Iâve never been blindsided like that in my life.
Simoneâs confession was a 400 lbs linebacker, flattening me out of nowhere. I feel like Iâm lying on the turf, gasping for breath, my whole head exploding.
Never, not for a second, did I think Simone might be pregnant with my child. We only had unprotected sex that one time at the museum. She was a virginâI didnât even consider it.
But now that the idea is in my head, so many things are falling into place.
How she got sick those last few weeks we were together. How she seemed increasingly anxious about my job. How she demanded to meet up that night, and her horror when I arrived, bruised and bloodied and reeking of gasoline . . .
She was going to tell me that I was about to be a father. And then I showed up looking like the least fatherly person on the planet. Like the last man youâd ever want around your child.
I understand now.
I understand . . . but Iâm not okay with it. Not one fucking bit.
She flew across the Atlantic. She disappeared out of my life without another word. She carried my baby for nine months, gave birth, and then RAISED MY FUCKING SON WITHOUT EVER TELLING ME HE EXISTED!
Iâm so angry at her that I canât even think about it without going into a blackout state.
When Simone ran away from me in the park, I didnât try to chase her. I knew it was better for her to get away before I said or did something Iâd regret.
I wasnât going to lay a hand on herâIâd never do that.
But if some stranger had walked up to me asking the time, I definitely might have murdered I could never hurt Simone.
Even now, filled with bitterness and fury, I know that to be true.
And I am bitter. Iâm as deeply, wretchedly bitter as a whole barrel of quinine. Iâm soaking in it, pickling in it.
She stole our baby. She raised him on the other side of the world. I never saw him grow in her belly. I never saw him learn to crawl or walk. I never heard his first words. And most of all, I never got to raise him. Never got to teach him, help him, care for him. Instill in him a sense of his culture, his family, his heritage, from my side.
Instead he was raised by Simone and Yafeu-fucking-Solomon, who I still hate. Yafeu got his revenge on me, and I didnât even know it. I tried to take his daughter from him, and he stole my son instead.
I stalk back and forth in the park, radiating so much rage that people jump out of my way on the paths.
Itâs not enough. I need to vent some other way.
So I stomp back to my car, still pulled up in front of the hotel, and jump into the open convertible. Thereâs a pile of blankets in the backseatâIâd been planning to take Simone for a drive out to the dunes later. I thought weâd sit on the sand and look at the stars.
What a fucking fool I was.
I roar away from the curb, speeding recklessly down the road. Usually I drive carefullyânot today. Nothing but cold wind in my face can dash away the heat burning behind my eyes.
She betrayed me. Thatâs why Iâm so angry. I was willing to accept that Simone left me. I could forgive her for that. All the pain it caused me could be washed away by having her back again.
But this . . . nothing can give me those nine years back with my son.
Fucking hell, I barely looked at him!
He was right there next to me in the hotel room, and I hardly gave him a momentâs thought.
I try to remember now.
I know he was tall, slim. He had curly hair and big, dark eyes. A lot like Seb when he was little, actually.
Picturing his face, I feel the first stab of something other than anger. A fragile flutter of anticipation.
My son was handsome. He had an intelligent expression. He looked strong and capable.
I could meet him now, meet him properly.
That must be why Simone told me about him.
She didnât have toâI had no idea. She could have kept pretending he was her nephew.
I remember asking her about that at the Heritage House event. She turned red and hesitated before she answered. GODAMNIT! How could I have been so stupid? There must have been a hundred hints of what was going on, nine years ago up until today.
If I would have gone to London, I would have found out. I would have seen Simone pregnant. Instead I stayed in Chicago, sulking.
I thought about chasing after her. Hundreds of times. I even bought a plane ticket once.
But I never went. Because of pride.
I told myself she didnât want me, and I couldnât make her change her mind.
I never considered that there might be another reason she left. Something outside the two of us.
Now I feel something else: a jolt of sympathy.
