Missing Wife Returns As Maid With Baby, Then His Mother Threatens Them-heuh

“Sir, do you need a maid? I can do anything – my daughter is starving.”

Daniel heard the words before he properly saw the woman.

The storm had turned the penthouse windows into black mirrors, each sheet of rain flashing silver when lightning rolled beyond the skyline.

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He had been alone in the suite for less than twenty minutes, long enough to change his shirt, straighten his cufflinks, and stare at himself in the mirror like a man preparing for execution rather than a board meeting.

Downstairs, in a private conference room, his mother was waiting.

So were the directors.

So were the papers.

The papers that would hand her everything his father had spent forty years building.

A mug of tea sat untouched beside the electric kettle on the sideboard, the surface already skinned over and cold.

Daniel had made it without thinking, the way people do when they need their hands to perform an ordinary task because their mind is too full of terrible ones.

He had just pulled his tie into place when the service door clicked.

Not the main entrance.

The service door.

A maid slipped in behind a linen trolley, bent almost double against the weight of wet clothes and fear.

The uniform was too large, the hem dragging against her shoes, the sleeves dark with rainwater.

Her hair clung to her face.

Her shoulders shook so hard the glassware on the trolley gave a tiny nervous rattle.

Daniel turned from the mirror.

“I didn’t call for housekeeping.”

The woman flinched.

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