LOGINROSE 𓆩♡𓆪
For the first time in days, I thought maybe everything would be okay.
I had slept my whole life out. By the time I opened my eyes it was past noon, the sun already sliding sideways through the curtain gap.
I lay there for a moment and just breathed in and out, no hospital smell underneath it, no decision waiting on the other side of it. Just silence and sunlight and the specific relief of a body that had finally been allowed to rest.
I got up, washed my face, pulled on a simple dress.
Today was just another day.
I almost believed it.
Two women were standing by the gate when I stepped outside.
They went silent the moment I appeared, not the natural pause of people that was interrupted mid-sentence, but the deliberate, loaded silence of people who were talking about the thing that just walked out the door.
One of them glanced at the other.
“That’s her,” she murmured.
Something cold moved through my chest.
I kept walking. Told myself I was reading into it. Got into a cab and watched the street disappear behind me and held onto the ordinary just another day, just another morning, everything was fine.
The building looked exactly the same.
Same tiled floor catching the light at the same angle. Same low chatter bouncing off the same walls. Same clatter of heels and the ambient noise of people starting their day.
I stepped inside, adjusted my bag on my shoulder, and reached for normal.
For about four seconds, it worked.
Then the silence started.
Not all at once that would have been easier. It crept in from the edges, the way cold does. One conversation dying. Then another. Heads turning in sequence, eyes following the same line from the door to where I was standing, until the weight of it settled in my chest like something deliberate and heavy.
I kept my face arranged. Keep moving.
“So how much did he pay you?”
The voice came from behind. Loud. Designed to carry.
I stopped.
Turned slowly.
Three girls stood by the counter with their arms folded and their eyes bright with something that had already made up its mind about me before I walked through the door.
“What?” I said.
Laughter broke the kind built specifically to reduce you. To make you feel exactly as small as it wants you to feel.
“Don’t do the innocent face,” one of them said, tilting her head. “Sandra told us everything.”
The floor shifted under me.
No. No no no!!!
“So it’s true?” Someone from the back. “You actually slept with him for money?”
The murmur spread across the room like something spilled fast, wide, impossible to contain.
“Disgusting.”
“Always so quiet and decent”
“I always knew something was off about her.”
Each word landed in a specific place. Carefully aimed.
“I needed the money,” I said.
Wrong answer.
The laughter that followed was louder than the first.
“Of course you did. That’s what they all say.”
Heat rushed up my neck and into my face. My eyes burned. I held them open and absolutely refused to let anything fall, because the moment I did it would become part of their story and they would have all of me, every piece, and I was not giving them that.
“I didn’t do anything wrong,” I said. Louder this time. My voice was steadier than I felt. “I didn’t do anything wrong.”
“Enough.”
One word. Different weight entirely.
Everyone went quiet.
My boss stood in his office doorway, expression unreadable. Cold. The face of a man who had already decided before he opened the door.
“Come inside,” he said.
The door clicked shut behind me and that small sound was somehow louder than all the laughter outside combined.
I stood with my hands at my sides and waited.
He didn’t look at me immediately. Moved behind his desk, sat down, arranged a file that didn’t need arranging. Taking his time. Like the conversation was already over and he was simply letting me catch up to that fact.
“Sir,” I started. “Whatever they say out there it’s not the full picture. Please just let me”
“I don’t need your explanation.”
Flat. Final. Not unkind exactly, just completely unmovable.
He looked up.
The disappointment in his face hit harder than anger would have.
“We don’t run that kind of business here,” he said carefully. “You’ve clearly secured more money than this job would ever provide. You’ll be fine.”
I blinked.
“I… what?”
“Take your things,” he continued, his voice smooth and practiced. “You’re not needed here anymore.”
“Sir, please,” I stepped forward, panic rising fast and physical through my chest. “I need this job. I didn’t do this for myself. I had no choice, I swear. Just suspend me. Dock my salary. Anything. Please don’t send me away.”
He watched me.
That was the worst part. Not the words or the decision the watching. Patient. Unmoved. Like he had already filed me somewhere and was simply waiting for the conversation to finish so he could move on to the next thing.
“Everyone has a choice,” he said. “You made yours.”
The same words. Again. Like everyone had been handed the same script before walking into the room with me.
“There’s nothing more to discuss,” he said. “Leave before I have you escorted out.”
I don’t remember walking out of his office.
I remember the faces turning to follow me. The silence was worse than the laughter because at least laughter was honest about what it was doing.
I remember pushing through the building doors and the sun hitting my face at a completely indifferent angle and the city moving around me like nothing had happened, because for the city nothing had.
I lost my job.
I let that land properly for the first time as I walked. Not deflected, not reframed, just sat down in front of me and looked at it directly.
I lost my job because Sandra talked.
Sandra, who had sat on my bed with her legs crossed and her phone in her hand, told me with a smile, I won’t tell anyone… like she was doing me a favor by saying the words out loud.
My feet kept moving. My chest kept tightening. And underneath the tightening, something else was building quiet, slow, the specific feeling of a person who is beginning to understand that what happened to them was not bad luck.
