The club pulsed like a living thing — low lights, heavy bass, and bodies moving in rhythm to forget. Danica Monroe leaned against the bar, her black satin dress catching the glow of neon as she sipped her drink. Her eyes scanned the crowd, not searching, just watching. She didn’t chase. She attracted.
“Vodka soda,” said a voice beside her — deep, smooth, deliberate.
She turned. The man was tall, tailored, and out of place in the chaos. His suit was too crisp, his gaze too focused. He looked like he belonged in a boardroom, not a nightclub.
“You’re overdressed,” she said, raising an eyebrow.
He smiled. “You’re underestimating me.”
Danica smirked. “I don’t do small talk.”
“Good,” he replied. “Neither do I.”
They talked anyway. About nothing. About everything. His name was Ben. Hers, she offered only after a pause. There was something about him — the way he listened, the way he didn’t try too hard. It was unnerving.
Later, in the quiet of his penthouse, the city stretched out beneath them like a secret. Danica stood at the window, her back to him, the skyline reflecting off the glass.
“You always bring strangers home?” she asked, voice low.
“Only the ones I don’t want to forget,” Ben said, stepping closer.
She turned slowly, meeting his gaze. “I don’t do attachments.”
“I’m not asking for one,” he said. “Just tonight.”
She hesitated. Then nodded.
Their kiss was slow, exploratory — not rushed, not careless. His hands found her waist, hers tangled in his collar. The air between them thickened with every breath.
“You’re not what I expected,” she whispered against his mouth.
“Neither are you,” he murmured, pulling her closer.
They moved to the bedroom in silence, the tension between them louder than words. The sheets were cool, the room dim, and every touch felt like a question answered. He traced the curve of her shoulder with reverence, she responded with fire. It wasn’t just physical — it was something else. Something that made her forget her rules.
Afterward, Danica lay awake, watching the ceiling. Ben’s arm rested across her waist, his breathing steady. She hated how her body still hummed. She hated how her mind kept replaying the way he looked at her — like she was more than just a moment.
She slipped out of bed, dressed quietly, and paused at the door.
“Leaving already?” came his voice, low and half-asleep.
“I don’t stay,” she said, not turning around.
“Maybe you should,” he replied.
She didn’t answer. Just walked out, heels clicking against marble, heart heavier than she expected.
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