My name is Avery. For years, my life had been summed up by the squeak of wax and the dim gleam of marble floors. It wasn’t my dream life, I admit, but it was the only way I could pay for my grandmother’s nursing home. She had given me everything; now I was giving her the only peace she could buy with a domestic worker’s salary.
The place where I worked wasn’t a house but a monument to opulence. A modern estate stretching across acres of the most coveted land outside of Santa Ridge, Arizona.
Stone columns, windows blazing under the desert sun, and gardens so manicured they looked digitally rendered. It was the residence of Mr. Harrison Beaumont, a man whose name was synonymous with power, fortune, and—tragically—quiet suffering.
But inside, beneath all the marble and crystal chandeliers, lived a silence that weighed on the chest. Not peaceful silence—heavy silence. Suffocating.
It was Caleb’s silence.
Caleb Beaumont was Harrison’s only son, just eight years old, and deaf since birth.
During the hours I spent polishing the mahogany or changing the silk sheets, I often found him tucked into the quietest corners of that enormous estate. A small boy with deep, sad eyes who kept one hand instinctively resting near his right ear.
The contrast between Caleb’s world and mine felt almost absurd. Harrison Beaumont had spent fortunes that could have funded a small country. He took Caleb to the most prestigious clinics:
Zurich, Boston, Seoul.
Specialists renowned across the globe had examined him—MRIs, advanced auditory studies, neuro evaluations.
Every single one concluded the same frostbitten truth:
Irreversible.
“Caleb cannot hear. Nothing can be done.”
But Harrison couldn’t accept it. His shoulders seemed to sag lower after every failed medical trip. His wife had died giving birth to Caleb. The boy was all he had left—his last thread of love, his living memory of her. Seeing his son trapped in a silent prison was Harrison’s private torment, a hell paved with millions of dollars spent for nothing.
I—Avery, twenty-seven, without a degree, without credentials—was the answer he never expected.