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    Home » The Billionaire Pretended to Be Asleep to Test His New Maid… Yet What She Did Left Him Completely Speechless
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    The Billionaire Pretended to Be Asleep to Test His New Maid… Yet What She Did Left Him Completely Speechless

    JuliaBy Julia03/07/2026Updated:03/07/202626 Mins Read
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    When Arthur Penhaligon learned that eleven members of his household staff had resigned in only eight months, he did not even turn to respond. He stood before the floor-to-ceiling glass wall on the highest level of the Penhaligon Spire, looking down at the city of Ironwood through the pale gray morning fog. His black coffee remained untouched on his desk, already twenty minutes cold, much like everything else in his life.

    For three years, Arthur had existed only in official records, operating like the machine business magazines called the architect of concrete. His partners respected his merciless efficiency, and his rivals feared his icy precision, but no one ever asked what becomes of a man after he loses the woman he loved and the tiny daughter who had only just learned to say his name.

    “Sir,” his assistant said quietly from the doorway, “the recruitment agency wants to know if you would like to review the file before confirming this specific candidate.”

    Arthur did not move from the glass wall.

    “Send her,” he said coldly without looking back, “because they all leave anyway.”

    The door shut with a soft click, leaving him inside the silence he had built for himself, while outside, the city stirred beneath yellow streetlights and gentle rain. Inside the mansion, the billionaire remained motionless, like a man trapped for years inside the same tragic memory.

    Miles away, in a cramped apartment in the Riverside District, a young woman named Maya carefully folded a navy blue uniform over a chair. The apartment smelled of reheated coffee and the sharp bitterness of heart medicine.

    “Grandma,” Maya said softly, “I have an interview tomorrow morning.”

    Catherine Snyder opened one tired eye from the couch, her hands swollen with painful arthritis and her heart weakening day by day, though her mind was still sharper than most people in the city.

    “What kind of job is it, dear?” she asked with a rough breath.

    “It is a housekeeping position at a large estate in the High Crest area,” Maya replied while checking her shoes.

    Catherine studied her granddaughter for a long moment, noticing the exhaustion that lingered around her eyes.

    “Wear your hair tied back tightly, and do not smile too much at first,” she warned, “because the wealthy rarely trust anyone who looks too kind too quickly.”

    Maya gave a quiet laugh at the cynicism, even though she knew her grandmother was probably right.

    “Thanks for the advice, Grandma,” Maya said with a small nod.

    “And do not sign any legal documents without reading them thoroughly,” Catherine continued. “Tell me, how much are they paying you?”

    When Maya told her the generous salary, Catherine fell completely silent for a long while. Then she said only one thing, and it carried the weight of a final decision.

    “Then you go, and you make sure you stay there.”

    That night, Maya switched off the hallway light and listened to the steady rhythm of her grandmother’s oxygen machine. For two years, that sound had filled their lonely nights, and Maya had left nursing school in her third year, not because she lacked ability, but because someone had to care for Catherine. The medicine cost far too much, the rent was always overdue, and this job could finally change their lives.

    The next morning, Mrs. Gordon opened the grand mansion door before Maya could even finish pressing the chime. She was thin, polished, and stern, carrying the kind of presence that could judge a person’s entire life in three seconds.

    “Maya Snyder,” she read from a crisp sheet of paper, “born in Clearwater, six years in Ironwood, native English speaker, some French. Come inside right now.”

    The tour through the house was quick and exact, with every room holding its own set of unspoken rules. The kitchen had rules, the guest rooms had rules, the laundry room had rules, but two particular rules were repeated with far more seriousness than the rest. Mr. Penhaligon’s study was strictly forbidden, and nothing on his massive desk was ever to be touched or moved.

    “Furthermore, the room at the far end of the second floor stays locked at all times,” the woman warned.

    Maya glanced toward the hallway with a brief spark of natural curiosity.

    “Why is that?” Maya asked, feeling the sudden tension in the air.

    Mrs. Gordon stopped walking and turned back, her eyes sharpening like glass.

    “Because Mr. Penhaligon ordered it that way,” she stated, and then she lowered her voice to a whisper. “And that door has been closed for exactly three years.”

    Maya felt a clear chill travel down her spine. She did not know it yet, but behind that locked door was the very reason every maid before her had quit in frustration or fear. When Arthur Penhaligon later pretended to sleep in order to test her honesty, he fully expected her to steal, pry, or flee like the others. Instead, Maya did something no one in that house had done for three years, something so unexpected that it made the most powerful man in the city open his eyes and forget how to breathe.

