When She Loves: Chapter 43
When She Loves: A Dark Mafia, Arranged Marriage Romance (The Fallen Book 4)
After two days of relaxing on our girlsâ weekend, weâre about to get on the road back to Casale di Principe. I climb inside the car with a full belly and an Aperol-spritz-fueled buzz from the lazy late lunch at a restaurant that served the best pasta Iâve ever had.
âThis trip was a great idea,â I say with a smile.
Gemma grins at me. âYeah?â
âI feel a lot better.â
She squeezes my hand. âYou look better. Youâve even got a bit of a tan.â
I glance down. My legs are golden from the two afternoons we spent on the pebble beach below our house. Iâve never had girlsâ trip like this, and it was everything I didnât know I needed. Iâm already thinking about when we can do the next one. It got my mind off Rafaeleâbrieflyâand I feel closer to my sisters than ever.
I let out a sigh. Maybe everything will be okay after all. âLetâs come back again this summer.â
âWe will.â Gemma hands me her phone. âHere. Queue up the next song.â
The four of us take turns with the playlist, blasting music through the open windows of the car, and the two-hour drive back passes in no time. We drop Mari and Gemma off at their homes first and then the driver takes Vale and me back to her and Damianoâs house.
When we walk through the front doors, Damiano is pacing the foyer. Heâs on the phone, but when he sees us, he quickly wraps up his call. He strides across the floor and takes Vale into his arms. A grin unfurls across her face before he kisses it off her lips.
Jeez. Youâd think weâd been gone for weeks instead of two days.
I look away, giving them some privacy and trying to ignore the pang inside my chest.
âHow was the trip?â Damiano asks some moments later, having finished with the passionate make-out session.
âAmazing. We had a lot of fun,â my sister responds. âHow were things back here?â
âAh. They wereâ¦interesting.â Thereâs a strange note to his tone that makes me glance at him. Damianoâs gaze moves from Vale to me, and his expression turns wary. âSomething arrived here for you, Cleo.â
Trepidation snakes up the inside of my belly. âThe divorce papers?â I crouch down to remove my sandals, conveniently hiding my crumbling expression. âGood. Iâm ready to sign them and move on with my life.â
Damiano clears his throat. âNot quite.â
The sound of steady footsteps reaches my ears, coming from somewhere up ahead. Iâm getting the second sandal off when a pair of patent leather dress shoes appears in my field of vision. I recognize those shoes. Trepidation morphs into disbelief. I swallow. Thereâs no way.
âHello, Cleo.â
Pressed black suit pants, gleaming leather belt, crisp white dress shirt, a triangle of tanned, tatted chest peeking from within. I stop before my gaze reaches his face.
For a few seconds, all I can do is breathe.
What is he doing here? He said it was over. Did he come just to break my heart again? To make sure it was sufficiently crushed under his heel?
No, heâs too pragmatic for that. If he wanted me to hurt some more, he could find a way to do it from New York. So why did he come? Did something else happen? Did something change? A pathetic flicker of hope appears in my chest. I crush it immediately.
No. Donât go there.
Rising from my crouching position, I finally allow myself to look at his face. What I see expels the air right out of my lungs.
The entire time Iâve known Rafaele, even with his grueling work schedule, Iâve never seen him look more than a little tired. The man is built like a machine, his body and mind honed for performance. But for the first time, I spot cracks in his meticulous facade.
He looks like he hasnât been sleeping well. Slightly ruffled hair, dark shadows under his eyes, and a drawn expression on his face. When our eyes connect, his flash with unmistakable pain.
A part of me Iâm not proud of rejoices.
Heâs hurting too? Good.
But it begs the questionâwhy? He was the one who ended it. Ended us.
Rafaeleâs stare burns across my flesh. He clenches his jaw. No one makes a sound. I blink and then whirl around and walk away from him.
