Not with romance.
Not with a miracle.
With pain.
With stubbornness.
With a poor girl in a maid’s uniform and a millionaire’s son who has forgotten how to believe anyone can see him without pity.
The first night, he stands for only three seconds.
You lock your arms around his waist. He leans heavily against you, taller than you expected, trembling so hard you think both of you will fall. His feet barely hold him. His breath breaks. His body remembers weight but not trust.
“One,” you count.
His hands grip your shoulders.
“Two.”
His face twists with pain.
“Three.”
Then his knees buckle.
You guide him back into the wheelchair before he collapses, and for a moment both of you just breathe.
Alejandro stares at his legs.
You expect anger.
Instead, one tear slips down his cheek.
He wipes it away fast, furious with himself.
“I stood,” he whispers.
You nod.
“You stood.”
The next night, he makes it to four seconds.
The night after that, five.
By the end of the first week, he can stand long enough for you to count to ten.
Nobody knows.
Not Doña Isabella DeVega, who floats through charity lunches in designer dresses while pretending her oldest son is “resting.”
Not Don Richard DeVega, who owns hotels, shopping centers, private clinics, and half the political favors in Los Angeles.
Not the butler, Mr. Sterling, whose footsteps you learn to recognize from two hallways away.
And especially not Alejandro’s younger brother, Damian.