would have, that was clear, he'd been trying to do just that but Midori had turned him away.
She let out a long breath and took a sip of wine. 'Sounds like you have a pretty strong connection.'
'I don't know what we have. Good chemistry, definitely. And we went through this really intense… experience together once. But now, for me, it's really about the baby. I worry about him growing up without his father. I worry about what I'm going to tell him.'
Delilah shrugged. 'Don't tell him anything. That's the way my mother handled it with me.'
'That's what I was planning on, more or less. Now I don't know.'
Delilah's heart beat harder and she said, 'Well, when you saw him, where did you leave it?'
'I don't even know exactly. He lives in a different world than mine. I told him if he ever gets out of that world, he could call me then. But I don't think he can get out of it. He's been in it forever, and I actually think… ah, I don't know.'
'What?'
Midori took a sip of wine. 'I think he likes it. I mean, he says he wants to get out, but if he really wanted to, he could, couldn't he? And he's had good reasons. The baby being the most recent.'
Every piece of information Delilah had teased out so far had been disappointing, even painful to hear. Still, there was that one thing, the one she'd wondered about in Paris, that might trump all the rest. She had tried for it subtly a moment ago, but Midori had blocked that approach. Well, subtlety was only a tool. There were other tools available. She felt a flush of adrenaline in her torso as she prepared to strip away the cover she had been wearing and emerge from beneath it.
'Maybe he's reticent because he knows he can never completely get out,' Delilah said, looking at Midori intently. 'And if he tries to live like a civilian, with a civilian, he'll always be a danger to that person. And she'll always be a danger to him.'
Midori shook her head slightly as though to clear it. 'What?'
'You know, a man like Rain has a lot of enemies.'
Midori looked at her. A long, silent moment spun out.
'And even if he could get out of the life,' Delilah went on, 'his enemies won't.'
'I'm sorry. You… know him?'
Delilah nodded. 'I know him well.'
'You… oh, my God.'
'Listen. If you do care about him, if you care about yourself and your son, you'll know to stay the hell away from him.'
Midori's eyes narrowed and some of the color drained from her face. 'Listen to me, you bitch. I don't know who you are. But if you ever threaten my child again, I will hunt you down and I will fucking kill you.'
Delilah held up her hands, realizing she had dangerously misspoken. 'I'm not threatening anyone. I want you and your son safe. My point is just that Rain can be a danger to the people around him. Haven't you noticed that?'
There was a long pause. Midori said, 'So you're part of his world, is that right?'
'Yes.'
'And… you're involved, in some way?'
Delilah shrugged.
'So… Jun must have told you about the baby, told you he was coming to see us. And you came here, you met me tonight with this bullshit story, because you were jealous. Is that about right?'
'I came here tonight because I don't want to see anyone get hurt. You and Rain together is an accident waiting to happen. I saw you on the way over here, and forgive me, but you don't have a clue. You never once checked your surroundings, you didn't look at the vehicles around us, nothing. I told you I'm no threat, but what if I had been? What would you have done? You're going to live like that with Rain? And if he starts living that way, how long do you think he's going to last?'
Midori said nothing. Delilah knew that right now, the woman's thoughts would be swirling around inside her head like a whiteout blizzard. This was the moment.
'Besides,' Delilah said, 'what kind of future can you have with him after what he did to your father?'
Midori flinched as though she'd been slapped. She stared at Delilah for a moment, and the shock and hurt in her eyes were palpable. Then her expression hardened and she stood up.
'I'm sure there's nothing else we have to say to each other,' she said. She turned and walked out.
Delilah watched her go. She felt suddenly off balance. Maybe it had been the abruptness of the woman's departure. Maybe its dignity.
But that was it, then. Rain had killed Midori's father, and Midori knew it. The look in the woman's eyes when Delilah spoke had confirmed it as definitively as a signed affidavit.
That was exactly what Delilah had come here to learn. It suggested that Rain's attachment to the woman had something to do with guilt, which could be managed. And it suggested that no matter what else might attract Rain and Midori to each other, there was one fundamental thing that would always keep them apart.
All of which was good news. She finished her wine and signaled for the check.
Good news, she told herself again.
So why did she feel so horrible?
Midori paced back and forth in her living room. Digne