1The Billionaire Pretended to Be Asleep to Test the New Maid… But What She Did Left Him Breathless When Rodrigo Cárdenas was told that eleven maids had quit in just eight months, he didn’t even turn around.

Part 2

By noon, Elena Salgado understood why the mansion felt less like a home and more like a museum that had been built around a wound.

Everything inside the Cárdenas residence was expensive, silent, and strangely untouched. The floors shone like dark water. The chandeliers glittered even when they were off. White orchids stood in glass vases along the corridors, arranged so perfectly they looked artificial.

But there were no family photographs.

No laughter coming from a television.

No shoes abandoned near a sofa.

No smell of breakfast lingering from the kitchen.

Only order.

Perfect, polished, unbearable order.

Mrs. Herrera walked ahead of Elena with her hands clasped behind her back.

“You will arrive at six thirty every morning,” she said. “You will leave at six unless requested otherwise. You will not speak unless spoken to. You will not ask personal questions. You will not bring visitors. You will not enter Mr. Cárdenas’s private rooms unless instructed.”

Elena nodded.

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“And if Mr. Cárdenas seems…” Mrs. Herrera paused, choosing the word with care. “Unpleasant, you will not take it personally.”

Elena almost smiled. “I won’t.”

Mrs. Herrera turned and looked at her.

“Everyone says that on the first day.”

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There was no kindness in the warning, but there was tiredness.

Elena saw it then. Beneath the older woman’s severe posture and sharp tone, Mrs. Herrera was exhausted. Not physically. Spiritually. Like someone who had spent too long guarding the entrance to a tomb.

They stopped outside the locked door at the far end of the second floor.

Unlike the other doors, this one had a small brass plate, polished clean but empty of a name. A thin line of dust lay along the threshold, untouched.

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Elena’s eyes lingered there only a second.

Mrs. Herrera noticed.

“You do not look at that door,” she said.

Elena lowered her gaze.

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“I understand.”

“No,” Mrs. Herrera said quietly. “You don’t. But perhaps that is better.”

A sound came from downstairs.

A door closing.

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Not loud, but final.

Mrs. Herrera straightened instantly.

“Mr. Cárdenas has returned.”

The air changed.

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It was not fear exactly, but everyone in the house seemed to tighten at once. A gardener visible through the window stopped trimming the hedge. A kitchen assistant lowered her voice. Somewhere in the hall, a young man carrying fresh linens stepped back against the wall as if making room for a storm.

Rodrigo Cárdenas entered the foyer wearing a black suit and the expression of a man who had forgotten there were other people in the world.

He was tall. More imposing in person than in magazines. His hair was dark, carefully combed, touched with the faintest silver at the temples. His face was beautiful in a hard way, all angles and shadows, but his eyes were what made Elena still.

They were not cruel.

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They were empty.

“Sir,” Mrs. Herrera said.

Rodrigo removed one leather glove and handed it to a waiting attendant without looking.

“This is the new maid?” he asked.

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Elena stepped forward.

“Yes, Mr. Cárdenas. My name is Elena Salgado.”

His eyes moved over her once. Not with interest. Not with warmth. With assessment. Like he was inspecting whether a replacement part would fail.

“You read the rules?”

“Yes, sir.”

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“You understand them?”

“Yes.”

“Then don’t disappoint me.”

He walked away before she could answer.

Mrs. Herrera exhaled almost silently.

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Elena watched him disappear toward the study.

“He doesn’t like new staff,” Mrs. Herrera said.

Elena looked at the closed study door.

“I don’t think he likes anything.”

For the first time all morning, Mrs. Herrera’s mouth almost twitched.

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“Be careful, girl. You notice too much.”

The rest of the day passed in careful silence.

Elena learned the rhythm of the mansion. The silver was counted every Friday. The sheets in the west wing were changed even though no one slept there. Mr. Cárdenas took coffee at seven, untouched most days. Lunch was prepared, delivered to his study, and returned half-eaten. Dinner was worse. Usually nothing but soup, sometimes not even that.

