The Housemaid: Part 1 – Chapter 1
The Housemaid: An absolutely addictive psychological thriller with a jaw-dropping twist
âTell me about yourself, Millie.â
Nina Winchester leans forward on her caramel-colored leather sofa, her legs crossed to reveal just the slightest hint of her knees peeking out under her silky white skirt. I donât know much about labels, but itâs obvious everything Nina Winchester is wearing is painfully expensive. Her cream blouse makes me long to reach out to feel the material, even though a move like that would mean Iâd have no chance of getting hired.
To be fair, I have no chance of getting hired anyway.
âWellâ¦â I begin, choosing my words carefully. Even after all the rejections, I still try. âI grew up in Brooklyn. Iâve had a lot of jobs doing housework for people, as you can see from my resume.â My resume. âAnd I love children. And alsoâ¦â I glance around the room, looking for a doggy chew toy or a cat litter box. âI love pets as well?â
The online ad for the housekeeper job didnât mention pets. But better to be safe. Who doesnât appreciate an animal lover?
âBrooklyn!â Mrs. Winchester beams at me. âI grew up in Brooklyn, too. Weâre practically neighbors!â
âWe are!â I confirm, even though nothing could be further from the truth. There are plenty of coveted neighborhoods in Brooklyn where youâll fork over an arm and a leg for a tiny townhouse. Thatâs not where I grew up. Nina Winchester and I couldnât be more different, but if sheâd like to believe weâre neighbors, then Iâm only too happy to go along with it.
Mrs. Winchester tucks a strand of shiny, golden-blond hair behind her ear. Her hair is chin-length, cut into a fashionable bob that de-emphasizes her double chin. Sheâs in her late thirties, and with a different hairstyle and different clothing, she would be very ordinary-looking. But she has used her considerable wealth to make the most of what sheâs got. I canât say I donât respect that.
I have gone the exact opposite direction with my appearance. I may be over ten years younger than the woman sitting across from me, but I donât want her to feel at all threatened by me. So for my interview, I selected a long, chunky wool skirt that I bought at the thrift store and a polyester white blouse with puffy sleeves. My dirty-blond hair is pulled back into a severe bun behind my head. I even purchased a pair of oversized and unnecessary tortoiseshell glasses that sit perched on my nose. I look professional and utterly unattractive.
âSo the job,â she says. âIt will be mostly cleaning and some light cooking if youâre up for it. Are you a good cook, Millie?â
âYes, I am.â My ease in the kitchen is the only thing on my resume that isnât a lie. âIâm an excellent cook.â
Her pale blue eyes light up. âThatâs wonderful! Honestly, we almost never have a good home-cooked meal.â She titters. âWho has the time?â
I bite back any kind of judgmental response. Nina Winchester doesnât work, she only has one child whoâs in school all day, and sheâs hiring somebody to do all her cleaning for her. I even saw a man in her enormous front yard doing her gardening for her. How is it possible she doesnât have time to cook a meal for her small family?
I shouldnât judge her. I donât know anything about what her life is like. Just because sheâs rich, it doesnât mean sheâs spoiled.
But if I had to bet a hundred bucks either way, Iâd bet Nina Winchester is spoiled rotten.
âAnd weâll need occasional help with Cecelia as well,â Mrs. Winchester says. âPerhaps taking her to her afternoon lessons or playdates. You have a car, donât you?â
I almost laugh at her question. Yes, I do have a carâitâs I have right now. My ten-year-old Nissan is stinking up the street in front of her house, and itâs where I am currently living. Everything I own is in the trunk of that car. I have spent the last month sleeping in the backseat.
After a month of living in your car, you realize the importance of some of the little things in life. A toilet. A sink. Being able to straighten your legs out while youâre sleeping. I miss that last one most of all.
âYes, I have a car,â I confirm.
âExcellent!â Mrs. Winchester claps her hands together. âIâll provide you with a car seat for Cecelia, of course. She just needs a booster seat. Sheâs not quite at the weight and height level to be without the booster yet. The Academy of Pediatrics recommendsâ¦â
While Nina Winchester drones on about the exact height and weight requirements for car seats, I take a moment to glance around the living room. The furnishing is all ultra-modern, with the largest flat-screen television Iâve ever seen, which Iâm sure is high definition and has surround-sound speakers built into every nook and cranny of the room for optimal listening experience. In the corner of the room is what appears to be a working fireplace, the mantle littered with photographs of the Winchesters on trips to every corner of the world. When I glance up, the insanely high ceiling glows under the light of a sparkling chandelier.
âDonât you think so, Millie?â Mrs. Winchester is saying.
I blink at her. I attempt to rewind my memory and figure out what she had just asked me. But itâs gone. âYes?â I say.
