Her Marriage Lessons Read Online Emily Tilton

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Erotic, Romance Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 80
Estimated words: 73013 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 365(@200wpm)___ 292(@250wpm)___ 243(@300wpm)
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We pulled up in front of my parents’ house, where we had asked to stay while we found the perfect starter house for a happy young couple. I couldn’t look at Rick; I had stolen a few glances during the drive, hoping to see any softening of his impassive face, but by this point it had become clear no softening would occur.

I looked out the car window at the horrid little house where I had grown up, learning the lessons of modesty that I knew somehow had ruined my young marriage before it had even properly begun. I hadn’t cried since getting out of bed in our lovely room in the beautiful lodge in the mountains, after weeping on and off all night. I felt a sob rise in my chest now that the awful drive had ended and some decision would have to be made about what would happen next.

Rick hadn’t turned the car engine off. I figured that meant he intended to drop me off here and then go to his old apartment, where his former roommates had found another guy to take Rick’s room. The new roommate probably hadn’t yet moved in, I guessed, hoping without thinking about it that my husband would at least have a bed to sleep in now that we were clearly going to get the marriage annulled.

That thought, which I hadn’t really let myself consider until this moment, dragged a sob from deep in my chest. I didn’t turn from looking out the window at my childhood home, but I choked out, “I’m… I’m sorry.”

He had tried so hard, when he had found me in the lobby. I had given him nothing, other than to tell him he had better sleep on the couch.

“I talked to Scott this morning before we left,” he said.

Despite the bizarre yet enormous role that insane conversation on the porch had played in this disaster, it took me a moment to comprehend what Rick had just said. He had disappeared from the room when I had gotten out of bed, but I had assumed he had just gone to get coffee and maybe to take a walk. I didn’t know why it shocked me so deeply that instead he had talked to someone.

I turned around to look at him, feeling anger rise out of my grief. He had the same blank expression on his face that he had worn all the way home.

“What did you tell him?” I demanded, as the heat rushed to my cheeks.

“Well,” Rick said, looking at me intently, “he asked me if you were alright, first of all.”

I felt my face crumple, tears leaking out of the corners of my eyes onto my cheeks.

“Asshole,” I said, looking away, out the windshield, so I wouldn’t have to look at Rick and see his reaction to my swearing. I wondered with a lurch of my stomach how long we could sit here before my mom noticed us and came out to see why we hadn’t gotten out of the car.

“Dee, look at me,” Rick said.

My eyes went wide as I complied, and saw that the same strange new note I had just heard in my husband’s voice seemed to be echoed in the narrowing of his eyes and the tilt of his chin.

“What?” I asked, scorn coming into my tone, fed by something defiant deep inside me. The flash of rebellion, rising in reaction to the severity in Rick’s expression, seemed foreign to my character and yet also somehow essential to it.

The youngest of three children, I had had a reputation as a brat all the way into high school, before deciding I wanted to put that behind me. I had done it so successfully that my sister had even joked at my graduation party that she thought I might go psycho from all the brattiness I had walled up inside myself. Everyone had laughed.

And now I’ve gone psycho.

I watched Rick’s brow furrow at the sneering tone and the scornful look on my face.

“What?” I repeated, liking my new anger and disdain for his stupid masculine attempts to take control and to get what he thought was his right as my husband. The little book could say all it wanted about how a loving wife lets her husband enjoy his conjugal rights whenever he chooses to express his love that way. If Rick had the same idea, well, we should just go ahead and get the marriage annulled as soon as possible.

“The way I see it,” Rick said forcefully, “we have two options, before we talk about anything else. We’re going to decide right now whether we try to put our marriage back on track, or we call it quits.”

My lips parted soundlessly. I realized I had expected Rick to stop using that assured, decisive tone once he had gotten my attention. Every time I had heard that note in his voice and seen that determined look on his face, it had melted away when he looked into my eyes, into the gorgeous smile that made my heart ache as I remembered it.


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