    By noon, Maya understood why the mansion felt less like a home and more like a museum constructed around an open, festering wound. Everything inside the residence was costly, silent, and strangely untouched, with floors shining like dark water and chandeliers glittering even when unlit. White orchids stood in glass vases along the corridors, arranged so perfectly they seemed almost fake, but there were no family photographs anywhere.

    There was no laughter from a television, no shoes left near a sofa, and no warm smell of breakfast drifting from the kitchen. Only order existed here, flawless and polished and entirely unbearable.

    Mrs. Gordon walked ahead of Maya with her hands clasped tightly behind her back.

    “You will arrive at six thirty every morning,” she commanded. “You will leave at six unless requested otherwise. You will not speak unless spoken to, and you will not ask personal questions under any circumstances.”

    Maya nodded, accepting the cold conditions of her employment.

    “And if Mr. Penhaligon seems unpleasant, you will not take it personally,” Mrs. Gordon added with a sigh.

    Maya almost smiled at how absurd it sounded.

    “I promise I will not,” Maya said.

    Mrs. Gordon turned and gave her a weary look.

    “Everyone says that on the very first day,” she said.

    There was no gentleness in the warning, only a deep, widespread exhaustion. Maya saw it then, because beneath the older woman’s strict posture, Mrs. v was worn down. They stopped outside the locked door at the far end of the second floor, the only one with a small brass plate, polished clean but bearing no name, with a narrow line of dust along the threshold.

    Maya’s gaze stayed there for only a second, but Mrs. Gordon noticed at once.

    “You do not look at that door,” she said sharply.

    Maya immediately lowered her eyes.

    “I understand,” she replied.

    “No,” Mrs. Gordon said quietly, “you do not understand, but perhaps that is better for your own peace of mind.”

    A sound rose from downstairs, a door closing with a heavy, final thud. Mrs. Gordon straightened instantly.

    “Mr. Penhaligon has returned home,” she announced.

    The air in the house shifted at once, growing thick with a strange, unspoken pressure. A gardener visible through the window stopped trimming the hedge, and a kitchen assistant lowered her voice into a murmur. Somewhere in the hall, a young man carrying fresh linens stepped back against the wall as though making space for an approaching storm.

    Arthur Penhaligon entered the foyer in a black suit and with the expression of a man who had forgotten other people existed. He was tall, more intimidating in person than in magazines, with dark, carefully combed hair touched by the faintest silver at his temples. His face was beautiful in a severe way, all hard angles and shadows, but his eyes were what made Maya freeze. They were not cruel, but they were completely empty.

    “Sir,” Mrs. Gordon said, lowering her head slightly.

    Arthur removed one leather glove and handed it to a waiting attendant without even looking.

    “Is this the new maid?” he asked, his voice like gravel.

    Maya stepped forward, keeping her spine straight.

    “Yes, Mr. Penhaligon. My name is Maya Snyder,” she said.

    His eyes moved over her once, not with curiosity, not with warmth, but with clinical judgment, as if he were checking whether a replacement part would break under pressure.

    “Did you read the rules I provided?” he asked.

    “Yes, sir,” Maya replied.

    “Do you understand them completely?” he pressed.

    “Yes, I do,” she said.

    “Then do not disappoint me,” he said, walking away before she could answer.

    Mrs. Gordon exhaled almost silently as he disappeared toward the study.

    “He does not like new staff,” Mrs. Gordon muttered.

    Maya looked toward the closed study door with unease.

    “I do not think he likes anything at all,” Maya said.

    For the first time all morning, Mrs. Gordon’s mouth nearly twitched into a smile.

    “Be very careful, girl, because you notice too much,” she warned.

    The rest of the day passed in careful, suffocating quiet, but Maya began learning the mansion’s rhythm. The silver was counted every Friday, the sheets in the west wing were changed even though no one ever slept there, and Mr. Penhaligon took coffee at seven, though most days it remained untouched. Lunch was prepared and delivered to his study, only to return half eaten, while dinner was usually nothing but soup, and sometimes not even that.

    At three in the afternoon, while dusting the main library, Maya found a small toy beneath a velvet chair. It was a wooden rabbit, no larger than her palm, once painted white, though much of the paint had worn away over the years. One ear was chipped, and a faded pink ribbon hung around its neck, looking painfully out of place in such a spotless room. Maya froze as she lifted it gently, a strange ache moving through her chest.

