When The Maid’s Baby Reached For The Boss, His Secret Started Bleeding-congtien

Nobody in Chicago believed Stellan Cross had anything left inside him that could be called gentle.

People believed he had money.

They believed he had influence.

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They believed his name could make a room get quieter before he even stepped into it.

But feelings were not part of the Stellan Cross story.

Not softness.

Not mercy.

And certainly not the kind of tenderness that made a man change the way he held his own breath because a baby had fallen asleep against his chest.

Nora Vale knew that better than most.

She had been working inside the Cross estate for three weeks, and three weeks was enough time to learn that the house operated on fear the way other houses ran on electricity.

Lights came on before he entered a hallway.

Conversations ended when his office door opened.

Staff moved like shadows, eyes down, shoulders tight, always listening for the sound of his shoes on marble.

On her first morning, Mrs. Aldridge had given Nora the rules in a voice low enough that the walls could not overhear.

Eyes forward.

Never ask questions.

If Mr. Cross walks into the room, disappear.

Nora had nodded because she needed the job more than she needed pride.

She was twenty-six, behind on rent, and raising a ten-month-old daughter whose hospital bills still arrived in envelopes that felt heavy before she opened them.

Wren had been born six weeks early on a night Nora still remembered in pieces.

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