Whatever I agreed to has made her very happy. âIâm pleased you think so too.â
âAbsolutely,â I say more firmly this time.
She uncrosses and re-crosses her somewhat stocky legs. âAnd of course,â she adds, âthereâs the matter of reimbursement for you. You saw the offer in my advertisement, right? Is that acceptable to you?â
I swallow. The number in the advertisement is more than acceptable. If I were a cartoon character, dollar signs would have appeared in each of my eyeballs when I read that advertisement. But the money almost stopped me from applying for the job. Nobody offering that much money, living in a house like this one, would ever consider hiring me.
âYes,â I choke out. âItâs fine.â
She arches an eyebrow. âAnd you know itâs a live-in position, right?â
Is she asking me if Iâm okay with leaving the splendor of the backseat of my Nissan? âRight. I know.â
âFabulous!â She tugs at the hem of her skirt and rises to her feet. âWould you like the grand tour then? See what youâre getting yourself into?â
I stand up as well. In her heels, Mrs. Winchester is only a few inches taller than I am in my flats, but it feels like sheâs much taller. âSounds great!â
She guides me through the house in painstaking detail, to the point where Iâm worried I got the ad wrong and maybe sheâs a realtor thinking Iâm ready to buy. It a beautiful house. If I had four or five million dollars burning a hole in my pocket, I would snap it up. In addition to the ground level containing the gigantic living room and the newly renovated kitchen, the second floor of the house features the Winchestersâ master bedroom, her daughter Ceceliaâs room, Mr. Winchesterâs home office, and a guest bedroom that could be straight out of the best hotel in Manhattan. She pauses dramatically in front of the subsequent door.
âAnd here isâ¦â She flings the door open. âOur home theater!â
Itâs a legit movie theater âin addition to the oversized television downstairs. This room has several rows of stadium seating, facing a floor-to-ceiling monitor. Thereâs even a popcorn machine in the corner of the room.
After a moment, I notice Mrs. Winchester is looking at me, waiting for a response.
âWow!â I say with what I hope is appropriate enthusiasm.
âIsnât it marvelous?â She shivers with delight. âAnd we have a full library of movies to choose from. Of course, we also have all the usual channels as well as streaming services.â
âOf course,â I say.
After we leave the room, we come to a final door at the end of the hallway. Nina pauses, her hand lingering on the doorknob.
âWould this be my room?â I ask.
âSort ofâ¦â She turns the doorknob, which creaks loudly. I canât help but notice the wood of this door is much thicker than any of the others. Behind the doorway, thereâs a dark stairwell. âYour room is upstairs. We have a finished attic as well.â
This dark, narrow staircase is somewhat less glamorous than the rest of the houseâand would it kill them to stick a lightbulb in here? But of course, Iâm the hired help. I wouldnât expect her to spend as much money on my room as she would on the home theater.
At the top of the stairs is a little narrow hallway. Unlike on the first floor of the house, the ceiling is dangerously low here. Iâm not tall by any means, but I almost feel like I need to stoop down.
âYou have your own bathroom.â She nods at a door on the left. âAnd this would be your room right here.â
She flings open the last door. Itâs completely dark inside until she tugs on a string and the room lights up.
The room is tiny. Thereâs no two ways about it. Not only that, but the ceiling is slanted with the roof of the house. The far side of the ceiling only comes about up to my waist. Instead of the huge king-size bed in the Winchestersâ master bedroom with their armoire and chestnut vanity table, this room contains a small single cot, a half-height bookcase, and a small dresser, lit by two naked bulbs suspended from the ceiling.
This room is modest, but thatâs fine with me. If it were nice, it would be a certainty I have no shot at this job. The fact that this room is kind of crappy means maybe her standards are low enough that I have a teeny, tiny chance.
But thereâs something else about this room. Something thatâs bothering me.
âSorry itâs small.â Mrs. Winchester pulls a frown. âBut youâll have a lot of privacy here.â
I walk over to the single window. Like the room, itâs small. Barely larger than my hand. And it overlooks the backyard. Thereâs a landscaper down thereâthe same guy I saw out at the frontâhacking at one of the hedges with an oversized set of clippers.
âSo what do you think, Millie? Do you like it?â
I turn away from the window to look at Mrs. Winchesterâs smiling face. I still canât quite put my finger on whatâs bothering me. Thereâs something about this room thatâs making a little ball of dread form in the pit of my stomach.
Maybe itâs the window. It looks out on the back of the house. If I were in trouble and trying to get somebodyâs attention, nobody would be able to see me back here. I could scream and yell all I wanted, and nobody would hear.
But who am I kidding? I would be lucky to live in this room. With my own bathroom and an actual bed where I could straighten my legs out all the way. That tiny cot looks so good compared to my car, I could cry.