    Before she could decide what to do, a voice sliced through the room like a blade.

    “Put it down,” Arthur shouted.

    Maya turned and saw Arthur standing in the doorway, his face completely changed, the emptiness gone and replaced by something sharp and dangerous.

    “I am so sorry,” Maya said immediately. “I found it under the chair, and I did not mean to intrude.”

    “Put it down,” he repeated.

    She obeyed, setting the rabbit carefully on the side table, but Arthur crossed the room in three long strides and grabbed it, as though the toy might disappear if he waited even a second more. For one moment, his hand trembled, and then he closed his fist around it.

    “You do not touch personal objects in this house,” he said.

    “I understand,” Maya whispered.

    “No, you do not,” he said, his voice dropping lower. “You people never understand. You come into this house pretending to respect rules, pretending you only want work, but then curiosity begins to take over.”

    Maya kept her gaze steady, refusing to drop her eyes in shame.

    “I was not stealing anything,” Maya said firmly.

    “I did not ask for your defense,” Arthur snapped.

    Heat climbed into her cheeks, but she swallowed the reply she wanted to give. Arthur looked at her as if he expected tears, excuses, or fear. When none appeared, his jaw tightened with irritation.

    “You may leave early today,” he said, turning away from her.

    Mrs. Gordon appeared behind him, alarmed by the sudden order.

    “Sir,” she began, but Arthur cut her off.

    “I said she may leave right now,” he insisted.

    Maya slowly untied her apron and placed it on the library table.

    “Of course, Mr. Penhaligon,” she said, walking out with her back straight.

    In the servants’ corridor, her hands started trembling. It was not because he had yelled, but because of the way he had gripped that toy, like a man holding a bone torn from his own chest. That night, Catherine was sitting upright on the couch when Maya came home.

    “You are home early,” Catherine said.

    Maya set her bag on the table with a heavy sigh.

    “I found something I should not have,” she said.

    Catherine’s brows rose with worry.

    “Was it money?” Catherine asked.

    “No, it was a toy,” Maya replied.

    The old woman stayed silent for a long moment, nodding faintly to herself.

    “Ah,” she whispered.

    Maya lowered herself into the chair beside her, feeling the weight of the mansion pressing down on her shoulders.

    “There was a little girl who lived there, was there not?” Maya asked.

    “In houses that rich, tragedy becomes gossip long before the funeral flowers even have a chance to dry,” Catherine said.

    Maya stared at her grandmother, stunned.

    “You know about this?” Maya asked.

    “Everyone knows a piece of the story, but no one knows the whole truth,” Catherine said, adjusting the blanket over her aching knees. “His wife died in a car accident, and the daughter did as well, three years ago on a rainy night on the road to the valley,” she explained.

    Maya closed her eyes, and suddenly the mansion made sense, the silence, the locked room, and all the untouched things.

    “What about the maids?” Maya asked.

    Catherine’s expression grew much darker.

    “That part is what people whisper about, because some left crying, some were fired, and one even claimed she heard a child singing behind a locked door,” she revealed.

    Maya opened her eyes.

    “A child?”

    “Grief has many voices, and not all of them are actual ghosts,” Catherine said cryptically.

    Maya said nothing, and her grandmother leaned closer.

    “Do you want to go back there?” Catherine asked.

    Maya thought of the medicine bottles on the kitchen shelf, the overdue rent notice folded beneath a magnet on the refrigerator, and her grandmother’s breath catching in her throat at night. Then she thought of the wooden rabbit and the shattered man who had clutched it.

    “Yes, I am going back,” Maya said.

    The next morning, Mrs. Gordon looked surprised to find her standing at the door.

    “You returned,” Mrs. Gordon noted.

    “I was scheduled to be here,” Maya replied.

    “Most people would not have returned,” Mrs. Gordon said.

    “I need the job,” Maya stated.

    Mrs. Gordon studied her face.

    “Need is not the same as endurance,” she said.

    “No, but it certainly teaches it,” Maya replied.

    From that day forward, Arthur watched her constantly, and Maya felt it even when he said nothing. His eyes tracked her when she crossed the foyer with fresh towels, and he noticed whether she paused near the study or glanced toward the locked door. He noticed whether she touched anything that did not belong to her.

    So Maya did her work and nothing beyond it, polishing the dining table until the dark wood reflected the ceiling like glass. She aired rooms no one used, repaired a loose button on a guest cushion because she could not stand seeing it dangle by a thread, and found old water stains on the piano and removed them with patient hands. She did not smile too much, she did not ask questions, but she listened to the house.

