LOGIN"Christopher's POV"
I hadn't put that much thought into a dinner reservation in years. Changed the place twice before landing on one I actually liked, quiet on the east side, no client-impressing bullshit, just somewhere real, no agenda, no performance. James picked Robin up at seven. I sat in the back of the car feeling nerves crawl up my spine, which felt almost ridiculous after handling boardrooms and crises without blinking. Robin climbed in and the nerves melted into something warmer. Dark shirt, hair pushed back, easy in his skin like always. He looked at me, said "hey" like we'd been doing this forever, and something tight in my chest finally loosened. The restaurant was warm, unhurried. Conversation flowed without effort. Robin told a story about a client who demanded a traffic-cone orange wall and fought every alternative. I laughed, real laughter, the kind I couldn't fake or control, deep from somewhere honest. We stayed longer than planned, neither of us mentioned leaving. On the drive back Robin reached for the water bottle in the console. James took a corner too sharp, bottle slipped, water splashed across Robin's hand and onto my jacket. Robin swore, turned to help, and suddenly his face was inches from mine, hand flat on my chest, world went still. I looked at him. He looked at me. I kissed him. Not soft. I didn't have soft left. Robin kissed back just as hard, hand twisting into my jacket, everything outside the car vanished. When we broke apart we were both breathing rough. "Come home with me," I said. Robin held my gaze a beat, then nodded. We didn't touch in the elevator but the air between us was thick, heavy, almost painful. I stared at the doors, hands at my sides, waiting, because I wanted this right, wanted space, room, everything I'd been thinking about since that first morning at Golden Anchor Homes. Elevator opened into the penthouse. I turned, reached for him, and that was it. I pulled him close, walked him backward until his back hit the entrance hall wall, kissed him deep and slow, hands framing his face. Robin made a low sound against my mouth, heat shot straight down my spine. "I stood in that building," I said, pulling back just enough to speak, "watching you paint those walls, couldn't move, couldn't think, just stood there like an idiot because of you." Robin's eyes were dark, lips swollen. He looked at me like he wanted every word. "How long?" "Long enough my assistant came looking for me," I said. He laughed low and warm, I felt it against my chest. "And you said nothing," he said. "I'm saying it now," I said, kissed him again before he could answer. I got his shirt off, ran my hands over his chest, his stomach, felt muscles tighten under my palms, pressed him harder into the wall, put my mouth on his neck, bit softly. Robin exhaled sharp, gripped my shoulders. "Christopher," he said, voice rough, low. "Tell me what you want," I said against his skin. "I want you to stop teasing me," he said. "Not yet," I said. He cursed under his breath. I took my time against that wall, found every spot that made him lose it, Robin wasn't quiet and I didn't want him to be, every sound pulled me further from control. When his hands opened my shirt, pushed it off, palms flat on my bare chest, I felt desperate for the first time in years. I lifted him, carried him to the bedroom, laid him down, stood over him a moment just looking. Broad, warm, watching me with dark eyes, something open in his face I'd never seen. "Since the first day," I said, moving over him, "I thought about this, about you, every single day after." "You have a terrible way of showing interest," Robin said, voice unsteady. "I know," I said, lowered my mouth to his chest, "let me make it up to you." Words stopped after that. I took it as yes. What followed wasn't quick, wasn't quiet, everything I'd locked away for years behind discipline, obligation, pretending. Robin gave as good as he got, matched me, pushed back. At some point he pulled me down, said my name against my ear in a way that made my whole body tighten, and I knew I was in deep trouble. I kissed down his body, slow, took his cock in my mouth, tasted him, felt him groan and fist the sheets. Sucked him deep, tongue working the head, hand stroking the base until his hips jerked, breath ragged. "Christopher, fuck," he said, voice wrecked. I pulled off, climbed up, lined myself up, pushed into him slow. He was tight, hot, took me inch by inch. When I bottomed out we both froze, breathing hard, just feeling each other. "You feel so fucking good," I said against his neck, started moving, slow deep thrusts, building rhythm. Robin wrapped legs around me, pulled me deeper, moaned low. I fucked him harder, faster, headboard banging, skin slapping. Robin's hands on my back, nails digging in, urging me on. "Harder," he said, "fuck me harder." I gave it to him, pounding deep, hitting that spot that made him arch, made him curse my name. "Look at you," I said, voice rough, "taking my cock so good, so tight, been thinking about this hole for weeks, finally filling you up." Robin moaned louder, body clenching around me. I flipped him onto his stomach, pulled his hips up, pushed back in from behind. Deeper angle, more intense. I gripped his hips, fucked him hard, fast, hand reaching around to stroke his cock in time. "Like this?" I asked, "like me wrecking you?" "Yes," he gasped, "fuck yes, don't stop." I didn't. Kept pounding, hand working him until he came hard, spilling over my fingers, body shaking. I followed right after, thrust deep, came inside him, filling him up, groaning against his back. We collapsed, breathing heavy, sweat-slick. I stayed inside him a moment, softening, then pulled out slow, watched my cum leak from him. We went again later, slower. Him riding me, hands on my chest, eyes locked on mine, moving steady until we both came again, quieter this time, deeper. Then in the shower, water hot, I pressed him to the tile, fucked him from behind, slow, deep, whispering how good he felt, how perfect he took me. By the end we were spent, sore, satisfied. Robin lay against my chest, hand flat on my stomach, breathing even. I stared at the ceiling in the dark, felt something settle over me I couldn't name cleanly. Not guilt. Not yet. Just the terrifying peace of finally having what I wanted, and no idea how to keep it. *********** Morning light came through the windows. I was still holding him when my phone vibrated on the nightstand. I reached for it