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The Billionaire's Secret Genius Nanny

The Billionaire's Secret Genius Nanny

Author: : Gu Mumu
Genre: Modern
Maya desperately needed the exclusive nanny position at the Beaumont estate to pay for her sister's life-saving medical care. But when she actually entered the door, she found that this job wasn't that easy to do either-- Because she is too young, the second son of the Beaumont family is suspicious and accuses her of scheming to attract men; Because she was too beautiful, the third son of the Beaumont family was lecherous and kept pressing towards her step by step; Even the man who was blessed with unique advantages and stood at the top of the world spoke coldly, doubting her motives. Maya ignores all of this and only does her job well. Medical skills, Tonic Diet conditioning, early education enlightenment, psychological counseling for puerpera...... Proficient in everything. The babies in her hands are all healthy, chubby, and don't cry or fuss, obedient like fairy babies. All the wealthy families in the capital were shocked and envious, offering sky high prices to poach her! Compete with her! Please her! The Beaumont family, however, began to be unhappy: "You can steal my business, but you can't steal my exclusive nanny!" At this moment, the noble figure also handed over his household registration book - "A 300 month old baby, seeking lifelong care." Maya:......

Chapter 1 The Price of Entry

Maya stepped out of the rideshare vehicle. The cold East Coast wind immediately bit through the thin fabric of her secondhand blazer. She wrapped her arms around her ribs. Her teeth clicked together once. She forced her jaw to relax.

She stared up at the towering wrought-iron gates of the Beaumont estate. The metal was black and imposing. The sheer scale of the property made her stomach drop. A wave of intimidation hit her chest like a physical weight. She swallowed the dry lump in her throat.

A heavily armed security guard stepped out of a stone booth. He blocked her path. His hand rested casually near his tactical belt. "Identification. Appointment QR code. Now," he said, his voice flat and devoid of any basic human warmth.

Maya pulled her worn wallet from her pocket. Her fingers were stiff from the freezing wind. She slid out her driver's license. The plastic edges were frayed. She handed it to the guard. He did not look at her face. He scanned the card with a clinical sneer. His eyes flicked over her cheap shoes.

The heavy gates slowly began to swing open. The metal groaned softly. Maya walked up the mile-long driveway. Manicured hedges lined the asphalt like green walls. Her cheap heels clicked against the pavement. The sound felt too loud in the dead silence of the estate.

She pulled her phone from her pocket. Her thumb tapped the screen. A photo of her sister Pippa appeared. Pippa was smiling in the hospital bed. Maya stared at the image. Her racing heartbeat began to slow down. The tightness in her chest loosened just enough for her to take a full breath. She locked the screen and shoved the phone back into her pocket.

Maya entered the grand foyer of the main house. The oppressive silence hit her instantly. The air smelled of expensive floor wax and fresh lilies. The ceiling was impossibly high. She felt like an insect trapped in a museum.

Claudia Savage approached her. The head housekeeper held a silver clipboard. Claudia was dressed in a flawless black uniform. Her sharp eyes scanned Maya from head to toe. Her gaze lingered critically on the scuff marks on Maya's shoes. Maya kept her face completely blank.

"You are number forty-two," Claudia said, her voice as crisp as her uniform, handing Maya a plastic badge. "The other candidates are in the West Wing waiting room. Do not be late." Claudia turned away before Maya could even nod.

Maya walked into the waiting room. The space was massive. The other nannies were clustered in tight cliques. They wore tailored designer suits and pristine heels. They whispered to each other behind manicured hands. The air was thick with competitive tension and expensive perfume.

A woman with blonde hair intentionally bumped her shoulder into Maya. The impact made Maya stumble slightly. The woman smirked. "Oh, listen to that accent," the woman sneered, her voice loud enough for her clique to hear. "Did you get your degree from a community college, darling? I'm sure they have an excellent program on... changing diapers." A few other women laughed.

Maya ignored the provocation. She did not rub her shoulder. She walked to an empty chair in the far corner of the room and sat down. She kept her eyes fixed on the blank wall ahead. She mentally ticked off the neonatal resuscitation algorithm: warmth, positioning, clearing the airway, stimulation. If no response, positive-pressure ventilation. She repeated the precise clinical steps in her head to block out the whispers.

