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Chapter no 29

The Housemaid

Nina comes home from dropping Cecelia off at camp at around two in the afternoon. Sheโ€™s carrying four large shopping bags from an impromptu spree during the drive home, which she dumps unceremoniously on the living room floor.

โ€œI found theย cutestย little shop,โ€ she tells me. โ€œI just

couldnโ€™t help myself!โ€

โ€œGreat,โ€ I say with forced enthusiasm.

Ninaโ€™s cheeks are flushed, there are sweat stains under her armpits, and her blond hair is frizzy. She still hasnโ€™t taken care of her roots, and the mascara on her right eye is caked in the corner. When I look her over, I genuinely canโ€™t figure out what Andrew sees in her.

โ€œTake those bags upstairs for me, would you, Millie?โ€ She plops down on the leather sofa and takes out her phone. โ€œThanks so much.โ€

I pick up one of the bags and, holy crap, itโ€™s heavy. What kind of shop did she go to? A dumbbell store? This is going to end up being two tripsโ€”I donโ€™t have big guns like Enzo. โ€œKind of heavy,โ€ I comment.

โ€œReally?โ€ She laughs. โ€œI didnโ€™t think so. Maybe itโ€™s time to start going to the gym, Millie. Youโ€™re getting a little soft.โ€

My cheeks burn.ย Iโ€™mย getting soft? Nina doesnโ€™t look like she has an ounce of muscle on her. She never works out, as far as I can tell. Iโ€™ve never seen her even wear sneakers.

As I slowly and painfully make my way to the stairs with two of the shopping bags, Nina calls out to me again, โ€œOh, by the way, Millie?โ€

I clench my teeth. โ€œYes?โ€

Nina rotates on the couch to look up at me. โ€œI called the house line last night. How come nobody answered?โ€

I freeze. My arms tremble under the weight of the shopping bags. โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œI dialed the house phone number last night,โ€ she says slower this time. โ€œAt around eleven oโ€™clock. Answering the house phone is one of your responsibilities. But you and Andrew both didnโ€™t pick up.โ€

โ€œUm.โ€ I put down the shopping bags for a moment and rub my chin, like Iโ€™m thinking about it. โ€œI may have already been asleep by then and the phone isnโ€™t loud enough in my room to wake me up. Maybe Andrew went out?โ€

She arches an eyebrow. โ€œAndrew went out at eleven oโ€™clock on a Sunday night? With whom?โ€

I lift my shoulders. โ€œI have no idea. Did you try his cell?โ€ I know she didnโ€™t. I was with Andrew at eleven oโ€™clock.

We were in bed together.

โ€œI didnโ€™t,โ€ she says, but doesnโ€™t offer any further explanation.

I clear my throat. โ€œWell, as I said, I was in my room at that point. I have no idea what he was doing.โ€

โ€œHmm.โ€ Her pale blue eyes darken as she stares at me across the living room. โ€œMaybe youโ€™re right. Iโ€™ll have to ask him.โ€

I nod, relieved she isnโ€™t questioning me further. She doesnโ€™t know what happened. She doesnโ€™t know we drove into the city together, saw the show she was meant to see with him, and then spent the night together at The Plaza. God only knows what she would do to me if she knew.

But she doesnโ€™t know.

I grab the shopping bags and heave them the rest of the way up the steps. I deposit them in the master bedroom, then rub my arms, which seem to have gone numb during the journey. My eyes are drawn to the master bathroom, which I cleaned this morningโ€”although since Nina was out of town, it was unusually clean already. I slip inside the room. The bathroom is nearly as large as my room upstairs, with a full-size porcelain bathtub. The tub is higher than most tubs, the rim at the level of my knees.

I frown down at the bathtub, imagining what mustโ€™ve happened all those years ago. Little Cecelia, taking a bath in the tub, as it slowly fills up with water. Then Nina grabs her daughter, forcing her under the water, watching her gasp for airโ€ฆ

I close my eyes and turn away from the tub. I canโ€™t think about this. But I can never forget how emotionally fragile Nina is. She can never know what happened between me and Andrew last night. It would destroy her. And then she would destroy me.

So I reach into my pocket and pull out my phone. I punch in a message to Andrewโ€™s cell number:

Just a warning: Nina called the house last night.

Heโ€™ll know what to do. He always does.

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