Over the next few days, Brianna began to notice a disturbing pattern.
Every time Zachary spent long hours in the master suite, his symptoms worsened. The coughing intensified. His headaches deepened. His fatigue became crushing. But on the rare days he worked downstairs or stepped outside into the gardens—even briefly—he looked marginally better. Not healed. But lighter.
The house was making him sick.Specifically, that room.
Brianna did something she’d never done before. After her shift, she stayed late—off the clock—and returned to the closet with her phone flashlight. She pressed gently against the wall. It gave slightly under her hand.
That was all the confirmation she needed.
The next morning, she knocked on Zachary’s door again.
“Mr. Lowell,” she said carefully, “I need to tell you something. And you might not like it.”
He opened his eyes slowly. “At this point,” he rasped, “I don’t think anything can surprise me.”
She told him everything. The smell. The dampness. The wall. Her suspicion of mold—toxic mold—hidden behind luxury finishes and sealed windows.
For a moment, Zachary said nothing.
Then he coughed. Harder than she’d ever seen. His hands trembled as he pushed himself upright.