![]() ![]() With its smart technology ingrained everywhere from the kitchen to the bathroom, mixed with the mysterious sounds of what could only be a ghost or a serial killer roaming in the attic, Rowan feels both haunted and hunted. It’s not the kids that are making Rowan second-guess her commitment though, it’s the house. ![]() She is determined to make it work, using every trick in the book while the parents are gone. The girls are unruly, testing Rowan at every angle. The house is wired everywhere - making her feel watched, listened to, and creeped out. Being a complete smart home, everything is controlled by an app, “Happy,” that Rowan thinks has a mind of its own. The house - an old Victorian that collided with a modern smart house - has architecture like she has never seen before. The day Rowan moves in to her new position, the parents unexpectedly take off on a business trip, leaving her alone with the three little girls. And her new quarters are gorgeous, with a private bathroom and enough space for a family in its own right. ![]() What’s the catch? The family seems normal enough, if not ungodly rich. The salary and location seem too good to be true. Rowan, a child-care provider in her early 30s, lands her dream job working as a live-in nanny in the remote Scottish Highlands. ![]()
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