Unrated.
When I read the blurb, about how Vincenzo sends his wife away because he discovers she is barren I thought: that bastard. I must immediately read this book, I am sure it will be delightfully crazy!
I’m at the fifty per cent mark, and I can’t read any more. It’s not delightful, it’s sad. Vincenzo is a rage monster and abusive, and Emma is sad. She’s on the brink of rather desperate poverty, she has a ten month old baby, and is incapable of supporting herself. She ran a child minding service out of her home until the mothers complained that she had no heating, and removed their children. It’s highly unlikely Emma had done anything to make this a legitimate business, because Emma is hopeless.
Her landlord has told her that he’s going to raise the rent, and hints that he might be amenable to negotiating another form of compensation. i.e. sex. This is what prompts her to call her estranged billionaire husband and ask for a divorce. Because when you get a divorce, you get money, right?
Vincenzo will see her, but she must come to London. Emma can barely afford a train ticket. She’s going to have an interesting time getting legal representation for less than a return train fare. There’s more backstory about Emma’s sadness – when she was at catering school her mum got cancer and died, there was no money for Emma after paying the medical costs, and Emma didn’t feel like going back to school. So instead she booked herself a holiday in Sicily, and that’s where she met Vincenzo.
Vincenzo pursues her, and they sleep together. He discovers that Emma is a virgin, and is furious. “I have robbed you of your virginity – the most precious thing that a woman possesses,” he rages. That this doesn’t bother Emma is … not great. Emma is in the habit of not telling Vincenzo fairly important things: ‘warning, I’m a virgin,’ and ‘I went to the doctor, and it looks like I’m barren,’ and ‘it turns out I’m not barren, I am going to have a baby.’ Emma frequently insists to herself that she has done nothing wrong.
The thing is, and this is what I can’t rationalise enough to read the rest of the book: Vincenzo is abusive. I’d been prepared for him to be controlling – that’s the game, and the interest in a book like this is how, after a huge fail in the game, the couple renegotiate the rules. What I can’t see is how the second half of the book is going to rehabilitate Vincenzo, how he will see his own mistakes and work out how to correct them, because I haven’t even got to the part yet where he threatens to remove the child from Emma’s custody unless she agrees to have sex with him. Some of Vincenzo’s stand out romantic hero moments are:
1. ogling a female employee while on the phone to his estranged wife
2. not wanting a divorce because he won’t be able to sleep with women without them trying to marry him
3. emotionally torturing Emma by telling her that it wasn’t her infertility that was the problem, it was the fact that she’d discovered it in secret, and then deceitfully kept the news to herself
4. when they were living together, extreme jealousy when men looked at Emma, and a refusal to allow her to pursue anything that would give her some independence
5. after sex, pointing out that they didn’t use contraception and taunting Emma with her infertility
6. Despising Emma for enjoying sex so much, because women with babies should be more restrained
7. Calling her a whore.
I’m disappointed. I can’t see there being any satisfying redemption. Vincenzo is so over the top, but I can't find him funny, and I've really tried. I’m sure there’ll be something where Vincenzo comes upon a moment of understanding of the wrong he has done Emma, but I can’t imagine there’ll be much left in the book by that stage, and therefore no opportunity to see that he will become a better man. I can’t see Emma doing anything more than enduring. I’m sad for them both.