I stared at him. The light from the porch caught the hard line of his jaw, the vein pulsing at his temple. He looked like his father in that moment. Not the composed Don the old man had been at the end, but the younger version, the one who'd thrown a chair through a plate-glass window when someone defied him at a sit-down.

"And why didn't you ever tell me you were carrying?"

His questions came rapid, stacked, each one louder than the last. The nausea rolled through me, but it wasn't the surgery. It was the sound of a man who believed his anger was the most important thing in the room. I wasn't in the mood to argue. I brushed past him, grabbed my suitcase, and headed for the door.

His hand closed around my arm. The grip was firm, the kind of hold he'd learned from years of grabbing men by the collar in back rooms and expecting them to stay grabbed. "Is this some kind of game to you? I told you I'd cut ties with her after the baby. I've made sacrifices for you. What more do you want me to do?"

His shameless words hit me, and I couldn't hold back any longer. I slapped him. The sound cracked through the quiet street like a gunshot, and for one frozen second, neither of us moved.