Maya was eight years old when she heard the truth.
She cried so much that she vomited.

Vanessa didn’t want a stepdaughter. She wanted the money: the bills, the house, the cars. Maya was nothing more than a nuisance standing in the way of the life Vanessa believed she deserved.

So Vanessa turned Maya’s childhood into something carefully cruel.

Breakfast, lunch, dinner: Maya ate alone.
School: the driver dropped her off and picked her up.
Vanessa didn’t attend a single parent-teacher meeting.

When the school finally called to ask why Maya’s grades were dropping, Vanessa replied unemotionally, “She’s lazy. She always has been,” and hung up.

The truth was that Maya could barely concentrate.

Her back hurt so much she couldn’t sit up straight. In class, she slumped to one side in her chair. The other children laughed. She pressed her lips together to keep from crying.

It had all started eight months earlier.

It was Saturday. Daniel, her father, was in São Paulo closing a deal. Maya was on the living room floor, finishing a jigsaw puzzle. She was proud: she had done all her homework by herself.

“Vanessa, look,” she said, holding up her notebook. “I finished everything.”

Vanessa didn’t look up from her phone. “Great. Now go.”

“But the teacher said…”

“I said leave!” Vanessa snapped, standing up. “Don’t you understand Portuguese?”

“I’m sorry, I just…”

“Get out of my sight!”

Vanessa pushed her hard.

Maya lost her balance, tripped on the rug, and fell backward. Her back hit the sharp corner of the coffee table: glass and marble.

The pain stole the air from her lungs. She screamed.

The blood spread across her white blouse.

Vanessa froze for a few seconds. Maya saw panic cross her face… and then, calculation.

“Get up,” Vanessa said coldly. “Stop acting.”

“It hurts,” Maya sobbed.

“I said get up.” Vanessa tugged on his arm. “And if you tell your father I pushed you, I’ll tell him you were running and you fell.”

Who do you think he’s going to believe: you or me?

Maya was eight years old. Terrified of losing her father too, she nodded through her tears.

Vanessa dragged her to the bathroom, cleaned the blood with paper towels, and stuck on several oversized bandages.

“It’s nothing. Change your shirt and keep your mouth shut.”

Maya remained silent… but the wound did not heal.

It got worse.

After a week, the pain increased.
After two weeks, it began to ooze.
After three weeks, she developed a fever.
By the fourth week, her skin was swollen and red.

“Vanessa,” Maya whispered one night, “I think I need a doctor.”

“It’s just a scratch.”

“But it hurts.”

“Do you want me to tell your father what you did?” Vanessa snapped. “That you broke his table?”

Maya shook her head, tears rolling down her cheeks.

“Then shut up.”

Eight months passed.

Eight months of untreated infection. The wound deepened. The skin began to die.

Maya would bathe crying because the water burned her skin. She slept on her stomach because she couldn’t lie on her back. She skipped physical education class because she couldn’t run.

And Daniel?

“Everything alright, darling?” he would ask in hurried goodbyes.

“Everything’s fine, Dad,” Maya replied.

He was already looking at his phone.

Then Teresa arrived.

Teresa was fifty-two years old, robust, and had hands shaped by decades of care. She had worked as a cook and housekeeper for twenty-five years… and she wouldn’t tolerate injustice.

She desperately needed the job. Her daughter Ana, five months pregnant, had just been laid off. No partner. No savings. Living together in a small apartment.

When Teresa saw the ad —live-in cook and housekeeper— she called immediately.

Three days later, I was inside the mansion.

Vanessa looked at her with open contempt. “You stay in the back rooms. Sundays off. That’s it.”

Teresa needed the salary. “Understood.”

On his first day, he met Maya.

The girl sat alone in the kitchen, eating cold pasta straight from the pot. Her eyes were red. Her body was tense.

“Hello, darling,” Teresa said softly. “I’m Teresa. What’s your name?”

Maya started, as if the kindness seemed strange to her. “Maya.”

“That food is cold. Let me heat it up.”

“Okay,” Maya whispered.

Teresa reheated it anyway, adding cheese, oil, and seasonings.

Maya ate slowly, as if good food were something new.

Teresa knew it at that moment: something was very wrong.

In the following days, he noticed everything.

Maya never took off her sweatshirt, not even when it was hot. She walked carefully, holding onto the railings. She moved like someone much older.

On Wednesday, Teresa baked a carrot cake.

“Can I eat a little?” Maya asked shyly.

“Of course, my love. I did it for you.”

Maya smiled as she ate. “My mom used to do this. For my birthday.”

“When is your birthday?”

“Last month. I turned nine.”

“And did you celebrate?”

Maya shook her head. “Dad was out. Vanessa said birthdays are a waste of money.”

Teresa’s chest tightened.

Then Vanessa arrived early with friends.

“Teresa, make appetizers. And champagne,” he ordered.

Then he turned to Maya. “Why are you here? Go to your room.”

Maya stood up quickly, winced in pain, and dropped the fork.

“What a clumsy girl,” one of the women laughed.

When Maya bent down, her sweatshirt rode up a little.

Teresa saw the dark stain soaking the fabric.

Later, while Vanessa entertained her guests, Teresa went upstairs. Gently, she convinced Maya to show her the injury.

The wound was huge and clearly infected.

“My God,” Teresa whispered. “How long have you had this?”

“Eight months,” Maya said softly. “She pushed me.”

At that moment Teresa’s phone rang.

Ana was bleeding. She was losing the baby.

Teresa faced the most difficult decision of her life.

If she left that night, Maya could die.

He stayed.

He took photos: evidence.

The next morning, Teresa tried to talk to Daniel, but Vanessa cut her off, turning him against her before she could explain. Daniel scolded Teresa and left.

Daniel was scheduled to leave for China in two weeks.

Teresa knew she didn’t have time.

She called Dr. Helena Costa, a lawyer who had once helped her.

“We need irrefutable proof,” Helena said. “Record everything.”

And so Teresa began to record.