“My mother was dying. My fiancé was sleeping with my sister. My father had frozen the only money that could save her. At the hospital, the final notice for my mother's $75,000 medical bill burned in my hand. I tried to access her trust fund, her last hope, but my father had frozen it. Weeks ago, I'd found my fiancé Colby in bed with my half-sister Anabel, plotting to use me. Now, Anabel called, inviting me to celebrate her engagement to Colby. At the Waldorf Astoria, she flaunted her diamond, making a public spectacle of my humiliation. My father, siding with them, coldly dismissed my pleas, leaving my mother's life hanging by a thread. Stripped of everything by my own family, a top Johns Hopkins student was now forced to abandon pride. I applied for a private caregiver job, a desperate gamble for the $50,000 advance that could save my mother. The catch: a silent, traumatized child, a demanding, mysterious employer, and a forbidden third floor. This wasn't just a job; it was a battle for survival, and I would fight.”