    By the end of the week, she knew which staircase creaked on the fifth step, she knew Mr. Penhaligon slept badly because his bedroom lamp stayed on past midnight, and she knew he hated lilies because every arrangement containing them vanished by afternoon. She knew someone still ordered a small carton of chocolate milk every Tuesday, even though no one drank it.

    On Friday evening, rain began tapping against the tall windows like anxious fingers asking to be let in. Maya was in the laundry room folding towels when the lights flickered once, then again, and a second later, the whole mansion fell into darkness. Somewhere upstairs, something crashed to the floor.

    Mrs. Gordon called from the corridor, “Stay where you are,” but then Maya heard another sound, a low, strangled gasp coming from the direction of Arthur’s study.

    She moved before she could think. The study door was partly open, and inside, Arthur stood beside his desk, one hand braced on the edge, the other pressed against his chest, with papers scattered across the floor and broken glass near his feet.

    “Mr. Penhaligon?” Maya cried out.

    “Get out of here,” he rasped.

    “You are hurt,” she said, stepping closer.

    “I said get out,” he yelled.

    But his face was pale, damp with sweat, and his breathing came too quickly, shallow and fractured. Maya stepped closer despite his command.

    “Are you having chest pain?” she asked.

    He glared at her with fierce frustration.

    “Do not touch me,” he ordered.

    “I studied nursing,” she stated firmly.

    That made him pause for one brief second.

    “Sit down right now,” she said, her voice shifting into a tone of command he had never heard from a servant.

    “I do not take orders from you,” he started.

    “You do if you want to keep breathing,” she retorted.

    His eyes flashed with anger, but then another wave of pain struck him, and his knees buckled. Maya caught his arm before he fell and guided him into the leather chair.

    “Mrs. Gordon, call Dr. Bennett right now,” she shouted toward the hallway.

    Arthur tried to stand again, but Maya pressed one hand to his shoulder, keeping him seated.

    “Do not move,” she commanded.

    For one strange second, they stared at each other in the dark, lit only by lightning flashing outside. No one had touched him like that in years, not gently, not without wanting something, and not without fear. Arthur stopped resisting and leaned back.

    Maya checked his pulse, which was fast and uneven, though not catastrophic, suggesting a panic attack brought on by the storm and the memories it carried.

    “Breathe with me,” she said, beginning to inhale slowly.

    He laughed bitterly and breathlessly at her instruction.

    “You think breathing fixes everything in this world?” he asked.

    “No, but not breathing certainly fixes nothing at all,” she replied.

    His mouth tightened, and after a moment, unwillingly, he followed her rhythm. The rain grew heavier, and thunder rolled over the mansion, shaking its very foundation, while Arthur closed his eyes. Beneath the sharp lines of his face, Maya saw something terrible, not power, not arrogance, not cruelty, but a man trapped in the exact second his life had ended.

    Dr. Bennett arrived twenty minutes later, soaked and visibly irritated by the call. He examined Arthur in the study while Mrs. Gordon lingered near the door, worry carved into her face.

    “It is another panic episode,” the doctor said finally. “His blood pressure is elevated and he is dealing with severe exhaustion.”

    Arthur looked away, refusing to accept the diagnosis.

    “I have told you before that you cannot continue like this,” the doctor warned.

    “I pay you for treatment, not for your lectures,” Arthur countered.

    “You pay me very well, so you get both whether you like it or not,” the doctor said with a sigh.

    Maya lowered her eyes to hide a small, sympathetic smile, but Arthur noticed it. After the doctor left, Mrs. Gordon escorted Maya toward the staff exit, but Arthur’s voice stopped her where she stood.

    “Snyder,” he called out.

    She turned and found him standing in the study doorway.

    “You said you studied nursing,” he noted.

    “Yes, sir,” she replied.

    “Why did you stop your training?” he asked.

    The question struck too close to her heart.

    “My grandmother became ill,” she explained.

    “So you chose domestic work instead,” he observed.

    “I chose survival,” she stated simply.

    His eyes shifted briefly to Mrs. Gordon, then returned to Maya.

    “You handled the situation adequately,” he said, and from him, it sounded almost like real gratitude.

    “Good night, Mr. Penhaligon,” she said.

