Adeline’s head was spinning. Was Daniele just trying to overload her with technobabble so she would stop asking questions? It was sort of working. She inhaled, trying to focus.
“Do the others share this view? That the past can’t be changed?”
“It remains a subject of some debate among the four.”
“Who wants to change the past?”
“No comment.”
“Elliott? He wants to save Charlie, doesn’t he?”
“You know he does.”
“And Constance. She wants to change the past. What happened to her?”
“It’s her secret. It’s not what you think it is.”
“What’s Hiro’s secret? What’s in that house in Vegas?”
“Not what you think either.”
“You know what’s there?”
“I do.”
“Please,” Adeline said. “Tell me.”
“His secret is not mine to share.”
“Elliott wants Absolom Two to save his son. Constance is clearly obsessed with the past. And changing it. What’s Hiro hiding?”
“What’s happening here is complex, Adeline. Leave it to me. You’ve done enough. And you’ve endured a tragedy. The loss of a parent is an injury that takes time to heal. You’ve lost both of yours too soon.”
The last line set Adeline off. “I haven’t lost my father. Not yet. The fact that you would say that, frankly, infuriates me. It’s like you’ve written him off. Like you want him gone—for whatever plans you’re making.”
Adeline sucked in a breath and stared at Daniele. The woman was a statue. As if the barrage of insults hadn’t even registered.
So Adeline doubled down. “I thought he left Ryan and me to your custody so we could get him back together. Instead, you’ve buried me in finance books and cryptic non-answers.” Adeline cocked her head. “I think that’s what you would do if you really wanted him gone.”
Daniele smiled.
That enraged Adeline even more.
“You want answers?” Daniele asked, her voice quiet and firm.
“I think I deserve answers.”
“Here’s one. See if you can figure out what it means: if you can’t change the past without destroying the present, what does that tell you?”
Adeline, almost against her will, instantly saw what it meant. “That in order for our present reality to exist, the past must have happened as it did.”
The edges of Daniele’s lips curved up, the hint of a smile forming. “That’s correct.”
“So Nora has to die? And my dad has to be sentenced to Absolom?”
“Yes.”
“Then it’s hopeless. I’ll never get Dad back. He’s two hundred million years in the past. And whatever happened back then has already happened. He was probably eaten by a dinosaur.”
“Don’t say that.”
“Why not?”
“Because it’s not in your nature.”
“What’s not?”
“Defeatism. People like you never give up, Adeline. They find a way. People like you made the world we live in. Now think hard. You’ve made one very important oversight.”
“Which is?”
“Think.”
Adeline saw it then: the one fact her rage had blinded her to. “Dad isn’t in our timeline.”
“Correct.”
“We can change the timeline he’s in all we want, and nothing will happen to us.”
“Correct.”
“That’s what you were talking about, wasn’t it? With Elliott, Constance, and Hiro? Sending something back to him.”
Daniele moved to the pocket door and slid it open. “I need to shower.”
“Hey, I’m talking to you.”
“No. You’re not. This conversation is over. Remember what I said: leave this to me, Adeline. It’s dangerous. And complicated. There are factors here you don’t appreciate.”
*
That night, Adeline was too tired to sleep. She tossed and turned in bed, and rage burned inside of her. She hated Daniele. And the world. And the Absolom founders, for not doing more to save her father.
Daniele had been right about one thing: Adeline wasn’t about to give up. Not in a million years.
She was going to fight.
She wanted answers.
She was going to get them. Even if it killed her.
Adeline opened the BuddyLoc app on her phone and searched for Hiro’s location, but it didn’t show up. He had disappeared. That was a first. What did it mean? Had he discovered the spyware? Or was his phone off or simply outside of cell reception?