THE BILLIONAIRE PRETENDED TO BE ASLEEP TO TEST THE NEW MAID… BUT WHAT SHE DID LEFT HIM BREATHLESS-mdue - Chainityai

THE BILLIONAIRE PRETENDED TO BE ASLEEP TO TEST THE NEW MAID… BUT WHAT SHE DID LEFT HIM BREATHLESS-mdue

THE BILLIONAIRE PRETENDED TO BE ASLEEP TO TEST THE NEW MAID… BUT WHAT SHE DID LEFT HIM BREATHLESS

Rodrigo Cárdenas had built an empire out of steel, silence, and discipline. To the outside world, he was untouchable. Magazines called him the architect of steel. Investors admired his precision. Rivals feared his decisions. Employees lowered their voices whenever he passed through a hallway.

But inside his mansion, everyone knew something else about him.

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Rodrigo Cárdenas was a man who had stopped living long before his body admitted it.

Three years earlier, he had lost the woman he loved. Worse still, he had lost the little daughter who had only just learned how to say his name. From that moment on, the mansion stopped being a home. It became a place where grief had rules, where doors stayed closed, where memories were locked away because opening them would hurt too much.

So when his assistant told him that eleven maids had quit in only eight months, Rodrigo did not even turn around.

He stood in front of the glass wall on the top floor of Cárdenas Tower, watching Monterrey wake beneath a thin gray rain. His black coffee sat untouched on the desk, already cold. That suited him. Almost everything around him had gone cold.

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

Rodrigo’s answer was flat.

“Send her. They all leave anyway.”

The new maid’s name was Elena Salgado.

She did not come from luxury. She came from a small apartment in Independencia, where the air smelled of reheated coffee, clean laundry, medicine, and worry. Her grandmother, Carmen, slept in the living room with swollen hands, a tired heart, and an oxygen machine that seemed to breathe for both of them through the night.

Elena had once studied nursing. She had loved it. But love does not always arrive in convenient shapes. When Carmen grew weaker, Elena left school because someone had to stay, someone had to manage the medicines, the rent, the appointments, and the bills that seemed to multiply every time she blinked.

When Elena told her grandmother about the job interview, Carmen asked how much it paid. Elena answered. The old woman stopped smiling.

That silence said more than any advice could have.

Then Carmen told her, “Go. And stay.”

The next morning, Elena arrived at Rodrigo’s mansion wearing a carefully pressed navy-blue uniform and her hair tied back. Mrs. Herrera, the housekeeper, opened the door before Elena had even finished ringing the bell.

Mrs. Herrera was thin, severe, and perfectly composed. She looked like the kind of woman who could judge a person’s entire life in three seconds and rarely be wrong.

She read Elena’s details from a sheet: born in Veracruz, six years in Monterrey, native Spanish, good English, some Portuguese. Then she let her in.

The tour of the house was fast and exact.

Every room had instructions. The kitchen had instructions. The guest bedrooms had instructions. The laundry room had instructions. Even the silence seemed to have instructions.

Elena followed with calm hands and careful eyes. She memorized every key, every hallway, every command, and every shift in Mrs. Herrera’s tone. The mansion did not feel lived in. It felt guarded.

Two rules mattered more than all the others.

Rodrigo Cárdenas’s study was forbidden.

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