A Billionaire Tested His Maid’s Little Girl, Then She Saw His Loneliness-Aurelle - Chainityai

A Billionaire Tested His Maid’s Little Girl, Then She Saw His Loneliness-Aurelle

Ethan Cole thought he was testing his new housekeeper.

That was the story he told himself at first.

He told himself he was being careful.

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He told himself a man with his money had to be careful.

He told himself that closing his eyes in the sitting room of his Nashville mansion was not strange, not cruel, not some quiet little trap set for a woman who needed her job.

It was only caution.

That was the word people with too much to lose used when they were afraid to admit they no longer knew how to trust anyone.

The rain came down softly that Friday evening, brushing the tall windows in silver lines.

The sitting room smelled faintly of coffee, lemon polish, and the wet grass beyond the back terrace.

A lamp glowed beside the cream sofa.

The low table was covered with a protective sheet, watercolor pans, a cloudy cup of rinse water, and one small stuffed rabbit named Noodle.

Across from it, a three-year-old girl in a yellow raincoat hummed while she painted.

Ethan leaned back against the sofa and closed his eyes.

Just for a moment.

That was what he told himself.

Just to rest.

Just to listen.

Just to see what happened when people believed the man with the money was no longer watching.

Ethan had learned early that wealth changed the temperature of a room.

People smiled faster when he entered.

They laughed harder than jokes deserved.

They softened their voices, remembered his coffee order, adjusted their opinions to match whatever they thought he wanted to hear.

Money did not make people honest.

It taught them timing.

It taught them when to nod, when to praise, when to flatter, and when to leave before the bill came due.

By twenty-eight, Ethan Cole had more money than most men twice his age.

His real estate company owned luxury developments across several states.

His name appeared beside glossy renderings of towers, private districts, and gated neighborhoods with names designed to sound older than they were.

People called him brilliant.

Some called him cold.

A few, usually after taking his money, called him family.

Inside his fourteen-thousand-square-foot mansion outside Nashville, none of those words mattered much.

The house was beautiful in the way a hotel lobby is beautiful.

Perfect.

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