half asleep, read the name before my brain caught up. Sophie. Her photo smiled up at me, warm, unaware. I declined the call before the second ring, placed the phone face down. Pulled Robin closer, pressed my lips to the top of his head. "Phone?" Robin murmured against my chest. "Work," I said. "Nothing important." He said nothing. Just lay still against me. I kept my arm around him, eyes on the ceiling, felt the lie sit between us like something heavy. In the quiet I knew he'd heard something in my voice I couldn't hide. And I knew he knew it too.Christopher's POV Five years later, my life looks nothing like it once did. The house is louder. Messier. There are shoes by the front door that are not mine or Robin's, small ones, left at angles that suggest they were removed in a hurry by people with more interesting things to do than align their footwear. There is a drawing on the refrigerator held up by three magnets, a family of four rendered in crayon with proportions that are medically implausible and entirely accurate in every way that matters. There are toys in the hallway and a small handprint on the wall beside the kitchen door that we noticed three weeks ago and have not been able to bring ourselves to paint over. I used to live in a penthouse that looked like it had been designed to be photographed. Every surface considered, every room performing a particular version of a life. I remember moving through it and feeling the particular loneliness of a person in a space that had been built for an image rather than an exis
Robin's POVThe destination was a small island off the southern coast, the kind of place that existed at a remove from the pace of everything we had left behind, warm and unhurried and entirely indifferent to anything happening on the mainland.Christopher had done well.The villa sat on a low cliff above the water, private and simply furnished, with a terrace that caught the evening light and a view of the sea that did what good views did, made everything feel proportionate. No neighbours visible. No obligations. Just the two of us and the sound of the water and however many days we had decided to give ourselves.We spent the first two days doing almost nothing of consequence, which was exactly right.We walked the coastal path in the mornings, the kind of walking that had no destination and no pace requirement, stopping when something was worth stopping for, a particular view or a village with a bakery that smelled the way bakeries in places like this always smelled, and Christopher
Christopher's POV We stayed at the venue until the last guests had left, which was later than we had planned and exactly the right amount of time. The evening had moved the way good evenings moved when nobody was watching the clock, the dinner long and unhurried, the conversation between tables drifting and settling and drifting again, and at some point the formal structure of it had dissolved entirely and it had simply become a gathering of people who were glad to be in the same room together. Grandma Rose had stayed until nearly eleven, which I knew because she was the kind of person who left precisely when she intended to and not a moment before or after, and the embrace she had given me at the door had said everything her speech had left unsaid. My mother had left earlier, quietly, with a brief touch of my arm and an expression that I understood and did not try to make into more than it was. It was a beginning. That was enough. *** We had one night back in the apartment befor
Robin's POVThe ceremony was short and entirely right.Christopher and I had written our own words, which I had known intellectually for weeks and had underestimated emotionally until I was standing in front of the registrar listening to him say them, and I had not made it through without my voice doing something I had not fully authorised it to do. Christopher had held my hands through all of it, steady and certain, and when the registrar pronounced us married he had looked at me with the expression I had come to think of as purely his, the one that was not performed for any audience, and I had looked back and felt the full weight of the distance between where we had started and where we were standing.The room had been quiet in the way rooms were quiet when something real had just happened in them.Then Mitchell had begun to clap first, because of course she had, and the room had followed, and the warmth of it was the particular warmth of people who were genuinely glad rather than
Christopher's POV The morning of the wedding was quiet in the particular way that significant days sometimes were, not the silence of emptiness but the silence of something gathering itself, the world holding still for a moment before it moved. I was ready before Robin, which surprised neither of us, and I sat in the sitting room in my suit with a coffee I was not really drinking and looked at the room we had made together over the past months, the books on the shelves and the particular disorder of two people living honestly in a space, and felt something move through me that did not have a clean name but was close to gratitude. Robin appeared from the bedroom and I stood without thinking. He was wearing what we had decided on together, simple and well-fitted and entirely him, and the sight of him ready, actually ready, on this actual morning, landed differently than I had anticipated, the way the real version of things always landed differently than the imagined version. We loo
Sophie's POV The invitation arrived on a Thursday morning, slipped through the letterbox with the rest of the post, and I almost missed it among the bills and the usual envelopes. But it was heavier than the others, the card stock substantial and deliberate, and when I turned it over and saw Christopher's handwriting on the front I stood in the hallway of the penthouse for a long moment before I opened it. I carried the invitation to the kitchen and made coffee and sat down and opened it properly. It was short and simply worded and warm in the way Christopher had always been warm when he was being genuine rather than performing warmth for an occasion. He was getting married. He and Robin. A small ceremony, close people only. He hoped I would come. I sat with it for a long time. The emotions it produced were not simple and I did not try to make them simple, because flattening complicated feelings into something tidier was something I had done too much of for too many years and I







