The Millionaire Hid Cameras to Protect His Paralyzed Son — Until He Saw What the Maid Did
Daniel Carter was sitting at the head of a long oak conference table on the twenty-third floor of a glass tower in downtown Chicago when his life, or what remained of it, began to crack open again. Beyond the wall of windows, the city looked frozen under a gray winter sky. The tops of the skyscrapers disappeared into low clouds.
Lake Michigan was somewhere beyond the haze, cold and steel-colored, and the streets below were crawling with traffic that looked silent from that height. Inside the boardroom, everything was polished, controlled, expensive. The table shone beneath the recessed lights.
The executives around him wore dark suits and careful expressions. A white screen at the far end of the room displayed growth charts, projected revenue, expansion plans, and multimillion-dollar figures. Daniel nodded whenever someone looked his way.
He had spent most of his adult life building Carter Holdings into the kind of company people whispered about in financial circles. He knew how to read a room before anyone spoke. He knew how to close a deal with one sentence.