Chapter 14
Rosália
The view from the sixty-fifth floor of Sean’s corporate headquarters was absolutely staggering, a dizzying grid of steel, glass, and crawling city traffic that seemed to stretch into infinity.
Rosália stood perfectly still before the floor-to-ceiling windows, her hands wrapped so tightly around a porcelain mug of black coffee that her knuckles ached.
The glass felt freezing against her forehead.
The massive, cavernous corner office was a temple built to Sean’s intimidating power—rich, dark mahogany, heavy leather seating, and aggressive, modern art.
It was entirely soundproof, shutting out the chaotic roar of the world below.
Yet, inside Rosália’s mind, the noise was deafening.
“He came home at three in the morning,” she whispered.
Her voice was barely a thread of sound in the quiet room, but she knew Sean heard every syllable.
She kept her eyes fixed blindly on the tiny cars below.
“He tried to be quiet. But the walls of that house are too thin in the dead of night. I heard the faint click of the garage door. I heard him walk down the hall. He didn’t even come into our bedroom first. He went into the guest bathroom and turned on the shower, trying to scrub her off his skin before he crawled into my bed. ”
Behind her, seated behind his expansive desk, Sean let out a low, rough sound that vibrated with cold contempt.
“Katherine crept through the side gate at three-fifteen,” Sean confirmed, his deep voice heavy and absolute.
“The security cameras caught her shivering in last night’s clothes.
When she finally slipped into the suite, she smelled like cheap motel soap, stale air conditioning, and guilt. They are getting incredibly sloppy.”
Rosália squeezed her eyes shut, a fresh, suffocating wave of disbelief crashing over her.
It felt surreal. It felt like she was watching a psychological thriller about someone else’s life. How had she spent ten years completely blind to the monster sleeping beside her?
She pushed herself away from the freezing glass, turning to face the room. Her legs felt heavy, as if she were moving underwater. She walked slowly toward the center of the office, stopping at the edge of the polished conference table.
Resting dead center on the dark wood was a thick, pristine manila folder. It contained the terrifying, ink-and-paper reality of her marriage: the prenuptial agreement.
Rosália stared at it, a bitter, hollow ache expanding in her chest. She remembered the day she had signed it.
She had been twenty-seven years old, deeply, foolishly in love, and completely blinded by the illusion of David’s protective authority.
When he had slid the heavy legal document across the table a month before their wedding, she hadn’t even wanted to read the fine print.
She would have signed her soul away just to build a life with him.
The prenup was an ironclad, suffocating trap drafted by David’s own ruthless firm, designed to leave her with practically nothing if she ever filed for divorce.
But Rosália’s attorney—a vicious, brilliant bulldog of an older woman who trusted no man—had flatly refused to let her sign it as it was.
Against David’s arrogant protests and Rosália’s own naive embarrassment, her lawyer had relentlessly negotiated a single, lethal addition: a strict infidelity clause.
If David strayed, the suffocating financial restrictions vanished into thin air. The tables would violently turn, legally entitling Rosália to a devastating sixty percent of all their joint assets, his massive investment portfolios, and the house.
David had signed it with a patronizing smile, arrogantly assuming he was entirely too smart, too careful, to ever be caught.
“Sean,” Rosália started, her voice trembling as she looked up from the folder. A profound, agonizing bewilderment clawed at her throat. “Can I ask you something?”
Sean immediately stood up from his leather chair. “Anything.”
“Is she...” Rosália swallowed hard, the humiliating, raw question tearing its way out of her chest. “Is Katherine really that incredible in bed?”
Sean stopped moving. His dark eyebrows rose a fraction of an inch, the sheer bluntness of the question catching him off guard, but his gaze remained incredibly steady, anchoring her in the turbulent room.
“I just don’t understand it,” Rosália breathed, shaking her head.
She began to pace a tight, anxious line across the expensive Persian rug, the cognitive dissonance finally breaking her composure.
“He is risking his entire career. He is risking sixty percent of his massive wealth. But it’s not just the money, Sean.
It’s the absolute, staggering hypocrisy of how he’s acting. ”
Memory violently dragged her back to the afternoon weeks ago when Sean had first proposed his twisted strategy.
He wanted them to spend their days together, cultivating an intense, borderline emotional affair to feed their cheating partners a bitter, paranoid taste of their own medicine.
Rosália had been fiercely skeptical. She had genuinely believed David wouldn’t even care—she’d assumed he was far too consumed by Katherine’s body to notice his own wife slipping away.
She had been entirely, terrifyingly wrong.
The memory hit her senses with visceral force. David had cornered her in the upstairs hallway after seeing Sean drop her off from a long lunch. The smell of David’s sharp cologne had been suffocating. His eyes had been wild, his face flushed an ugly, mottled red with unhinged, feral jealousy.
“You are mine, Rose,” David had snarled, the memory echoing loudly in her head.
He had slammed his heavy hand against the drywall right next to her face, effectively trapping her, his hot breath fanning over her cheek.
He had looked absolutely crazed, his eyes dark with territorial possession.
“Do you hear me? I will never lose you. Sean will never, ever be able to take you from me. You are my wife.”
“He begged me to end the friendship,” Rosália told Sean, her voice cracking as she stopped pacing.
