The Nanny Smelled One Bottle And Uncovered A Mansion’s Secret-kieutrinh

The first time Eliana Cruz saw the Holloway mansion, the ocean was the loudest thing on the property.

It hit the rocks below the cliff in slow gray bursts, steady and indifferent, while black SUVs sat in the driveway and a small American flag near the entrance snapped in the wind.

The house looked like the kind of place where nothing could go wrong without someone being paid to fix it.

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Glass walls.

Private security.

Staff with earpieces.

A front door so heavy it opened like a bank vault.

Eliana stood on the stone path with her worn canvas suitcase beside her and wondered, not for the first time, whether rich people made houses big because they were trying not to hear each other.

Then she heard the child cry.

It was not loud.

It was not the full-bodied, furious cry of a toddler who wanted a toy or a snack or his father.

It was a thin sound, swallowed almost before it reached the hallway, and something in Eliana’s chest tightened.

Children who cried like that had usually learned the room did not belong to them.

Rowan Mercer was three years old, but he looked smaller than that when she entered the nursery.

His pale curls lay soft against his forehead.

His face was narrow.

His eyes drifted past people instead of landing on them, as if eye contact had become another thing that cost too much energy.

A monitor hummed beside him.

The room smelled of antiseptic, baby lotion, salt air, and expensive laundry detergent.

Under all of that, faint enough that Eliana could not place it yet, there was another smell.

Bennett Holloway stood behind her near the door.

He was forty-three, broad-shouldered, and dressed like a man who had already taken three business calls before breakfast.

People called him a visionary in newspapers.

They called him impossible in boardrooms.

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