I wait for Dante out in front of the hotel. Iâm so nervous I feel like Iâm going to throw up.
I spent over an hour getting ready. The pathetic part of me hopes that if I look beautiful enough, he might forgive me. I know itâs ridiculous, but when you spend your whole life trading off your looks, what else can you turn to in your most desperate moment?
I would do anything to go back in time and change the decisions I made.
But thatâs impossible. All I can do now is tell Dante the truth. The whole, entire, ugly truth.
I left Henry with my parents. Theyâre playing board games.
I got Henry all ready for bed before I left, in clean pajamas, teeth brushed.
âWhere are you going?â he asked, eyeing my dress, heels, and earrings.
âIâve got to go out for a couple hours,â I told him.
âAre you going to see ?â he asked. âMy father?â
I hesitated, then answered honestly: âYes.â
âI want to come with you,â Henry said at once.
âYou canât.â
âWhy not?â
âI have to have . . . an adult conversation with him. Just the two of us. But I thinkâI hopeâyouâll be able to meet him soon.â
âI already met him,â Henry said, his voice muffled by the toothbrush.
âI mean, meet him properly.â
Henry spat into the sink, looking cross. âI want to come with you now.â
âYou canât,â I said again, more firmly that time.
I kissed him on the cheek, smoothing his hair. âPlease be good for Grandma and Grandpa.â
âI always am,â he said.
As I walked toward the elevators, I heard the hotel room door crack open behind me. Henry poked his head out in the hall. I shot a look at him, and he retreated into the room, slamming the door behind him.
I hoped he wouldnât say anything to my parents about Dante, but at this point, it hardly matters. I know they want to keep Henry a secret from the Gallos. But thatâs not their decision anymore.
Dante pulls up in front of the hotel. Heâs driving a vintage convertibleâprobably one of Neroâsâand he looks freshly showered. Thereâs a couple folded blankets in his backseat, the kind you lay out on the ground for a picnic, or a nighttime visit to the beach. He dressed up and made plans for us, like itâs a date. My heart clenches in my chest.
He jumps out to open the car door for me. I see heâs moving stiffly, like his back is sore. Still, he pulls the door open, stepping aside to let me get in.
As he climbs back in the driverâs side, I notice that his right ear is bright red, and so is the back of his neck, like he got a nasty sunburn, despite the fact that itâs fall. A white bandage covers his bicep, only half-concealed by the sleeve of his t-shirt.
âWhat happened to you?â I cry.
âNothââ
He was about to say ânothing,â before he stopped himself. He doesnât want to lie to me.
âI found out whoâs been shooting at us,â he says. âHis name is Christian Du Pont.â
âWhoâs that?â I say, mystified. âDid Kenwood hire him?â
âNo,â Dante shakes his head. âActually, he wasnât shooting at your father at all. It was Callum he wanted. And possibly me tooâIâm still figuring that part out.â
âWhat?â This makes no sense to me.
âItâs a long story,â Dante sighs. âBasically, he blames the Griffins and the Gallos for the death of his cousin. And heâs not exactly wrong.â
âDid you find him today?â
âNo. I found where he was staying. Found his little stalker journal. But then the whole place, uh, sort of blew up.â
âWHAT!?â
Dante winces. I know this is exactly the kind of thing he doesnât want to tell me. But, unlike me, heâs never shied away from the truth about who he is, and what he does.
âAre you okay?â I ask him, trying to recover my calm.
âYes. Completely okay.â
That probably wasnât true, but heâs trying to make me feel better. My heart is going a million miles a minute. This isnât how I expected to start our conversation.
âAnyway,â Dante says, âI can tell you all about it over dinner.â
âActuallyââ I swallow hard. âMaybe we could just . . . go for a walk or something.â
I donât want to be around other people for this. I donât want anyone to overhear us.
âOh . . . sure,â Dante says. âThereâs a park about a block down the street . . .â
âPerfect.â
âIâll pull the car over here.â
He parks alongside the curb, then we climb back out again.
Iâm not really dressed for walking. God, I really didnât think this through. Iâm wearing strappy sandals and a black cocktail dress with a light blazer over top. The air is chilly now that the sun has gone down. I wrap my arms around myself, shivering a little.