Her hands were shaking. “He was physically trembling with jealousy. He acts like the mere thought of me smiling at another man is going to kill him. And yet... the very next night, he waits until I am asleep, walks out into the dark, and continues risking everything to chase after your girlfriend. Why? If he’s so terrified of losing me, why can’t he just stop? ”
Sean walked slowly around the massive desk, closing the physical distance between them until he was standing just two feet away. The sheer heat and quiet authority radiating from his large frame offered a sudden, desperate sanctuary.
“Rosália,” Sean began, his deep voice incredibly smooth, stripped of all judgment.
“Even with everything she has done... even with the absolute lack of respect she has shown me, I am not a man who discusses the intimate details of a woman’s body with anyone.
I will not talk about Katherine’s abilities. ”
Rosália flinched, a hot flush of embarrassment burning her cheeks. She looked down at her boots. “I know. I’m sorry, I shouldn’t have—”
“But,” Sean interrupted gently. He reached out, his warm, calloused fingers gently lifting her chin, forcing her to look back into his dark, piercing eyes. “I can tell you exactly why he is doing it. And I promise you, Rosália, it has absolutely nothing to do with what she does in the dark.”
He dropped his hand, his expression hardening into a mask of pure, analytical ruthlessness.
“Small men like David live entirely off their ego,” Sean explained, his deep voice methodically dismantling her husband’s psychology down to its pathetic, hollow core.
“He doesn’t love Katherine. He loves the raw power he feels when he takes something that belongs to a man who is richer, older, and more powerful than him.
It makes him feel like a god. And his sudden, violent jealousy over you? ”
Sean took a half-step closer, the air between them pulling tight with electric tension.
“That isn’t love, Rosália,” Sean murmured, his eyes blazing with fierce, protective intensity. “That is territorial possession. The thought of me having his mistress and taking his wife destroys the fragile illusion of his control. He needs to own you both to feel like he’s winning.”
The heavy, devastating truth of Sean’s words settled deep into Rosália’s bones, chilling her blood. It wasn’t about love. It had never been about love. It was a sick, twisted game of power, and she was nothing but a pawn on David’s board.
Before the crushing weight of the realization could pull her under, the heavy, frosted glass doors of the office swung open.
The spell broke. Sean stepped back as his executive assistant held the door.
A sharp, impeccably dressed man in his late fifties entered the room. He carried a sleek black leather briefcase and possessed the cold, predatory aura of a man who destroyed lives for a living.
“Mr. Sterling,” the lawyer said, extending a hand to Sean without a single wasted movement. “Mrs. Vanguard. I’m Arthur Vance.”
“Arthur,” Sean greeted, shaking his hand firmly. “Thank you for coming.”
Arthur Vance didn’t waste a breath on pleasantries or condolences. He walked directly to the conference table, popping the brass latches of his briefcase. He pulled out three thick stacks of heavily tabbed legal documents, dropping them next to the prenup with a heavy thud.
“I’ve reviewed the prenuptial agreement, the security footage from your estate, the private investigator’s financial trails, and the motel receipts from last night,” Vance said, his voice entirely devoid of emotion, operating with the terrifying efficiency of a scalpel.
He looked directly at Rosália. “The infidelity clause is completely ironclad, Mrs. Vanguard. With this mountain of evidence, your husband’s attorneys won’t even be able to mount a coherent defense.
You will get the sixty percent, and you will walk away completely clean. ”
Rosália let out a long, shaky breath. A massive, suffocating weight began to lift off her chest. The end was finally in sight. “So we file today?”
“No.”
The word cracked through the quiet office. It came from Sean.
Rosália turned to him, her brow furrowing in deep confusion. “What do you mean, no? We have everything. Why would we wait?”
Sean walked slowly over to the table, standing shoulder-to-shoulder with the lawyer. His dark eyes met hers, and the comforting protector she had just been speaking with was gone. In his place stood the ruthless, calculating billionaire who had built an empire by crushing his enemies.
“If we file for divorce today, David will panic, but he will still have his prestigious firm and his vast resources to fight a prolonged war of attrition against you,” Sean explained, his voice a low, lethal purr that sent a shiver down her spine.
“And Katherine will just run away, crying victim, to the next wealthy mark she can find.”
Vance nodded in grim agreement, tapping a manicured finger against the files. “We are going to wait exactly three weeks before I file the divorce papers with the state court, Mrs. Vanguard.”
“Why three weeks?” Rosália asked, her heart pounding a frantic rhythm against her ribs.
Sean offered a slow, devastating smirk. The sheer, cold promise of destruction in his eyes was breathtaking.
“Because, Rosália, three weeks is exactly how long it is going to take me to systematically and completely obliterate both of their careers,” Sean murmured darkly, leaning his hands flat against the mahogany table.
“By the time David is served with those divorce papers, he won’t have a job to pay for a lawyer.
And Katherine won’t have a single fitness sponsor left to her name. ”
Sean looked out the massive windows at the sprawling city below, the undisputed king surveying the empire he was about to weaponize.
“We don’t just want to leave them,” Sean promised, the words hanging heavy and absolute in the cold air of the office. “We are going to destroy them.”