A sterile electronic chime echoed through the room. The heavy double doors opened. A team of private nurses walked in. They wore crisp white scrubs. Their faces were entirely emotionless.

The lead nurse stood at the front of the room. "Welcome, candidates," she announced, her voice clinical and detached. "The first phase of your evaluation is a comprehensive medical screening. The Beaumont family requires absolute biological purity for anyone in proximity to the heirs. You will strip, put on the provided gowns, and submit to a full physical examination and blood panel. There are no exceptions."

Several candidates gasped in outrage. The nurses began handing out thin paper hospital gowns.

Maya gripped the cheap fabric of her blazer. Her knuckles turned white. Her throat closed up. Her trauma-induced aversion to clinical settings flared instantly. The smell of the nurses' sterile uniforms made her stomach churn. A panic attack threatened to break through her control.

"This is an outrage! It's a violation of our basic human dignity!" one high-society nanny shouted, throwing her paper gown onto the floor. "My father is a litigator. You'll be hearing from him!" another added, storming towards the exit. The nurses did not even blink. They simply crossed two names off their clipboards.

Maya closed her eyes. She visualized the stack of unpaid medical bills sitting on her kitchen counter. She saw the final notice from Pippa's care facility. She forced her trembling hands to open. She reached out and took the paper gown from the nurse.

She walked into the sterile examination cubicle. The space was tiny and blindingly white. She pulled the thin privacy curtain shut behind her. The metal rings scraped loudly against the rod.

Maya stripped off her clothes. She folded her blazer carefully. The cold air conditioning hit her bare skin. Goosebumps erupted along her arms and legs. She felt entirely stripped of her dignity. She pulled the paper gown over her body. It offered no warmth.

A stern-faced medical examiner entered the cubicle. He did not introduce himself. He snapped on a pair of latex gloves. The sound made Maya flinch. He did not make eye contact with her.

Maya endured the invasive physical examination. The examiner checked her throat, her ears, her reflexes. His hands were cold and clinical. Maya bit the inside of her cheek. She tasted copper. She focused on the pain in her mouth to stop herself from crying out.

The examiner prepared a syringe. He tied a rubber tourniquet around her upper arm. "Make a fist," he commanded. He took three vials of blood. "We are testing for everything from illicit substances to genetic markers."

Maya watched the dark blood fill the plastic tubes. Her arm throbbed. She reminded herself that every single drop of blood was a down payment for Pippa's safety. She kept her breathing slow and even.

The examiner finished. He pulled the needle out and pressed a cotton ball to her vein. He marked a harsh green check on Maya's file. He threw a white towel at her chest. "Get dressed," he said, and walked out.

Maya quickly put her clothes back on. Her fingers fumbled with the cheap plastic buttons of her blouse. The lingering adrenaline made her hands shake. She smoothed down her skirt and took a deep breath.

She exited the cubicle. She looked around the waiting area. Only twenty candidates remained. The rest had either failed or refused the humiliation.

Claudia Savage returned to the room. Her expression shifted into slight surprise when she saw Maya still standing there. Claudia looked at the cleared medical file in Maya's hand.

"Impressive," Claudia stated, a single word that held a mountain of judgment. "The remaining candidates will immediately proceed to the psychological and etiquette evaluations. There will be no breaks. Follow me."

Maya adjusted her collar. She grabbed her file tightly. She stepped forward and walked through the double doors into the psychological evaluation wing.

Chapter 2 Mind Games

Maya stepped through the double doors into the psychological evaluation wing. The heavy oak doors clicked shut behind her. The sound was final and isolating.

She walked down a dimly lit corridor. Antique portraits of the Beaumont ancestors lined the walls. Their painted eyes seemed to follow her. The air here felt heavier. It smelled of old paper and lemon polish.

Her phone vibrated in her pocket. She pulled it out. It was an automated text message from Pippa's private care facility. The screen displayed a warning of an impending account deficit. If the balance was not paid in three days, Pippa would be discharged.

Maya gripped the phone tightly. The digital numbers burned into her mind. Her thumb hovered over the screen for a second before she put the phone away. The fear in her chest hardened into absolute resolve. She could not fail today.

