He walked into the bathroom without greeting her, needing a minute alone. He washed and shaved, brushed his teeth, and gathered his things. He didn’t have much.
He didn’t look at her when he walked back in the room, but Charlie twined himself around his legs and then shot under the bed when he stumbled.
“Damn cat,” he muttered. He crouched down and lifted the spread. His suitcases were where he’d shoved them back in January. Both were speckled with Charlie’s hair. He unzipped the empty one and laid it open. The other was still packed with things he hadn’t used, costumes for characters he hadn’t needed.
“He’s going to sulk for hours now,” Dani said, still beading. “I’ll never get him out.”
He grunted and straightened. She thought he was worried about Charlie. He shrugged out of his shirt, exchanging it for a new one. His fingers flew over the buttons, and he tucked it into his trousers, snapping his suspenders back in place and turning down his collar.
“He likes you, you know. He just doesn’t know how to tell you. So he makes a nuisance of himself.” So far his actions had not alerted her that something was amiss.
“I have to leave, Dani,” he said, tugging open his drawers. He didn’t look at her, but from the corner of his eye, he saw her pause, her needle upraised so her beads wouldn’t slide off the string.
“Where to?” she asked. “And when will you be back?” Her voice was easy, trusting.
He kept moving. His drawers were emptied—one, two, three—in all of twenty seconds.
“Michael?” She secured the needle in her fabric and put the lid on the tin of beads.
He folded his suits on top of the contents of his drawers and added his dress shirts before zipping it closed. His files were already in the trunk. He didn’t know what he’d do with those. He didn’t need them anymore. His boots were in the trunk too. He’d started keeping them there, away from Dani’s curious touch.
“Chicago. I have to go to Chicago,” he said, his answer distracted. Belated.
He tossed his shaving kit, his spectators, and his white fedora into the valise he’d had since he was eighteen years old. It’d been everywhere with him. The white handkerchief Irene had initialed and Dani had returned was already tucked in the inside pocket.
“Michael?” Her voice was sharper now.
“I’ll just run these out to the car. Give me a minute,” he said. “Then I’ll tell you everything.” Dani’s feet were bare, and she wouldn’t follow him. He strode out of the room, the two suitcases in his hands, and was through the back door before she was even off the bed.
She was ready for him when he returned, though, holding his valise like she was taking it hostage, her eyes bright, shoulders stiff, mouth unsmiling.
He took it from her and set it by the door. His hat was on his desk, his overcoat slung over his chair. His suitcoat was still in the car. He hadn’t even worn it inside. He was ready.
“What happened, Michael?” she asked.
“I have a new assignment in Chicago and reason to believe that I’ve been made, or Michael Lepito’s been made. And that’s not safe for you or your aunts.”
Her brow furrowed. “What about Francis Sweeney?”
“He’s not my problem anymore. He really never was. This was all . . . temporary. You knew that.”
“Whose problem is he?” she whispered.
“His family has been notified and advised.”
“Of what?”
“His mental condition. He’s being taken to an institution as we speak. He’ll continue to be monitored. Watched. He won’t be getting out anytime soon.” He shrugged and reached for his hat.
“I see,” Dani whispered. He could see that she did.
“You’re not coming back?” she asked, but it wasn’t really a question.
“No.” His heart had begun to race.
“You will leave. And I will stay. And we will be through,” she said.
“Yes.” He couldn’t breathe. Short, blunt answers were best when one couldn’t breathe.
“Is there nothing about me . . . about us . . . that you would like to keep?”
Leave it to Dani to pose the question that way, to cut to the heart of it all. The parts of himself, all the neat compartments that he kept so cleanly divided, were beginning to touch. They were beginning to hover at the edges of one another, sparking and grinding, and he could not simply walk from room to room, closing doors on one matter to attend to the next.
“I would take you with me if I could. If you could,” he confessed in a rush. It was a suggestion, a cruel one, because she would not leave. But he couldn’t help himself from making it. He would take her with him, everything else be damned. If she said, I’m coming with you, he would let her.
“I can’t leave them,” she said.
“I know. I can’t stay, and you can’t leave,” he said.
“I have responsibilities here. I am not free to go wherever I wish.”
He didn’t lecture her and say, I told you so. It would have been insincere. He had told her. And he’d told himself, and they had still done what people do. They’d become attached to one another.
“Do you think someday we might be . . . together again?” she asked.
“You will find someone else.”
“No. I won’t.” She shook her head once, vehement. “And I wish you wouldn’t say such things. It makes me feel as though you don’t know me at all.”
“I know you, Dani. And you know me. No pretense, remember? You have become . . . dear . . . to me. You will always be dear to me.” It was true. But it was weak. Limp. And only a fraction of the truth.
“So we will part as friends, then?” she asked. “Is that what you want?”
“You are not just my friend,” he confessed.
“No?” Her voice was faint.
“No. I’m in love with you. So you aren’t just . . . my friend.” And he was a bastard for admitting it. Love confessed and then denied was not a gift.
“You are in love with me. And I am in love with you. But you’re still going to go?”
“Yes.” A bastard.