    On Monday, her duties changed. No one announced it officially, but Maya began finding tasks assigned nearer and nearer to Arthur’s private spaces. She carried coffee to the hallway outside his study, then into the study itself, and she organized the bookshelves on the east wall while he worked. She watered the plant near his bedroom balcony and tended to his needs with quiet, efficient grace.

    And Arthur continued testing her. A gold watch was left carelessly on a table, a half-open drawer with bank envelopes inside sat waiting, a phone was abandoned beside the sofa with its screen glowing with messages, and a stack of confidential documents was placed where she could not avoid seeing them. Maya touched none of it.

    But the tests became stranger as the days passed. One afternoon, she entered the study to collect an untouched lunch tray and found Arthur asleep on the leather sofa, or at least pretending to be. His breathing was too controlled, his arm positioned too deliberately, and a book lay open on his chest, but his fingers were not relaxed. Maya knew immediately that he was watching her.

    Mrs. Gordon’s warning echoed in her mind about how the wealthy do not trust anyone who looks too kind too quickly. On the desk, clearly visible, lay an envelope thick with cash and beside it, a silver key. The forbidden room. So this was the true test, and for a moment, the entire house seemed to hold its breath.

    Maya walked toward the desk while Arthur’s eyelids did not move at all. She lifted the lunch tray, but then stopped, noticing the untouched soup, the cold coffee, and the small prescription bottle resting unopened beside the sofa. Maya set the tray down again and went to the closet by the window, pulling out a folded blanket.

    Arthur stayed completely still as she crossed to the sofa and gently laid the blanket over him. He almost flinched, but Maya noticed and acted as though she had not.

    “You will wake with a stiff neck if you do not cover up,” she murmured, so quietly he could barely hear.

    Then she looked toward the coffee table, where dust had gathered around a framed photograph lying face down. Maya hesitated, because the rule was clear, but the frame had slipped partly over the edge, and if it fell, the glass would shatter. Carefully, with both hands, she lifted it just enough to set it flat again, and for one second, the photograph faced upward.

    A woman with bright eyes and wind-tossed hair smiled at the camera, and beside her stood a younger, gentler Arthur, laughing at something beyond the frame. Between them was a little girl with curls and a missing front tooth, holding a wooden rabbit. Maya’s throat tightened, but she turned the frame face down again exactly as it had been.

    Then she did the one thing no one in that house had done for three years. She began to sing, not loudly, not dramatically, only under her breath as she gathered the tray, an old, simple lullaby. It was the kind of song women sang in kitchens, on buses, beside sickbeds, and beside cradles.

    “Duérmete, mi niña,” she hummed softly.

    Arthur stopped breathing for a moment, listening with sudden intensity.

    “Duérmete, mi sol,” she continued.

    The words drifted through the study like dust in the afternoon light, and Arthur’s hands curled beneath the blanket. He was no longer in the study; he was inside a bedroom painted pale yellow, with rain tapping against the windows, his daughter refusing to sleep unless her mother sang that song twice. He was standing in the doorway after a late meeting, loosening his tie, watching his wife smooth curls away from their child’s forehead.

    Esther had laughed softly and whispered that she had his stubbornness, and Arthur had answered that one day she would conquer the world. The memory struck with such force it felt almost physical, and when Maya reached the final line and stopped, the silence that returned was different from before, because this silence had finally split open.

    Maya picked up the tray and turned toward the door.

    “Snyder,” Arthur’s voice was rough as he spoke.

    Maya froze. He opened his eyes, and for a moment, neither of them said anything.

    “You knew I was awake the whole time,” he stated.

    “Yes, I did,” Maya replied.

    “And you still did not take the money,” he noted.

    “No, I did not,” she said.

    “Or the key,” he asked.

    “No, I did not,” she repeated.

    “Why?” he asked.

    Maya glanced toward the silver key on the desk, then back at him.

    “Because locked doors are usually locked for a reason,” she said.

    Something unreadable moved across his face as he absorbed her answer.

    “And the song?” he asked.

    Her expression softened before she could stop it.

    “My grandmother used to sing it to me, and I sing it to her when the pain is bad,” Maya explained.

    Arthur slowly sat up, the blanket sliding into his lap.

    “My wife sang that song to my daughter,” he said.

    “I am so sorry for your loss,” Maya said.

    His eyes sharpened immediately.

    “Do not ever say that,” he ordered.

    Maya held his gaze with steady strength.

    “Then I will not,” she said.

    He seemed almost annoyed that she obeyed so easily.

