When a Maid’s Baby Reached for Chicago’s Most Feared Man, Everything Cracked-kieutrinh

No one in Chicago believed Stellan Cross had a heart.

They believed he had money.

They believed he had men.

Image

They believed he had judges who misplaced evidence, city officials who returned calls after midnight, and enemies who vanished into rumors before their names could make the morning news.

But a heart was different.

A heart was something human, and people had stopped using that word for Stellan Cross a long time ago.

Selene Hart learned his rules before she ever saw his face.

Keep your eyes down.

Never ask questions.

And if Mr. Cross enters a room, become as invisible as the furniture.

Mrs. Thornbury gave those instructions on Selene’s first morning at the estate while the two of them stood in a back hallway that smelled like lemon polish, steam, and money.

The Cross mansion sat behind iron gates, but once Selene was inside, it felt less like a home than a silent hotel no guest had survived.

The marble was always cold.

The windows were always clean.

The old books in the office were dustless, and the locked boxes on the shelves looked as if they had not been opened by anyone who expected forgiveness.

Selene did not need forgiveness.

She needed a paycheck.

She had three months of rent hanging over her, a refrigerator that hummed louder than it cooled, and an eleven-month-old daughter whose medicine cost more than Selene made in two shifts cleaning houses that were not hers.

Fern had come into the world eight weeks early.

For two months, Selene slept in chairs beside a NICU crib and learned the language of machines before she ever learned the rhythm of her baby’s breathing.

She knew the chirp of the monitor when Fern’s oxygen dipped.

She knew the squeak of the nurse’s shoes at 3:00 a.m.

She knew the smell of hand sanitizer so well that sometimes, months later, she would catch it in a grocery store and feel her stomach drop.

Fern survived, but survival left paperwork.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *