http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20020903/people_nm/people_mccartney_dc_1No Pre-Nup for McCartney and New Wife
Tue Sep 3, 6:59 PM ET
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Heather Mills offered to sign a prenuptial agreement with new husband Paul McCartney but the former Beatle, one of the wealthiest musicians in the world, turned down the offer, according to an interview published Tuesday.
Mills, who married McCartney at a lavish ceremony in June despite the misgivings of his adult children, also told Vanity Fair magazine that they would like to have child.
Mills, 34, said she volunteered to sign a prenuptial agreement with McCartney, whose fortune is estimated at close to a billion dollars.
"I wanted to prove that I love him for him," she was quoted as telling the magazine in an interview, released on Tuesday, in its October edition. "He said, 'I wouldn't let you'."
The former model turned charity worker, who had her leg amputated after a traffic accident, is infuriated by widespread assumptions that she married McCartney, 60, only for his money.
"It's the biggest insult to Paul to say 'Oh there's nothing else a woman would want him for.' He's not talented? He's not sexy? He's a very sexy, charismatic man?" Mills was quoted as saying.
McCartney met Mills a year after his wife Linda died in April 1998 of breast cancer ( news - web sites). Mills said she was wooed the old-fashioned romantic way.
"I had flowers sent to me; I was sung to on the phone, sung to while I was making dinner. I thought: This is unbelievable! This is what people dream of," she said.
"I'm really happy. It's incredibly passionate. It's intense all the time and we love each other's company. Our favorite thing is to stay home. I cook a meal -- Indian or Thai or Italian -- and he dances around the room like Fred Astaire," Mills added.
Mills said she and McCartney were trying for a baby, but she was not hopeful about her chances because she suffered two unsuccessful pregnancies in the past. "I just say 'What will be, will be'....I adore kids, and if it happens, it happens, but I've seen too many people get too upset about it," she said.