
The Tycoon’s Only Taste of Love
Chapter 2
The motel room smelled like stale cigarettes and broken dreams. The carpet was a sickly brown color that probably hadn't been cleaned in years, and the single bed sagged in the middle like it had given up hope long ago. Leo sat cross-legged on the threadbare comforter, his small fingers tracing patterns in the dust motes that danced in the harsh fluorescent light.
"Mommy, why are people so mean to you?" His voice was barely a whisper, but it cut through me like a blade.
I sat beside him on the lumpy mattress, pulling him close. His hair still smelled like the expensive shampoo from Isabella's house—a cruel reminder of how far we'd fallen in just a few hours.
"Some people forget how to be kind, sweetheart," I said, my voice catching. "But that doesn't mean we stop being good people."
Leo buried his face against my shoulder, and I felt his small body shake with silent sobs. "I don't want to live in a scary place," he whispered. "I want to go home."
The problem was, we didn't have a home anymore. This twelve-dollar-a-night motel room with its peeling wallpaper and dripping faucet was all we could afford. I held Leo tighter, my own tears falling into his soft hair as he cried himself to sleep in my arms.
The next morning brought a new kind of humiliation. I'd found a job listing for a sous chef position at Meridian, one of the city's most prestigious restaurants. It was a long shot, but I had to try.
The moment I walked through Meridian's gleaming glass doors, I knew I'd made a mistake. The hostess looked me up and down with barely concealed disgust, taking in my wrinkled blouse—the best I could manage after a night in a motel—and my scuffed shoes.
"I'm here about the sous chef position," I said, trying to inject confidence into my voice.
The manager appeared before I could even finish my sentence. He was a thin man with sharp features and an expensive suit that probably cost more than I'd made in my last month at Isabella's.
"Let me stop you right there," he said, his voice dripping with disdain. He didn't even glance at the resume I'd carefully prepared. "We don't hire desperate single mothers here. This is a serious establishment that requires serious professionals."
My cheeks burned. "Sir, if you'd just look at my qualifications—"
"No need." He waved a dismissive hand. "I can tell everything I need to know just by looking at you. Try the diner down the street. They might have something more... suitable."
The hostess smirked as I turned and walked out, my dignity in tatters on their polished marble floor.
The coffee shop interview started better. Brew & Bean was a cozy little place with mismatched furniture and the warm smell of roasted coffee beans. The owner, a middle-aged man with kind eyes named Tom, actually listened as I explained my experience.
"You seem like exactly what we need," he said, nodding thoughtfully. "The position is for our morning shift, and we could really use someone with your background in food service."
Hope bloomed in my chest for the first time in days. "That sounds perfect. I'm very reliable, and I work hard."
"Great. Just one question—do you have any children?"
I hesitated for a split second, but I couldn't lie. "Yes, I have a six-year-old son."
Tom's entire demeanor changed. The warmth in his eyes cooled, and he leaned back in his chair. "Ah. Well, that changes things."
"I can arrange childcare," I said quickly. "It won't interfere with my work."
"Look, I'm sure you're a nice lady, but I need someone without distractions." His voice had taken on that familiar tone of polite dismissal. "Kids get sick, they have school events, they need their moms. I can't risk hiring someone who might miss work for kid emergencies."
"But I—"
"I'm sorry. I really am." He stood up, effectively ending the interview. "I hope you understand."
I understood perfectly. I understood that being a single mother made me unemployable. I understood that society had already written me off as damaged goods.
By evening, desperation had driven me to a place I'd sworn I'd never go. My parents' house sat in the same suburban neighborhood where I'd grown up, with its perfectly manicured lawn and white picket fence. It looked exactly the same as it had when I was a child, but I felt like a stranger approaching the front door.
Leo's hand was small and warm in mine as I rang the doorbell. Through the frosted glass, I could see my mother's silhouette approaching. When she opened the door, her face went through a series of emotions—surprise, pain, and finally, cold resolution.
"Elara." Her voice was flat. "What are you doing here?"
"Mom, please. Leo and I need help. We have nowhere else to go."
Behind her, I heard my father's heavy footsteps. He appeared in the doorway, his face already set in the disapproving frown I remembered so well from my childhood.
"Absolutely not," he said before I could explain our situation. "You made your choices, Elara. You married that boy against our advice, you got divorced like some common—" He glanced at Leo and caught himself. "You're a disgrace to the family name."
"Dad, please. It's not about me. It's about Leo. He's your grandson."
My mother's eyes filled with tears, but her voice remained firm. "We can't enable this behavior, Elara. You need to figure out your own mess."
"What behavior?" I demanded, my voice rising. "Being betrayed by my husband and best friend? Losing everything through no fault of my own?"
"You should have tried harder to keep your marriage together," my father said coldly. "Good wives don't lose their husbands."
The words hit me like a physical blow. Leo pressed closer to my side, sensing the tension even if he didn't understand the words.
"Please," I whispered one last time. "We'll sleep in the garage. Anything."
My mother's face crumpled, but she stepped back and began closing the door. "I'm sorry, Elara. I really am. But you have to figure this out yourself."
The door clicked shut with a finality that echoed through my bones. Leo looked up at me with those trusting brown eyes, and I realized that rock bottom had a basement.
We walked back to the motel in silence, our shadows long and lonely under the streetlights. Tomorrow would bring new rejections, new humiliations, new reminders that the world had no place for women like me.
But tonight, all I could do was hold my son close and try to believe that somewhere, somehow, there had to be a way forward.
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