Elena's day had been exhausting. Scrubbing floors, dusting chandeliers, polishing silver the mansion seemed endless. Every corner held another room, another shadow, another mystery.
But one hallway had caught her attention: the one leading to the east wing.
It was quiet, almost unnervingly so. The air grew cooler as she stepped closer, and she could have sworn she heard whispers - soft, indistinct, as if the walls themselves were breathing.
Her curiosity flared. Why was it off-limits? What could be in there?
She hesitated, hand hovering over the cold, ornate doorknob. Then, a soft voice behind her made her jump.
"Elena."
She spun around. Mrs Marlene's sharp gaze pierced her.
"Do not even think about going in there," Mrs Marlene said firmly.
"It is not a place for anyone - especially not you."
Elena's cheeks flushed. "I-I wasn't going to..." she stammered.
But Mrs Marlene's eyes held a warning she couldn't ignore.
"Curiosity in this house can be dangerous. The master does not tolerate it. You understand?"
Elena nodded quickly, but inside, a tiny spark of defiance flickered.
She had questions, yes. And some of them wouldn't let her rest.
Mrs Marlene sighed, almost as if she were weary of repeating this warning for the hundredth time.
"Your job is simple: clean, serve, observe the rules. That wing is forbidden. Do not disobey."
Elena forced a polite smile, though her mind kept wandering back to the locked doors, the cold shadows, the mystery behind them.
Later that evening, while cleaning the grand hallway, Elena glanced again toward the east wing. The mansion was quiet, the lights dimmed. Her heartbeat quickened.
From somewhere above, she heard the steady, heavy footsteps she was beginning to recognize - Adrian moving through his private domains. The sound reminded her that she was intruding into his world, and every step she took could be noticed.
Shaking off her curiosity, she continued her work, mopping and dusting as instructed. But the image of the dark hallway lingered in her mind, drawing her like a magnet.
Why is he so protective of that wing? she wondered.
What could possibly be behind those locked doors?
Elena didn't know it yet, but her first brush with the forbidden east wing was just the beginning a spark that would eventually ignite a fire she couldn't put out, and a secret that could change everything between her and the cold billionaire whose eyes never left her
Elena was exhausted. The endless polishing, dusting, and arranging had left her arms sore and her back aching. She paused for a moment in the grand hallway, taking a deep breath and wiping the sweat from her forehead.
She had almost forgotten about the vase - the priceless antique sitting on the pedestal in the corner of the main foyer.
"Just a little closer... careful," she muttered to herself, adjusting its angle to match the other decorations.
And then - disaster.
Her hand slipped. The vase wobbled, tottered, and tumbled to the marble floor with a crash.
Elena froze. The sound echoed like thunder in the cavernous mansion. Her stomach dropped.
Oh no, oh no, oh no...
Before she could even move, the coldest voice she had ever heard in her life cut through the silence:
"Elena."
Her heart stopped. She spun around to see Adrian Harrington standing at the top of the grand staircase, arms crossed, eyes dark with icy fury.
"You broke it," he said simply, but every word was laced with controlled rage.
"I-I'm so sorry, sir! I didn't mean to! I'll pay for it! I swear!" Elena stumbled over her words, her cheeks burning.
Adrian descended the stairs slowly, each step deliberate, like a predator closing in on its prey. He stopped a few feet from her, and the air between them grew thick, almost suffocating.
"This was not just a vase," he said quietly, his voice almost chilling in its calmness.
"It belonged to my family for generations. Do you understand?"
Elena nodded frantically. "Y-yes, sir! I understand! Please forgive me! I didn't mean it!"
Adrian's eyes studied her, sharp and unyielding. And for a fraction of a second, Elena thought she saw... something else. Something fleeting. Was it curiosity? Concern?
"Make sure it never happens again," he said finally, turning sharply and walking away.
Elena exhaled shakily, sinking to her knees to clean up the shattered pieces. Her hands trembled, not just from fear, but from the strange flutter in her chest.
He hadn't yelled. He hadn't hit her. Yet, his presence had been... electric.
She realized, with a mix of dread and fascination, that she was already thinking about him too much - the man whose gaze could make her feel exposed and alive all at once.
And little did she know, this small mistake had done more than break a vase.
It had broken the beginning of a boundary between her and the billionaire - a boundary that would slowly, painfully, and irresistibly be tested in the days to come.
Elena wasn't meant to be in that part of the mansion.
She had finished her morning chores early and decided to explore-just a little. The mansion was enormous, full of corridors, locked doors, and rooms she had never seen. Curiosity tugged at her like a child pulling at her sleeve.
She wandered down a quiet hallway lined with tall windows, sunlight spilling across the polished floor. That was when she heard it.
A sound-soft, haunting, delicate.
Piano music.
Elena paused. It was not the kind of melody one played for fun. It sounded... lonely. Heavy. Almost aching.
Her feet moved before her mind decided anything, carrying her toward the half-open double doors.
Inside, a grand piano sat beneath a chandelier, the keys moving beneath long, elegant fingers.
Adrian Harrington.
Elena froze, breath caught in her throat.
He wasn't wearing a suit this time. Just a black shirt with the sleeves rolled to his forearms-revealing veins, strength, vulnerability she had never noticed before. His eyes were closed, his expression soft, almost fragile.
She had never imagined a man like him could look... breakable.
A board creaked under Elena's foot.
The music stopped instantly.
Adrian's head snapped up. His expression shifted-a brief flash of shock, then a cold mask sliding back into place.
"What are you doing here?" His voice was low, controlled. But something else lived beneath it-something he didn't want her to hear.
She swallowed.
"I-I heard the music, sir. I didn't mean to intrude."
His jaw tightened.
"This room is off-limits."
"I'm sorry," she whispered, backing away.
But Adrian stood from the piano, taking a slow step toward her. Not threatening-focused. Studying her in a way that made her pulse race.
"Who told you to wander the house?"
"No one," she admitted, cheeks burning. "I finished my chores and-"
He cut her off sharply.
"This house is not a playground. It's full of things you don't understand."
Elena lowered her gaze. "Yes, sir."
There was silence. A long, heavy one.
Then Adrian exhaled-quiet, irritated, but not at her.
"Don't walk alone in the east wing. Ever."
Elena frowned. "Why? What's there?"
His eyes hardened instantly.
"Nothing you need to know."
But she saw something flicker in them. Pain. Memories. A warning.
She nodded softly. "Okay."
Adrian should have left then. But he didn't.
Instead, he looked at her for a long moment, as if trying to figure out why she had been able to hear the music-because no one else ever did. He closed the piano lid gently, almost reverently, then cleared his throat.
"Go back to your duties."
"Yes, sir."
She stepped back toward the hallway-and felt his gaze on her until she disappeared behind the door.
Once she was gone, Adrian exhaled, pressing a hand to the piano.
"No one was supposed to hear that again," he murmured.
But someone did.
And that changed everything.