The New York skyline shimmered through the tall windows of the penthouse as Dominic Hayes, one of the city’s youngest billionaires, reclined in his leather chair. Outside, the flash of cameras caught models leaving the building with forced smiles and hidden tears.
Dominic had a rule that governed his personal life. He only involved himself with women untouched by past relationships. To him, this was not love, not intimacy, only a way to maintain control over a life that constantly demanded perfection. It was power, nothing else.
That evening, his usual housekeeper could not come in. A replacement arrived. Aaliyah Monroe, twenty-five years old, a single mother from Brooklyn, stepped quietly into the penthouse carrying a mop and bucket. Her sneakers were worn, her uniform frayed at the edges, yet her posture was straight, and her eyes met his without hesitation.
Dominic observed her. There was something about the calm precision in her movements that unsettled him. She did not look at him with fear or admiration. She did not act as though he were the world. She simply did her work.
“You are new,” he said, his voice controlled.
“Yes, sir,” she replied. “I am here to clean.”
Her answer lingered longer than he expected. Usually, women in his life reflected his power or served to please him. Aaliyah carried neither. Only dignity.
As she worked, Dominic noticed her reflection in the polished marble. For the first time in years, he was not drawn to her body but to her presence. To the way she hummed softly under her breath, a tune reminiscent of lullabies his mother once sang. He felt no need for control. He felt observed. Seen.
Weeks passed, and Aaliyah returned on her regular schedule. Dominic pretended to work in his study, yet every sound—the clatter of dishes, the soft laughter from her phone conversations—pulled him toward her. He began asking small questions about her life, her child, her dreams. She answered politely but kept a careful distance.
One night, a sudden blackout trapped them in the penthouse. City lights flickered below, and Aaliyah moved to the window. “It is beautiful,” she murmured. “But lonely up here, is it not?”
Dominic froze. No one had ever acknowledged the emptiness that gnawed at him. She saw it without judgment.