The Italian Billionaire’s Shy Waitress – A Billionaire Breaks My Heart Read Online Marian Tee

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Billionaire, Insta-Love Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 36
Estimated words: 34995 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 175(@200wpm)___ 140(@250wpm)___ 117(@300wpm)
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I shake my head. “I really don’t want to talk about it. I just need time and space to think about things.”

She studies me with those dark, too-perceptive eyes. "Okay. But Thea?"

"Mm?"

"John 8:33.”

It’s all she has to say, and I nearly break down and cry. The truth. The truth always sets us free. I know that. Believe that. But what if the truth is just too terrifyingly painful to bear?

DAY FOUR STARTS THE same way.

Seven-twenty-three. Corner booth. Coffee, black, no sugar. Omelet. Twenty percent tip.

Except this time, when my shift ends at six, I'm the one closing.

Gail asked me to stay late because Rhea called in sick, and I said yes because I always say yes, and also because staying busy means not thinking about frozen overlooks and coat collars and the word slumming echoing in my head.

By six-thirty, the café is empty. The last customer left fifteen minutesago, and I'm wiping down tables and counting chairs (fourteen) and trying not to think about anything except whether we need to order more napkins.

We probably need to order more napkins.

I'm behind the counter, doing the register count, when I hear the door swing open.

I look up, ready to say we're closed, and—

Santino.

Snow is melting off his jacket, turning dark spots on the shoulders. His hair is damp. His hands are in his pockets. And he's looking at me with an expression I can't read, which is nothing new, except this time there's something else underneath it.

Something that might be exhaustion.

"We're closed," I say automatically.

"I know."

"I was about to lock the door."

"I know." He doesn't move. Just stands there with the cold air coming in behind him and snow melting onto the floor. "May I come in?"

I should say no. I should tell him it's late, I need to finish closing, I have homework, I have literally any excuse that would make this easier.

But since I remember Jolie’s gentle and well-meaning words about the truth...

I force myself to nod, and my heart starts pounding against my chest as I watch him step inside. The café suddenly feels smaller. Quieter. Just the two of us and all this space that somehow isn't enough space at all.

I go back to the register. Count bills I've already counted.

Twenty-three ones. Fifteen fives. Eight tens.

He doesn't move from the door.

I can feel him watching me. Can feel the weight of his attention like a physical thing. My hands are shaking slightly as I stack the bills, and I hate that he can probably see it, hate that I can't even count money without my body betraying me.

"Thea," he says finally.

I don't look up. "I need to finish closing."

"I know."

"It'll take a while."

"I can wait."

"You don't need to—"

"I have been trying to talk to you for three days."

"I've been working."

"You have been avoiding me."

My hands still on the bills. "I've been working," I say again, but the words sound hollow even to me.

Silence.

"Please. Sit with me."

I do look up now. He's still by the door, hands in his pockets, and his expression is—I don't know. Open? Uncertain? Like he's asking for something he's not sure I'll give.

"I have to finish closing—"

"Please."

"Why?"

"Because I—" He stops. Looks away. Looks back. "Because I need to explain. And you will not let me explain while you are working."

I come around the counter. My legs feel uncertain, like I'm walking on ice. I choose a table by the window—not the corner booth, never the corner booth—and I sit.

He sits across from me.

And for a long moment, neither of us speaks.

The café is so quiet. No espresso machine. No Gail barking out orders in the kitchen. No customers. Just the sound of snow hitting the window and the heating system clicking on and my heart doing something complicated in my chest.

“Thea...”

Something about the way he says my name makes my breath catch.

“No more pretending."

I nod.

“You’ve been avoiding me.”

I nod again.

“Why?”

“Because...” Just thinking of what I’m about to admit out loud makes my chest hurt. “What Kimberly said—”

“—is out of spite and jealousy,” he cuts in quietly. “And that’s why you should know none of it is true.”

“Is it?” I gesture at myself. At my coffee-stained shirt and my hair that's falling out of its

ponytail. "I’m not like her."

“If you were like her, I wouldn’t have had anything to count. I wouldn’t even care to count. And I certainly wouldn’t be driving across town every day just to have breakfast.”

Oh.

“Do you understand what I’m saying, Thea?”

I bite my lip hard. I think I do, but I’m still scared to admit this. “We’re just so different,” I say helplessly, and frustration flashes over his chiseled features at the words.

"I am not good with words. I am good with speed. With timing. With knowing when to

brake and when to accelerate. But this—" He gestures at the space between us. "I do not know how to measure it. How slow or fast you want me to move.” He rakes his fingers through his hair, and my heart stutters at the gesture. The lack of control in it is nothing like him.


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