It was nearly two in the morning inside the old colonial mansion on the outskirts of town when the silence shattered. A sharp, desperate scream tore through the halls, echoing off the walls and sending chills through the few staff members still awake. Once again, it came from Leo’s bedroom.
Leo was only six years old, yet his eyes carried a tiredness far beyond his age. That night—like so many others—he struggled against his father’s grip. James, an exhausted businessman still wearing his wrinkled suit, dark circles carved deep beneath his eyes, held his son by the shoulders with patience already worn thin.
“Enough, Leo,” he snapped hoarsely. “You’re sleeping in your bed like a normal kid. I need rest too.”
With a rough motion, he pressed the boy’s head down onto the perfectly arranged silk pillow at the head of the bed. To James, it was just an expensive pillow—another symbol of the success he had worked so hard to build.
But to Leo, it was something else entirely.
The moment his head touched the pillow, Leo’s body arched as if shocked by electricity. A scream ripped from his throat—not a tantrum, not defiance, but pure pain. His hands clawed upward, trying to lift his head as tears streamed down his already red face.
“No, Dad! Please! It hurts! It hurts!” he sobbed.
James, blinded by exhaustion and outside influence, saw only misbehavior.
“Stop exaggerating,” he muttered. “Always the same drama.”
He locked the door from the outside and walked away, convinced he was enforcing discipline—never noticing the quiet figure who had witnessed everything.
Standing in the shadows was Clara.
Clara was the new nanny, though everyone called her Mrs. Clara. Gray hair pulled into a simple bun, hands worn by years of work, and eyes that missed nothing. She had no degrees, no office—but she knew children’s cries better than most professionals. And what she had just heard was not the cry of a spoiled child. It was the cry of someone being hurt.
Since arriving at the mansion, Clara had noticed things others ignored. By day, Leo was gentle and sweet. He loved drawing dinosaurs and hiding behind curtains to scare her with shy laughter. But when evening came, fear took over. He clung to doorframes, begged not to go to his room, tried to fall asleep anywhere but his bed—the couch, the hallway rug, even a hard kitchen chair.