The Secret That Made a Beverly Hills Heir Try to Stand Again-iwachan

Maria Fernanda was seventeen when her family decided her childhood had become too expensive. In East Los Angeles, dreams were treated like luxuries, and luxuries were the first things cut when rent came due.

She had one year left of high school. Her notebooks were full of lesson plans she invented for imaginary students, because Maria wanted to become a teacher. She believed classrooms could save people.

Her mother believed money saved people faster. On a Friday morning at 5:12 a.m., she placed a plastic grocery bag on the kitchen table and told Maria she was leaving school.

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The job paid two thousand dollars a month with room and board included. To Maria’s parents, that sounded like rescue. To Maria, it sounded like a sentence being read aloud.

Her father made the decision final by smashing a glass against the floor. “If you can’t earn money, you’re useless,” he shouted. Maria remembered the scrape of glass under the stove more than the words.

The next morning, she arrived in Beverly Hills with three shirts, two skirts, and a heart so full of shame she could barely breathe through it.

The DeLuca mansion stood behind iron gates, surrounded by gardens, polished stone, fountains, and cars Maria had only seen on television. It looked like a palace, but the air inside felt colder than money should allow.

Mrs. Isabella DeLuca inspected her like an object. “This girl is too thin,” she told the butler, not Maria. That was the first lesson of the mansion: servants heard everything, but counted as nobody.

Maria worked from five in the morning until her hands ached. She swept marble floors, scrubbed kitchen tiles, polished railings, carried laundry, and initialed the Home Care Meal Log three times a day.

The only place she was warned away from was the third floor. “Do not make noise near the young master’s room,” the butler said, his voice lowered as if even the walls were listening.

The young master was Alexander DeLuca, twenty years old, the oldest son of Richard and Isabella. Before the accident, staff whispered he had been brilliant, stubborn, handsome, and impossible to ignore.

Three years earlier, on the road from San Francisco to Los Angeles, a crash left his legs almost completely paralyzed. Doctors came and went. Specialists gave careful answers. Then the family stopped speaking his name.

Alexander was not dead, but the house treated him like a portrait hung in a room nobody entered. His bedroom became a private museum of abandoned hope.

Maria saw him first through a cracked door while carrying towels. He sat in a wheelchair facing the window, afternoon light on his face, looking less like a rich man’s son than a boy forgotten by everyone.

A few days later, Isabella gave Maria a new duty. She would bring Alexander his meals and clean his room. She was not to speak unless necessary or tell anyone what she saw.

The room unsettled Maria immediately. It was expensive, orderly, and lifeless. Books lined the wall. Medicine bottles sat in rows. Therapy bands hung beside equipment that looked barely used.

Under the bed, half-hidden by shadow, sat a pair of therapy braces coated in dust. Maria could not explain why that detail hurt her, but it did.

They had not only given up on his legs. They had given up on him.

Alexander did not welcome her. “Leave it there and go,” he said during her first visit. His voice sounded tired in a way anger could not hide.

Still, Maria noticed things. The physical therapist came twice a week, never more. Richard DeLuca traveled constantly. Isabella attended charity lunches and luxury events where she smiled beside causes printed on glossy banners.

The DeLucas could buy the best equipment in the country, but no one seemed willing to spend patience. In that house, money moved easily. Love did not.

The night everything changed, Maria brought Alexander’s medicine at 9:46 p.m. She had already cleaned the kitchen and was hoping to sleep when a hard crash came from his room.

She pushed the door open and found him on the floor, his wheelchair tipped sideways. His face had gone pale, but he clenched his jaw like pain was another thing he refused to give them.

“Don’t call anyone,” he snapped before she could shout. “I don’t want them seeing me like this.”

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