âItâs perfect,â I say.
Mrs. Winchester seems ecstatic about my answer. She leads me back down the dark stairwell to the second floor of the house, and when I exit that stairwell, I let out a breath I didnât realize I was holding. There was something about that room that was very scary, but if I somehow manage to get this job, Iâll get past it. Easily.
My shoulders finally relax and my lips are forming another question when I hear a voice from behind us:
âMommy?â
I stop short and turn around to see a little girl standing behind us in the hallway. The girl has the same light blue eyes as Nina Winchester, except a few shades paler, and her hair is so blond that itâs almost white. The girl is wearing a very pale blue dress trimmed in white lace. And sheâs staring at me like she can see right through me. Right through my .
Do you know those movies about the scary cult of, like, creepy kids who can read minds and worship the devil and live in the cornfields or something? Well, if they were casting for one of those movies, this girl would get the part. They wouldnât even have to audition her. They would take one look at her and be like, , âCece!â Mrs. Winchester exclaims. âAre you back already from your ballet lesson?â
The girl nods slowly. âBellaâs mom dropped me off.â
Mrs. Winchester wraps her arms around the girlâs skinny shoulders, but the girlâs expression never changes and her pale blue eyes never leave my face. Is there something wrong with me that I am scared this nine-year-old girl is going to murder me?
âThis is Millie,â Mrs. Winchester tells her daughter. âMillie, this is my daughter, Cecelia.â
Little Ceceliaâs eyes are two little pools of the ocean. âItâs nice to meet you, Millie,â she says politely.
Iâd say thereâs at least a twenty-five percent chance sheâs going to murder me in my sleep if I get this job. But I still want it.
Mrs. Winchester pecks her daughter on the top of her blond head, and then the little girl scurries off to her bedroom. She doubtless has a creepy doll house in there where the dolls come to life at night. Maybe one of the dolls will be the one to kill me.
Okay, Iâm being ridiculous. That little girl is probably extremely sweet. Itâs not her fault sheâs been dressed in a creepy Victorian ghost-childâs outfit. And I love kids, in general. Not that Iâve interacted with them much over the last decade.
Once we get back down to the first floor, the tension leaves my body. Mrs. Winchester is nice and normal enoughâfor a lady this richâand as she chatters about the house and her daughter and the job, Iâm only vaguely listening. All I know is this will be a lovely place to work. I would give my right arm to get this job.
âDo you have any questions, Millie?â she asks me.
I shake my head. âNo, Mrs. Winchester.â
She clucks her tongue. âPlease, call me Nina. If youâre working here, I would feel so silly with you calling me .â She laughs. âLike Iâm some sort of rich old lady.â
âThank youâ¦Â Nina,â I say.
Her face glows, although that could be the seaweed or cucumber peel or whatever rich people apply to their faces. Nina Winchester is the sort of woman who has regular spa treatments. âI have a good feeling about this, Millie. I really do.â
Itâs hard not to get caught up in her enthusiasm. Itâs hard not to feel that glimmer of hope as she squeezes my rough palm in her baby smooth one. I want to believe that in the next few days, Iâll get a call from Nina Winchester, offering me the opportunity to come work at her house and finally vacate Casa Nissan. I want to believe that so badly.
But whatever else I can say about Nina, sheâs no dummy. Sheâs not going to hire a woman to work and live in her home and take care of her child without doing a simple background check. And once she doesâ¦
I swallow a lump in my throat.
Nina Winchester bids a warm goodbye to me at the front door. âThank you so much for coming by, Millie.â She reaches out to clasp my hand in hers one more time. âI promise youâll be hearing from me soon.â
I wonât. This will be the last time I set foot in that magnificent house. I should never have come here in the first place. I should have tried for a job I had a chance of getting instead of wasting both of our time here. Maybe something in the fast-food industry.
The landscaper who I saw from the window in the attic is back on the front lawn. Heâs still got those giant clippers and heâs shaping one of the hedges right in front of the house. Heâs a big guy, wearing a T-shirt that shows off impressive muscles and just barely hides the tattoos on his upper arms. He adjusts his baseball cap and his dark, dark eyes lift briefly from the clippers to meet mine across the lawn.
I raise my hand in greeting. âHi,â I say.
The man stares at me. He doesnât say hello. He doesnât say âquit trampling my posies.â He just stares at me.
âNice to meet you too,â I mutter under my breath.
I exit through the electronic metal gate that encircles the property and trudge back to my car/home. I look back one last time at the landscaper in the yard, and he is still watching me. Thereâs something in his expression that sends a chill down my spine. And then he shakes his head, almost imperceptibly. Almost like heâs trying to warn me.
But he doesnât say a word.