The sound did not drift through the house so much as strike it, echoing off polished stone and vaulted ceilings as if the walls themselves were pleading for someone to listen. At three in the morning, the mansion on the edge of Lake Briarwood should have been silent, resting behind its gates like a museum after closing hours. Instead, the cry of an infant cut through the air with a sharpness that made sleep impossible.

Lillian Parker stood just outside the nursery with her fingers curled around the brass handle, her heart beating faster with every scream. She had worked in large homes before, places where money spoke louder than concern, and she had learned early that the safest way to survive was to remain unseen and unremarkable. Still, there was something in that cry that would not allow her to step away.

It was not the sound of hunger or impatience. It carried strain, desperation, and a kind of exhausted panic that made Lillian’s chest tighten. She had helped raise her younger cousins, she had soothed babies through fevers and nightmares, and she knew the difference between discomfort and distress. This was distress.