It was designed.
At least I still have home, I told myself.
I held onto that the entire walk. Let it be the thing that kept my shoulders up and my face forward.
I pushed the gate open.
The house was too quiet.
Not peaceful, quiet , the kind of quiet that means people are present but waiting.
“Uncle?”
Nothing.
“Back already?”
Sandra’s voice drifted from the living room. Light. Unbothered. She was exactly where the voice suggested, legs crossed on the sofa, phone in hand, scrolling with the contentment of someone who has absolutely nothing on her conscience.
The sight of her made something snap inside me.
“You told them,” I said.
She looked up slowly and arranged her face into confusion with the laziness of someone who knows the performance isn’t necessary.
“What are you talking about?”
“Don’t.” The word left my mouth hard and flat. “I lost my job today, Sandra. They called your name. They said you told them everything.”
She tilted her head. Let the silence stretch just long enough to be deliberate.
“I might have mentioned it,” she said finally, with a half shrug that moved her shoulders half an inch. “It slipped.”
Slipped.
I stood there and looked at her and I felt the full shape of the word. Not an accident. Not a moment of weakness or a thoughtless comment that got out of hand.
“You promised me,” I said. My voice was shaking now and I couldn’t stop it. “You looked me in the eye and you promised.”
“And you believed me?”
She said it almost gently. Like she was pointing out something small and forgivable, a naivety I should have grown out of by now.
“I lost my job,” I repeated. Each word is slow and separate. “I have nothing now. Do you understand that? Because of what you said I have nothing.”
Something shifted that had been sitting there the whole time, patient and certain, waiting for exactly this moment.
“I was helping you,” she said, sitting up straighter. “Or have you forgotten who pushed you to take that offer? You wanted to save him. I gave you the way. The least you could do is be grateful.”
“Grateful,” I said.
The word came out like something broken.
“You destroyed my life,” I said. “And you’re asking me to thank you for it.”
She opened her mouth.
“Rose.”
My uncle’s voice.
I hadn’t heard him come in. He was standing in the doorway, filling it with the particular stillness of a man who has already formed his conclusion and is now simply delivering it.
His face was unreadable. Which with him was never a good sign.
“Is it true?” he asked quietly.
I opened my mouth. My throat closed. The silence stretched and stretched until it answered for me.
His jaw tightened once.
“You sold yourself,” he said. Flat. Like a fact being read from a document.
“Uncle, no it wasn’t like that. Someone needed help and I had no other way, I…”
“There is always another way.”
“I raised you better than this,” he continued, quieter now, which somehow made it worse than shouting would have. “And this is how you repay me. Bringing shame into my house.”
“I didn’t mean…”
“Enough.”
Silence fell. Thick and absolute.
“I will not have this behavior under my roof,” he said. “If this is who you’ve chosen to become then you cannot stay here.”
“Uncle.”
My voice broke completely. There was no point holding it anymore. “I have nowhere to go. Please. I have nowhere.”
He didn’t answer.
He didn’t soften.
Nor did he hesitate.
“Pack your things.”
Two words.
I stood there and felt them land and could not do anything except stand there and feel them.
Sandra exhaled slowly behind me.
I turned to look at her.
She met my eyes.
And smiled.
Not with warmth. Not with anything that resembled the cousin I had grown up with. With the quiet, specific satisfaction of someone who has been waiting for something for a very long time and is watching it finally arrive.
“Why?” The word came out barely above a whisper. “Why would you do this to me, Sandra? What did I ever do to you?”
She held my gaze for a moment long enough for me to see that the answer was already there, I was always there, sitting just behind her eyes.
“Because,” she said simply, “you had something I wanted.”
She stood up and smoothed her dress with both hands.
“And now,” she added, “now you don’t.”
I packed in silence.
Not quickly there was no rush anymore. Just the slow, methodical work of folding a life into a bag and deciding what was worth carrying.
I didn’t cry while I packed. I had already used everything available for crying in that office. There was nothing left for this room.
I zipped the bag.
I picked it up.
I walked out without looking back at either of them.
Outside, the evening was cooling into the street. The gate closed behind me with a sound that felt more final than it should have.
I stood on the pavement with my bag at my feet and thought about Demian somewhere over an ocean, holding his mother’s hand, completely unaware that the girl who put him there was standing on a street with nowhere to go.
I thought about the note folded in my bag.
“You’re rare. Try not to waste that again”.
I picked up my bag.
And started walking.