âI donât want to see him.â
Vale clasps her hands in front of her stomach. âHeâs only asking for five minutes. Heâs waiting for you in the library.â
I stare at my reflection in the mirror as I roughly comb my hair. Whatever peace I found in Amalfi is now no more than a wistful memory. I still canât believe he showed up here. âI have nothing to say to him.â
Vale sighs. She opens her mouth and then closes it.
âWhat?â I snap, annoyed. âJust say whatever it is you want to say.â
She shakes her head. âNothing.â
âYou think I should talk to him?â
âCleo, itâs your choice.â
When I donât answer, she leaves.
I run my brush through my curls over and over until theyâre gleaming in the light. I thought I was doing better, but one look at him, and Iâm a mess. Itâs not fair. He doesnât just get to waltz back into my life uninvited and reel me back to the miserable place Iâve tried so hard to crawl out of.
Five minutes later, Valeâs back.
âWhat now?â I know itâs not Valeâs fault, that sheâs only playing messenger, but I canât help taking it out on her. Iâm so fucking frustrated.
âHe says he wonât leave until you speak to him.â
Anger surges through my veins like poison. That damn asshole. âDoesnât he know better than to make demands? Who does he think he is? Weâre not in New York anymore. Heâs a nobody here. Canât Damiano force him to leave?â
Vale runs her tongue over her teeth. âI could ask, if you really think thatâs necessary.â
I take a steadying breath. No, I donât need Damiano to solve my problems for me. I slap my brush on the vanity. âFine. Iâll speak to him, but only so that heâll leave all of us the hell alone.â
I stomp downstairs, march through the hall, and fling the library doors open. Heâs standing by the window, his palms linked behind his back.
âWhat do you want?â
At the sound of my voice, he turns around. The flash of relief in his blue eyes only makes me angrier.
âYou have five minutes,â I hiss, closing the doors behind me.
He scans me over, taking his time like heâs drinking me in. âHow are you?â
âYou know, I was doing okay until you showed up.â
He flinches, and it bolsters me. Iâm so angry with him for being here, for bringing all of my raw, painful feelings back to the surface. âI hope you brought the papers, although Iâm not sure why you chose to deliver them in person. For future reference, this area is covered by FedEx and DHL.â
âI wanted to see you.â Thereâs a hint of something desperate in his tone.
âOh? The last person I want to see is you.â I fill the last word with as much venom as I can muster.
A tremor runs through his cheek. âPlease, Cleo. Can we talk?â
âIsnât that what weâre doing?â
He moves his jaw back and forth. âI deserve your anger. I said things I shouldnât have.â
âWell, it doesnât matter now, does it?â
âIt does matter.â He reaches for me, and my body buzzes with anticipation. It still craves his touch. Misses it. But my mind knows better. I jerk back, putting more space between us.
âRafaele, why are you here?â
His arm is still extended in the air. His fingers twitch around nothing before he lowers his hand back down. âI want to fix this. Iâve realized a lot of things since you left.â
My heart crawls into my throat. For a long, tense beat, I think he might say the words I wanted to hear so badly from him before everything went to shit. But then I catch myself. Of course, he wonât. Thatâs not who he is.
âJust send me the fucking papers,â I whisper. âOr do you really hate me so much that you want to keep me guessing when theyâll finally arrive? I want to move on.â I show him my hand. âI want this fucking ring off my finger.â
We both look at my wedding band at the same time.
I left the emerald engagement ring in New York. It wasnât intentionalâI just wasnât wearing it to work the day I got kidnapped. I rarely wore it to work because I had to lift a lot of boxes, and I didnât want to risk damaging it. But I never took my wedding band off. For the last few months, whenever I glanced at it, something akin to pride fluttered through me. But not anymore. Now when I look at it, it just hurts.
Thereâs nothing stopping me from taking it off. I donât know why Iâve waited. Itâs not like I needed his permission to do it.
I wrap my fingers around the metal and pull.
