3.5 stars.
Hero finds his long-lost wife & surprise daughter per chance. He overhears a li’l gal telling Santa Claus that all she wants for Xmas is a daddy, @ an upscale Dept. store he recently acquired. He’s flabbergasted that the kid’s mom is none other his estranged wife. He finds out where she lives & demands that they spend Xmas w/ him, ‘cuz she’s deprived him & his child the chance of knowing each other’s existence. He blackmails her, if she doesn’t dance to his tune, he’ll take the kid away from her (the usual theme in HP). What follows is a tug-of-war as they both struggle to come to terms that - despite 4 yrs of separation - their chemistry is still dynamite. What had triggered the collapse of their marriage ? What makes her so resistant to his attempt @ reconciliation ?. He works his @$$ off to convince her that he’s a reformed hubby now. He’s not a monk, he’s been w/ others during their separation ‘cuz he’s a red-blooded male w/ needs, yet he gets pissy w/ her when he learns of her potential BF. He thinks she’s barking up the wrong tree, dismissing her accusations that he’s been boinking his luvly P.A. On the other hand, she feels that he only needed her as a bedmate & housekeeper during their disastrous marriage. She tries to make him see from her POV, that money is not the “be all & end all” of marriage. He took her for granted before & she drums it on his head now, that he gotta change his attitude, by not putting his career as 1st priority & his family in the backseat anymore. He owns up to his past mistakes. He doesn’t grovel / get down on his knees, but he redeems himself by trying to spend time w/ her & their baby, to make his marriage work. I had several minor hurdles to overcome in reading this book (I really luved both H/H’s POVs, just like the previous MM I’ve read – ‘Bought for marriage’. Got 4 more MM in my TBR) :
1st of all, the hero’s name – Luigi. It’s a legit Italian’s name, but in my mind, I’ve always had to replace it w/ another, whenever I read a book w/ this name, ‘cuz it reminded of me of the plumber Mario’s green-clad, bulbous-nosed, cute-as-a-button twin bro cum sidekick / nemesis, from 1 of my all-time fav Nintendo games, Super Mario bros. It’s silly, I know =)~
2nd, the secret baby. Yeah it’s prevalent in HPlandia, but the reason the young preggers heroine walked outta her marriage & kept her 3 y/o li’l daughter a secret from the hero, was not credible to me. If her hubby had been an abusive @$$hole like the infamous pig Sean Culhane, I woulda empathized & understood her reasoning. Nope, in this case, only ‘cuz the hero is emotionally vacant, due to his deprived, difficult upbringing. Well, @ least he’s a rebel w/ a cause LOL... Per heroine, she didn’t wish her kid to grow up w/ a workaholic, money-driven daddy. For Luigi, public display of affection is a foreign concept, having been neglected by his parents, being taken away & tossed around between foster homes since he’s 8 y/o. He’s 1 of those uber-alpha, rags-to-riches heroes who are incapable of expressing his feelings verbally & his belief - that the more money he earns, the more security he provides his wife – backfires on his marriage (they got hitched when she’s only 18 y/o). He’s determined that he’ll have earned $ 1 mil by the time he’s 30 y/o. Alas, his breath-taking mansion doesn’t impress his wife. They can’t see eye to eye when it comes to the meaning of luv & marriage. 1 day she decided she’s had enuff of his absence & lack of affection, just up & left w/out telling him & her parents.
3rd, the excuse heroine gives hero for disappearing from her hubby’s & her parents’ lives (who adore hero), that if she’d given him advance warning, he woulda tried to stop her from deserting him. So here we have the usual non-existent communication between H/H. He had no telltale signs that there was trouble in paradise. The self-made hero thought she understood his drive & ambition (he’s a wunderkind in Information Technology world).
4th, the obtuse hero. He’s admitted that he’s aware of the fact that his gorgeous, red-haired P.A. has the hots for him but the feeling isn’t mutual. He’s adamant that there’s no hanky panky whatsoever going on between ‘em, their relationship is purely professional, yet we’re told from his POV, that he treats her to dinners & weekend getaways, as just rewards, ‘cuz he’s a slave-driver. Even in the end, after heroine tells him that the reason she had a hard time believing his repetitive claims of innocence, & that the P.A. herself has blatantly made a bold-faced lie that they’ve been having an affair, he still finds it v. hard to believe that his P.A. would spin a web of lies. Now, I’m not a man, but if I were one & found out from my own luv of my life & mother of my child that my P.A. was a fork-tongued viper who tried her darndest to wreck my marriage, I’d sack her w/ no recommendations. Instead, all he does promise the heroine, is to have a serious talk & give the P.A. an ultimatum to behave or else, leave. Even if she’s the most valuable P.A. in the universe, every worker’s replaceable. There’s gotta be 1 potential P.A. out there who can be re-trained & trusted in & outside the office. Knowing the real colors of the P.A. would be sufficient to dismiss her for good. Once a liar, always a liar. U just use your common sense that sometime down the road, the P.A. might try to cause trouble in his marriage again. Typical of men, hero doesn’t seem to grasp that 3’s a crowd. U’d think that the hero’d realize, removing the thorn on his side would be more conducive to the longevity of his holy matrimony.
Having said all that, I thought it was well-written & I still luved MM’s writing style. I also liked that the hero had compunctions, that he had to blackmail his wife spend Xmas w/ him & sort out their marriage problems. He’s confident that they can make another go @ it if they can lay it out in the open. Even tho’ it’s a bitter pill to swallow & he says more than once that he’ll never forgive her for denying him the 1st 3 yrs of his child’s life, he doesn’t punish heroine for it. He’s all for confrontation, if it means saving his marriage. He learns that sometimes words speak louder than action.