Richard Marx and Daisy Fuentes.Photo: Courtesy Richard Marx

daisy fuentes and richard marx

Richard Marxis loving every second of life with his “Now and Forever” muse, wifeDaisy Fuentes.

“We’re so in tune with each other,” Marx, 57, gushes over a Zoom call from their L.A. home. “I’m in love in the most freeing way I’ve ever experienced. It’s a beautiful thing.”

“It wasn’t just that she was so beautiful. It was her vibe,” he says. “I remember thinking, ‘I bet we would get along great.’ I always had a fascination with her.”

Though Marx and Fuentes ran in the same circles, it would be decades before they’d meet in person. After separating from Rhodes in 2013 after 24 years of marriage, Marx cast his own romantic fate when he invited Fuentes, via Instagram, to one of his shows in L.A.

They had an instant spark, but “it was a really tumultuous time,” Marx says of his impending divorce. “When I met Daisy, I was flailing a bit. I very quickly saw things in her that made me feel like, ‘That’s my person.’ But I was like, ‘Do I want to be in another relationship already?’ I had just become single for the first time in my life.”

Richard Marx and Daisy Fuentes.Denise Truscello/Wireimage

richard marx and daisey fuentes

Fuentes, who had gone through her own divorce from actor Timothy Adams in 1995, had similar concerns, and six months into their romance, she ended the relationship.

“She went, ‘I need to be able to trust this to not be a rebound,'” Marx recalls. “So we stopped seeing each other for a while, but I was completely hung up on her. I remember thinking, ‘I can’t let her go.'”

They soon began spending time together again, first as friends — and then as lovers.

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Seeing Fuentes bond with his and Rhodes’ three sons, Brandon, now 30, Lucas, 28, and Jesse, 27, made him fall for her more.

“It took a while for everyone to feel comfortable meeting and getting to know each other, but my boys could see how happy I was,” he says. “Pretty early on, one of my sons blew my mind when he raised a glass while we were having dinner and said, ‘I want to make a toast to Daisy, because I’ve never seen my father so happy.’ That’s a pretty heavy, powerful thing to do.”

“We acknowledge that it could have been very different had they been still young or in their teens,” he adds. “But still, it could have gone either way, and I’m so lucky that they seem to really like hanging out with us, which is pretty awesome.”

Despite their intense connection, neither Marx nor Fuentes was interested in getting married again at first.

“We would knock [marriage],” he says. “We would go, ‘Who needs another contract?'”

But after two years together Marx changed his tune.

“I really wanted her to be my family,” he says. “We ended up getting married for the only reason that really makes sense, which is no reason. There was no agenda.”

Almost six years later, Marx and Fuentes remain strong, and they were brought even closer over the past year amid theCOVID-19lockdown.

“As a couple, it was a pretty amazing time,” Marx says. “But we didn’t voice that to too many people because we knew the horrific nature of what was going on around us.”

In the early months of the lockdown, Marx admits it was a bit of a “struggle” for him personally “because it was the first time in my entire life where I was forced to just sit still.”

“I wassofrightened of being still,” says Marx, who had released his 12th studio album,Limitless, just weeks before the pandemic hit. “I had to figure out: Who am I offstage? Who am I when I’m not making records and frantically writing songs? It became a powerful year of self-reflection.”

Marx shares the fruits of his introspection in a new memoir,Stories to Tell, out July 6.

“I’ve never really taken much time to look at what I’ve done,” he says. “My instinct is to never look back. Daisy convinced me it was time to celebrate what I’ve achieved. I’m grateful that she helped me give myself permission to do that.”

When fans read his new memoir, which covers the scope of his life and career, Marx jokes that he hopes they learn “that I’m taller than they think I am.”

“I don’t know about this perception that I’m this tiny little person,” he says with a laugh. “But the real answer is I want people to come away with my sense of gratitude. I really want, if nothing else, for people to go, ‘He’s a grateful guy,’ because I really am. I feel like if anyone should be grateful, it should be me.”

“I cling to the moments when I’m sitting next to Daisy and our dog, and I know my family is safe,” he says. “Whether it’s 10 minutes or two hours, it’s a tremendous gift.”

For all the details on Richard Marx’s life and love story with Daisy Fuentes, pick up the latest issue ofPEOPLE, on newsstands everywhere Friday.

source: people.com