At three, while dusting the main library, Elena found a small toy beneath a velvet chair.

A wooden rabbit.

It was no bigger than her palm, painted white once, though much of the color had worn away. One ear was chipped. A faded pink ribbon hung around its neck.

Elena froze.

The library was immaculate. Nothing was misplaced here. Nothing accidental survived in this house.

She picked it up gently.

A strange ache moved through her chest.

Before she could decide what to do, a voice cut through the room.

“Put it down.”

Elena turned.

Rodrigo stood in the doorway.

His face had changed. The emptiness was gone, replaced by something sharp and dangerous.

“I’m sorry,” Elena said immediately. “I found it under the chair. I didn’t mean—”

“Put it down.”

She obeyed, placing the rabbit carefully on the side table.

Rodrigo crossed the room in three long strides and snatched it up, as if the toy might vanish if he waited. For one second, his hand trembled.

Then he closed his fist around it.

“You do not touch personal objects in this house,” he said.

“I understand.”

“No, you don’t.” His voice lowered. “You people never understand. You come into this house pretending to respect rules, pretending you only want work. Then curiosity begins. Drawers open. Doors are tested. Private things are handled.”

Elena kept her eyes steady.

“I wasn’t stealing.”

“I didn’t ask for your defense.”

Heat rose in her cheeks, but she swallowed it.

Rodrigo looked at her as though expecting tears, excuses, fear. When none came, his jaw tightened.

“You may leave early today,” he said.

Mrs. Herrera appeared behind him, alarmed.

“Sir—”

“I said she may leave.”

Elena untied her apron slowly.

“Of course, Mr. Cárdenas.”

She walked out with her back straight.

But in the servants’ corridor, her hands began to shake.

Not because he had shouted.

Because of the way he had held that toy.

Like a man clutching a bone pulled from his own chest.

That night, Carmen was sitting upright when Elena came home.

“You’re early.”

Elena placed her bag on the table. “I found something I shouldn’t have.”

Carmen’s brows lifted.

“Money?”

“A toy.”

The old woman was quiet for a moment.

“Ah.”

Elena sank into the chair beside her.

“There was a little girl, wasn’t there?”

Carmen took her time answering.

“In houses that rich, tragedy becomes gossip before the funeral flowers dry.”

Elena stared at her grandmother.

“You know?”

“Everyone knows a piece. No one knows the whole thing.” Carmen adjusted the blanket over her knees. “His wife died in a car accident. The daughter too. Three years ago. Rainy night. Road to Santiago.”

Elena closed her eyes.

The mansion suddenly made sense.

The silence.

The locked room.

The untouched things.

“And the maids?” she asked.

Carmen’s expression darkened.

“That part, people whisper about. They say some left crying. Some were fired. One claimed she heard a child singing behind a locked door.”

Elena opened her eyes.

“A child?”

“Grief has many voices,” Carmen said. “Not all of them are ghosts.”

Elena said nothing.

Carmen leaned closer.

“Do you want to go back?”

Elena thought of the medicine bottles on the kitchen shelf. The overdue rent notice folded under a magnet on the refrigerator. Her grandmother’s breath catching at night.

Then she thought of the wooden rabbit.

“Yes,” Elena said. “I’m going back.”

The next morning, Mrs. Herrera looked surprised to see her.

“You returned.”

“I was scheduled.”

“Most would not have.”

“I need the job.”

Mrs. Herrera studied her. “Need is not the same as endurance.”

“No,” Elena said. “But it teaches it.”

From that day on, Rodrigo watched her.

Elena felt it even when he said nothing. His eyes followed her when she crossed the foyer with fresh towels. He noticed whether she paused near the study. He noticed whether she looked at the locked door. He noticed whether she touched anything that did not belong to her.

So Elena did her work.

Only her work.

She polished the dining table until the dark wood reflected the ceiling. She aired rooms no one entered. She repaired a loose button on a guest cushion because she could not bear seeing it hang by a thread. She found old water stains on the piano and removed them with patient hands.

