My Family Forced Me to Become a Maid at 17—But Every Night, I Secretly Entered the Millionaire’s Son’s Room

He has never said your name like that before.

Like it is something gentle.

“What?”

“I took a step.”

“You did.”

“I took a step.”

“You did,” you say again, smiling so hard your face hurts.

His eyes shine.

And in that moment, you forget the mansion.

You forget the uniform.

You forget the family that sold your future for eight hundred dollars a month and called it gratitude.

For one perfect second, you are simply two young people kneeling on a bedroom floor, staring at a miracle nobody else believed in.

But miracles attract danger.

The first sign comes from Mr. Sterling.

You are leaving Alejandro’s room at 1:12 a.m. when the butler appears at the end of the hall.

Your heart stops.

He stands beneath a wall sconce, tall and thin, his silver hair perfectly combed even in the middle of the night.

“Maria,” he says.

You clutch the empty tray in your hands.

“Mr. Sterling.”

“What are you doing on the third floor at this hour?”

Your mouth goes dry.

“Mr. Alejandro was thirsty.”

“At one in the morning?”

“Yes, sir.”

His eyes move to the door behind you.

“His medical schedule does not require nighttime service.”

You lower your head.

“I’m sorry, sir.”

He watches you for so long you feel sweat form beneath your collar.

Then he says, “Do not become attached to things that are not yours.”

The words are quiet.

Almost kind.

That makes them worse.

You nod and walk past him, forcing yourself not to run.

The next night, you tell Alejandro.

He goes still.

“Sterling knows something.”