I thought my weekend would be about dust and laundry—until I found my fired maid’s note: ‘Your husband is a monster.-hongtran

I was still holding my coffee when my husband, Daniel, told me he had fired our housekeeper, Elena.

“She crossed a line,” he said, buttoning his shirt as if the conversation were already over. “We’ll hire someone else next week.”

That was all he gave me. No explanation, no story, no frustration beyond a clipped tone that made it clear he did not want questions. Daniel had always liked control. He was polished, successful, and calm in a way people admired,

but living with him taught me that his calm usually meant he had already decided what everyone else was allowed to know.

Elena had worked for us for almost two years. She was punctual, quiet, and careful with everything in the house. She remembered where I left my earrings, how I liked the guest towels folded, and which flowers triggered my allergies.

Firing her without warning felt wrong, especially because she had texted me two nights earlier to ask whether I wanted the winter blankets washed before storage. Nothing about that message sounded like someone about to be dismissed.

Still, Daniel left for a business trip Friday morning, and I told myself I would just handle things. Until we found a replacement, I would clean the house myself that weekend.

By noon on Saturday, I had stripped the beds, vacuumed the upstairs hallway, and worked my way into the living room. The house felt unusually silent without Elena’s soft footsteps or music playing from her phone in the kitchen.

 I dusted the bookshelves, the mantel, the window ledges, trying not to think about how irritated Daniel had seemed whenever I mentioned her name.

Then, as I lifted a framed family photo from the console table, a folded slip of paper drifted to the floor. I frowned. It was tucked behind the frame, hidden carefully enough that no one would notice unless they moved it.

My name was written on the outside in hurried block letters.

I opened it.

Claire, if you are reading this, I am already gone. Your husband is a monster. Look under the carpet in his office and you will understand everything. Please be careful. — Elena

For a second, I just stood there, staring at the note while my heartbeat pounded in my ears. Daniel’s home office was locked almost every day, but he had forgotten to take the spare key from the kitchen drawer before leaving.

My hands were shaking when I opened the office door, stepped inside, and rolled back the corner of the carpet.

Underneath it was a loose floor vent.

And inside that vent was a stack of photographs, a passport, and a thick envelope with my name on it.

I knelt on the hardwood floor, too stunned to breathe properly.

The passport came first. It belonged to a woman named Megan Carter, but I recognized the face immediately. It was Elena. Same brown eyes, same narrow chin, same small scar near the eyebrow she usually covered with makeup. The name she had given us had been false.

The photographs were worse.

They showed Daniel with several women over the past two years. Not romantic photos. Transactional. Calculated. Daniel entering restaurants, hotels, parking garages, private homes. In some of them, he was passing envelopes.

In others, he looked furious, pointing a finger into a woman’s face while she turned away. Two of the women I didn’t know. One of them I did.

Rachel. My younger sister.

My stomach dropped so hard I nearly gagged.

I grabbed the envelope with my name and tore it open. Inside was a typed letter and a flash drive. The letter was short.

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