Thirty thousand a month. Not his money. Tributary income. Money that flowed up from the businesses the Moretti family protected, money that was supposed to fund operations, grease palms, keep the machinery of the empire turning. And Dante had been skimming it to keep his comare in silk and supplements.
When Daniel came out of the shower, his phone rang. From my vantage point, through the crack in the bedroom door, I saw his face soften as he answered the call. He ran his thumb along the edge of his jaw, that slow, deliberate gesture he made when he was calculating something. Then he glanced toward the bedroom, and carefully stepped out onto the balcony, closing the glass door behind him.
Curiosity gnawing at me, I forced myself up and stood by the door, watching him through the glass. I couldn't make out the words, but his expression was tender, with a slight smile. The kind of smile he hadn't given me in months. Maybe longer. At some point, whoever was on the other end must have said something that made him frown in discomfort. His jaw tightened. But soon enough, he caved, agreeing with a subtle smile that softened the hard lines of his face.
The chill in my chest deepened. Slowly, I turned and dragged myself back to bed, feeling as if the air had been sucked out of the room. Even breathing felt like a burden. The house was enormous and silent around me. Somewhere downstairs, the grandfather clock in the foyer ticked. Outside, one of the perimeter guards passed beneath the bedroom window, his footsteps crunching on gravel. The sounds of a world that kept moving while mine had stopped.
A few minutes later, I heard Dante tiptoe back inside. One of his hands rested on my belly while the other gently brushed the hair from my forehead.
His voice was soft as he whispered, "Baby, there's something urgent I need to handle. Family business. I have to go."
I turned my head and stared deeply into his eyes. My last shred of hope flickered weakly as I asked, "I don't feel well. Could you stay?"
For a brief moment, I thought that if he chose to stay with me instead of running to her, I could try to forgive him. That maybe the seven years meant something. That maybe the ring on my finger and the child in my belly outweighed whatever Cara Valente whispered to him on the phone.
But then I remembered: once the kite string snaps, it can never be fixed.