—“Damn it! What on earth do you think you’re doing? Filthy. Revolting. That’s something you never touch.
You serve it. You watch it. But you never hold it.”
Nathaniel Blake’s words cut like shattered glass. He stormed into the room, ripping the infant from Maya Williams’s arms with such force it knocked the breath from her chest.
“No, please, she had just dozed off.”
“She wouldn’t stop crying.” “I don’t care,” he snapped. “You’re the help. Not her mother. You’re nothing.”
Nothing.
The baby shrieked the instant she was torn from Maya’s breast. It sounded like something inside her cracked.
Her tiny fists clawed at empty space. Her cries were sharp, piercing, desperate.
“Shh. Lily. Shh. It’s all right, sweetheart.”
“I’m here,” Nathaniel shouted.
But her sobs only grew wilder, her bo:dy writhing, face flushed and gasping.
“Why won’t she stop?” Maya froze, heart pounding.
“I’ve tried everything,” she whispered. “She only sleeps in my arms. That’s the truth.”
He didn’t answer. He just stood stiffly, his daughter’s wails rising higher.
“Give her back,” Maya said, low but firm.
His jaw latched.
“I said give her back. She’s frightened. You’re frightening her.”
Nathaniel looked at the baby, then at Maya. His gaze was cold, yet beneath it flickered something else—uncertainty, reluctance… then surrender.
He placed Lily back in her arms. The baby curled into Maya’s chest instantly, as though her body remembered where safety lived. Within half a minute, the sobs dwindled into shaky hiccups, then faded into fragile sleep.
Maya cradled her tightly, lowering herself onto the rug, rocking gently, murmuring without thought,
“I’ve got you. I’ve got you, my love.”
Nathaniel didn’t move. He stood silent, watching.
That night, not a word was spoken, but the house felt colder. Hours later, Maya laid Lily in her crib. She never closed her own eyes.
By dawn, Mrs. Delaney found her in the nursery corner, wide awake, hands trembling.
“Just sleep beside her,” the older woman whispered, glancing at the peacefully dreaming child.
Nathaniel said nothing at breakfast. His tie was crooked, his coffee untouched.
The second night, Maya tucked Lily in and stepped away. The child screamed. Mrs. Delaney rushed in. Nathaniel tried. Nothing soothed her.
Only when Maya returned, whispering with open arms, did Lily settle.
On the third night, Nathaniel lingered outside the nursery door. He didn’t step in. He listened. No screaming. Just a faint lullaby, half-hummed.
He knocked softly.
“Maya.”
She opened.
“I need to speak with you.”
She slipped out, shutting the door carefully behind her.
“I owe you an apology,” Nathaniel admitted.
Silence.
“Why?” Maya asked evenly—neither tender nor harsh, just steady.
“Because of the way I spoke. Because of what I said. It was cruel. It was wrong.”
“Lily knows truth,” she replied.
“She doesn’t care about status or money. She only needs warmth.”
“I know. She… she won’t rest unless she feels safe.”
“I know,” she repeated. “And she’s not the only one.”
“I’m sorry, Maya.”
A beat of quiet.
“I won’t quit,” she said. “Not because of you. Because she relies on me.”
“I hope you’ll stay,” he murmured. “For her.”
“For her,” Maya echoed.
Yet inside him, something unbarred. Something he thought buried for good. He didn’t trust himself. But Lily did. And for now, that was enough.
The next morning, Maya Williams moved through the home like a shadow. The dining table gleamed, polished spotless. Fresh coffee scented the air.
Neither Nathaniel Blake nor Mrs. Delaney spoke as Maya transferred with a folded blanket in her arms.
“Good morning,” she said evenly, eyes straight ahead.
Mrs. Delaney gave a stiff nod. Nathaniel looked up from his tablet, jaw rigid, lips tight. He said nothing. It didn’t matter.
Maya wasn’t there for kindness. She wasn’t predicting warmth. She was there for the baby.