He Saw Bruises On The Pregnant Maid And Remembered His Old Promise-maimoc

At two in the morning, the Brennan estate felt less like a home than a museum someone had forgotten to turn off.

The hallway lights hummed softly above me.

Lemon polish clung to the air, sharp and clean, over the colder smell of stone floors and old wood.

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I stood on a step stool in the east hallway, stretching toward a shelf of framed photographs that probably had not been noticed by anyone but staff in years.

My name was Nola Ferris.

I was seven months pregnant, exhausted down to the bone, and wearing a red housekeeping uniform that had not been designed with pregnancy in mind.

The shirt hung loose at my shoulders and strained hard across my stomach.

Every time I reached too far, my baby kicked like she was trying to call me back into my own body.

I whispered, “I know, baby. Just a little longer.”

That was what I told her every night.

A little longer.

A little more work.

A little more silence.

Rent was due in six days, the clinic bill from my last visit was folded in the bottom of my purse, and the payroll sheet in the service office said my overnight hours had been approved through Saturday.

I could not afford to lose any of them.

So I cleaned shelves no one saw.

I wiped baseboards no one thought about.

I smiled at supervisors who never asked questions they did not want answered.

The Brennan estate sat behind iron gates and a long driveway lined with winter-bare trees.

There was a small American flag near the front entry, tucked into a planter beside the wide stone steps, the kind of quiet touch wealthy families kept because it looked proper.

I had passed it every night on my way to the service entrance.

I never used the front door.

People like me were not hired for front doors.

That night, while dusting the upper shelf, I felt the fabric at my shoulder pull.

Then my sleeve slid down.

The bruises around my wrist showed under the warm hallway light.

I yanked the sleeve back immediately.

Too late.

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The air changed before I heard a sound.

I looked up.

Callum Brennan stood at the far end of the hallway.

The owner of the estate.

The man people in that house discussed only in careful tones.

The man whose name had a way of making confident men suddenly speak more softly.

He wore a dark coat and looked like he had just come in from the cold.

He did not move.

He did not ask why I was there at that hour.

He only looked at me.

I lowered my eyes because that was what women like me learned to do around men with power.

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