PART 3 — What the Housekeeper Told Me
I carried Timmy all the way to the car even though he was technically too big for me to hold that long now.
I didn’t care.
His little arms were wrapped tightly around my neck like he thought if he let go, someone might take him back.
By the time I buckled him into the backseat, he looked exhausted.
Not physically.
Emotionally.
Like he’d spent two days trying very hard not to cry.
I climbed into the driver’s seat and immediately called my husband.
The moment he answered, I said, “I’m bringing Timmy home.”
A pause.
“What happened?”
I looked back at our son.
He was staring silently out the window.
“She’s been terrorizing those kids.”
Silence.
Then: “What?”
I told him everything.
The lines.
The punishments.
The pool incident.
The crying children.
By the end, my husband sounded stunned.
“That doesn’t sound like Mom.”
“Yes,” I snapped before I could stop myself. “That’s the problem. It does. We just never wanted to see it.”
I hung up before he could answer.
But instead of pulling away immediately, I noticed someone walking quickly down the driveway toward my car.
The housekeeper.
Maria.
I recognized her vaguely from holidays. Quiet woman. Probably late fifties. Always polite. Always invisible in the way wealthy families sometimes expect staff to be.
She glanced nervously toward the house before reaching my window.
“Please,” she whispered urgently, “roll it down.”
I cracked the window slightly.
Maria’s hands were shaking.
“You need to listen carefully,” she said.
Every instinct in my body went alert.
“What is it?”
Her eyes filled with something dangerously close to guilt.
“She only invites the children she thinks need to be corrected.”
A chill spread through my chest.
“What do you mean?”
Maria looked back toward the estate again before lowering her voice even more.
“The quiet ones. The emotional ones. The children she calls weak.”
I felt sick.
“She believes she’s fixing them.”
The words landed like ice water.
Maria swallowed hard.
“She did it to your husband too.”
I froze.
“What?”
“When he was little, he cried often after his grandfather died,” she whispered. “Your mother-in-law hated it. She said softness destroys boys.”
Suddenly so many things about my husband made terrible sense.
His discomfort with emotion.
The way he shut down during conflict.
The way he apologized constantly for crying when we first dated.
Things I once thought were personality traits.
Maybe they weren’t.
Maria’s voice trembled now.
“Some children leave here different.”
I stared at her.
“What happened here?”
She hesitated.
Then said quietly:
“Two summers ago, one of the older boys climbed out a second-floor window trying to run away.”
My heart stopped.
“What?”
“He broke his arm.” Her eyes filled with tears. “The family called it an accident.”
The world tilted around me.
And suddenly those perfect family vacations sounded less like tradition…
and more like something carefully hidden.
Then Maria grabbed my wrist suddenly.
“There’s something else,” she whispered.
Her face had gone completely pale.
“She kept a notebook.”
My stomach tightened.
“What kind of notebook?”
Maria looked directly into my eyes.
“One where she writes evaluations about every child.”
Then she whispered the sentence that made my blood run cold:
“And your son’s name was already highlighted in red.”