LOGINKELVIN’S POV
I shouldn’t be here. I should be home dealing with Austin instead of hiding in a hotel room with expensive whiskey and thoughts I’ve been avoiding for months now.
But instead, here I am. The Sterling. Room 206. A place where nobody knows me, where I can sit in silence for one night and pretend I’m not Kelvin Clayton for a few hours.
Not the billionaire everybody expects things from. Not the father constantly hearing rumors about his son and pretending none of it bothers him.
Not the man whose wife’s been dead for fifteen years and he still can’t move on, still wakes up some nights expecting her beside him, still carries something heavy that never really leaves.
Just…… a man sitting alone in a quiet room trying not to think too much. I pour another drink, watching the amber liquid settle while ice clinks softly against the glass.
Everything in my life usually stays controlled. Tonight doesn’t feel controlled at all. Then I hear the door open.
My head lifts immediately, confusion pulling at my brows because I know damn well I locked it.
And then I see her. Young. Beautiful. Clearly drunk. She stumbles into the room like she belongs here, distracted enough not to even notice there’s somebody already inside.
“I think you have the wrong room,” I say calmly, even though my brain is already cataloging details, already shifting into that sharp awareness I don’t switch off easily.
Dark hair slightly messy. Eyes unfocused from alcohol but still sharp underneath it. And despite the drinking, despite the confusion, there’s something painfully raw about her expression.
Like she’s holding herself together by force alone. But then she looks at me fully. And something in her eyes stops me cold, Loss.
Fresh loss. I know that look. I’ve seen it in mirrors before. “This is my room,” she insists, slurring slightly, her voice uneven but stubborn.
It isn’t. But I don’t correct her right away. Instead, I stand, and when she stumbles, I catch her, my hand closing around her arm before she can fall.
She looks up at me, and I should let go, I should create distance, put space between us before this becomes something else. I should step back, call the front desk, send her to her actual room, and end this before it starts.
But I don’t. “I caught my boyfriend cheating. With my best friend.” And just like that, I understand, not the details but the feeling, the kind of blow that leaves you standing there not knowing what to do next.
The drinking. The wrong room. The recklessness. She’s running from something that’s destroying her, something she doesn’t know how to hold together.
I know what that’s like. “Stay,” I hear myself say, the word out before I can stop it, before I can think it through properly.
What the hell am I doing? She’s young……early twenties at most, barely at the start of her life.
She’s drunk. She’s vulnerable. Everything about this is wrong, every instinct telling me to stop, to fix this, to do the right thing for once. But when she kisses me, when she looks at me with those desperate eyes and says she needs to forget, when her fingers tighten slightly like she’s holding on to something that’s slipping…….
I break, because I need to forget too, more than I admit, more than I allow myself to think about. And for one night…….just one……I let myself be selfish, let myself stop thinking about consequences, about responsibility, about everything that usually controls me.
I let myself take what she’s offering, even though I know I’ll regret it, even though I know this won’t end clean. Even though I know this will complicate everything, more than I can see right now. Even though I know she deserves better than this, better than me, better than whatever this is turning into.
But in the moment, when her lips meet mine and the world narrows to just us, when everything else fades into the background like it doesn’t matter…….I forget why this is a bad idea.
The next morning, I wake before she does, my head clearer, the weight of what we did settling heavy in my chest, heavier than it should be for something that was supposed to mean nothing.
She’s still asleep, face peaceful in a way it wasn’t last night, her breathing even, her body relaxed like the storm inside her paused for a while.
Young. God, what have I done? I should wake her. Apologize. Explain…… say something that makes this less complicated than it already is.
Explain what? That I’m old enough to know better? That I took advantage of her pain, even if she asked for it, even if she chose it?
It's better to pretend this never happened, like it was just a moment, a mistake that fades if we don’t look at it too closely.
I close my eyes, pretending to sleep, keeping my breathing steady, still, like I’m not awake, like I’m not thinking too much.
And when I hear her slip out quietly, the soft sound of movement, the door opening and closing……..guilt and relief mix in equal measure, settling somewhere uncomfortable in my chest.
It’s over. It has to be. I’ll never see her again.
**** SANDRA’S POV ****
Morning comes too fast. I wake slowly, my head pounding, my body sore in ways I don’t want to examine. The room is too bright,I blink, disoriented.
Then I remember. I sit up carefully, my stomach twisting. The other side of the bed is empty,t he sheets are cold, untouched for a while, like he’s been gone longer than I want to think about.
I don’t look around too much. I can’t because if I start noticing things, I’ll have to acknowledge what I just did. And I’m not ready for that.
I gather my clothes silently, slipping out of bed, dressing quickly in the bathroom. When I step back out, the room is still empty. Good……I grab my phone, my bag, my key card. And I leave. I don’t look back because if I do, I might stay.
**** KEVIN POV’S ****
Two days later, I’m standing in my own house, about to finalize an investment with Joseph Nicholson, going through numbers in my head, keeping everything controlled, everything where it should be.
And she walks through the door. The girl from the hotel. Nicholson’s daughter. Austin’s girlfriend. My son’s girlfriend. For the first time in fifteen years, I have no idea what to do.
