
The millionaire had come home early—and nearly collapsed at what he saw.
For months, Michael Reynolds had lived in a kind of helplessness he had never known before. A man who controlled one of San Diego’s largest construction empires, he had discovered that all his power, all his wealth, meant nothing when it came to healing the shattered heart of a three-year-old child.
That afternoon, something pulled him away from an important investor meeting. It wasn’t logic or schedule—it was instinct. A quiet voice urging him home. He followed it.
When he pushed open the kitchen door of his mansion, Michael froze. His hand shot out to grip the doorframe, steadying himself.
There was Ava. His silent, grief-buried daughter. Sitting on the maid’s shoulders, giggling as they washed dishes together. Not just smiling—laughing. A bright, musical laugh he had not heard since the night everything fell apart.
“Scrub right here, princess,” Paige murmured, guiding the child’s tiny hands. “You’re doing wonderfully.”
“Aunt Paige, can I make bubbles with the soap?” Ava asked. Then, noticing Michael, she tilted her head. “What’s wrong?”
Her voice—strong, clear, alive—hit him like a blow. He had believed he might never hear it again.
His legs weakened. Since his wife’s death in the car accident, Ava had not spoken a single word. Doctors had told him to be patient, that trauma could silence a child. But here she was, speaking freely… as if the last few months had been nothing more than a bad dream.
Paige turned, startled, almost dropping a plate.
“Mr. Reynolds—I’m sorry, I didn’t know you were home.”
“Daddy!” Ava squeaked, then instantly recoiled, guilt flickering across her face.
Michael backed out of the kitchen and made his way to his office, shutting the door behind him. His hands trembled as he poured a glass of whiskey, but the burn of it did nothing to calm the storm inside.
How had this young maid reached his daughter in ways he—and multiple specialists—could not? Why was Ava opening her heart to Paige but shutting him out completely?
The next morning, he left the house at his usual time. But instead of heading to his office, he circled the block and parked. He needed to know the truth.
Quiet as a shadow, he slipped through the back door, went straight to his office, and pulled out the tiny cameras he had bought on his way home the night before.
And with shaking hands, he installed them.
Whatever was happening in his house, he was finally going to see it.