She did not smile too much.

She did not ask questions.

But she listened.

Not to secrets. To the house.

By the end of the week, she knew which staircase creaked on the fifth step. She knew Mr. Cárdenas slept poorly because his bedroom lamp stayed on past midnight. She knew he hated lilies because every arrangement containing them disappeared by afternoon. She knew someone still ordered a small carton of chocolate milk every Tuesday and that no one drank it.

On Friday evening, rain began to fall.

It tapped against the tall windows like nervous fingers.

Elena was in the laundry room folding towels when the lights flickered once. Then again.

A second later, the mansion went dark.

Somewhere upstairs, something crashed.

Mrs. Herrera called from the corridor, “Stay where you are.”

But then Elena heard another sound.

A low, strangled gasp.

Not from a servant.

From the direction of Rodrigo’s study.

She moved before thinking.

The study door was ajar.

Inside, Rodrigo stood beside his desk, one hand braced against the edge, the other pressed to his chest. Papers had scattered across the floor. A glass lay shattered near his feet.

“Mr. Cárdenas?”

“Get out,” he rasped.

“You’re hurt.”

“I said get out.”

But his face was pale, slick with sweat. His breath came too fast, shallow and broken.

Elena stepped closer.

“Are you having chest pain?”

He glared at her. “Do not touch me.”

“I studied nursing.”

That made him pause.

“Sit down,” she said, her voice changing. Firm now. Controlled. “Right now.”

“I don’t take orders from—”

“You do if you want to keep breathing.”

His eyes flashed with anger.

Then another wave hit him. His knees buckled.

Elena caught his arm before he fell and guided him into the chair.

“Mrs. Herrera!” she shouted. “Call Dr. Márquez. Now.”

Rodrigo tried to stand.

Elena pressed one hand to his shoulder.

“Don’t.”

For one strange second, they stared at each other in the dark, lit only by lightning.

No one had touched him like that in years.

Not carefully.

Not without wanting something.

Not without fear.

Rodrigo stopped fighting.

Elena checked his pulse. Fast. Irregular, but not catastrophic. Panic, perhaps. Triggered by the storm. By memory.

“Breathe with me,” she said.

He laughed bitterly, breathless. “You think breathing fixes everything?”

“No. But not breathing fixes nothing.”

His mouth tightened.

She inhaled slowly.

After a moment, unwillingly, he followed.

The rain grew harder.

Thunder rolled over the mansion.

Rodrigo closed his eyes, and beneath the sharp lines of his face, Elena saw something terrible: not power, not arrogance, not cruelty.

A man trapped in the exact second his life ended.

Dr. Márquez arrived twenty minutes later, soaked and irritated. He examined Rodrigo in the study while Mrs. Herrera hovered near the door.

“Panic episode,” the doctor said finally. “Blood pressure elevated. Exhaustion. Again.”

Rodrigo looked away.

Dr. Márquez snapped his medical bag shut.

“I have told you before. You cannot continue like this.”

“I pay you for treatment, not lectures.”

“You pay me very well, so you get both.”

Elena lowered her eyes to hide a smile.

Rodrigo noticed.

After the doctor left, Mrs. Herrera escorted Elena toward the staff exit.

At the door, Rodrigo’s voice stopped her.

“Salgado.”

She turned.

He stood in the study doorway.

“You said you studied nursing.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Why did you stop?”

The question struck too close.

“My grandmother became ill.”

“So you chose domestic work.”

“I chose survival.”

His eyes shifted, briefly, to Mrs. Herrera, then back to Elena.

“You handled the situation adequately.”

From him, it sounded almost like gratitude.

Elena nodded.

“Good night, Mr. Cárdenas.”

On Monday, her responsibilities changed.

No one announced it officially, but Elena began finding tasks assigned closer and closer to Rodrigo’s private spaces. She brought coffee to the hallway outside his study. Then into the study itself. She organized the bookshelves on the east wall while he worked. She watered the plant near his bedroom balcony.

