Follow
Chapters
Share
Her Worst Christmas Eve Novel Cover

Her Worst Christmas Eve

The door was slightly ajar, just enough for a sliver of warm light to spill into the corridor, and through that gap, I could hear voices. "You're terrible," the woman's voice said, breathy and amused. "What if someone comes looking for you?" "No one's coming," John's voice replied, lower than usual, intimate in a way that made my stomach clench. "Everyone's gone home to their families." "Not everyone," she said, and there was a rustling sound, like fabric moving against skin. I should have knocked. I should have cleared my throat, announced my presence, given them a chance to... to what? To spring apart? To pretend whatever was happening wasn't happening?
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The red dress felt perfect when I'd slipped it on an hour ago, the silk whispering against my skin as I'd turned before the mirror, adjusting the neckline just so. Now it felt like a costume, too bright, too hopeful for a woman standing alone in her living room at seven-thirty on Christmas Eve.

I checked my phone again. No missed calls. No messages.

The Christmas tree lights blinked their cheerful rhythm in the corner, casting warm shadows across the walls that suddenly felt too close, too quiet. Chloe's party had started thirty minutes ago. I could picture her apartment now—filled with laughter, clinking glasses, the kind of easy joy that comes from being surrounded by people who actually show up when they say they will.

My heels clicked against the hardwood as I paced to the window, peering out at our empty driveway. John's BMW wasn't there. It hadn't been there when I'd arrived home from work three hours ago, my arms full of the wine and dessert I'd promised to bring to the party. The wine sat on the kitchen counter now, the bottle sweating condensation rings onto the granite.

I dialed his number again, my fingers trembling slightly as I pressed the familiar sequence.

It rang once, twice, three times before going to voicemail. His professional voice, smooth and confident: "You've reached Dr. John Mills. Please leave a detailed message, and I'll return your call as soon as possible."

The beep felt like a slap.

"John, it's me again. I'm... I'm worried. We were supposed to leave for Chloe's party an hour ago. Please call me back."

I ended the call and stared at the phone, willing it to ring. The silence stretched, broken only by the soft hum of the refrigerator and the distant sound of carolers somewhere in the neighborhood. Their voices drifted through the walls, singing about silent nights and holy nights, and I wanted to scream at the irony.

Something was wrong. It had to be.

John might be many things—distant lately, critical, increasingly cold—but he wasn't irresponsible. Not about work, anyway. If there had been an emergency at the hospital, a surgery that couldn't wait, he would have called. He always called.

Unless...

My chest tightened as darker possibilities crept in. A car accident on the icy roads. A heart attack—the stress of his position, the long hours, the way he'd been drinking more lately. Or maybe someone at the hospital needed him, some crisis that had pulled him away from his phone, from thoughts of Christmas Eve parties and wives waiting at home in red dresses.

I grabbed my coat and purse, my hands shaking as I fumbled with the keys. The drive to the hospital would take fifteen minutes. I could check his office, make sure he was safe, and then we could still salvage the evening.

Maybe we'd arrive at Chloe's fashionably late, with a story about medical emergencies and the noble sacrifices doctors made. People would understand. They always understood when it came to John.

The hospital parking garage was nearly empty, our footsteps echoing off concrete walls as I hurried toward the elevator.

The fluorescent lights cast everything in harsh, institutional white, making my reflection in the elevator doors look pale and ghostly. I pressed the button for the fourth floor, where John's office sat at the end of a long corridor lined with awards and commendations.

The elevator climbed with mechanical precision, each floor marked by a soft ding that seemed too loud in the silence. When the doors opened, the familiar smell of antiseptic and floor wax hit me, along with something else—the lingering scent of coffee and the faint trace of someone's perfume.

My heels clicked against the polished linoleum as I walked down the corridor, past darkened offices and empty nursing stations. Most of the administrative staff had gone home hours ago, leaving only the skeleton crew that kept the hospital running through the night. John's office was at the far end, and I could see a strip of light beneath his door.

Relief flooded through me. He was here. He was safe. There had been an emergency, or paperwork that couldn't wait, or some crisis that had pulled him away from his phone.

I would knock, and he would look up with that distracted expression he got when work consumed him, and he would apologize for making me worry.

But as I approached his door, I heard something that made me freeze mid-step.

Laughter. Soft, feminine laughter that definitely didn't belong to John.

My hand hovered inches from the door, my heart suddenly pounding so hard I was sure it could be heard in the hallway.

The door was slightly ajar, just enough for a sliver of warm light to spill into the corridor, and through that gap, I could hear voices.

"You're terrible," the woman's voice said, breathy and amused. "What if someone comes looking for you?"

"No one's coming," John's voice replied, lower than usual, intimate in a way that made my stomach clench. "Everyone's gone home to their families."

