coming from my sister, who’s spent months at a time locked up in our house. She hasn’t seen much more of the world than I have.
“I know Dante,” I tell her.
“Is he a criminal or not?”
“He’s . . . he’s not . . . it’s different. He’s from an Italian family . . .”
“Mafia?” Serwa says with a horrified expression.
“You don’t know him,” I say lamely.
My stomach is churning.
“This isn’t what you want for yourself,” Serwa says.
I’ve always listened to my sister. Unlike my parents, she supported my dreams. She told me I should apply to Parsons. To have her turn on me now is upsetting. It makes me question my judgment.
I feel like I’m going to throw up.
“Dante and I have a connection,” I whisper. “The way I feel about him . . . I can’t even explain it to you, Serwa. Do you know how you meet people, people who are beautiful, or charming, or funny, and you like them? But there are dozens of people like that, they don’t mean anything to you, not really. Then, every once in a while, you meet someone who has a kind of glow. It pulls you in . . . and you get a crush. You want to be around them. You think about them when you’re alone.”
“Yes,” Serwa says. “I’ve had a crush or two.”
“What I feel about Dante . . . a crush is candlelight. And Dante’s like the sun, right inside my chest. It burns so bright and so brilliant that I can barely stand it. It could burn and burn for a million years and not go out.”
Serwa is staring at me, mouth open. This is not what she expected.
“What are you saying . . .” she asks me.
“I love him,” I tell her.
“Love him! But, Simone—”
“I know what you’re going to say. You think I don’t even know what that means yet. But I do, Serwa. I love him.”
Serwa slowly shakes her head. She doesn’t know how to convince me. How furious our parents will be. How crazy it is to fall in love with the first boy you’ve ever kissed . . .
“Do you have a picture of him?” she says at last.
I open the hidden folder on my phone where I keep the one and only picture I have of Dante.
It’s a shot I took the night we went to the speakeasy. He was sitting across from me at the table, listening to the music.
I lifted my phone to snap a picture of him and he turned his head right at that moment, looking directly at me. Stern and unsmiling.
It was so dim in the speakeasy that the photo looks almost black and white, robbed of all saturation. Dante’s hair melts into the shadows around his face, and his skin looks paler than it actually is. His eyes are like onyx under the heavy slashes of his brows. His jaw is so darkly shadowed with stubble that it almost looks like a bruise.
Serwa presses her lips together tightly.
I know what she sees: a gangster. A thug.
She doesn’t know that Dante is so much more than that.
“How old is he?”
“Twenty-one.”
“He looks older.”
“I know.”
She hands my phone back. Her eyes are worried.
“I hope you know what you’re doing, Simone.”
I don’t. Not at all. Not even a little bit.
I walk back to my own room. I’m supposed to be going out to see Dante in an hour. I told Mama I was meeting Emily at a restaurant.
My stomach is still rolling from my conversation with Serwa. I hate conflict. I hate disapproval. When it’s from the people I love most, it’s unbearable.
I run to my en suite bathroom and throw up in the sink. Then I rinse my mouth out with water and glance at my face in the mirror.
My eyes look just as worried as Serwa’s.
12
Dante
It’s almost a week since I saw Simone. I’m on edge, craving her like a substance I can’t get out of my system.
She texts me that her parents have been suspicious—asking questions every time she tries to leave the house.
I text her back,
We should stop sneaking around.
There’s a long pause where I see her start responding, then stop, then start again.
Finally she says,
I know. I hate it, too.
I scowl, typing quickly.
Then tell them about me.
Another long pause. Finally she responds,
I want to. I’m afraid.
I understand her position. I know how important her family is to her. I know she thrives off their approval, their acceptance.
I understand it, because my family