And Rodrigo kept testing her.

A gold watch left carelessly on a table.

A half-open drawer with bank envelopes inside.

A phone abandoned beside the sofa, screen glowing with messages.

A stack of confidential documents placed where she could not avoid seeing them.

Elena touched none of it.

But the tests grew stranger.

One afternoon, she entered the study to collect an untouched lunch tray and found Rodrigo asleep on the leather sofa.

Or pretending to be.

His breathing was too controlled. His arm was positioned too deliberately. A book lay open on his chest, but his fingers were not relaxed.

Elena knew instantly.

Mrs. Herrera’s warning echoed in her mind.

Rich people don’t trust anyone who looks too kind too quickly.

On the desk, in plain sight, lay an envelope thick with cash.

Beside it, a silver key.

Elena’s eyes moved from the key to Rodrigo.

The forbidden room.

So this was the real test.

For a moment, the house seemed to hold its breath.

Elena walked to the desk.

Rodrigo’s eyelids did not move.

She picked up the lunch tray, then paused.

The soup was untouched. The coffee was cold. Beside the sofa, a small prescription bottle sat unopened.

Elena set the tray down.

Then, instead of taking the money, instead of touching the key, instead of leaving, she went to the closet near the window and removed a folded blanket.

Rodrigo did not move.

She crossed to the sofa and gently placed the blanket over him.

He almost flinched.

Elena noticed, but pretended not to.

“You’ll wake with a stiff neck,” she murmured, so softly he could barely hear.

Then she looked at the coffee table.

Dust had gathered around a framed photograph lying face down.

Elena hesitated.

The rule was clear.

Do not touch personal objects.

But the frame had fallen partly over the edge. If it slipped, the glass would break.

Carefully, using both hands, she lifted it just enough to place it flat again.

For one second, the photograph faced upward.

A woman with bright eyes and windblown hair smiled at the camera. Beside her stood Rodrigo, younger, softer, laughing at something outside the frame.

Between them was a little girl with curls and a missing front tooth.

She held the wooden rabbit.

Elena’s throat tightened.

She turned the frame face down again exactly as she had found it.

Then she did the thing no one in that house had done for three years.

She began to sing.

Not loudly.

Not dramatically.

Just under her breath, while collecting the tray.

A lullaby.

Old and simple.

The kind women sang in kitchens, on buses, beside sickbeds, beside cradles.

“Duérmete, mi niña…”

Rodrigo stopped breathing.

Elena continued, unaware.

“Duérmete, mi sol…”

The words floated through the study like dust in afternoon light.

Rodrigo’s hands curled beneath the blanket.

He was no longer in the study.

He was in a bedroom painted pale yellow, rain tapping against the windows, his daughter refusing to sleep unless Lucía sang twice, always twice. He was standing in the doorway after a late meeting, loosening his tie, watching his wife brush curls from their child’s forehead.

Lucía had laughed softly and whispered, “She has your stubbornness.”

And Rodrigo had said, “Then she will conquer the world.”

The memory struck so hard it was almost physical.

Elena reached the final line and stopped.

Silence returned.

But it was not the same silence.

This one had cracked open.

She lifted the tray and turned toward the door.

“Salgado.”

Rodrigo’s voice was rough.

Elena froze.

He opened his eyes.

For a moment, neither spoke.

“You knew I was awake,” he said.

“Yes.”

“And you still did not take the money.”

“No.”

“Or the key.”

“No.”

“Why?”

Elena looked toward the silver key on the desk, then back at him.

“Because locked doors are usually locked for a reason.”

Something unreadable crossed his face.

“And the song?”

Her expression softened despite herself.

“My grandmother used to sing it to me. I sing it to her when the pain is bad.”

Rodrigo sat up slowly, the blanket sliding to his lap.

“My wife sang that song to my daughter.”

“I’m sorry.”

His eyes sharpened. “Do not say that.”

Elena held his gaze.

“Then I won’t.”

He seemed almost irritated that she obeyed.

“You saw the photograph.”

