“Mom!”
They crashed into her, wrapping their arms tightly around her waist.
The boy—around eight—was frail, his body thin. He coughed, a dry, painful sound that didn’t belong to a child.
The girl—no more than five—was barefoot. Her small feet were covered in dirt, her oversized dress hanging loosely from her shoulders.
Elena dropped her bag and knelt, gathering them into her arms.
“I’m here,” she whispered, pressing kisses to their heads. “I’m here.”
Andrew felt something tighten in his chest.
This… was her reality?
The woman who made his floors shine like glass… who quietly wiped away the evidence of his wealth each morning…
She returned home to this.
Andrew instinctively stepped back.
But his foot struck something—a crushed metal can.
It rattled loudly across the ground.
The noise broke the moment apart.
Elena turned around at once.
Her entire posture shifted in an instant—warmth replaced by alert tension. She moved in front of her children, shielding them.
Her eyes widened when she saw who it was.
“Mr. Whitman…”
Her voice shook.
“Please… don’t fire me.”
The words rushed out, as if she had been holding them back for far too long.
“I can explain everything. I just— I needed the job. I didn’t want you to know—”
The little girl tugged gently at her sleeve, looking up with wide, uncertain eyes.
“Mom…” she whispered. “Is he bad?”
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