LOGIN(Daniel’s POV)
I had rules.
No unnecessary attachments. No emotional entanglements. No situations I couldn't control and exit cleanly.
I had broken every single one of them in the last three hours.
The elevator doors opened directly into my penthouse suite, and Rosa stepped inside ahead of me. She stopped at the windows. The entire Vegas Strip spread out below us, and she stood in the middle of it looking like something that didn't belong in my world at all.
She was still half-wearing her wedding dress under the borrowed jacket. The woman had married two men today. One who ran. One who should have.
She turned around.
"This is really happening," she whispered.
Something about the way she said it cut through the last layer of whiskey and logic I had left.
I crossed the room and framed her face in my hands. Her skin was warm. Her brown eyes were steady, burning, completely unafraid despite everything they'd seen today.
"Do you want it to?" I asked.
"Yes." No pause. No performance. Just yes.
I kissed her.
Slow at first. Careful. Tasting tequila and something underneath it, something sweeter, something that had no business being there. Rosa made a small sound against my mouth and pressed into me, and the careful part lasted about four more seconds before it didn't.
My control, maintained at considerable cost for thirty-four years, started coming apart.
Her fingers found my suit jacket, pushed at it. I helped, shrugging it off, letting it hit the floor without caring where it landed.
I worked my shirt buttons while Rosa watched with her lips parted, and something about being watched by her felt different from anything I'd experienced before.
When my shirt joined the jacket, she put her hands on my chest. Exploring.
"You're so controlled," she murmured. "Even now."
"Not for long." My voice came out rougher than I intended.
I turned her gently, found the zipper at the back of her dress. I slid the zipper down slowly, feeling the fabric loosen, watching it pool around her feet like a surrender.
She stood with her back to me in white lace, and my breath left my body.
I pressed my lips to her shoulder. Trailed up along the curve of her neck. Rosa's head fell back against my chest and she exhaled like she'd been holding that breath all day.
"Daniel—"
"Tell me what you want," I said against her skin.
She turned in my arms. Her eyes met mine, and whatever she found there must have been enough because she didn't hesitate.
"I want to forget today," she said. "I want to stop feeling like something people throw away." Her hand pressed flat against my chest, right over my heart. "Make me feel real. Make me feel like I matter."
I had never wanted to give anyone anything as much as I wanted to give her that.
I lifted her. She was light in a way that made something protective twist in my chest, and I carried her to the bed and laid her down on black silk sheets and just looked at her for a moment, this chaotic, warm, furious, broken, beautiful stranger who was, by every legal definition, my wife.
Rosa reached up and pulled me down.
After that, there was no more thinking.
Her kisses turned urgent. My hands learned her, the curve of her waist, the softness of her thighs, the way she shivered when I found the places that made her gasp.
When I unhooked her bra and took her into my mouth she arched off the bed hard, fingers twisting into my hair.
"Don't stop," she breathed. "Please don't stop."
I had no intention of stopping.
I had been with women before.
But this was different.
Every sound Rosa made felt like it was happening inside my chest. Every time her body responded to my hands, my mouth, my name on her lips.
When I settled between her thighs and tasted her, she came apart completely. Loud and unguarded and completely unashamed of it.
She pulled me back up, kissed me deep, and her hands worked my belt with more coordination than she had any right to after that much tequila.
"Condom," she whispered.
I knew. I knew I needed to get one. My wallet was fifteen feet away and my brain was aware of that fact.
But Rosa was pulling me closer. Her legs wrapped around my hips, warm and deliberate.
"We shouldn't—" I started.
"I don't care." Her eyes held mine. Dark and certain. "I want to feel everything tonight. No barriers. Just this." Her hand pressed my jaw, turning my face fully toward her. "Please, Daniel."
I was lost.
I had built thirty-four years of walls and she had walked through all of them in four hours while wearing a wedding dress and smelling like tequila and I was completely, catastrophically lost.
When I pushed inside her, the world went quiet.
She was perfect. She fit against me like something I hadn't known I was missing.
"Oh God," she breathed, and her nails raked down my back, and I moved.
We found a rhythm that built and built, her body meeting mine, her voice breaking on my name, and for the first time in my life I understood what people meant when they said they lost themselves in someone.
I pressed my face into her neck and breathed her in. This warmth, this connection, this woman who asked for nothing but realness and somehow got it out of me in a single night when no one had managed it in thirty-four years.
When she came the second time she cried out so completely that I followed without meaning to, the release hitting me like a train on full speed.
We collapsed together, breathing hard, tangled in silk.
Rosa traced patterns on my chest with one finger. Lazy circles. Like she was drawing something only she could see.
"That was—" She stopped.
"Yeah," I said.
I had no other words either.
She yawned. Her eyes fluttered. The tequila and the exhaustion and the full devastating weight of her day were pulling her under, and I watched it happen, the moment her face let everything go and went soft and unguarded and at peace.
I should have moved. Should have put the distance back between us.
I didn't move. I tucked her closer and she settled against me like she'd always slept there, and I stared at the ceiling while the Vegas lights shifted slowly across the room.
At some point I found my sketchbook. I had carried one since I was twelve years old, the one habit my father had never managed to beat out of me. I sat beside her sleeping form and I drew her, the line of her jaw, her hand relaxed against the pillow, the way her hair fell across her face. I drew for hours. I didn't question it.
Dawn came in gray and quiet.
I looked at what I'd drawn. Page after page of her, this woman I had known for one night.
This could not continue. She was a stranger. Last night was tequila and recklessness and one night of feeling something real, and real things were exactly what I could not afford.