She entered a grand library. The remaining twenty candidates were already filing in. Individual mahogany desks were spaced evenly across the Persian rug. The room was dead silent. Maya walked to a desk in the back row and sat down.

A corporate psychologist in a sharp gray suit stood at the front. He began distributing thick, sealed test booklets to each desk. He moved with mechanical efficiency.

"You have forty-five minutes to complete the three-hundred-question examination," he stated, his voice devoid of inflection. "There will be no talking. No questions. Your time begins... now."

Maya broke the paper seal on the booklet. She flipped to the first page. Her eyes rapidly scanned the dense blocks of text. The questions were designed to profile personality traits.

She instantly recognized the test structure. It was the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory. But it was heavily modified. The standard questions had been twisted to detect greed, ambition, and disloyalty.

She read a trick question. It asked if she would report a minor safety violation committed by a family member. Maya paused. A normal person would say yes to show integrity. Maya calculated the exact answer the Beaumont family demanded. They wanted absolute loyalty to the bloodline above the law.

Instead of answering honestly, Maya began to construct a psychological profile in her head. She needed to appear as a perfectly submissive, highly competent, and emotionally detached employee. She marked the box that indicated she would handle the violation internally without reporting it to authorities.

Two rows ahead, Diane Adler sighed loudly. The rival nanny flipped her pages with arrogant speed. She wanted to intimidate the room. The sound of her pencil scratching aggressively filled the quiet library.

Maya tuned out the noise. Her pencil moved with mechanical precision. She deliberately answered a few low-stakes questions wrong. A perfect score would look artificial and trigger a red flag. She needed to look human, just a very compliant one.

The timer buzzed sharply. Maya put her pencil down exactly on the second. She did not rush to fill in one last bubble. Her breathing was steady.

The psychologist walked down the aisles. He collected the papers without a word. He fed the thick stacks into a high-speed scanner sitting on a side table. The machine hummed loudly.

Five minutes later, the scanner spit out five red-flagged files. The psychologist read the names aloud. "Ms. Albright. Ms. Chen. Ms. Rodriguez. Ms. Peters. And Ms. Vance. Security will escort you out. Thank you for your time." The five nannies were immediately escorted out by security guards. They looked shocked and angry.

Maya's file received a green stamp. She exhaled a silent breath of relief. Her muscles relaxed slightly. She had advanced to the top fifteen.

Claudia Savage entered the library. She led the survivors into a formal dining room. The long table was set with priceless antique porcelain and heavy silver cutlery. The crystal glasses caught the light from the chandelier.

The etiquette test began. "Ladies," Claudia began, her voice cutting through the tension. "Before you is a Georgian silver tea service, circa 1780. The porcelain is Meissen. Each cup is valued at more than your annual salary. You will serve one perfect cup of tea. No spills. No drips. No sound. You will be judged on grace, steadiness, and composure under pressure. Ms. Adler, you may begin."

Diane Adler stepped up first. She performed the task flawlessly. Her posture was perfect. She shot Maya a condescending smirk as she walked back to her spot.

It was Maya's turn. She stepped up to the serving cart. Her bones ached from exhaustion. She pushed the fatigue down. She kept her hands perfectly steady.

As Maya lifted the heavy silver teapot, the candidate standing next to her shifted. The woman deliberately bumped the serving cart with her hip. "Oh, my apologies," she whispered, her voice laced with false sincerity.

The cart jolted violently. A priceless porcelain teacup slid toward the edge of the table. It tipped over the side, threatening to shatter on the hardwood floor.

Maya dropped her posture instantly. Her left hand shot out with lightning reflexes. Her fingers clamped around the delicate handle of the teacup a millimeter from the floor.

With her right hand, she kept the boiling teapot perfectly level. Her wrist locked into place. She did not spill a single drop of the scalding water.

The room fell dead silent. The saboteur gasped loudly. She stepped back, her eyes wide with fear of being caught.

Maya calmly stood back up. She placed the teacup back on the saucer. The porcelain made a soft clink. She poured the tea perfectly. She stepped back into the line. She did not look at the saboteur. She did not say a word.

Claudia Savage watched the entire exchange. Her eyes narrowed. She noted Maya's incredible crisis reflexes. She also noted Maya's absolute emotional control in not causing a scene.