Rafaele makes a pained grunt, deep from within his chest. His face flashes with torment, and then heâs right in front of me, wrapping his hands around mine, stopping me from removing the ring. âDonât. Just donât. Iâm begging you.â
I struggle for a bit, trying to twist myself out of his hold. His one hand is big enough to engulf both of mine, and he wraps his other hand around my waist. My body is pressed against him, and I squirm and pant, shock crackling through me at how fiercely heâs fighting me.
âLet go of me. I donât want to be near you.â
His hold on me loosens, but he doesnât release me. âPlease, Cleo. Hear me out. I made a mistake pushing you away. I donât want a fucking divorce.â
Heâs too close. I can count each one of his eyelashes.
âLet go of me, or Iâll scream.â
Reluctantly, he drops his hands away. I back away. One step. Two steps. Three. The backs of my knees bump against the sofa.
Why should I let him stop me from doing this? I try again. The ring gets stuck around my knuckle, and for a moment, I worry I wonât be able to get it off after all, but another hard pull, and it slips off. I throw the ring at Rafaele.
âNo, Cleoââ
It bounces off the center of his chest. Falls to the floor. Rolls back toward my feet.
Panic and agony skate across Rafaeleâs features. He moves quickly, dropping to his knees before me and folding his hands around the ring, like heâs afraid Iâll pick it up and aim for the window this time.
He looks up, his expression so devastated it sends a wave of shock through me.
I watch, stunned, as he leans forward and presses his forehead to my belly. âPlease, Cleo,â he whispers hoarsely. âPut it back on. Donât do this.â
My throat constricts. The anger inside me wavers like a candle flame in a gentle breeze. I canât believe heâd go this far.
He wraps one arm around my hips, pulling me closer. His lips are against my shirt, pressing a kiss right above my belly button. âIt belongs on your finger, tesoro.â
The endearment feels like a stab right through the heart. It reminds me of everything we had and lost. âHow dare you?â I hiss. âDo not call me that.â
His hand flexes against my hip. âOkay. I wonât.â He exhales a heavy breath and glances up at me again.
I donât recognize him. Who is this person? What has he done to the proud man I married? A man who wouldnât even beg God if it meant getting on his knees?
He takes my hand and puts the ring inside it. âPlease.â
Pity blooms inside me, pity and something else thatâs not as easy to describe or understand. Iâve tried to harden my heart to him, but I havenât succeeded yet. There are parts that are still soft, still tender, and theyâre weeping.
Iâm trembling as I slide the ring back on. âIâm only doing this so that youâll leave.â
The torment in his face eases. âIâm so fucking sorry.â
âWhat are you sorry for?â
His hands slide over my jeans, down the backs of my thighs. âFor treating you like a liability. I shouldnât have shut down and pulled away when you needed me the most. It wasnât right to blame you for what happened with Nero. It was my fault. I was the one who lost it. I was the one who made mistakes.â
His words exhaust me. I sit down on the edge of the sofa and hang my head. I donât want to talk about what happened anymore. Iâve spent two weeks trying to come to terms with everything, and I was nearly there before he showed up here uninvited.
âIt doesnât matter,â I say weakly.
He places his palms on my knees. âI should have accepted the fact that I was developing feelings for you instead of running away from it. I kept you at a distance, and I know that must have hurt.â
I shake my head. âDonât.â
âI was in denial for the months we were together. If I hadnât been, maybe I could have learned how to process my emotions better. Instead, I did everything I could to pretend that I was in control of the situation. I was a coward.â
I shove his hands away from me. âStop it. You donât have feelings for me. You said it yourself, and I heard you loud and clear. I donât want to listen to this anymore.â
When I stand up and step around him, he reaches for me again. His hand brushes against my calf. âCleo, please. Donât do this.â
I move toward the door. âDo what?â
He gets up. âGive up on us.â
âWhy would I give another chance to a man who is incapable of love? I deserve better than that, Rafe.â
He opens his mouth to say something, but Iâm done. I canât do this right now, not when my heart is about to splinter. Without giving him a chance to respond, I walk out of the room.