I Thought I Had Just Destroyed My Life — Until He Walked In and Turned the World Upside Down
CHAPTER ONE – THE SMELL THAT DOES NOT ASK FOR PERMISSION
There are certain smells that bypass logic entirely, slipping past reason and memory and going straight for something older, more primitive inside the human brain, and the smell of burning hair is one of them, sharp and sulfurous and unmistakably wrong, the kind of scent that does not belong in clean homes or safe spaces and that announces, without apology, that something living is being damaged.
I was halfway down the east wing corridor of the Hale residence when it hit me, that sudden acrid sting curling into my nostrils, making my stomach lurch before my mind could even catch up, and the basket of freshly folded linens nearly slipped from my hands as an image flashed uninvited through my thoughts: fire, pain, screaming.My name is Lydia Moore, and at that time I was thirty-one years old, three months behind on rent, drowning in medical debt for a mother whose kidneys were failing faster than hope, and employed as a live-in caregiver for one of the most powerful men in the region, Calvin Hale, chairman of Hale Dominion Group, a multinational conglomerate whose name carried enough weight to silence entire rooms.
It was six o’clock on a Tuesday, which in this house meant preparations were underway for one of Calvin’s carefully curated public appearances, tonight a charity gala attended by politicians, donors, and people who smiled with their teeth while calculating leverage behind their eyes, and it also meant that his seven-year-old daughter, Ivy, was supposed to be getting ready under the supervision of his fiancée, Marissa Vaughn.Ivy hadn’t spoken since her mother died.