“Only because it was falling.”

“And?”

“She was beautiful.”

Rodrigo looked away.

“Elisa,” he said after a long pause. “My daughter’s name was Elisa.”

Elena did not move.

It was the first personal thing he had offered her. Maybe the first he had offered anyone in years.

“She was four,” he added.

The words seemed to scrape his throat raw.

Elena lowered the tray.

“She had your eyes.”

Rodrigo’s face tightened.

For a second, she thought he might order her out.

Instead, he asked, “Do you believe in ghosts, Salgado?”

Elena thought of Carmen’s oxygen machine in the dark. Of memories that sat beside you in empty rooms. Of grief that touched your shoulder when no one was there.

“Yes,” she said. “But not always the kind people mean.”

A faint, bitter smile appeared and vanished.

“You speak like someone older than you are.”

“And you sleep like someone afraid of dreams.”

The air went still.

Elena realized too late that she had crossed a line.

Rodrigo stood.

The blanket fell to the floor.

For one heartbeat, the old hardness returned to his face.

Then, quietly, he said, “Leave the tray.”

She did.

At the door, he spoke again.

“Tomorrow morning, come early.”

Elena turned.

“Why?”

His eyes moved toward the ceiling, toward the second floor, toward the locked room.

“Because I am opening a door.”

Elena slept badly that night.

At dawn, she arrived while the sky was still violet over San Pedro.

Mrs. Herrera was waiting in the foyer.

Her face looked pale.

“Did he tell you?” Elena asked.

Mrs. Herrera nodded.

“You don’t have to go in.”

“He asked me to.”

“That room has broken stronger people than you.”

Elena glanced up the staircase.

“Maybe they tried to enter it alone.”

Mrs. Herrera’s eyes softened, just for a moment.

Rodrigo appeared at the top of the stairs.

He wore no suit jacket. Only a white shirt with the sleeves rolled to his forearms. In his hand was the silver key.

He did not greet them.

He walked to the end of the hallway.

Elena followed.

Mrs. Herrera stayed several steps behind, one hand pressed to her chest.

At the locked door, Rodrigo stopped.

For a long time, he simply stared.

Elena heard his breathing change.

“You don’t have to do it today,” she said.

His jaw tightened.

“Yes,” he whispered. “I do.”

The key entered the lock.

The sound was small.

The effect was enormous.

The door opened with a soft sigh.

Dust and lavender drifted out.

Elena stepped inside after him.

The room was a child’s bedroom.

Frozen in time.

Pale yellow walls. White curtains. Shelves full of picture books. A tiny pair of red shoes near the wardrobe. Stuffed animals arranged on the bed, waiting faithfully for a child who would never return.

On the pillow lay another wooden rabbit.

Not the chipped one from the library.

A second one.

Newer.

Unbroken.

Rodrigo stared at it as if he had been struck.

Mrs. Herrera gasped behind them.

“That wasn’t there,” she whispered.

Rodrigo turned slowly.

“What?”

Mrs. Herrera’s face had gone white.

“That rabbit. It was not on the pillow when I locked this room.”

Elena felt cold spread through her body.

Rodrigo stepped closer to the bed and picked up the toy.

A folded piece of paper was tied around its neck with a pink ribbon.

His fingers stiffened.

“Elisa couldn’t write,” he said.

No one answered.

He untied the ribbon and opened the note.

Elena saw the color drain from his face.

“What is it?” she asked.

Rodrigo read the words once.

Then again.

His voice, when it came, was barely human.

“It says… ‘Papá, I waited.’”

Mrs. Herrera crossed herself.

Elena’s heart pounded.

Rodrigo looked up, eyes burning with shock, grief, and something far more dangerous.

Hope.

Then, from somewhere deep inside the room, a music box began to play by itself.

A delicate, broken melody filled the air.

Elena recognized it instantly.

The same lullaby she had sung in the study.

Rodrigo turned toward the wardrobe.

The door was open by one inch.

And from the darkness inside came the soft sound of a child laughing.

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