The Nanny Who Spilled Coffee And Saved The Romano Family Twice-eirian

Beatrice Gallagher arrived at the Romano estate twenty minutes early because she was terrified of being late.

She had ironed her navy dress twice that morning, then stood in front of her cracked apartment mirror and wondered if the fabric was too honest.

The dress did not hide her stomach.

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It did not apologize for her hips.

It simply fit her, which somehow felt more dangerous than anything else.

The agency had warned her that Dominic Romano was private, demanding, and impossible to please.

By the time Beatrice reached the porch, sweat had loosened the curls pinned at the back of her neck.

She pressed her leather portfolio to her chest and whispered that she could do hard things.

The doors opened before she could knock.

The foyer beyond them was white marble, glass, steel, and silence.

It looked less like a home than a museum where children would be fined for breathing too loudly.

“Shoes off,” a woman said from the staircase.

Beatrice looked up.

Cassandra Dupont descended in a cream silk dress and a look that had been sharpened for sport.

Beatrice knew her face from magazine covers in grocery store lines.

“Mr. Romano does not tolerate dirt on Italian marble,” Cassandra said.

Beatrice bent to unbuckle her heels.

Her fingers were damp.

The clasp stuck.

Her portfolio slipped.

It hit the floor with a slap that seemed to echo through the whole house.

Papers shot across the marble.

Crayons rolled in every direction.

A wrapped granola bar skidded beneath a console table.

Then her iced coffee thermos cracked open and sent a brown puddle spreading toward Cassandra’s perfect shoes.

Beatrice dropped to her knees.

“I am so sorry,” she said, grabbing tissues from her bag. “I can clean it. I have napkins. I have a stain stick somewhere. I have, apparently, no dignity left.”

Cassandra laughed.

“Dominic asked for a nanny, not a bakery truck.”

Beatrice felt heat crawl up her neck, but she kept her eyes on the mess.

She had been laughed at in school hallways, on buses, in dressing rooms, and once by a doctor who assumed every problem in her life began and ended with weight.

Then a low voice came from the study doorway.

“What happened here?”

Dominic Romano stood there in a charcoal suit, motionless and unsmiling.

The house seemed to lean toward him.

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