He Recognized the Pregnant Maid by a Scar From Seventeen Years Ago-ruby - Chainityai

He Recognized the Pregnant Maid by a Scar From Seventeen Years Ago-ruby

The house was silent when I first saw him again.

Not peaceful.

Silent.

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There is a difference.

Peace lets you breathe.

Silence waits to see what you will do wrong.

At 2:00 a.m., I stood on a step stool in the east hallway of the Brennan estate with a dust cloth in one hand and a spray bottle hooked over my fingers.

The hallway smelled like lemon cleaner, old wood polish, and money.

That was the only way I knew how to describe it.

Money had a smell in that house.

It lived in the polished floors, the framed oil paintings, the soft rugs that swallowed footsteps before they could echo.

I had been assigned the east hallway on the overnight rotation because wealthy people liked waking up to proof that invisible people had worked while they slept.

The shelves were already spotless.

The brass trim already shined.

The vases had probably never been touched by a guest, let alone noticed.

Still, Mrs. Tierney’s housekeeping schedule had my name next to East Hallway, 1:45 a.m. to 2:30 a.m., so I climbed the step stool and reached for the top shelf like my back was not screaming.

My feet were swollen inside black work shoes.

The red housekeeping uniform hung loose everywhere except across my stomach, where the buttons strained against seven months of pregnancy.

Every time I stretched too high, the baby kicked beneath my ribs.

It felt less like movement and more like protest.

The county clinic intake papers in my tote said I needed rest.

The rent notice taped to my kitchen cabinet said otherwise.

I was twenty-seven years old, pregnant, alone, and too tired to pretend dignity paid bills.

At 2:07 a.m., I reached for the far edge of the shelf.

My sleeve slipped down.

The bruises around my wrist showed under the hallway light.

I pulled the cuff back so fast the step stool rocked under me.

Too late.

Someone was standing at the end of the hall.

Callum Brennan had come home without a sound.

That was the thing about him people talked about in the city.

He never seemed to arrive.

He was simply there.

Men who laughed loudly in restaurants lowered their voices when his name came up.

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