Because I realize how sick and scared she must have been. She was eighteen years old. Barely an adult.
I think of how much Iâve changed since then. I was impulsive, reckless, a poor decision-maker. Can I blame her if she made a bad choice, too?
If it even was a bad choice.
I think of all the stupid things I did over those nine yearsâall the conflict and bloodshed, all the mistakes I made . . .
Simone raised our son in Europe, away from all of that. He was healthy, happy, and safe.
Iâm not glad she did itâI canât be.
But . . . I understand why.
I picture her standing in the park, shaking with fear of the thing she had to tell me. Why was she so scared? Because she thought Iâd hurt her? Because she thought Iâd steal her son?
No. If those were the reasons, she wouldnât have told me at all.
She told me . . . because she loves me. Because she wants me to know Henry after all these years, and for him to know me. And because . . . I think . . . I hope . . . because she wants to be with me. She wants us to be a family, like we always should have been.
Iâm driving down the freeway at a hundred miles an hour, barely having to weave through traffic because itâs getting late and thereâs not many cars on the road.
Iâve been driving toward the South Shore development without even realizing it. And now I know the reason whyânot to see the high rises, or the empty construction equipment my workers have abandoned for the night.
I want to see her face.
I drive up to the billboard right as it flips from the ad for Cola to the one for perfume.
Simoneâs face hits me like a slap.
Sheâs beautiful. Dreamy. And sad. Yes, sheâs sad, I know it. Because all those years she longed for me, just like I did for her. We were two halves of a heart, torn apart, bleeding and aching to be stitched back together again.
She loves me. And I love her. I canât stop loving her.
No matter what sheâs done to me, no matter what she might do in the future, I can never stop. I would cut off my hands for this woman. Strip the flesh off my bones for her. I canât live without her, and I donât want to try.
Forgiving her isnât optional. I have to do it. I canât exist without it.
Because I canât exist without her. I tried and I tried. It will never work. Iâll get down on my fucking knees and crawl across glass for her.
As soon as I realize this, the anger seeps out of me. My chest is burning, but not with fury.
Itâs just love. I fucking love her. I always have and I always will.
Iâm parked in front of the billboard. The dark night is silent all around me.
Until someone sits up in my backseat.
I shout and spin around, reaching automatically for the gun under the seat.
Then I see itâs a boy.
My boy.
Itâs Henry.
He looks at me nervously, trying to flatten his curls with one hand. He bites his bottom lip, with the unmistakable appearance of a kid who knows heâs in trouble.
Heâs wearing flannel pajamas, navy blue with red piping. I canât stop staring at him.
I must have been fucking blind before. Heâs got Simoneâs smooth, bronze, luminescent skin. His curls are a little looser and a little lighter. His face is longer, not square like hers.
In fact, itâs just the shape that Sebâs was at that age. Heâs got long lashes like Nero had, and Aida. But the actual color of his eyes . . . theyâre dark, dark brown. Almost black.
Just like mine.
Iâm frozen in place, looking at him. Silent. Totally unable to speak.
âI . . . I hid in the backseat,â he explains, unnecessarily. âSorry,â he adds, wincing.
âItâs okay,â I tell him.
Those are the first words Iâve spoken to my son.
His eyes dart away from me and back again. I can tell heâs as curious to look at me as I am him, but heâs scared.
âItâs alright,â I say again, trying to reassure him. I donât really know how to talk to a kid. I had younger siblings, but that was different, and it was a long time ago.
âI wanted to meet you,â he says.
âMe too,â I assure him. Then, as gently as I can, I say, âDoes your mom know where you are?â
He shakes his head, looking more guilty than ever.
âI snuck out,â he admits.
Heâs honest. Iâm glad to see that.
âWe should call her,â I say.
I hit the number on my phone. It rings several times, then switches over to voicemail. No response from Simone.
Sheâs still upset over the way I reacted. She must not have noticed that Henryâs missing. Sheâs probably crying somewhere.