I knew what happened to people who loved someone in my world. I had watched it happen to my mother.
I found hotel stationery.
Annulment papers will be couriered. – D. Gosling.
I set it on the nightstand beside the cheap chapel ring and her phone.
I dressed in silence. Picked up my sketchbook. Took one last look at her sleeping, her chest rising and falling, one hand still reaching toward the space where I had been.
I'm sorry, I thought. For what, I couldn't have said exactly.
For last night. For leaving. For the fact that I already knew the sketchbook pages I'd filled were going into my safe the moment I got back to New York. That I would take them out and look at them in weak moments and hate myself for it.
I closed the door quietly behind me.
I walked to the elevator, pressed the button, and stood very still while it descended.
I had done the right thing. The logical thing.
So why did it feel like I had just left something in that room that I was never going to get back?
Daniel's PovSecurity called my office at twelve fifteen the next day."Mr Gosling, there's a situation in the lobby.""What kind of situation?""Ms Theron is here. She's refusing to leave."I was already standing, jacket half on, before the man finished the sentence. My heart pounded in a way it hadn't in years, a mix of anger and something I didn't want to name."Tell her I'm on my way," I said. "And tell security to stay close.""Yes, sir."The elevator ride down felt longer than usual. I rehearsed exactly nothing, because there was nothing to rehearse with Johansson, only damage control. She'd been a part of my life for years, a constant thorn, a reminder of obligations I'd never wanted and alliances I'd never asked for.She stood near the front desk when I stepped off the
Rosa's PovHe stopped close enough that I could feel the warmth coming off him. Neither of us said anything for a long moment. The kitchen light hummed above us, and somewhere down the hall a clock ticked too loud in the silence."This is a bad idea," he said finally."Probably.""Rosa.""I know." I didn't step back. "Doesn't mean I want you to leave the kitchen."His jaw tightened. He stayed exactly where he was, but his eyes kept dropping to my mouth and then snapping back up again, like he was fighting something he didn't want to fight."How's the baby?" he asked, his voice rougher than usual."Fine. The doctor says everything looks normal." I wrapped both hands around my water glass, needing something to hold onto that wasn't him. "Small for now. Apparently that's normal too.""Good.""You could ask me that more than once a week.""I'm asking now.""At midnight. In a kitchen. Because you couldn't sleep." I set the glass down. "Not exactly daily check-in material."He looked away f
Daniel's PovMy father's lawyer called at nine in the morning. His voice carried the particular smoothness of a man paid to deliver bad news politely."Richard wants this resolved quickly," he said. "The unfortunate marriage, specifically.""It's not unfortunate. It's legal.""Your father's exact words were unfortunate, ill-considered, and beneath the family name." A pause, papers rustling somewhere on his end. "He's prepared to offer a settlement for an expedited annulment. Generous terms for the woman involved.""There's a pregnancy now."Silence stretched long on the other end."Richard will want to discuss that directly.""Tell him I said no." I hung up before the lawyer could respond, my jaw already aching from how hard I'd clenched it through the entire call.James knocked twic
Rosa's PovThe library sat at the end of the hallway I'd never bothered exploring. Floor-to-ceiling shelves, a rolling ladder, the kind of room that existed in movies more than real apartments.I wandered in around two in the afternoon with nothing better to do. Books lined every wall, mostly business titles, biographies of men who built empires. Boring, predictable, exactly what I'd expect from a man who treated feelings like a liability.A leather-bound book sat tucked behind a row of finance texts on the lowest shelf. I pulled it out without thinking much about it. The cover had no title. Just worn leather, soft from years of handling, a small dent across the spine like it had been dropped a hundred times and picked back up just as many.I opened it.My own face stared back at me.Page after page. My jaw, my hands, the curve of
Daniel's PovThe hotel lobby buzzed with the usual evening traffic when I walked through it. Staff nodded as I passed, the way they always did, polite and practiced and careful never to look at me too long.I caught two of them near the concierge desk, heads bent close together."Heard she was some kind of translator before this. No money, no family, nothing.""Married him after two weeks. Two weeks.""I heard she's pregnant already.""Of course she is."I stopped walking. Both women froze the second they noticed me standing there. One went pale immediately. The other dropped her eyes to the floor like that might erase the last thirty seconds."Mr Gosling.""Carry on," I said, and kept walking, jaw tight the entire way to the elevator.James caught up to me on the executive floor, two coffees in hand. He handed one over without asking if I wanted it."You heard them," he said."I heard them.""It's everywhere now, Daniel. Staff, board members, half the city apparently." He fell into s
Rosa's PovThe kitchen smelled like coffee when I walked in. Daniel sat at the counter, already dressed for the office. His tie was knotted tight, his jacket on, a folder open in front of him."Morning," I said, reaching for a mug."Morning.""Sleep okay?""Fine."I poured coffee I wasn't supposed to be drinking anymore, then remembered, then poured it down the sink instead. He watched the whole thing without comment."There's tea in the pantry," he said. "Greta got the caffeine-free kind.""Thoughtful.""It's for the baby."I set the mug down harder than necessary. "Right. For the baby. Of course.""What's that supposed to mean?""Nothing." I grabbed the tea bag. "How was your night?""Busy.""Anything interesting happen?""Not particularly."I waited for more. Nothing came. He closed the folder, slid it into his bag, checked his watch like the room itself was costing him money."I have an early call," he said. "I won't be back for dinner.""Daniel.""There's money on the counter for







