She thought about her father, the one whose name she carried as a question, not an answer.
His name was Simon. He chose not to stay.
The bus came. She got on. She found a seat by the window. She watched the city go by and let herself feel the thing she always felt when she was about to start something new: a small, steady hope. The kind that does not shout. The kind that simply shows up every time, no matter how many times the world has given it reason not to.
Whatever this new job was, she would do it well. She always did.
Monday came the way Mondays always do, quickly and without asking if you were ready.
Rebecca was up at 5:30. She showered, dressed in clean, simple clothes, and made herself a small breakfast, bread and tea, eaten standing at her kitchen counter because her table was covered with things she had been sorting through the night before. She had wanted to make sure she left her apartment tidy before starting the new job. It felt important somehow, like beginning something properly.
She looked at her mother’s photograph before she left. “Wish me luck,” she said quietly.
The photograph said nothing, of course, but the woman in it was still laughing, still tilting her head back, still looking free.
Rebecca picked up her bag and went downstairs.
She arrived at the villa at 6:55, 5 minutes early. She pressed the bell and waited, her bag over her shoulder, the morning air still cool and smelling faintly of wet grass from somewhere nearby.
The gate opened, but it was not Grace. It was Mr. Caleb himself, dressed already in work trousers and a white shirt, reading glasses pushed up on his head.
He looked at her, then at the small watch on his wrist, then back at her.
“5 minutes early,” he said.
“Good morning, sir,” Rebecca said.
He stepped aside to let her through. “Grace left a folder in the kitchen. Everything she told you is written down in it. The schedule, the shopping list, the house rules. Read it today when you have time.”
He was already turning back toward the house as he spoke.
“Coffee is in the third cabinet on the left. The kettle is already filled.”
“Yes, sir.”
“I take my breakfast at 7:30.” He glanced back once. “Not 7:25. Not 7:40. 7:30.”
“7:30,” Rebecca said.
He nodded and went inside.
Rebecca stood in the garden for just a moment, looking up at the big white house in the early morning light. She breathed in slowly through her nose.
All right, she thought. Let’s begin.
The first day was about learning.
She moved through the house quietly and carefully, the way you move in a place that is not yet yours, touching only what needed to be touched, opening only what needed to be opened. She read Grace’s folder at the kitchen table while the kettle heated. It was 3 pages of neat handwriting, organized exactly the way the kitchen cabinets were organized, everything in its right place.
She prepared Mr. Caleb’s breakfast exactly as Grace had described: scrambled eggs, 2 minutes after turning down the heat, then off; brown toast; orange juice in a glass. She carried it to the dining table at 7:29 and set it down without a sound.
At 7:30, Mr. Caleb walked in, sat down, unfolded his napkin, and looked at the plate. He said nothing, but he picked up his fork and began eating.
That, Rebecca decided, was good enough.
She went back to the kitchen, washed what needed washing, and began the morning’s cleaning.
Grace had been right about the house. Every room had its order. Every surface had its arrangement. Rebecca, who had always been careful and observant, quickly understood the logic of it, not because she was told, but because she paid attention. The paintings in the hallway were hung at exactly the same height. The books on the shelves were not only arranged by size, but loosely by subject. The kitchen towels were folded in thirds, not halves. The mat at the front door was always centered; she could tell by the marks on the floor where it had sat for years.
She cleaned and tidied and replaced everything exactly as she found it.
By midday, the ground floor was done. She had made lunch, a simple plate of rice and stew, which she left on the dining table at exactly 1:00, as the folder had instructed, and was working quietly through the upstairs hallway.
She moved past the guest bedrooms, past the linen cupboard, and stopped at the end of the hall, where a window looked down over the back garden. Below, she could see the mango tree Grace had mentioned. It was large and old, its branches spreading wide and low. A wooden bench sat beneath it in the shade.
It was the 1 part of the garden that looked slightly less controlled than the rest, slightly more natural, as if it had been allowed to simply be. She wondered if Mr. Caleb ever sat there.
Then she went back to her cleaning.
The days settled into a rhythm.
By the end of the first week, Rebecca knew the house the way she knew her own small apartment. Not just where things were, but how they felt: the way the third step on the staircase creaked slightly if you stepped on the left side, the way the morning light moved through the sitting room, starting at the bookshelf and slowly crossing the floor until it reached the far wall by midmorning, the way the whole house went very still between 1:00 and 2:00 when Mr. Caleb ate lunch alone and the hallway clock seemed to tick a little louder.