"Not everyone," she said, and there was a rustling sound, like fabric moving against skin.

I should have knocked. I should have cleared my throat, announced my presence, given them a chance to... to what?

To spring apart? To pretend whatever was happening wasn't happening?

Instead, I found myself leaning closer to the gap in the door, my breath caught in my throat as the scene inside came into focus.

John was pressed against his desk, his white coat discarded on the chair behind him, his usually perfect hair mussed.

And in his arms was a young woman I recognized from the nurses' station—Amber, I thought her name was. Pretty in that fresh-faced way that made me suddenly conscious of every line around my eyes, every softness that forty years had carved into my body.

Her hands were tangled in his hair, her scrubs pulled askew, and they were kissing with the kind of desperate hunger that belonged to new lovers, secret lovers, people who couldn't get enough of each other.

My leather handbag slipped from my numb fingers and hit the floor with a sharp crack that seemed to echo through the corridor like a gunshot.

They sprang apart instantly, John's head snapping toward the door, his eyes meeting mine through the gap with a flash of something that wasn't guilt or shame or remorse.

It was annoyance.

Annoyance that I had interrupted. That I had caught him.

That I was here at all.

For a moment, none of us moved. I stood frozen in the doorway, still in my Christmas Eve dress, still wearing the lipstick I'd applied so carefully hours ago, while my husband stared at me with the cold calculation of a man who had been caught but refused to feel ashamed.

Amber had the decency to look startled, at least, her hand flying to her mouth as she took a step back from John. But she didn't run. She didn't apologize. She just stood there, watching me with curious eyes, like I was some interesting specimen that had wandered into her territory.

"What is this?" The words came out of my mouth in a whisper, barely audible even to myself.

John straightened his shirt with deliberate movements, his expression shifting into the clinical mask he wore when delivering bad news to patients' families.

"It's exactly what it looks like," he said, his voice steady and professional. "A moment of stress. An instant lapse in judgment."

A lapse in judgment. As if he'd made an error in a medical chart, not destroyed our marriage on Christmas Eve.

"But John—"

"The question is," he continued, cutting me off as he moved around the desk to face me fully, "why are you here? Why didn't you call first?"

The words hit me like a physical blow. "Call first?"

"This is my office, Giselle. My private workspace. You can't just show up unannounced and expect—"

"Expect what?" My voice was rising now, the shock giving way to something sharper, more dangerous. "Expect my husband not to be cheating on me?"

He had the audacity to look irritated, as if I were the one being unreasonable. As if I were the one who had crossed a line by walking into his office and finding him with another woman's hands in his hair.

"You're overreacting," he said, reaching for his coat. "We'll discuss this at home."

And then, as if nothing had happened, as if he hadn't just shattered everything I thought I knew about our life together, he walked past me toward the door, leaving me standing there in my red dress, staring at the woman who had been kissing my husband.

