She can’t run from her obligations, even when her mind warns her
Angela cannot afford to lose this job of a nanny to Ronny’s children, no matter what his sister or mother-in-law say or do.
Ronny Kipchoge’s well-balanced domestic sphere tilts, rendering him a single parent to three young children. Schools will reopen in two weeks’ time, the reason he has no patience when his sister interrupts him with her criteria on why he should not hire Angela as the nanny.
Angela desperately needs a job to provide for her son and save for her lifelong dream of a university education. While Ronny fumbles through grief and his work as a CEO, Angela, his twenty-three-year-old nanny, "mothers" his children so well that he has ideas to make her stay forever. But the more Ronny makes his overtures known, the more he draws Angela into a web of struggles at his house-his relatives and friends are eager to get her out of the picture.
Will Ronny and Angela let outsiders dampen the growing attraction between them, or can they combine forces to overcome the challenges and live a happily ever after, in this second chance romance?
Note: The terms Housegirl and Nanny are used interchangeably in the book. Housegirl is common in Kenya where the book is set, while Nanny is used in other parts of the world.