Part 34 (1/2)

My father shook his head and held his hand up. ”Isabel,” he said with determination. In fact, he sounded very much like a father who had heard enough, and was about to set the record straight. ”Isabel,” he said again. ”Of course I have watched over my little girl and my little boy and my wife.” He cleared his throat. ”My former wife. But I was never intrusive. I never followed you in the way you are talking about. Of course, I heard about Sam disappearing and your client dying, and then a few months later I heard about your friend dying and you being suspected of her murder. So, of course, I was around more at those times. That's why I was still around when I saw you meet with Dez Romano. But I never tailed you so you felt watched, never so you felt me there. I had to make sure you were okay. Certainly you can understand that. I had to ensure that you were protected. I just could not believe when I saw who you were hanging out with.”

”Hanging out with? What does that mean?”

”Michael DeSanto.”

”I wasn't hanging out with Michael DeSanto.”

He held up his hand again. ”I realize that. I figured out that you were doing undercover work with John Mayburn. What I couldn't figure out was if it was some kind of trap. I knew that DeSanto was working with Dez Romano. I knew Romano was in the new version of the Camorra in the United States. The thing is, Romano and these U.S. guys in the System work differently. I had no idea what was going on. It took me a while to determine that it was just a coincidence-an entirely freakish coincidence-that you were involved with them.”

I stopped and thought about it. ”That must have been bizarre.”

He shook his head. ”You have no idea.”

We both chuckled, but then I stopped short.

”What?” he said.

”That's the first time I've seen your smile in twenty-two years.”

That made him lose his smile. Both of us fell silent for a moment.

”I never intended to step out of the shadows, Izzy. But then that night when Romano and DeSanto were running after you...” He shook his head, as if trying to shake off a horrid memory. ”I had to save you.”

”Well...thank you.”

He nodded.

After a minute of uncomfortable quiet, we began talking again. And we talked for an hour. It was a quiet conversation filled with short questions designed to find the most minimal amount of information without prying too much. We were like new parents dancing around a baby, not wanting to wake it up, afraid of what might happen if we did.

”Where did you live the whole time?” I asked him.

”Rome,” he told me. ”Mostly Rome, but also Milan and Naples.”

”What did you do with yourself?”

”I joined the antimafia office. I practiced my Italian. And I went back into profiling.”

”Trying to bring down the Camorra.”

A solemn nod.

”You just couldn't leave it behind.”

His face turned fast to mine, his eyes flas.h.i.+ng, then he looked back at the seat in front of him. ”I knew nothing else.”

”So when I went to the antimafia office in Rome, did they let you know?”

”Not right away, but yes. Hardly anyone knows that I work with the office. Almost no one knows my real name or ident.i.ty. But word of your visit eventually got to some people I know. And they briefed me.”

”And then I was followed to Naples, and those guys came after me with guns.” Something occurred to me. ”Elena said that those men were just trying to scare me, because the Camorra doesn't chase, they kill.”

”That's true.”

I felt a little frozen with fear. ”Did you send those guys after me? Were you trying to scare me into going home or something?”

”No.” His voice was curt, distinct. ”Of course not. I never want you to be scared. From what I can tell, there must be a Camorra spy in the Rome antimafia office, a mole who told someone you were in there. They must have figured out you were going to Naples and followed you.”

I replayed that night when the guys were chasing me, when they were getting off the elevator near ours in the hotel and ran down the hall toward our room, only to get clocked with that door.

”That was you, wasn't it?” I said. ”The door opening when those guys were running down the hallway at the hotel?”

”Yes.”

”Very Laurel and Hardy of you.”

He chuckled again. ”Sometimes you have to go back to the basics.”

I folded my hands in my lap and looked down at them. ”Did you ever remarry?”

A sad smile, a definitive yet soft, ”No.”

”Do you have any other kids?”

A shake of his head, a flash of pain across his face, as if the thought seared him.

He seemed so strong, someone who could endure anything, even the forced loss of his family, and yet, now that the secret was out, there was something that arose from within him and was revealed in his eyes. It was...What was it? He was wounded. Yes, my father was a wounded man.

How strange to think of him alive, as someone suffering right now, instead of thinking of him as my father, who pa.s.sed away when I was young.

”And you,” he said. ”I know a little more about you. And I have to say, from what I saw, I liked that Sam.”

That Sam...I felt a wave of sadness. It was so powerful I closed my eyes against it. But then I realized it was just that-only a wave, one that crested and went away. When it was gone, I opened my eyes and looked into my father's-green eyes that looked like mine (minus my eyeliner and two coats of mascara).

Thinking of Sam and me, of the couple we used to be, made me think of another couple, and I had to ask. ”Does Mom know?”

”That I'm alive?”

”Yes.”

He shook his head no.

The internal wounds seemed to pain him now, and his eyes took on an anguished tint.

”I guess we need to figure out how to handle this,” I said.