. I want him and all of him, unmediated, closer than I ever thought possible.
But I have to think of my baby now, and Dadâs right.
My parents can give me stability. Theyâve been through this beforeâthey know what to expect.
They can help me, and I wonât pretend like Iâm not scared of whatâs going to happen.
To my body, to my life.
Even Angelo knows itâs true.
I shouldnât give up my dreams for him.
Dad keeps steering me and I keep walking, moving woodenly. I want to turn back and go to Angelo, to kiss him, hug him, tell him that everythingâs okay, tell him that he can be the father of this child if thatâs what he wants, but I canât bring myself to do it.
All my life, Iâve tried to do whatâs right.
Iâve followed the rules.
Even when the rules chafe against who I really am.
Iâve done it because itâs .
And Iâll do it again now.
Right now, at my lowest, at my worst, Iâll do the right thing.
For my baby.
Even if it kills me.