“Why did you?” Her words were so soft; he had to strain to hear.
“You need to ask?” He met and held her gaze for the longest moment. When she didn’t answer, he walked to the window and propped his hip against the ledge. “Ellie, you can’t mean to live here. You have no money, no job—”
“You made sure of that.”
He scrubbed his cheek with the back of his hand. A man in his position had connections. He used them. He refused to feel guilty. He wanted what was best for her. And for yours truly, the taunt stabbed. He dismissed it. Working in that seedy nightclub was not for this woman, who’d taken his name and became a part of his soul. Every muscle of his torso tightened. She behaved like he was the enemy. “You have no prospects.”
She started to laugh. A soft sound at first, then it grew to a high pitch.
“What’s the matter?” He made to grab her, changed his mind, and stuffed his hands in his coat pockets.
She swallowed and the sound muted. “Nothing. “Everyth—”
“Then, come home.”
“I have no home, Peter.”
“No?”
She remained silent.
He winced.
The sound of their breathing compounded the awkward moment.
He reached out to touch her hair, and then checked the motion. “Accept the credit cards – to pay rent, food—”
“No,” she fired back. “I want nothing from you. I want to be free.”
A lacerated sound burst from his mouth. He’d grown up in a household of near-starving kids while his mother sewed into the early hours of the morning, then cleaned houses to help feed and clothe them. To keep a roof over their heads, his father, an immigrant, speaking broken English, worked in kitchens with soap suds to his elbows while the affluent in society dined out.
Peter had cringed with embarrassment every time someone mispronounced his name and wished he could fit in better. Of course, he never had. So, from an early age, he hit the streets of Little Italy in New York, vowing to opt out of that life, make something of himself, help his family have a better life, and aid others in need. Never having to go to sleep clutching his growling stomach. Never to feel the stigma of being a foreigner and wearing hand-me-downs from well-meaning neighbors. Never to have others look at him with pity because of his background or the sound of his name.
“You think living like a pauper is going to make you free?” he said, his words a growl.
“Of you,” she fired back, her words a stake in his heart.
He nearly doubled over. “Think again, hard.”
She dropped down on the sofa and adjusted the cap over her ears.
“Don’t glamorize poverty,” he said, his tone curt. “You don’t want to do poor, Ellie.”
“I’d rather be poor and free, than like… like Rapunzel in her tower.”
“Do you realize what you’re saying?”
“Ye-es,” she said, her eyes sparking fire. “I’d rather be poor and happy than—”
“And how many poor happy people do you know?” he asked, his words cynical.
“I haven’t counted—”
He guffawed, a dry, humorless sound, and eclipsed her flip retort.
“Money, power, and prestige are the only things that matter to you,” she said, tone resigned.
“Where did you get that idea?”
“From what you’ve done.”
“What’s that?”
“You’ve put your profession before our marriage a-and everything.”
“And that makes me a bad guy?”
“I don’t know.” She crinkled her forehead. “I thought—”
“You thought wrong.” He paced the floor twice. “There’s a great deal you don’t know about me, amore mia.”
“Why’s that?”
He shrugged.
She frisked him with her eyes. “You’re a real smooth operator.” A smile teased the corner of her mouth, and she nipped it away with her teeth. “Didn’t mean it to come out a pun.”
He cocked his head, debated, and then simply said, “You could be mistaken in your assessment.”
His childhood hadn’t seemed to matter, so he hadn’t told her. Later, he’d gotten buried in work and when he surfaced, he wanted to hold her, love her. Apparently, that hadn’t been enough for her.
He rubbed the back of his neck and refrained from confiding in her, still. Maybe he wanted her to take him at face value. Wanted her to think more of him than the shallow, controlling bastard she coined him.
“It doesn’t matter,” she said.
“No?”
“No, yes.” She avoided meeting his searching gaze. “I don’t know.”
He was silent for a long moment, and then nodded. “How will you live? What will you do?”
“I’ll sing for my supper,” she tossed back.
“Parading yourself before—”
She leaped up, but he grabbed her arm before she found her mark. Her gaze collided with his midnight-blues. Her chest heaved. His nostrils flared. The silent war waged between them, then she twisted from his grasp,rubbing her wrist.
“Did I hurt—?” He reached for her.
“No.” She half-turned from him, knowing in her heart this man would never, could never, hurt her. Then why was she putting them through purgatory? Her heart bled. Because she preferred to go through it than dwell on it. “I-I’ll be fine.”
“You can’t make a decent living without some skill.”
“I’ll learn.” She stood erect to her full five-foot four inches, not wanting him to dwarf her.
“Everything’s high tech.”
“I’ll take a class.”
“Costs money.”
“I have—” He lifted an eyebrow, and she amended, “I’ll find work in one of the clu … er … restaurants.”
He set his mouth, not missing her near slip, but chose not to address it. “In the meantime?”
“I’ll manage.”
“How?”
Exasperated at his inquisition, she blurted, “I’ll marry money.”
He laughed, a savage sound. “You’re married to money now.” Silence thickened, tension built and crackled with his flint-hard words.
“Admit it, Ellie.” He curled his lip, contempt carving his features. “You didn’t marry me. You married my pocketbook.”
“No.” She reached for him, but when he twisted away, she glanced down at her boots. She hadn’t meant those harsh words. Said them to annoy him, because she hurt being so close to him and him not understanding her. She peeked at him through her lashes, but the wall of his back pricked her resentment.
It had always been about his life, his career, and his agenda. While he flourished, she wasted away. But Ellie could no longer deny herself. Not for her parents. Not for her husband. She had to take a firm stand