She learned his rhythms too, the way Grace had warned her she would need to. He was always in his study by 6:00 in the morning. He did not like to be interrupted before 9:00 unless it was urgent. He ate quietly and quickly, without ceremony. He moved through the house with purpose, never wandering, never idle, as if he had decided where he was going before he stood up.
He did not speak much to her beyond what was necessary. A “good morning,” a brief instruction, a quiet “thank you” when she set down his meals. But it was not unfriendly silence. It was simply the silence of a man who had lived alone for a long time and had grown used to the texture of his own company.
Rebecca was comfortable with that. She had her own quiet, after all.
But occasionally, just occasionally, she would look up from her work and find him watching her from across the room, not in a strange way, more like the way a person looks when something has snagged gently on a thought and they have not yet worked out what the thought is.
Each time it happened, he would look away immediately, and so would she.
Neither of them mentioned it.
It was on a Thursday morning in the second week that it happened.
Rebecca was cleaning the study. Mr. Caleb had gone out, one of the rare mornings when he had an early meeting at the office, and the house was entirely quiet in the peaceful way it only ever was when he was not in it.
She worked her way around the room carefully. She dusted the bookshelves, replacing each book exactly as she found it. She wiped down the desk, moving around his papers without touching them. She cleaned the window in long strokes from top to bottom.
Then she turned to the wall of photographs.
She cleaned the frames one by one, lifting each gently, wiping the glass, setting it back. There was the large formal one of Mr. Caleb shaking hands with someone in front of a completed building. There was a group photograph of several men in suits at what looked like an office celebration.
Then she lifted the next one.
It was smaller than the others, in a simple black frame. It showed a young man, maybe in his late 20s or early 30s, standing outside somewhere, looking directly at the camera. He was lean, sharp-eyed, serious even then. Not yet the polished businessman with silver hair and pressed white shirts. Just a young man at the beginning of something.
Rebecca looked at the photograph.
She was not sure how long she stood there. It could not have been more than a few seconds, but something about it held her in a way she could not explain, a strange quiet pull, like hearing a piece of music that feels familiar even though you are certain you have never heard it before.
There was nothing unusual about the photograph. It was simply a young Mr. Caleb, her employer, a man she had known for 2 weeks. And yet she set the frame back exactly where it had been and stood looking at it for 1 more moment before shaking her head slightly, picking up her cloth, and moving on.
She told herself it was nothing. She had no reason not to believe herself.
The following Saturday, everything changed, though not in any way Rebecca could have seen coming.
She was in the kitchen just after 11:00 in the morning washing the breakfast things when she heard a car pull into the driveway. Not Mr. Caleb’s car. A different engine, louder and less smooth. Then a car door slamming. Then a voice, large and cheerful, coming from outside.
“Caleb, come out here, man. I didn’t come all this way to ring a bell.”
Rebecca heard Mr. Caleb’s study chair pushed back. She heard his footsteps, unhurried as always, move down the hallway toward the front door. Then came the sound of the door opening and 2 men greeting each other the way old friends do, not with formality, but with something loud and warm and slightly messy that Mr. Caleb’s house did not usually contain.
“Benjamin,” she heard Mr. Caleb say.
Even in that single word, spoken in his usual even tone, there was something different, something looser.
Rebecca dried her hands on a towel and went to see if she was needed.
Benjamin was nothing like Mr. Caleb. Where Mr. Caleb was contained, Benjamin overflowed. He was a big man with broad shoulders and a wide smile, the kind of laugh that came from the belly and had no interest in being quiet. He was wearing a bright open-collared shirt and carrying a leather travel bag, which he dropped in the middle of the hallway without a second thought. He had the easy, comfortable energy of someone who had spent many years moving between countries and had stopped being surprised by anything.
He and Mr. Caleb were standing in the hallway when Rebecca came around the corner from the kitchen, a small tray in her hands.
“Sir,” she said, looking at Mr. Caleb, “would your guest like something to drink?”
Benjamin turned, and he stopped.
Not dramatically. Not the way people stop in films with wide eyes and sharp breaths. Just a pause, brief and quiet. His smile stayed on his face, but something behind it shifted, the way a light flickers once and then steadies.
