Chapter Twenty-Two
VALENTINO
I drive without a destination, which is not something I usually do.
Every car I have ever sat behind the wheel of has had a route plotted before the engine started, contingencies built into the contingencies, because a man who doesn’t know where he’s going is a man who can be followed without realizing it.
This morning I just drive. Away from the lake, away from the lodge. The road curves through low hills, empty at this hour, and I drive faster than I should, not because I’m trying to get anywhere, but because the speed gives the noise in my chest somewhere to go.
I keep waiting for the part of me that handles crises to take over, the part that has talked frightened clients off rooftops and walked unarmed into rooms with armed men and never once let the fear show on my face.
It doesn’t come. There is no protocol for this.
No briefing document, no contingency tree, no exit route mapped in advance, because I never planned for the possibility that the thing I needed to escape from might be my own son’s existence catching up with me four years late.
I have spent my entire adult life becoming the kind of man who is never caught flat-footed by anything, and this morning I am exactly that–flat-footed, furious, and entirely without a plan.
I call Vaughn from a gas station forty minutes out, parked at the edge of an empty lot with the engine still running and my hands not quite steady on the wheel.
He answers on the second ring, which means Riley already told him something was wrong, because Vaughn Mercer does not pick up that fast for anyone unless his wife has flagged a problem.
“Talk to me,” Vaughn says, no greeting, the particular efficiency he reserves for crises.
“Nico is mine.”
Silence on the line, brief and total. Then, quietly: “Say that again.”
I say it again. I tell him all of it, the words coming out in the clipped, sequenced order I use for incident reports, because that is the only structure I currently trust myself to use.
Venice. The mask. The math I refused to do out loud for four days.
The kitchen this morning, her voice breaking on a single syllable that rearranged the entire architecture of my life.
Vaughn doesn’t interrupt. He never does, not when it matters, and it is one of the reasons I have trusted him with everything for over twenty years.
When I finish, he’s quiet for a moment longer than is comfortable.
“She lied” I say
“Yes,” Vaughn says. “And you once drove a kidnapped woman across the desert for your best friend’s revenge plan and somehow ended up installing a child seat in the same car eighteen months later.
” A pause, deliberate. “People are complicated, Valentino. That’s not a defense of her. It’s a fact about all of us.”
“This is different.”
“Is it? You spent four years building a security empire out of a childhood you survived by yourself. She spent four years raising a son out of a single night neither of you could have planned for. You’re both people who learned to handle catastrophe alone because nobody taught you another way to handle it.
I’m not telling you her reasons make it hurt less.
I’m telling you they’re not as far from your own instincts as you want them to be right now. ”
I grip the wheel harder than necessary. “She let me build a relationship with him without telling me the truth.”
“She did.” Vaughn doesn’t soften that, doesn’t hedge it, and I respect him for it even if it cuts. “And you have every right to be angry about that. You’re allowed to feel exactly what you’re feeling, Valentino. I’m not going to talk you out of being angry. I’d be worried about you if you weren’t.”
“Then what are you telling me?”
“I’m telling you there’s a difference between being angry and being intentionally obtuse.
” His voice sharpens slightly, the tone he uses in boardrooms when he wants something to be solved.
“You have resources most people will never have access to. Lawyers who could make this very ugly, very fast, if you let the anger drive instead of the man underneath it. If you go back to that retreat and use everything you have to punish her for surviving the way she had to survive, you become exactly what she was afraid you’d be.
The thing she ran from in the first place. ”
I don’t answer that immediately, because there isn’t an answer that doesn’t cost me something to admit.
“I don’t want to be that” I say finally.
“I know you don’t.” A pause, and when he speaks again his voice has shifted, gentler now, the version of him that exists almost exclusively around Riley and the baby.
“You have a son, Valentino. Whatever else is true this morning, that fact doesn’t change, and it isn’t going anywhere.
The question isn’t whether you’re furious.
You’re allowed to be furious for as long as you need to be.
The question is what kind of father you want to be furious as. ”
I sit with that for a long moment, the gas station quiet around me, a single attendant visible through the window doing something to a coffee machine with the particular boredom of someone working a shift nobody else wants.
“Call Griffin,” Vaughn says, before I can respond. “He’ll want to talk about paternity, about how to handle this properly so nothing about it can be used against you or against the boy later. He’s better at legal things than I am.”