    “You saw the photograph,” he challenged.

    “Only because it was falling off the table,” Maya clarified.

    “And?” he asked.

    “She was beautiful,” Maya said.

    Arthur looked away, pain tightening his eyes.

    “Esther,” he said after a long pause. “My daughter’s name was Esther, and she was four years old.”

    The words seemed to scrape his throat raw as they came out. Maya lowered the tray, her own heart aching for him.

    “She had your eyes,” Maya added.

    Arthur’s face tightened with pain. For a second, she thought he might order her out of the house, but instead, he asked if she believed in ghosts. Maya thought of her grandmother’s oxygen machine in the dark, of memories that sat beside you in empty rooms, and of grief touching your shoulder when no one was there.

    “Yes, I do,” she said, “but not always the kind that people usually mean.”

    A faint, bitter smile appeared on his face and disappeared just as quickly.

    “You speak like someone much older than you are,” he noted.

    “And you sleep like someone afraid of his own dreams,” she countered.

    The air went completely still as Maya realized she had gone too far. Arthur stood, the blanket dropped to the floor, and for one heartbeat, the old hardness returned to his face. Then, quietly, he told her to leave the tray and go. She obeyed.

    At the door, he spoke again.

    “Tomorrow morning, come here early,” he commanded.

    Maya turned back to him.

    “Why?” she asked.

    His eyes moved toward the ceiling, toward the second floor, toward the locked room.

    “Because I am finally opening a door,” he stated.

    Maya slept poorly that night, and at dawn, she arrived while the sky over the city was still violet. Mrs. Gordon waited in the foyer, her face pale and anxious.

    “Did he tell you what he plans to do?” Maya asked.

    Mrs. Gordon nodded slowly.

    “You do not have to go in there,” Mrs. Gordon warned.

    “He asked me to be there,” Maya replied.

    “That room has broken stronger people than you,” Mrs. Gordon whispered.

    Maya glanced up the staircase toward the forbidden floor.

    “Maybe they just tried to enter it alone,” Maya said.

    Mrs. Gordon’s eyes softened for only a moment.

    Arthur appeared at the top of the stairs, wearing no suit jacket, only a white shirt with the sleeves rolled to his forearms, and in his hand was the silver key. He did not greet them but walked to the end of the hallway, and Maya followed. Mrs. Gordon remained several steps behind, one hand pressed to her chest in agitation.

    At the locked door, Arthur stopped and stared for a long time, while Maya heard his breathing shift as he prepared himself.

    “You do not have to do this today,” she said.

    His jaw tightened with resolve.

    “Yes, I do,” he whispered.

    The key slid into the lock, and the sound was small, but its effect was enormous, as the door opened with a soft, long sigh. Dust and the faint scent of lavender drifted out, and Maya stepped inside after him.

    The room was a child’s bedroom, perfectly frozen in time, with pale yellow walls, white curtains, and shelves filled with picture books. A tiny pair of red shoes sat beside the wardrobe, and stuffed animals were arranged on the bed, waiting faithfully for a child who would never come back. On the pillow lay another wooden rabbit, not the chipped one from the library, but a second one, newer and unbroken.

    Arthur stared at it as if lightning had struck him. Mrs. Gordon gasped behind them in the hallway.

    “That was not there,” she whispered in terror.

    Arthur turned slowly.

    “What?”

    Mrs. Gordon’s face had gone white as paper.

    “That rabbit, it was not on the pillow when I locked this room,” she insisted.

    Maya felt cold spread through her body as Arthur stepped closer to the bed and picked up the toy. A folded piece of paper was tied around its neck with a pink ribbon, and his fingers stiffened.

    “Esther could not write,” he said, his voice trembling.

    No one answered him. He untied the ribbon and opened the note, and Maya saw the color leave his face instantly.

    “What does it say?” she asked.

    Arthur read the words once, then again, and when he finally spoke, his voice barely sounded human.

    “It says, ‘Daddy, I waited for you,’” he revealed.

    Mrs. Gordon crossed herself in the doorway, and Maya’s heart slammed against her ribs. Arthur looked up, his eyes burning with shock, grief, and something far more dangerous, which was hope. Then, from somewhere deep inside the room, a music box began to play on its own, a delicate, broken melody filling the air.

    Maya recognized it instantly, the same lullaby she had sung in the study. Arthur turned toward the wardrobe, and the door stood open by one inch, and from the darkness inside came the soft, unmistakable sound of a child laughing.

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