KELVIN'S POVMarcus smiles one last time before climbing into his SUV.The engine starts.The taillights disappear beyond the gates. Only then do I look down at the photograph still resting on my car.Sandra steps beside me."What is it?"I don't answer immediately.Not because I'm hiding it but because I'm already exhausted. I hand her the photograph.She studies it, her expression changes almost instantly.It's subtle, just a flicker.Confusion.Then something sharper.The picture shows me sitting inside a quiet restaurant with a woman around sixty years old. She's holding my hand across the table while I'm leaning forward, saying something the camera can't hear.Without context, it looks intimate.Sandra stares at it a second longer than I expected.Then she quietly asks,"Who is she?"The question isn't angry.It's careful.I look at her."You thought…..."She immediately groans. "I know. I know how this looks.""You were jealous.""I was not.""You absolutely were.""It lasted f
SANDRA'S POVI spend the entire drive to my childhood home wondering if this is a terrible idea.Kelvin glances at me before stopping at a red light."You've sighed six times.""I counted five.""I missed one while driving.""I appreciate your commitment to accuracy."He smiles."You can still change your mind.""So can you.""I've already worn the uncomfortable suit.""I picked that suit.""I know.""If tonight goes badly...""I'm blaming your fashion choices."A laugh escapes me before I can stop it."That's better.""What is?""You laughed.""I also feel like throwing up.""We can multitask."I roll my eyes."I forgot how annoying you are.""No, you got used to it."When the car stops outside the Nicholson house, neither of us reaches for the door.The porch light glows softly.Everything looks exactly the same, everything feels completely different.Kelvin quietly clears his throat."If your dad throws me out...""I'll leave with you.""If he throws both of us out?""We'll order p
KELVIN'S POVJoseph's name stays on my phone long after it stops ringing.I stare at the screen.Rachel walks into my office carrying a folder, notices my expression, and immediately changes direction."I'll come back.""Rachel."She stops."If I don't return in two hours…..." She blinks. “Should I call security?"I almost smile."No.""The police?""No."She thinks for a second. "Your therapist?""I don't have one.""That's becoming increasingly obvious."Despite everything, a laugh slips out.She nods toward my phone."Him?""Yes."She doesn't ask another question."I'll cancel your afternoon.""You don't know what this meeting is.""I know you're wearing that face.""What face?""The one that says you'd rather negotiate with sharks."An hour later, I pull into the private golf club where Joseph and I spent nearly twenty years closing business deals.The clubhouse hasn't changed.The lake still reflects the afternoon sun. The eighteenth green still slopes to the left.Everything lo
SANDRA'S POVSunday somehow feels familiar again enough to make me miss what used to be.The gates of the Nicholson house slide open, and before I can reach the front door, Margaret appears on the porch with both hands on her hips.She looks me up and down.Then sighs dramatically."Oh, this is unacceptable."I blink. “Good afternoon to you too.""You've lost weight.""I have not.""You absolutely have."I laugh."You said the same thing three weeks ago.""And I was right then too."Before I can defend myself, the gardener waves from the lawn."Miss Sandra! Welcome home!"Home.The word still catches me off guard.I wave back."Good morning, Mr. Lewis.""You haven't visited enough. The roses were starting to complain."Margaret nods seriously."They asked me yesterday."I stare at both of them."You're making fun of me."Mr. Lewis grins."We learned from your father."Margaret opens the front door."And from you."The house feels warmer today. The chef pokes his head out of the kitche
KELVIN'S POVBy seven the next morning, every television inside Clayton Global is talking about my car.One channel zooms in on the word HOMEWRECKER like it's breaking economic news. Another debates whether vandalism is an understandable emotional reaction. Social media has already turned the photo into a thousand opinions from people who've never met me.I mute the television.The silence lasts exactly three seconds before my office phone rings.Rachel walks in carrying a stack of files and two coffees."Good morning," she says brightly. "You're trending again.""I've always hated being popular.""I noticed." She places a coffee on my desk. "One investor canceled breakfast, another requested an emergency meeting, and three reporters are pretending to be delivery drivers downstairs.""They're getting creative.""One came dressed as a florist."I look up."You're joking.""I wish I were. Security confiscated twelve roses."Despite myself, I laugh.Rachel points toward the coffee."Dr
SANDRA'S POVThe ballroom falls so quiet that I can hear Austin's footsteps against the polished marble floor.Nobody moves.Austin stops barely two feet away from us.He isn't glaring at Kelvin, he's looking at me. Like he's trying to find someone he used to know.Kelvin's fingers brush mine.Not pulling me behind him or pushing me forward, just reminding me I'm not alone.Austin notices.A tired smile touches his face before disappearing almost immediately."I should've expected that," he says quietly. "Still…... seeing it is different."My throat tightens."Austin…...""No." He shakes his head. "Actually…... wait. Maybe yes. I don't know." He laughs without humor and rubs the back of his neck. "I've rehearsed this conversation about a hundred times, and somehow every version disappeared the second I walked over here."Nobody around us pretends to continue talking anymore.The gala has become background noise.Austin exhales slowly."Just answer one thing."I nod.He looks directly
KELVIN'S POVI should have canceled, and the thought follows me through the entire drive as one reason after another lines up in my head because I should have called, should have texted, and should have done something sensible for once, yet despite knowing better, I'm still on my way to another mis
SANDRA'S POVThe problem with questions is that once they get inside your head, they don't leave.They multiply, one becomes ten,ten becomes a hundred.And eventually you're lying awake at three in the morning staring at the ceiling while your entire future tears itself apart in a dozen different d
KELVIN'S POVMarcus Webb doesn't strike me as the type of man who enjoys golf.The realization arrives halfway through lunch while he stands beside a putting green overlooking one of the most expensive country clubs in Los Angeles, smiling politely at investors and executives while pretending this
SANDRA'S POVI know exactly how prisoners feel.The thought arrives the moment I step into the ballroom and immediately makes me feel guilty because nobody dragged me here, nobody locked any doors, and nobody forced me into the expensive dress hanging perfectly against my body, yet as congratulatio







