The baby of the poor cleaner would not stop crying, no matter what her mother tried. “Please, Ivy… not today,” Lena Brooks whispered, her voice breaking as the sharp cries echoed through the marble halls of the mansion. The baby had been crying for more than twenty minutes, her tiny chest heaving, the sound cutting through every corner of the estate in São Paulo. Lena had only been working there for three days. She paced the long hallway with her daughter in her arms, her dark hands trembling. She had begged the supervisor to let her bring the baby after the woman who usually watched her fell suddenly ill. Now every desperate cry felt like one step closer to losing the only job she had. Her face burned with shame and exhaustion as she tried everything—offering a bottle, shaking an old stuffed toy, humming the lullaby her grandmother once sang. Nothing worked. Ivy arched her back, waved her fists, and screamed louder. Other staff members exchanged annoyed looks, whispering as if Lena herself were the problem. The tension grew heavier by the second, and Lena knew that if she couldn’t calm her baby, she could lose everything.
That was when heavy footsteps came down the grand staircase. The hallway fell silent—everyone except Ivy. Marcus Hale, the reclusive billionaire owner of the mansion, appeared at the top of the stairs. Tall, broad-shouldered, sleeves rolled up, he scanned the scene with unreadable eyes until they landed on Lena, sweating and shaking as she clutched her crying child. “What’s going on?” he asked. His voice wasn’t cruel, but it carried enough weight to freeze the room. The supervisor rushed in with excuses, but Marcus barely listened. His focus stayed on Lena and the frantic baby. “Have you tried everything?” he asked quietly. Lena nodded, humiliated, apologizing and saying her daughter never cried like this. Then Marcus said something she never expected. “Let me try.” For a moment, she thought she’d misheard. The owner of the mansion wanted to hold her baby. Her heart pounded as he held out his arms—steady, patient, almost gentle. With trembling hands, Lena placed Ivy against his chest.