He looked at Rebecca. His eyes moved slowly across her face, the way you look at something when your brain is doing a calculation it has not told you about yet. Her eyes, her cheekbones, the shape of her jaw, the way she held herself.
Then the smile came back fully. He shook his head almost imperceptibly, as if answering a question only he had heard, and turned back to Mr. Caleb.
“Water is fine,” he said. “Thank you.”
Rebecca nodded and went back to the kitchen.
Behind her, she heard Benjamin say something quietly to Mr. Caleb. She could not make out the words. Then she heard Mr. Caleb say, “She started last week. Grace recommended her.”
Benjamin gave a short sound, half laugh, half something else she could not read at all.
Rebecca filled 2 glasses of water and carried them back out on the tray. Neither man was looking at her strangely when she returned. Benjamin was already talking about his flight, waving his hand, launching into a story about the airport. Mr. Caleb was listening with the particular expression he used when he was being patient.
Rebecca set the glasses down and left them to it.
Benjamin stayed for lunch.
Rebecca prepared it—grilled fish, rice, and a simple salad—and served it in the dining room. As she moved back and forth from the kitchen, she caught small pieces of their conversation drifting through the doorway: old names, old places, the way people talk when they are reaching back into a shared past and pulling out memories to examine.
She paid it no particular attention. It was not her conversation to listen to.
But then she heard Benjamin’s voice drop into a different register, lower and warmer, the way a voice goes when it is getting close to something real.
“Do you remember those days, Caleb? That last year of school.”
Rebecca was in the kitchen covering a dish. She was not listening. Some of it.
“Some of it,” Mr. Caleb said.
“Some of it,” Benjamin laughed. “You always say that. You remember all of it. You just don’t like to say so.” A pause. “Victoria.”
Benjamin said the name clearly, casually, the way you drop a stone into still water without expecting much.
Rebecca set down the dish cover.
She was not sure why that name made her hands go still. She told herself it was a common name. It meant nothing. She stayed where she was and did not move.
“Benjamin,” she heard Mr. Caleb say. His voice was quiet and careful. A warning, almost.
But Benjamin was already moving forward the way old friends do, the ones who earned the right long ago to say things others would not dare.
“I’m just saying,” Benjamin said with a smile in his voice that Rebecca could hear even from the kitchen. “She was a good girl, Victoria. She deserved better from you, my friend. We both know that.”
He chuckled.
“Running away when she told you she was pregnant? Honestly, Caleb, I was ashamed of you.”
Silence followed, the kind that has weight to it.
“That was a long time ago,” Mr. Caleb said. His voice had gone very flat, very still.
“30 years,” Benjamin agreed. “Exactly.”
He paused, as if considering whether to say the next thing. Then he did.
“You know what’s strange? That girl out there, your new maid.” Another pause. “She looks like her. Victoria. Around the eyes, especially. I noticed it the moment she came around the corner.”
He laughed softly, as if trying to soften the edge of his own words.
“Probably just my imagination working too hard. I’ve been traveling. I’m tired. Ignore me.”
Mr. Caleb said nothing.
“Ignore me,” Benjamin said again, lighter this time. “Pass the salt.”
In the kitchen, Rebecca stood very still. The dish cover was in her hands. The afternoon sun was coming through the window. The clock above the shelf was ticking.
Victoria. She looks like her.
She breathed out slowly through her nose, set the dish cover down, and picked up the water jug that needed refilling. She had a job to do. She would do her job.
She walked back into the dining room with the water jug and refilled both glasses with a steady hand and a calm face, and neither man could have known that their conversation had just landed somewhere inside her like a seed falling into soil, quietly, without fanfare, not yet ready to grow.
That night, long after Benjamin had said his warm goodbyes and driven away in his loud car, Mr. Caleb sat alone in his study. He had not turned on the main light, only the small lamp on the corner of his desk, which threw a warm circle onto the papers in front of him.
He was not reading the papers.
He was sitting back in his chair with his hands folded in his lap and his eyes on something that was not in the room.
She looks like her. Victoria. Around the eyes, especially.Generated image
He had not thought about Victoria in he could not even say how long. Years. Many years. He had been very deliberate about not thinking about her. He was a disciplined man. When he decided not to think about something, he did not think about it.
But Benjamin’s words had slipped past all that discipline the way smoke slips under a closed door. There was nothing to grab onto and push back. They were just words, casually said by an old friend who had probably already forgotten he said them.