Eight-year-old Emily Carter hadn’t eaten a single bite in fourteen days. No cookies, no soup, not even a spoonful of broth. Grief had shrunk her—her body, her voice, her presence.
Since the accident that took her mother, the mansion felt enormous and hollow, a place of marble echoes and closed doors. Doctors came with charts and careful words. Therapists spoke of grief and time. Nothing changed the truth: Emily sat by the window, staring into the garden as if waiting for someone to return her old life.
At seven that morning, Rachel Moore arrived with a canvas bag, a new uniform bought with her last savings, and a wrinkled note with the address. She didn’t ask why the position never lasted long. Rent was due, bills were piling up, and survival didn’t allow questions.
The door was opened by Helen Brooks, the longtime housekeeper, a woman with tired eyes and a voice shaped by disappointment.
“You’re the new one?”
“Yes. I’m Rachel,” she said softly.
Helen led her through the grand foyer—polished marble, a crystal chandelier, expensive silence.
“The man of the house is Daniel Carter,” Helen said. “His wife died two months ago. Since then, Emily hasn’t eaten. Specialists, psychologists, nutritionists—no one’s helped. No one stays more than three days.”
Rachel listened. She understood loss. Five years earlier, her husband had died in a factory accident. She knew the fog, the emptiness, the way pain rewires the world.
“Where is she?” Rachel asked.
“In her room. Always.”
Upstairs, the pink nameplate read Emily. The room looked frozen in time—dolls, stuffed animals, toys abandoned mid-play. Emily sat in an armchair by the window, pale, distant, barely present.