Ethan Carter’s mansion in Lagos was breathtaking, a palace of marble floors, towering gates, and endless rooms. But behind the polished beauty lived three six-year-olds who turned every day into chaos: Daniel, David, and Diana.
In less than five months, Ethan had hired and lost twelve nannies. Some left in tears, others stormed out in frustration, and one swore she would never work in a private mansion again. The children screamed, ignored rules, and destroyed everything within reach. Their mother had passed away during childbirth, and despite his wealth and influence, Ethan never found a way to restore peace to his home.
She was thirty-two, a widow, with calm eyes and a tightly packed nylon bag under her arm. She wasn’t there because of luxury or status. Her only reason was her daughter, Deborah, who lay in a hospital bed with a heart condition. Naomi needed the income to keep her child alive.
The housekeeper, exhausted from training caregivers who never stayed, handed her a uniform without ceremony.
“Start in the playroom,” she said quietly. “You’ll see.”
As soon as Naomi entered, she saw the devastation. Toys covered the floor, juice streaked the walls, and the triplets bounced on the sofa as if it were a trampoline.