When the sixteenth caregiver left the house in tears, abandoning her shoes by the front steps and refusing to even look back, Josh Piercewood finally admitted what he had denied for over a year. His wealth, his intelligence, and his reputation meant nothing inside his own home.
The mansion in Bellevue had once been filled with warmth and motion, but now it felt hollow, as if sound itself hesitated before entering. The walls were lined with photographs of a smiling woman whose presence could still be felt but no longer touched. Josh stood alone in the hallway, listening to the echo of a door slamming shut, knowing that another attempt had failed.
At forty years old, Josh was a celebrated figure in the world of artificial intelligence. He led a company whose algorithms shaped financial markets and medical systems. He negotiated with senators and investors with unshakable calm. Yet none of that prepared him for the sight of his children unraveling one by one after their mother’s death.
His wife Rebecca had passed away fourteen months earlier, and with her went the fragile balance that had held the family together. She had known how to translate fear into reassurance, grief into gentleness. Josh had tried to step into her place, but grief had made him rigid where she had been fluid.
Their youngest child, Molly, barely spoke anymore, whispering instead to broken toys she refused to throw away. The twins, Evan and Lucas, erupted into daily battles that left bruises and broken furniture behind. Grace, nine years old, attempted to replace her mother by taking on responsibilities far beyond her years, while Thomas, the eldest at eleven, retreated into silence, his gaze distant and guarded.