Claudia picked up her clipboard. "The final five candidates who will proceed to the family interview are," she announced, pausing for effect. "Ms. Diane Adler. Ms. Evelyn Reed. Ms. Chloe Dubois. Ms. Isabella Vance. And... Ms. Maya Flores."

Claudia pointed toward a set of frosted glass doors at the end of the hall. "Ms. Flores. You are last. Wait here until you are called." Maya nodded once and stood her ground, ready for the final battle.

Chapter 3 The Cold Evaluation

Maya's sharp heels clicked down the quiet corridor, the thick wool carpet muffling every sound. She pushed open the door of the luxurious final interview lounge and stepped inside. The room was tastefully furnished with soft leather armchairs, and a floor-to-ceiling panoramic window overlooked the estate's calm private lake. Pale winter sunlight streamed through the glass, yet the room held a lingering coldness. Four poised women were already seated. They turned to sharply glare at her as Maya took the last empty chair.

Diane Adler let out a sharp, bitter chuckle. Dressed in an elegant cream blazer, she leaned forward slightly, staring pointedly at Maya's scuffed leather loafers. "I have to ask," she said loudly with obvious disdain, "how does somebody from the Rust Belt-a nobody with no elite connections-slip into this crucial final interview?"

The other women snickered in quiet mockery. Maya did not glance up. She calmly ignored Diane, her steady gaze fixed on the heavy polished mahogany doors leading to the inner office. Her facial expression remained blank and unreadable.

She mentally listed her authoritative certifications: neonatal resuscitation, advanced trauma life support, crisis intervention. These were practical life-saving skills, not empty fancy printed titles.

The solid mahogany doors swung open abruptly. A piercing cold draft swept through the warm lounge, and every faint quiet sound in the room died instantly.

Damien Beaumont strode calmly into the room. His imposing presence pressed heavily over everyone. He wore a sleek charcoal tailored suit with a sharp angular jawline, his icy blue eyes completely devoid of human warmth.

The four nannies quickly straightened their postures. Some nervously fixed their hair, visibly intimidated by Damien's dominant presence.

Damien paid them no mind. He walked straight to the head of the conference table and sat down.

Kevin Robles, his quiet assistant, stepped forward and placed a sleek silver tablet on the table. "The final five candidate dossiers, sir," he murmured in a respectful tone.

Damien swiped through the files slowly. Sharp impatience crossed his face; all resumes were neatly polished, repetitive and hollow.

Diane cleared her throat to break the tense silence. "Mr. Beaumont," she said confidently, "I hold a board position at the National Childcare Association. I have abundant industry resources."

Damien did not lift his cold eyes. "I don't care about your titles," he said in a frigid tone. "I only care about survival rates."

Diane's face flushed bright red. She shrank back in her chair, utterly humiliated, and fell into awkward silence.

Maya realized glamorous resumes meant nothing here. She stood up slowly and walked steadily toward the table.

Kevin stepped forward and firmly blocked her path. "Miss Hayes, remain seated unless instructed otherwise," he said in a steady tone.

Maya stopped two feet away. She calmly held her ground, respectful yet unyielding.

"Mr. Beaumont," Maya said in a clear, calm tone. "I have no fancy board titles. I have rich experience handling acute psychiatric episodes and pediatric physical trauma, specializing in urgent emergency intervention."

Damien stopped scrolling. He slowly raised his eyes to look at Maya for the first time.

His sharp gaze swept over her cheap blazer, bare wrists and pale exhausted face.

His eyes narrowed slightly at the faint pale scar around her wrist-a leftover mark from Pippa.

Damien tossed the tablet carelessly onto the table and leaned back, openly displaying his contemptuous attitude.

"You wear cheap clothing on purpose," he said in a low, cold drawl.

"You fake humility for sympathy. You are a calculating social climber who uses hardship stories to enter wealthy households."

The other nannies snickered softly, enjoying Maya's awkward embarrassment.

Maya felt hot anger surge inside her, but she kept a neutral expression and firmly held his cold gaze.

"My background does not affect my professional competence," Maya replied calmly. "I can keep your family alive in a crisis. That is all that matters."

Damien slowly scanned her from head to toe. He curled his thin lips into a disdainful sneer, ready to speak coldly.

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