Even though Iâm dreading telling my parents about Dante, I sit them down that same night, as soon as weâre done eating. I would have liked Serwa to be there too, but she was tired and went to bed early.
âMama, Tata,â I say, âI have something to tell you.â
My mother looks expectant. My father is frowningâhe doesnât like surprises.
I take a deep breath. âI met someone. Weâve been dating a couple of months now.â
Mama smiles. She looks pleased, like she already expected this. âItâs Jules, isnât it?â she says. âI saw his mother at brunch last week, and she saidââ
âItâs not Jules,â I interrupt.
âOh.â Her smile fades, but not all the way. She thinks it must be some other boy from Young Ambassadors, or a friend of Emilyâs.
âHis name is Dante Gallo,â I say. âHeâs from here. From Chicago.â
âWho is he?â my father asks at once.
âHeâs, well, uh . . . his family works in construction. And the restaurant business . . .â I say. Iâm trying to list the least-offensive of their professions.
My father isnât fooled for a minute.
âIs that who youâve been sneaking out to see?â he barks.
âYafeu, why are youââ Mama says.
âDonât think Wilson hasnât told me,â my father says, not taking his eyes off me. âHe drops you off at the library, and you call him six hours later. You disappear from dinners and parties . . .â
âI didnât realize I was under surveillance,â I say coldly.
âSneaking out?â Mama says, frowning. âI really donât seeââ
âWhat are you hiding?â my father demands. âWho is this man youâre seeing?â
Iâm sweating and my stomach is rolling over and over. I hate this. But Iâm not going to cry or throw upânot this time. I have to stay calm. I have to explain.
âHeâs a good man,â I say firmly. âI care about him . . . very much. I didnât want to tell you about him because I knew what youâd think.â
âWhat?â my father says with deadly calm. âWhat would I think?â
âHis family has . . . a criminal history.â
My father swears in Twi.
My mother is staring at me, wide-eyed.
âYou canât be serious, Simone . . .â
âI am. Iâm very serious.â
âYouâve become infatuated with some . . . some ?â
âHeâs not like that,â I say.
I didnât want to lie anymore, but I donât know how to explain what Dante is, actually. Heâs strong, heâs bold, heâs intelligent, heâs passionate . . . I hate to hear him described in the awful terms my parents are using. But at the same time, I canât exactly claim that heâs innocent, that heâs never broken the law . . .
âI want you to meet him,â I say, in the firmest tone I can muster.
âOut of the question!â my father scoffs.
âWait, Yafeu,â my mother says. âMaybe we shouldââ
âAbsolutely not!â he says. Turning to me, he orders, âYouâre not going to see this man again. Youâll block him on your phone, youâll give his name and description to the staff, and from this moment onââ
âNo!â I cry.
My parents fall silent, staring at me in shock.
I donât think Iâve ever told them ânoâ before. Iâve definitely never shouted.
Heart racing, I say, âIâm not going to stop seeing him. Not before youâve even met him. You canât say anything about him now when heâs a stranger. You donât know him like I do . . .â
My father looks like he wants to shout something back at me, but Mama puts her hand on his arm, steadying him. After a moment, he takes a breath and says, âFine, Simone. Youâll invite him here for dinner.â
Even Mama looks surprised at that.
âDinner?â I say.
âYes,â he presses his lips together in a thin line. âWeâll meet this man whoâs insinuated himself into my daughterâs heart. And weâll see exactly what sort of person he is.â
Blood is thundering in my ears. I canât believe heâs agreeing. It seems like a trick. Like the other shoe is about to drop.
But my father doesnât say anything else. He waits for my response.
âThank you,â I say quietly. âIâll invite him tomorrow night.â
âGood,â Tata says. âI canât wait.â
The dinner is a disaster.
From the moment my father opens the door, I know thatâs how itâs going to be.
Heâs put on one of his best suitsâthe navy Brioni. This isnât as a gesture of welcome or respect. He wants to appear as intimidating as possible.
He greets Dante coldly. My father can be horribly stern when he wants to be.
The problem is that Dante is equally stern in return. Heâs wearing a button-up shirt and a pair of slacks. His hair is nicely combed, and his dress shoes are polished. But he doesnât look refined like Tata. With the sleeves of his shirt rolled up, his meaty forearms are displayed, dusted with dark hair and thick with veins and muscle. His massive hand closes around my fatherâs, and it looks like a brutal hand, with its swollen knuckles and the gold family ring Dante wears on his pinky.
By contrast, my fatherâs hands are slim, refined, manicured. My fatherâs watch and cuff links look like the jewelry of a gentleman.
Dante looks like he hasnât shaved, even though I know that he has. Itâs just the darkness of his facial hair that marks his cheeks in a perpetual five oâclock shadow.
When he greets my mother and sister, I know heâs using his most gentle tone, but it comes out like a grunt. Theyâre not used to his voice. Mama actually jumps a little. They donât know how to differentiate between his softer tone and his truly terrifying growl. To them, he sounds rude and uncouth in everything he says, even when he tries to compliment them.
âYou have a beautiful home,â he tells Mama.
That sounds wrong, too, like heâs never been in a nice house before. When I know that the Gallo mansion is lovely and venerable in its own way. Much more than this rented place.