ALEX 𓆩♡𓆪His phone started to ring before seven.He had been at his desk since half past five, one of those mornings where his brain refused to stop processing during the hours it was supposed to be offline. The expansion documents were open. The coffee was good. The house was quiet in the specific productive way it got quiet before it woke up properly.His PR director called at six fifty-two.He answered on the second ring.“There’s a headline,” she said. No preamble. She was good at her job and part of that was delivering bad news without making it into a performance. “Three outlets already. By nine it will be everywhere.”“Send it,” he said.He was already reaching for his personal phone.The email arrived before he finished the sentence. He opened it and read the headline first.“Billionaire Hiding Pregnant Mistress: Inside The Christopher Estate’s Best Kept Secret.”He looked at the photograph.He looked at it for a long time.It had been taken inside his property. East corrido
KARA𓆩♡𓆪I knew before the message arrived.That was the thing about knowing someone the way I knew Alex, you stopped needing confirmation. You felt the shift before anyone named it. Three years of learning the specific language of his silences, his posture, the fraction of a degree his attention moved when something had gotten through to him. I had built my entire understanding of him on exactly that kind of reading.And for the past week I had been reading his attention pointed in one direction.Away from me.I sat at my kitchen counter Thursday morning with my coffee going cold in front of me and thought about the doorway.Not the kiss, I had gone into the kiss knowing its limitations, knowing it was a move rather than a moment. The doorway. The specific quality of what Rose left behind when she turned and walked out of it. I had been watching people leave rooms for years and I understood the difference between someone leaving because they were hurt and someone leaving because t
ROSE𓆩♡𓆪I told myself it didn’t matter.I said it out loud, quietly, to the closed door of my room, standing with my back against it and my hands flat against the wood behind me and the image of the two of them still sitting somewhere behind my eyes where I couldn’t quite reach to remove it.It doesn’t matter, she was here before me. Just like she will be here after I leave. I was here because of the babies. That was the full and complete reason for my presence in this house and in this life and in any proximity to Alex Christopher. The babies. Two heartbeats on a screen that I had pressed my hand over and made quiet promises to. Two lives that were mine regardless of what their father did in his study in the afternoon with women from his past, or is she still a past considering that I just saw them kiss and almost had sex. I was not here because of anything else.I was not here for any reason that gave me standing to feel what I was currently feeling and therefore what I was cur
ALEX𓆩♡𓆪I knew what Kara had done, it didn’t look accidental to me. I knew it the moment it happened, the specific angle of her reach, the placement of the cup, the timing. I had known Kara for a long time and I knew the difference between her accidents and her intentions and that had not been an accident, it looked intentional. I know Kara too well to know she was a mean person. I looked at my phone.I kept looking at my phone.I told myself I was in the middle of something and that intervening in a moment that was already over would produce more tension than it resolved and that Rose had handled it without requiring my involvement and that was evidence she didn’t need my involvement.All of that was true.None of it was why I said nothing.I said nothing because saying something required me to take a position in front of Kara and in front of Rose and in front of whatever this situation had become, and taking that position out loud and at a breakfast table at eight in the mornin
ROSE𓆩♡𓆪Alex was different, he has become different of late. Not dramatically different, not in a way that announced itself or required acknowledgment or could be pointed to and named cleanly. Just different in the accumulation of small things that I had been cataloguing with the same careful attention I applied to everything in this house.The glass of water that appeared on the kitchen counter before I got there. Not every morning, just some mornings, the ones when I came down slightly later than usual, as though someone had noted my pattern and adjusted for it without being asked.The door to the garden held open on Tuesday when his hands were full and mine were too and the holding required him to pause in the middle of something he was doing.The way he stood in the corridor outside my room on Wednesday evening, I had heard the footsteps stop and the particular quality of the silence that followed, the silence of someone who had paused rather than passed, and then after a mo
KARA𓆩♡𓆪I thought about the beginning.Not the dramatic beginning, not the day I found out about Rose or the day I walked into that house and saw her in the corridor. The real beginning. Alex and I in the early days, before any of this existed as a possibility, when the landscape between us was simple and familiar and mine to move through without having to think about it.I thought about the way he used to look at me across a room, the way he takes me on random dates, buys me gold, diamonds. The way he pays attention to the things that matters to me. The specific quality of his attention focused, certain, arriving on me without appearing to search for me first because I was simply always where he expected me to be. I had built that. Cultivated it over years with the patience and precision of someone who understood that a man like Alex Christopher did not give his attention easily and that keeping it required constant and invisible maintenance.I had been good at the maintenance.I h
ROSE𓆩♡𓆪I had to follow the doctor to the Hospital for a closer look at my babies. It appears that what the doctor said about one of the twins was correct, then he discharged me. The car ride back to the estate was twenty minutes.I know because I watched the clock on the dashboard the entire wa
ROSE𓆩♡𓆪The second appointment with the doctor was different from the first.Not in the clinical sense, Doctor Charles was the same, the in-house clinic was the same, the examination bed with its paper covering and the gel that was always colder than i expected was the same. The procedure was the
ALEX 𓆩♡𓆪I didn’t plan to go to the garden.I had been in my study since dinner ended sitting at my desk with the lamp on and a report open in front of me that I had read the same three paragraphs four times without retaining a single sentence. The house was quiet in the way it got quiet after te
ROSE 𓆩♡𓆪 It was almost 6:30 in the evening and I was still in my room doing nothing in particular other than thinking about my parents.If they were still alive none of this would have happened. I wouldn’t be here in this enormous borrowed room with its floor-length curtains and its perfect impe







