A Nanny’s Testimony Exposed What Happened Inside Blackwood Mansion-habe

The Blackwood mansion was never quiet in the way ordinary houses were quiet.

It had staff moving behind paneled doors, security radios whispering in clipped code, and cars rolling through iron gates at all hours of the day.

But on the afternoon Serena Montigue hurt Ethan, the silence inside the marble vestibule felt manufactured.

Image

It felt like everyone in the house had been trained to disappear.

Lily had worked there for six months.

Six months was not long enough to become family on paper, but it was long enough to learn a baby’s entire language.

Ethan cried differently when he was hungry than when he was scared.

He pressed two fingers against Lily’s collarbone when he wanted to be carried.

He slept only if his blue blanket was tucked under his left elbow, and he made a tiny complaining sound whenever someone tried to replace it with the newer white one Serena had bought because it photographed better.

Lily had not expected to love him.

She had taken the position because her mother needed help with rent and because the agency said Victor Blackwood paid on time, asked few questions, and kept a staff so formal that no nanny would ever be alone in the house.

The agency had not mentioned Serena.

Serena Montigue entered Lily’s life as a perfume cloud and a perfect smile.

She called Lily “sweetheart” in front of Victor and “the girl” when Victor was out of the room.

She kissed Ethan on the forehead when cameras were present and wiped her lipstick off his skin the moment the photographer turned away.

At first Lily told herself Serena was nervous.

A woman about to marry a man like Victor Blackwood had reasons to be controlled.

Victor was feared in Chicago, not because he raised his voice, but because people who crossed him tended to find doors closing all over the city at once.

He had money, lawyers, men who answered on the first ring, and a reputation that made restaurant owners stand straighter when he entered.

Yet with Ethan, Victor was almost painfully gentle.

He removed his cufflinks before lifting the baby.

He warmed bottles himself when he came home late.

He once stood in the nursery at 1:04 a.m. with his shirt sleeves rolled up, listening while Lily explained that Ethan’s fever had broken and that the pediatrician at St. Agnes Pediatric Center had said not to panic unless his breathing changed.

Victor had not forgotten that.

Read More