âHold on,â Dante says. He jogs back to the car, grabs his leather jacket out of the backseat, and puts it around my shoulders. âBetter?â he says.
âYes,â I nod, miserably. I donât want Dante to be kind to me right now. I canât stand it.
He can sense my nerves. He can tell somethingâs wrong. As we turn into the park, he says, âSo what did you want to talk about? Is it about your job? Because I couldââ
âNo,â I interrupt him. âItâs not that.â
âWhat, then?â
His huge frame walks heavily alongside me, each step audible on the paved path. I can feel his body heat even through the leather jacket wrapped round my shoulders. When I glance over at him, his black eyes are fixed on me with surprising gentleness.
âDante,â I say, my voice shaking. âI love you . . .â
Heâs about to respond in kind, but I cut him off.
âNo, wait, just listenâIâve done something. Something awful.â
Heâs watching me. Waiting. He thinks that whatever Iâve done, it doesnât matter. Heâs probably picturing violence or theft or betrayal, something heâs familiar with from his world. Something he would perceive as forgivable.
As always happens when Iâm stressed, my senses become heightened. I can smell his cologne, his aftershave, his soap and deodorant, even the pomade in his hair. Under that, his skin and his breath, and that hint of raw testosterone he produces in excess of a normal man. These scents donât clashâthey blend together to make, what to me, is the epitome of masculine fragrance.
Besides that, I smell the dry, smoky scent of the crushed leaves under our feet. The raw pine sap in the air, and the car exhaust from the roads surrounding the park. Even the slight tang of lake water.
I feel the cool breeze on my face, the loose curls dancing around my cheeks, and the leather jacket heavy on my shoulders.
I hear the noise of traffic, of other people walking and talking in the park, though none very close to us, and the leaves crunching as we walk, and Danteâs heavy tread.
All those things become a jumble in my brain, making it hard for me to think. I have to dissociate so I can get through this. I feel like Iâm watching myself walk down the path. I feel like Iâm hearing my voice speak, without any control over the words coming out of my mouth:
âWhen I left nine years ago . . . itâs because I was pregnant,â I say.
The words come tumbling out, so quick that they slur together.
Dante falls utterly silent. Either because he doesnât quite understand me, or because heâs in shock.
I canât look at him. I have to keep my eyes on the pavement, so I can finish what I have to say.
âI had the baby in London. Your baby. That was Henry. Heâs not my sisterâsâhe never was. She helped me raise him. But heâs your son.â
Now I steal a glance at him.
The expression on his face is horrifying. It strangles the rest of the words I intended to say, cutting them off like a hand around my throat.
Danteâs eyes are black pits in a pale face. His cheeks, his lips, his jaw, are rigid with shock and fury.
I have to keep going. I have to finish while I have the chance.
âI hid him from you. And Iâm so sorââ
âDONâT,â he snarls.
I skitter back from him, stumbling on my heels. Itâs just one word, but itâs saturated with hatred. He doesnât want me to apologize. He sounds like heâll kill me if I try.
Dante stands there, shoulders hunched, fists clenched at his sides. Heâs breathing slowly and deeply. He looks like he wants to pick up boulders and hurl them, uproot entire trees and break them over his knee.
I had wondered, deep down, if he suspected that Henry might be his son . . .
Now I see that he had no idea. He never even considered it.
He never imagined that I could hide something like that from him.
Iâm terrified to speak another word. The silence is unbearable. The longer it goes on, the worse it feels.
âDante . . .â I squeak.
His eyes dart up to me, his teeth bared and his nostrils flared.
âHOW COULD YOU?â he roars.
Thatâs it. Itâs too much for me. I turn on my heel and I run away from him as fast as I can. I run back out of the park and down the sidewalk the block and a half back to the hotel.
Iâm in heels and Dante is faster than meâif he wanted to catch me, he could. But he doesnât chase after me. Probably because he knows if he did, he might rip me apart with his bare hands.
I push through the doors of the hotel, and run to the bathrooms. I lock myself in a stall and I slump down on the tile floor, sobbing into my hands.
Iâve done something that can never be put right.
I broke Danteâs heart nine years ago, and now Iâve done it all over again.
He was willing to forgive me for leaving. But this . . . he could never forgive this. I should have known from the start. I should never have let us get close all over again.
