A guard opened the gate and offered a quiet, sympathetic nod.
Jonathan met her with exhaustion written across his face.
“The job is cleaning only,” he said quickly. “My daughters are grieving. I can’t promise calm.”
A loud crash echoed upstairs.
Nora nodded. “I understand grief.”
Six girls stood on the staircase watching her closely.
Hazel, twelve, standing stiff with responsibility.
Brooke, ten, pulling at her sleeves.
Ivy, nine, eyes alert and restless.
June, eight, pale and quiet.
The twins, Cora and Mae, six, smiling too deliberately.
And Lena, three, clutching a torn stuffed rabbit.
“I’m Nora,” she said evenly. “I’m here to clean.”
Hazel spoke first.
“You’re number thirty-eight.”
Nora smiled gently. “Then I’ll start with the kitchen.”
She noticed photos taped to the refrigerator. Maribel cooking. Maribel resting in a hospital bed. Maribel holding Lena.
Grief was not hidden here. It lived openly.
Nora cooked banana pancakes shaped like animals, following a handwritten note tucked into a drawer. She set the plate down and walked away.
When she returned, Lena was eating quietly, eyes wide with surprise.
The twins tested her next.
A rubber toy appeared in the mop bucket. Nora examined it calmly.
“Very realistic,” she said. “But fear needs meaning. You’ll have to try harder.”
They stared at her, unsettled.
When June had an accident during the night, Nora said only, “Fear confuses the body. We’ll take care of it.”
June nodded, relieved.
She sat with Ivy during moments of panic, guiding her breathing until the tension eased.
“How do you know how to do this?” Ivy whispered once.
“Because someone helped me,” Nora replied.
Weeks passed.
