When he’d refused to take her back to her house in Valencia the night before, although promising to get her to work on time that morning, she hadn’t argued. He’d been quietly satisfied that she was adapting to his authority well, right until he’d discovered her missing. She’d returned a couple of hours later with a bag of shopping, saying, ‘You can hardly expect me to go to work wearing Chanel.’ Thus she had proceeded to take herself off to one of the spare rooms she’d appropriated for her own use, locked the door, and refused to come out until the morning.
He’d been sorely tempted to kick said door down but had refrained from losing his cool in any fashion. He’d left her alone, dining on marinated fillet of pork while she stayed hungry, stewing in her own righteousness.
Come Friday she would be in his bedroom with him. If she refused, she knew what the consequences would be. No more funds for her pet project.
When she reappeared exactly five minutes later, she got into the car and slammed the door.
‘You’re doing that deliberately, aren’t you?’ he said through gritted teeth.
‘Sorry.’
She didn’t sound in the least bit sorry.
Grinding his teeth some more, he reversed, turned round and drove out of the car park.
‘Why were you driving that thing anyway?’
‘I was taking some of the kids home.’
Now he recalled her mention of her car the day before. ‘When did you pass your driving test?’
‘A year ago.’
‘I always said there was nothing to be frightened of and that you were capable of driving over here.’ She’d learned to drive in England but had never taken a test. Despite all his cajoling and his offer to buy her any car she desired, she’d always flatly refused to get behind the wheel of a car in Spain.
It felt like a slap to know she’d waited until she was out of his life before trying for her licence.
‘You’re always right,’ Charley said shortly, thinking of all the times she’d heard the words ‘I told you’ from his lips, before quickly adding, ‘I needed to be able to drive for the job. We take it in turns to collect the kids and drop them back, at least for the ones whose parents don’t drive.’
Looking back, she couldn’t believe it had taken her so long to take her test. She’d been even more surprised when she’d passed first time. She’d been convinced she was going to fail.
When the examiner had told her she’d passed, her first impulse had been to call Raul and share the news with him. Finally she’d passed something—it had been a heady moment.
‘I assume you charge extra for the taxiing service?’ he said.
She shot him a look. ‘Of course we don’t.’
‘That’s something that will have to change. You’re throwing money away.’
Charley breathed deeply, biting back every nasty name she wanted to throw at him.
She’d always known her husband was materialistic but this was something else. How could he have such an attitude towards those poor children?
‘Do you know where I live?’ she asked, deliberately changing the subject before she gave in to the urge to punch him.
‘Your address was on the divorce papers.’
They lapsed into silence for the rest of the short journey to her home.
‘This is your house?’ Raul asked when he pulled into her driveway.
‘Not what you were expecting?’
‘I was expecting something more lavish.’ His lips formed a mocking smile. ‘What happened? Did you have to sell up when the money started to run out?’
She kept her gaze on him even. ‘I bought this house six months after I left you. Lavish is your style, not mine.’ Her two-bedroom villa was modest but more than adequate for her needs. It might not have its own swimming pool or a beach at the bottom of the garden but nor did it have so many rooms she needed a map to find her way around.
‘That’s not how I remember things.’
Oh, yes. That was right. He thought she was a gold-digger. ‘I don’t control your memories.’
‘And neither do you control your finances.’
Fighting the rising anger, Charley tugged at her bag and rummaged through for her keys. ‘Let’s get this done.’
Inside, she headed straight to her bedroom and began to pack, carefully placing her clothes into the same Louis Vuitton suitcases she’d used when she’d left him. She could hear Raul giving himself a tour of her home. It was a very short tour. Minutes later he was in her room watching her put the last of her stuff into the cases.
‘Are you nearly done?’
‘Yes. Whatever we can’t fit in the car today I’ll collect on Friday.’ On Friday they would be coming back to Valencia. She would work at the centre while Raul finalised the purchase of the new building. As far as Raul was concerned, her shift at the centre would be her last. She wasn’t prepared to argue about it until the deeds were signed and in her hands.