Under that attack, Emily had stiffened and lost much of her natural colour. âJamie was always safe. I did the very best that I couldââ
âBut your best wasnât halfway good enough,â Duarte cut in with biting derision. âYou left my son at the mercy of passing strangers instead of ensuring that he received proper careââ
âI wanted to spend every minute with him that I could and youâre making this sound much worse than it was,â Emily protested defensively. âEverywhere I worked, Jamie got loads and loads of attention. Most people like babies, especially happy onesââ
âThatâs not the point,â Duarte said coldly.
Emily worried at her lower lip and then said heavily, âEven if I had wanted to, I couldnât have afforded to pay someone to look after himââ
âAnd whose fault was that?â
As her tension climbed, Emily trembled and her tummy churned. Thinking straight had become a challenge; she had never been much good at confrontations. However, on this occasion she found herself struggling to speak up in her own defence. âWhose fault was it that I left Portugal in the first place?â
Far from looking impressed or indeed startled by that comeback, Duarte inclined his arrogant dark head to one side and levelled his incisive gaze on her in the most formidable way. âPresumably you are about to give me the answer to that strange question?â he prompted.
âI only left Portugal because I thought that you were planning to try and take my child off me the minute he was born!â Emily countered in an accusing rush.
Duarte angled an imperious brow. âWhat kind of a nonsensical excuse is that? Before this morning, I never made a threat in that line. To be frank, my patience with you came to an end today. But who or what gave you the idea that I might have been considering such a dramatic move last year?â
Emily flinched and dropped her head, shaken at how close she had come in her turmoil to revealing Blissâs role in events eight months earlier. Had she done that, she could never have forgiven herself. Bliss had been the truest of supportive friends during Emilyâs troubled marriage, cheering Emily up when her spirits were low while offering helpful advice and encouragement. Although Emily had not contacted the other woman since leaving Portugal, she assumed that her friend still worked as Duarteâs executive assistant. Bliss had eavesdropped on that confidential dialogue between Duarte and his lawyer and had forewarned Emily. Were Duarte ever to discover that a member of his own staff had been that disloyal, Blissâs high-flying career would be destroyed.
âI just got the ideaâ¦at the time, the way you were treating meâwell, erâ¦it seemed to make sense to me and I was afraid that you were planning to separate me from my childââ
âSo you chose to separate our son from me instead. Is that how this sorry story goes?â Duarte dealt her a look of shimmering challenge that made her breath trip in her already tight throat. âThis convenient angle that continually seeks to turn you into a poor little victim? Well, I have news for youâIâm not impressed, querida.â
âIâm not trying to impressââ
âNo?â Without warning, Duarte sent her a sudden slanting golden glance as hard and deadly as an arrow thudding into a live target.
Feeling the sudden smouldering surge in the atmosphere but unable to comprehend what had caused it, Emily untwisted her laced hands and made a jerky move with one of them as if she was appealing for his attention. âI know Iâve made mistakesââ
âMistakes?â
ââbut now Iâm just being open and honestââ
âOpenâ¦and honest,â Duarte repeated with a brand of electrifying soft sibilance that danced down her rigid spine like a fullscale storm warning. âQue absurdo! An honest whore you were not!â
Emilyâs lips parted company and she fell back a faltering step in dismay at the proclamation and that particular word being aimed at her. Even in the aftermath of finding her in another manâs arms, Duarte had not employed such an emotive term. âB-butââ
âBut what? You were carrying my baby when you slept with another man. How many women have affairs while theyâre pregnant with their husbandâs child?â Duarte demanded in a derisive tone of disgust that nailed her to the spot. âBut no such fine sensibilities restrained you. You even dared to introduce me to your lover. You also brought him into my home. Only a whore would behave like that.â
Forced to recognise the extent of the sins being laid at her door, Emily gasped strickenly, âDuarte, it wasnât like that and Toby was never myââ
âDo you really think Iâll listen to your pathetic excuses? You are nothing to me.â Duarte made that wounding statement with a savage cool that bled all remaining colour from her shaken face.
You are nothing to me. That he should feel that way was hardly news but spoken out loud that acknowledgement cut Emily in two.
âBut you belong to me. Minha esposaâ¦you are my wife,â Duarte completed with sardonic bite.
Under the onslaught of that ultimate putdown, Emily felt something curiously akin to a re-energising flame dart through her slim tense body and she flung her head back. âNoâ¦I donât belong to you like your cars and your houses and your wretched art collection,â she heard herself asserting. âI may be your wife but Iâm not an object without any thoughts or feelings or rightsââ
Although she had no recollection of him moving, Duarte was now a step closer, threateningly close. Even as she was still fighting to understand quite where her own unusually spirited defence had come from, she was awesomely conscious of the expanse of all that lean, taut masculinity poised within inches of her own much smaller frame.
In the electrifying silence that had fallen, shimmering golden eyes sought and held her scrutiny, all the powerful force of will he possessed bearing down on her. âYou have no rights in this marriage.â
âI donât believe you mean thatâ¦you couldnât,â Emily reasoned, tearing her gaze hurriedly from his as her heart rate speeded up. âYouâre just very angry with meââ
âI am not angry with you,â Duarte growled like a leopard about to spring on an unwary prey. âBut I cannot and will not trust you with the kind of freedom I gave you before.â
âThatâ¦was freedom?â A startled laugh empty of humour was wrenched from Emilyâs working throat, for she had found her duties as a Monteiro wife as rigid a constraint to her days as a prison cell. Every daylight hour had been rigorously organised for her with a weighty yoke of responsibilities that took no account of her own personal wishes.
Hard dark colour scored the hard set of Duarteâs proud cheekbones. âSo you find my former generosity a source of amusement?â
âOh, you mean your moneyâ¦â Emily very nearly let loose a second nervous laugh as comprehension finally sank in and her soft mouth tensed. âWell, it wasnât much consolation when you were never around and I never did take to shopping, although I did try hard to like it. You see, I wasnât the sort of woman you should have married and I still canât really understand why you didâ¦â
Duarte stared down at her with eyes as dark and fathomless and deep as the midnight witching hour. As he ensnared her fraught gaze afresh, she forgot what she was saying at the same time as she forgot to draw another breath. The atmosphere surged around her like a slow smouldering fire closing in, using up all the oxygen.