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The New Nanny

The moment Sienna Clarke walked through the wrought-iron gates of the Bennett estate, the atmosphere thickened. The sun dripped over her like honey, clinging to her skin as if even the light couldn't resist her. Her auburn curls framed a face too soft to be threatening—until you noticed the eyes. Green, sharp, and slow-moving, like a cat surveying prey. Her dress was demure in theory—ivory linen, sleeveless, high neckline—but it clung in all the right places. She was temptation in a mask of innocence. She didn't belong here—at least not in the way everyone expected. And yet, she moved like she'd always known this place would be hers.

She had all the right qualifications. References that made Charlotte Bennett beam with relief. "She's perfect," Charlotte had said, sipping her tea and glancing fondly at Sienna across their sun-drenched sitting room. "The children will absolutely adore her."

Adrian Bennett had barely looked up when they first met. His hand was on his tablet, scanning numbers, stock figures. He muttered a polite hello, barely registering the young woman before him. But when Charlotte rose to take a call and left the room, Adrian glanced again.

And that glance lingered.

Sienna met his eyes—steady, unreadable. A subtle lift of her lips. A quiet acknowledgment. Nothing inappropriate. But the charge between them? Very immediate. Dangerous. He looked away first.

The Bennetts' estate was sprawling and coldly beautiful—just like their marriage. High ceilings. Marble floors. A grand piano Charlotte hadn't touched in years. The kind of house where everything was polished but nothing felt lived in. A house held together by image, not intimacy.

Sienna entered it like smoke—curling through the cracks, unnoticed at first. She settled into the guest wing, unpacked her modest suitcase with careful deliberation. She moved through the halls silently, always just where she was needed, never too visible. But she watched. She learned.

She was good with the children. Sweet. Patient. Disarming. Charlotte adored her. Adrian kept his distance—but his eyes didn't.

One evening, after dinner, Charlotte excused herself early—headache, she said—and left Adrian in the library, bourbon in hand. Sienna passed by, barefoot, in a silk robe far too luxurious to be store-bought. Ivory, like her dress. It whispered against her thighs as she walked.

He looked up. She paused.

"I didn't mean to disturb you," she said softly, her voice like velvet over ice.

"You didn't," he replied, throat dry.

Her lips curved into the barest smile. "Goodnight, Mr. Bennett."

He watched her leave—watched the sway of her hips, the flash of bare calf beneath the robe—and for the first time in a long while, Adrian felt something other than boredom or duty.

He felt hunger.

He didn't know what game she was playing. He wasn't even sure she was playing one.

But he could feel it already—the pull, the danger, the slow unraveling of a thread he'd long forgotten was even there.

Sienna didn't look back. She didn't need to. She already knew.

She wasn't just the nanny.

She was the spark to a marriage soaked in gasoline.

And she had just struck her first match.

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