I cry and cry until my whole body aches. My eyes are swollen shut. I can hardly breathe from the mucus in my throat.
I wish I could stay in this bathroom forever. I canât deal with the mess Iâve made. Itâs too much. Itâs too awful.
Unfortunately, thatâs not an option.
So I pull myself up off the floor, still shaking and weak. I go over to the sink and I splash my face with cold water until the swelling goes down a little. Then I dry my eyes with one of the fancy folded hand-towels in the basket, and I try to take a deep breath that doesnât end in another shuddering sob.
Finally, Iâm ready to go back upstairs.
I take the elevator up, dreading making small talk with my parents. I have to say goodnight to them. And maybe put Henry to bed, if he hasnât gone already.
I go into my parentsâ suit, thinking they might still be playing board games with Henry.
The Ticket to Ride board is all folded up, back in the box along with all the tiny plastic pieces. Mama is drinking a mug of tea, while my father sits on the couch, a biography open on his lap.
âHow was dinner?â Mama asks. âThat was fast.â
âYes,â I say, numbly. âDid Henry go to sleep already?â
âHe did,â she nods, taking a sip of her tea. âHe didnât want to play anymore after you left. Said he was tired and went right to bed.â
âI hope heâs not getting sick,â Tata says, turning the page of his book.
Henry never goes to bed early if he can help it. He must have been angry that I didnât let him come with me. I hope he wasnât crying over in the other suite, too far away for my parents to hear him.
âIâll go check on him,â I say. âThank you for watching him.â
âHeâs such a good boy,â Mama says, smiling up at me.
âGoodnight, little one,â Tata says.
âGoodnight.â
I go through the adjoining door to our suite. Henry and I have our own separate bedroomsâIâm trying to give him his privacy, now that heâs getting older.
Still, I tiptoe over to his room and crack the door, not wanting to wake him up if he really is sleeping, but feeling the need to check on him all the same.
His bed is a jumble of pillows and blankets. Itâs hard to spot him, in all the mess. I open the door a little wider.
I donât see his curls, or his long legs hanging out from under the blanket.
Heart in my mouth, I step all the way into the room and stride over to the bed. I pull the blanket back.
Empty. The bed is empty.
I try to hold back the panic, but itâs impossible. I run wildly through the little suite, checking my room, the bathroom, and the couch in the sitting room, in case he fell asleep somewhere odd.
Losing all control I yell, âHENRY!â several times.
My father comes into the suite, looking around in confusion.
âSimone, whatââ
âWhere is he? Did he come back into your suite?â
It takes too long, way too long, for my parents to understand. My mother keeps saying we should check all the rooms, even though I tell her Iâve already done that. My father says, âMaybe he was hungry? He might have gone downstairs looking for food?
âCall the front desk!â I shout at them. âCall the police!â
I run down the hall to Carlyâs room, pounding on her door. Then I remember I gave her the night offâshe probably went out for dinner, or to see a movie.
I try to call her just in case. No answer.
I run to the ice machine, the stairwell, the elevators. I sprint down to the main lobby, and check the commissary like my father suggested, praying Iâll find Henry perusing the chocolate bars and chips. He does love sweets.
The only person in the commissary is an exhausted-looking businessman, trying to make an unenthusiastic choice between a banana and an apple.
âHave you seen a boy?â I ask him. âNine years old? Curly hair? Wearing pajamas?â
The businessman shakes his head, startled by my wild shouting.
I run all the way outside the hotel and I look up and down the busy city street, wondering if Henry would have come out here. He knows heâs not allowed to wander around by himself, especially not at night. But if he was angry that I didnât bring him along to see Dante . . .
I hesitate on the corner, next to a white painterâs van.
Is that what happened? Did Henry come downstairs to try to get another look at his father? Did he follow us . . . maybe all the way to the park?
The back of the painterâs van opens up.
I step aside to get out of the way, still dazed and looking in the direction of the park. Wondering if I should run over there, or if I should call Dante instead.
At that moment, a cloth bag drops over my head. Itâs so sudden that I donât understand whatâs happeningâI rip and pull at the cloth, trying to tear it off my face. Meanwhile, arms close around me, and Iâm lifted off my feet. I shriek and struggle but itâs no use. In two seconds, Iâve been tossed in the back of the van.