Iâm already sick with dread and the dinnerâs barely begun.
We all sit down around the formal dining table.
Tata is at the head. Mamaâs at the foot. Serwa sits on one side, Dante and me on the other. At least weâre right next to each other.
One of the housemaids brings out the soup.
Itâs gazpacho, with a sheen of olive oil glimmering on its surface. Dante eyes the chilled soup warily.
He picks up his spoon. It looks comically small in his huge hand. My father, mother, and sister are all staring at him like heâs an animal in a zoo. Iâm so angry at them that I want to cry. I know they donât mean it, but it hurts me to see their stiff expressions, the veneer of politeness with distaste underneath.
Dante can feel it, too. Heâs trying to be calm. Trying to be warm to them. But itâs impossible under the bright lights, the tense scrutiny, the silence that blankets the table. Every clink of our spoons is magnified in the formal dining space.
Dante takes a few polite bites of the soup, before laying down his spoon. Itâs too much to try to eat with so many people watching you.
âThe soup doesnât agree with you?â my father says with chilly politeness. âI can order something else from the kitchen. What do like to eat?â
He says it like he thinks Dante lives on a diet of pizza and french fries. Like normal human food is beyond Danteâs appreciation.
âThe soup is excellent,â Dante growls. He picks up his spoon again and takes five or six hasty bites. In his hurry, a little of the red soup splashes on the snow-white tablecloth. Dante flushes and tries to dab the spot with his napkin, making it worse.
âOh, donât bother about that,â Mama says.
She means it kindly, but it sounds condescending, like Dante is a Great Dane sitting at the table, from which nothing better could be expected.
I canât eat a bite. The soup smells awful to me, like it has iron filings in it. Iâm holding back tears.
âSo, Dante,â my father says, as calm and deliberate as ever. âWhat do you do for a living?â
âMy family owns several businesses,â Dante replies. To his credit, his voice is as calm as Tataâs, and he has no trouble meeting my fatherâs eyes.
âWhat sort of businesses?â
âConstruction. Real estate. Fine-dining.â
âIndeed,â my father says. âAlso several laundromats and a strip club, isnât that right?â
I see a muscle jump in Danteâs jaw. My father is making it clear that heâs done his research on the Gallo family.
âYes,â Dante says. âThatâs right.â
âYour family has a long history in Chicago, donât they?â
âYes.â
âThat house on Meyer Avenue is simply . . . charming. Your family must have had it a hundred years.â
âSince 1902,â Dante says stiffly.
My father lays down his spoon and folds his slim, shapely hands on the table in front of him.
âWhat Iâm wondering,â he says, âis why you think that I would ever allow my daughter to align herself with the Italian mafia?â
A frigid silence falls over the table. We all seem frozen in place, my mother stiff and wide-eyed in her chair, Serwa holding her spoon up to her mouth but not taking a sip of her soup, me digging my nails into my palm so hard I might be drawing blood. My father staring at Dante, and Dante staring right back at him.
âAll families have their secrets,â Dante says, his harsh voice in direct opposition to my fatherâs cultured tones. âYou, for instance, growing up in Accra . . . I doubt youâd have to look far to find a relative who had cut someoneâs throat for a few Cedi.â
My father doesnât flinch, but I see the outrage in his eyes. I donât know if Dante is aware how accurate that statement was. My father had two uncles who worked for a local gangster. One day they offered his sisters positions as housemaids in the wealthy part of the city. The girls packed their bags, planning to come home on the weekends. But they never came backâmy father never saw them again.
Tataâs hand twitches on the tabletop. I think heâs about to respond, but Dante isnât finished yet.
âThatâs normal in Africa, I guess,â Dante growls. âWhat about after you came to London? Thatâs where the real money is. Hedge funds, mergers and acquisitions, large-scale real estate transactions . . . the Outfit is good with money. Very good. But weâve got nothing on international financiers . . . thatâs crime on a whole other scale.â
My father makes a sound, his top lip drawn up in a sneer.
âIâm sure youâd like that to be true,â he says. âMy hands may be black, but yours are bloody. Those hands will never touch my daughter. Not after tonight.â
Danteâs eyes get so dark that theyâre darker even than my fatherâsâno iris at all, only black pupil.
Iâm afraid thatâs heâs going to tell Tata that heâs already touched me. In every way possible. Iâm not Daddyâs pure little princess anymore. Not even close.
But Dante would never betray me like that.
Instead, he says, âThatâs not your decision.â
âYes, it is,â Tata says. âI am Simoneâs father. She will obey me.â
Dante looks over at me. Itâs the first time our eyes have met since this awful dinner began. And itâs the first time I see a crack in Danteâs armor. He walked in here like a dark knight, stern and unyielding. And now in his eyes, I see the first hint of vulnerability. A question: is my father speaking the truth?
My mouth is too dry to speak. My tongue darts out to moisten my cracked lips, but itâs not enough. I canât form any words.
That muscle jumps in Danteâs jaw again. His brows lower in disappointment. He turns to my mother.
âThank you for your hospitality,â he says.
And with that, he stands up and walks out of the room.
Instead, I vomit directly into my soup bowl. All over the untouched gazpacho.