Iâm about to text her, but Henry interrupts me.
âHow come you never came to visit me?â he says.
I hesitate. I donât know what Simone told him. I could have discussed this with her, if Iâd stayed calm, instead of losing my temper.
âWhat did your mom say?â I ask Henry.
âShe said you were far away.â
âThatâs true. I was in the army for a whileâdid you she tell you that?â
Henry shakes his head.
âI went to Iraq. You know where that is?â
âYes,â he says. âI like geography. I learned a song about the hundred and ninety-five countries.â
âThey eat kebabs in Iraq. You know, meat skewered on a stick. Lamb or beef, sometimes fish or chicken. That was good, better than the barracks food. They had this stew called , too.â
âI donât like soup,â Henry says, wrinkling his nose.
âI donât like soup, either,â I tell him. âBut stew, if itâs good and thick, that can be a real meal. I bet you get hungry, a big kid like you.â
âYeah, all the time.â
âI was that way, too. Always growing. Are you hungry now?â
Henry nods, eyes bright.
âWhatâs your favorite food?â
âIce cream.â
I start the car engine again.
âI bet thereâs someplace open that serves ice cream . . .â
Right then, my phone starts buzzing next to me. I see Simoneâs name, and I pick it up, thinking that she noticed my call, or saw that Henry was missing. Iâm planning to tell her that heâs with me, heâs safe.
âSimoneââ I start.
A male voice replies instead.
âDante Gallo.â
Itâs a smooth voice. Almost pleasant. Still, it sends a sick electric pulse across my skin.
I know who it is, though Iâve never heard his voice before.
âChristian Du Pont,â I say.
He lets a little hiss of air, halfway between annoyance and a laugh.
âVery good.â
He already knows Iâve figured out his name, because he saw me in his little cabin.
Itâs me whoâs flooded with a nasty sense of shock.
Du Pont called me on Simoneâs phone. That means he has her phone. And he probably has Simone as well.
âWhereâs Simone?â I demand.
âRight here with me,â he says, softly.
âLet me talk to her.â
âNo . . . I donât think so . . .â he replies, lazily.
My brain is racing, and so is my heart. Iâm trying to stay calm, trying not to antagonize him. My voice is like a steel cable, stretched to the breaking point.
âDonât you hurt her,â I growl.
Du Pont gives that huffing laugh again, louder this time.
âSheâs a true beauty,â he says. âEven more than her pictures. That surprised me.â
Iâm gripping the phone so hard Iâm afraid Iâm going to shatter it in my hand. Henry is watching me, wide-eyed. He canât hear the other side of the conversation, but my expression is enough to terrify him.
âWhat do you want?â I demand.
âThatâs an interesting question,â Du Pont says. I canât see him, but he sounds pensive, like heâs leaning back in a chair, smoking a cigar, or just looking up at the ceiling. âWhat I actually want is impossible. You canât bring someone back from the dead, after all. So then I have to look at other options. Other things that might make me feel just a little bit better . . .â
âSimone has nothing to do with this!â I snap.
Du Pont doesnât respond to my anger. He stays perfectly calm.
âI donât think thatâs true, Dante. You know, when I came here, I had a simple and specific purpose. Revenge. I planned to do it cleanly. Callum Griffin, Mikolaj Wilk, and Marcel Jankowski. Kolya Kristoff deserved to die as well, of course, but Fergus Griffin had already taken care of that. So I intended to work my way down the list and be done with it. But you got in my way.â
âI didnât even know who you were trying to hit at the rally,â I tell him.