“And then what?”
“And then call Beckett. Because the legal part isn’t the part you actually need help with right now.”
I call Griffin next, still parked at the edge of the lot, the coffee I bought and haven’t touched going cold in the console.
Griffin’s advice is exactly what I expect from a man who has spent his career anticipating other people’s worst decisions before they make them. Establish paternity properly, privately, through legitimate channels.
Don’t threaten custody in anger, because anything said in the heat of this morning could be used against me later by anyone looking for a reason to paint me as unstable or vindictive. Document nothing through emotion. Move slowly enough that every step can withstand scrutiny.
“I’ve watched men in your exact position do this two ways,” Griffin says, his voice carrying the particular detachment of someone who has spent a career inside other people’s worst moments without letting it touch him directly.
“The first way, they lead with the lawyers. Custody filings before the dust even settles, an attorney’s letter delivered like a verdict, every interaction with the mother routed through intermediaries from day one.
It feels like control. It is control, in the narrowest possible sense.
And it almost always costs them the relationship with the child they were supposedly protecting, because children grow up and read the file eventually, Valentino.
They find out who fought whom, and for what, and they remember which parent treated the other like an enemy combatant during the worst weeks of their childhood. ”
“And the second way?”
“The second way, they get the legal groundwork in order quietly, properly, without urgency, and they spend the actual emotional energy on the child instead of the conflict. That’s the version that survives custody arrangements, divorces, every kind of fracture I’ve ever drafted paperwork for.
The kid doesn’t remember who won the legal argument. He remembers who showed up.”
“You’re angry,” Griffin says, somewhere near the end of the call, in the flat, assessing tone he uses on everyone, including, I suspect, himself.
“That’s fine. Be angry on your own time, with people who aren’t her or the boy.
Don’t let the anger draft a single document.
I’ve seen good men lose everything that mattered to them because they let the first week’s fury write the next ten years’ strategy. ”
I thank him. I mean it, even though gratitude is not what I’m currently capable of feeling in any generous quantity.
Beckett is last, and I almost don’t call him, because I already know roughly what he’ll say, and some petty, exhausted part of me doesn’t want to hear it confirmed by someone who has actually lived it.
He answers without the dry humor I expect, which tells me Vaughn has already called ahead.
“Fatherhood doesn’t start when biology gets confirmed,” Beckett says, no preamble, no easing into it.
“It starts the moment a kid needs you and you show up anyway. You’ve already been doing that for three days, Ferretti, whether you knew the math or not.
The paperwork doesn’t change what already happened on that rug with the racetrack. ”
“That feels like a generous read of the situation.”
“It’s not generous. It’s just true.” A pause, and I hear something shift in his voice, the careful, deliberate honesty of a man choosing his next words with more weight than he usually bothers to use.
“You think the test results are what make you his father. They’re not.
They’re what make it official. You already did the actual work — showing up, paying attention, being the person he reaches for in the dark.
The rest is just paperwork catching up to something that’s already real. ”
I don’t say anything for a moment.
“You’re allowed to be angry at her,” Beckett continues.
“You’re allowed to need space, time, whatever it takes to get your footing back under you.
But don’t confuse being angry at the mother with deciding the son is a complication you need to manage.
Those are different problems. Solve them separately, or you’ll end up punishing the wrong person for the thing that hurt you. ”
I drive back to the retreat an hour later, the sun fully up now, the lake catching light through the trees as the road curves toward the lodge. I don’t know what I’m going to say to Livia. I don’t know if there’s anything to say yet that wouldn’t come out sharper than I mean it to.
I let myself into the cottage quietly. The main room is empty, and for a moment I stand there with my keys still in my hand, unsure of where to put myself in a space that no longer feels neutral.
I think about Beckett’s words. The paperwork doesn’t change what already happened on that rug.
I think about Calabria, about a hillside and goats that weren’t mine and a farmhouse.
I tattooed a representation of it onto my own skin so I would never forget that survival is something you build, not something given to you.
I think about the boy who became that tattoo, eleven years old and entirely alone, deciding that the only way forward was to never again let anyone get close enough to be used against him.
I have spent twenty years protecting that decision like it was the most important thing I ever built.
Standing in this doorway, I am no longer certain it was a decision at all.
It might only ever have been fear, dressed up in the language of discipline long enough that I stopped being able to tell the difference.