It felt like time itself had stopped.
The man stood frozen in the doorway, his eyes locked on the maid. Not on the luxury. Not on the woman in white. Only her—on the floor, shaking, holding her stomach like it was the only thing keeping her alive.
“Explain,” he said, voice low but sharp.
The woman in white stood up slowly, suddenly uneasy.
“She spilled it,” she said quickly. “I simply reacted—”
“Did you throw it?” he interrupted.
Silence.
That silence answered everything.
The man walked forward one step.
Then another.
Each step heavier than the last.
The maid tried to speak again, but pain cut through her breath. She bent slightly forward, protective instinct tightening around her belly.
“I didn’t mean—” she whispered.
The man dropped to one knee beside her instantly.
For the first time, his voice softened.
“Are you hurt?”
She shook her head weakly, but her eyes said otherwise.
Behind them, the woman in white stiffened.
“This is unnecessary drama,” she said coldly. “She’s just a maid.”
That sentence changed the air.
The man slowly stood up.
And when he turned, his expression was no longer calm.
It was final.
“Just a maid?” he repeated.
His voice dropped.
“She’s carrying my child.”
The room shattered into silence again—but this time it was different.
The woman froze.
Her confidence broke in real time.
The maid lifted her head slightly, confused… shocked… unable to process what she just heard.
The man walked toward her and gently offered his hand.
“No one touches you again,” he said quietly.
The woman in white took a step back.
For the first time, she wasn’t in control anymore.