âThatâs whatâs so interesting about fate, isnât it, Dante?â Du Pont hisses. âI knew all about you in Iraq, even before I ended up in a unit with your spotter. You were a hero to those boys. To me too, when I first got there. I wanted to meet you. A couple times it almost happened. One night we were both at the al-Taji base, close enough that I could see your back, sitting in front of the fire. But something always intervened to keep us apart. And after a while, I started to think it was better that way. Because I wanted to beat your record. I thought it would be so much more fun if the first time we met, face to face, I could tell you that. Then you went home, and I thought, âPerfect. Now I know exactly what number I have to beat.â â
Iâm in agony listening to this bullshit. I donât want to hear about this ridiculous military rivalry between us that existed only in his head. I want to know where Simone is right now. I need to hear her voice to know that sheâs safe. But Iâm clinging to every shred of patience I can muster, so I donât antagonize this psychopath more than I already have.
âThen they sent me back,â Du Pont says, with an edge of bitterness in his voice. âAnd I never hit that number.â
I already know he wasnât âsent back.â He was discharged for being a nut job. But I doubt heâs going to acknowledge that, and I certainly donât need to bring it up.
âI thought that was the end of our parallel paths,â he sighs. âUntil Jack died.â
âYou know didnât kill him,â I say. Not because I give a fuck what Du Pont thinks about it, but because I donât want him taking it out on Simone.
âI know exactly what happened!â Du Pont spits. âThough it took me months to get the real story. You all covered your asses, kept your own names out of the papers. Let them write about Jack like he was a fucking criminal like the rest of you. When he WASNâT!â
âHe was Callumâs bodyguard,â I say, not asserting one way or another if that likewise made Jack part of the Irish mafia, or only an employee. âThey were friends.â
â
Du Pont sneers. âDo you drive your friends around like a servant? Do you open doors for them? Those Irish fucks treated him like a dog, when our family has ten times the pedigree of theirs.â
Thereâs no point arguing with him. I know that Cal cared about Jack. He was devastated and guilty for months after Jackâs death. It took him a long time to forgive Miko, even after Mikolaj married Calâs sister. Callum probably wouldnât ever have forgiven him, if Mikolaj hadnât saved Nessaâs life.
But none of those things are going to make Du Pont any less angry at our families. We walked away from that battle with our families intact. Christian didnât.
âWhat do you want?â I repeat, trying to get him back on track. I donât give a shit about his grudge. I only care about Simone.
âItâs not what I want,â Du Pont says, in a calmer tone. âItâs what fate has decreed. Itâs brought us together again, Dante. Itâs making us face off against each other, just like we did in Iraq.â
Following the musings of a madman is exhausting. I never knew Du Pont in Iraq. But he thinks we had some kind of rivalry. Like Nero guessed, it appears that he wants to reignite it here and now. He wants the showdown he was denied.
âThatâs what you want?â I say. âA competition?â
âIt seems the most fair way to resolve our conflict,â Du Pont says, dreamily. âTomorrow morning, at 7:00 am, Iâm going to release the beautiful Simone into the wild. Iâm going to hunt her like a deer. And Iâm going to put a bullet in her heart. Iâve told you the time, and Iâll text you the place. Youâll have your chance to try to stop me. Weâll see whose bullet finds its mark first.â
This is not at all what I thought he was going to say. My hand trembles around the phone. I would give anything to be able to reach through the space between us, to tear out Du Pontâs throat.
âIâm not fucking playing games with you!â I shout. âIf you put one fucking finger on her, Iâll eviscerate every last Du Pont on this fucking planet, starting with that old bitch Irene! Iâll track you down and rip your spine out, youââ
Heâs already hung up the phone. Iâm shouting at nothing.
Actually, Iâm shouting at my son, whoâs been watching me this whole time with his big, dark eyes, hands clenching the blanket still laying across his lap in the backseat.
Iâm shaking with rage, I canât help it.
That lunatic has Simone. He wants to shoot her right in front of me tomorrow morning.
âIs someone gonna hurt Mom?â Henry whispers.
âNo!â I tell him. âNo oneâs going to hurt her. Iâm going to get her and bring her back. I promise you, Henry.â
Itâs the first promise Iâve ever made to him.
Iâll keep it, or Iâll die trying.