You may also like

He Hated A Love I Forgot Novel Cover
7.4
My memory was gone, a blank slate wiped clean each day. I lived a life guided by Post-it notes-simple instructions that told me who I was, what to eat, and to be polite to visitors. Then he came back. Jax, the man I supposedly abandoned for money seven years ago, was now a billionaire. He stood at my door with his new fiancée, his eyes burning with a hatred I couldn't place. He forced me onto a humiliating reality show, turning my broken mind into a public spectacle. He tore down my notes, my only connection to myself, and let the world watch as I nearly drowned in a tank of ice water. When my brother tried to save me, he was arrested for assault. To free my brother, I had to confess. I stood before the world and apologized for a betrayal I couldn't even remember, becoming the monster everyone believed me to be. But as I spoke the lies he fed me, a single detail about a stolen necklace made his perfect world shatter. He finally saw the truth in my empty eyes. It was just seven years too late.
I Faked My Death to Escape My Husband's Cruelty Novel Cover
8.1
I stood frozen in the hallway, my hand clutching the doorframe for support as James's cruel words sliced through me like shards of glass. "Honestly, she's like a stray dog that won't leave," he said, his voice carrying clearly from our Manhattan penthouse living room. The sound of expensive crystal clinking followed, punctuated by deep masculine laughter. "Seven years of following me around with those sad eyes. It's pathetic." My lungs constricted. Seven years. Seven years of silent devotion, of enduring his coldness, his contempt. Seven years of sacrificing everything—my family, my dreams, my dignity—all to stay close to the heart beating in his chest. Ethan's heart. "Why don't you just divorce her?" asked one of his business associates, the question casual, as if discussing the weather.
I Was Kidnapped, He Married His First Love Novel Cover
7.6
When the kidnapper pressed a tactical knife to Falon's throat and demanded a one-million-dollar ransom, she was certain her fiancé would pay. Instead, Jerod's annoyed voice echoed through the speaker. He was busy cutting a cake with his fragile, manipulative mistress, Abby. "Do whatever you want with her," Jerod told the thug. "I am done." The call disconnected. Left to die, Falon was injected with a lethal black-market aphrodisiac. She fought her way out, escaping into the freezing rain, and threw herself at the mercy of a stranger in a black Maybach. That stranger was Bell Farrell, a ruthless billionaire and Jerod's biggest corporate rival. To survive the burning drug and shatter the memories of her fiancé's betrayal, she gave herself to the devil that night. The next morning, Falon woke up in a stranger's bed, staring at her bruised skin. For four years, she had endured her abusive family's cruelty, watching them treat her fake, adopted sister like a princess while using Falon as a corporate pawn. She had compromised everything for Jerod, only to be thrown away like garbage. Why did she have to suffer while the people who destroyed her played the victims? Falon took off her five-carat engagement ring and threw it in the trash. She put on a sharp black suit and crashed her family's elite ballroom gala, ready to burn their high-society facade to the ground.
My Groom Kept Me Blind to Protect His Mistress Novel Cover
9.5
Light. It wasn't just a concept to me anymore; it was a piercing, brilliant reality. "Blink slowly, Kendra," Dr. Elena Rodriguez murmured, her skilled hands gently pulling the final layer of gauze from my face. I blinked. The blurry, sterile white of the private clinic sharpened into crisp, undeniable lines. For ten years, my world had been a canvas of absolute black, defined only by the tap of my cane and the terrifying, repressed echoes of the Los Angeles warehouse where I was taken at fifteen. But now, at twenty-four, just days before my wedding, the darkness was gone. Dr. Rodriguez guided a hand mirror into my trembling fingers.
No Longer Mrs. Cooley: The Architect's Return Novel Cover
7.9
I went to the City Clerk's office for a routine copy of my marriage license to finalize a trust fund audit. I expected a simple piece of paper, but the clerk's pitying look told me my entire life was a lie. "The license was never finalized, Ms. Oliver. In the eyes of the state, you are single." The three-hundred-guest wedding at the Plaza and the Vogue features meant nothing. My husband, Gray Cooley, had intentionally filed the documents with a "procedural defect" so he could discard me without a legal divorce. Moments later, an iCloud invite titled "Our Little Secret" popped up on my screen. It was a photo of my best friend, Brylee, holding a positive pregnancy test at our Hamptons estate. Gray's text to her was the final blow: "Happy anniversary, babe. This baby is the best gift. Once the trust unlocks today, we're done with the charade." I soon discovered they were even stealing my career, reassigning my architectural masterpiece to Brylee while preparing my eviction notice. Gray's mother called me a "barren mule" in a leaked recording, mocking the infertility I suffered after saving Gray's life in a construction accident. I wasn't a wife; I was a three-year placeholder used to secure his inheritance. How could the man I bled for treat me like a disposable prop? How could my best friend carry his child while pretending to comfort me through my darkest moments? The betrayal burned until it turned into a cold, hard stone of fury. I didn't cry. Instead, I walked into the penthouse of the Barretts, the Cooleys' most powerful rivals. I signed a marriage contract with Kane Barrett, the man the tabloids called the "Beast of Wall Street." "I want a wedding," I told his father, my voice steady and lethal. "Bigger than the one I had with Gray." If they wanted me gone, they would have to watch me become the woman who owns their world.
The Tycoon's Contract With A Vicious Beauty Novel Cover
9.5
My husband Hubert threw a stack of faked, compromising photos at my bleeding face. He crushed my hand under his leather shoe and threatened our five-year-old son's life, forcing me to sign away my company shares and full custody. Then, my younger sister Ara walked into the room, stepping carefully to avoid my blood, and kissed my husband deeply. "You really are a stupid stepping stone, Amelie. I paid a lot of money to have those photos photoshopped." She sneered at me, admitting she had orchestrated everything just to steal my fashion brand and my life. Before I could fight back, Ara injected a paralytic directly into my neck. They stuffed me into a duffel bag and dumped me in the freezing mud of a secluded hunting estate. Ara waved a forged suicide note in my face, claiming I had drowned myself out of shame, before giving her bodyguard a sharp nod. Three massive, starving mastiffs were released from their cages. As the dogs tore through my flesh and crushed my bones, Hubert watched my bloody massacre live on a video call. In my final seconds of agonizing pain, a blinding hatred locked into my dying brain. I didn't understand why the two people I loved most would torture me so ruthlessly, but I made a venomous vow. If I ever come back, I will make you both drown in your own blood. Opening my eyes again, I wasn't dead in the mud. I had awakened in the young body of a girl named Gena, and fate had just dropped the perfect weapon for my revenge right into my lap: Hubert's ruthless billionaire uncle.