
Her Worst Christmas Eve
Chapter 2
The silence stretched between us like a chasm, filled only by the harsh buzz of fluorescent lights overhead. I stood frozen in the doorway, my mouth half-open, words dying on my tongue before they could form. This couldn't be happening. Not like this. Not on Christmas Eve.
But John didn't wait for my response. He didn't offer an explanation, didn't try to justify what I'd just witnessed, didn't even look back at me as he straightened his tie with clinical precision.
"We'll talk about this at home," he said again, his voice flat and dismissive, as if he were scheduling a routine appointment. Then he brushed past me, so close I could smell the lingering trace of her perfume on his shirt, and walked out of his office without another word.
I turned to watch him disappear down the corridor, his footsteps echoing with the same confident rhythm they always had. As if nothing had changed. As if he hadn't just been kissing another woman. As if I were the one being unreasonable for showing up at his office and catching him in the act.
The sound of his departure faded, leaving me alone with the woman who had been in his arms moments before. I should have followed him. Should have demanded answers. Should have screamed or cried or done something other than stand there like a statue, but my body felt disconnected from my mind, frozen in shock.
Amber hadn't left with John. Instead, she moved with deliberate slowness, adjusting her scrubs with casual indifference, as if being caught in a compromising position with a married man was just another Tuesday evening for her. Her blonde hair was still mussed from John's fingers, her lips slightly swollen, and there wasn't a trace of shame or embarrassment on her young face.
In fact, she looked almost... amused.
She turned toward me, her green eyes traveling slowly from my carefully styled hair down to my red dress, taking in every detail with the kind of calculating assessment that made my skin crawl. Her gaze lingered on my face, noting the fine lines around my eyes, the slight softness at my jawline that hadn't been there ten years ago.
"Well," she said finally, her voice carrying a tone of mock sympathy that was somehow worse than outright cruelty. "This is awkward."
I opened my mouth to respond, but no words came. What was I supposed to say? What was the proper etiquette for confronting your husband's mistress?
Amber stepped closer, her movements predatory and confident. She was so young—probably not even thirty—with the kind of effortless beauty that came from good genes and a metabolism that hadn't yet betrayed her. Everything about her seemed designed to highlight what I was losing: my youth, my husband's attention, my place in the world I thought I understood.
"You know what's really pathetic?" she continued, tilting her head as if she were genuinely curious about my answer. "You can't even keep your own husband interested."
The words hit me like a physical blow, stealing what little breath I had left. She said it so casually, so matter-of-factly, as if she were commenting on the weather rather than delivering a verdict on my worth as a woman, as a wife.
"Look at you," she went on, her eyes bright with cruel satisfaction. "Standing there in your little Christmas dress, probably spent hours getting ready for some party he never intended to take you to. How long has it been since he actually wanted to be alone with you? Months? Years?"
Each question was a knife twist, precise and devastating. Because she wasn't entirely wrong, was she? When was the last time John had looked at me the way he'd been looking at her? When had he last kissed me with that kind of desperate hunger?
"He talks about you, you know," Amber continued, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. "About how you've let yourself go. How you're always nagging him about spending time together, always demanding his attention like some needy little girl. He says it's exhausting, being married to someone so... clingy."
The fluorescent lights seemed to grow brighter, more harsh, casting sharp shadows that made everything look distorted and wrong. My hands were shaking now, and I could feel the familiar tightness in my chest that came with panic, with the sensation of the world tilting off its axis.
"I—" I started to say, but my voice came out as barely a whisper.
"What?" Amber leaned closer, cupping her ear in an exaggerated gesture. "I can't hear you. Are you going to cry? Because that would be perfect. Really complete the picture."
She was enjoying this. Actually taking pleasure in my humiliation, in the destruction of my marriage, in the power she held over me in this moment. There was something genuinely cruel in her smile, something that went beyond simple selfishness or thoughtlessness.
"You should probably go home now," she said, stepping back and smoothing her hair. "I'm sure John will be there eventually. Though he might need some time to... decompress first. This whole scene was pretty stressful for him."
Stressful for him. As if I were the problem. As if my presence, my very existence, was an inconvenience to be managed.
Amber brushed past me then, her shoulder bumping mine with just enough force to make me stumble slightly. She smelled like vanilla and something sharper—ambition, maybe, or the particular confidence that came from knowing you'd won.
"Merry Christmas, Giselle," she called over her shoulder as she walked away, her voice sing-song and mocking. "Hope you have a wonderful evening."
And then she was gone, her footsteps fading down the corridor, leaving me alone in the doorway of John's office with the lingering scent of her perfume and the echo of her laughter.
I stood there for what felt like hours but was probably only minutes, staring at the empty space where my husband had been kissing another woman. The desk where he'd pressed her against him. The chair where his coat still hung, wrinkled from being hastily discarded.
Finally, my body began to obey me again. I bent down on unsteady legs and picked up my handbag from where it had fallen, the leather cold against my trembling fingers. The simple act of retrieving it felt monumental, like climbing a mountain or crossing an ocean.
I walked back through the hospital corridors on autopilot, my heels clicking against the linoleum with mechanical precision. Past the empty nursing stations, past the darkened offices, past the Christmas decorations that now seemed garish and inappropriate. The elevator doors opened and closed. The parking garage materialized around me. Somehow, I found myself sitting in my car, gripping the steering wheel so tightly my knuckles had gone white.
The silence in the car was deafening. No Christmas carols on the radio. No sound of traffic. Just the harsh rhythm of my own breathing and the distant hum of the hospital's ventilation system.
My phone buzzed. A text from Chloe: "Where are you guys? The party's in full swing!"
I stared at the message for a long moment before my fingers found the call button. The phone rang twice before Chloe's warm, familiar voice filled the car.
"Giselle! Finally! We were starting to worry. Are you and John on your way?"
The normalcy in her voice, the assumption that everything was fine, that I was still the same person who had RSVP'd to her party with enthusiasm, nearly broke me.
"Chloe," I managed, forcing my voice to sound steady. "I'm so sorry, but something came up. We can't make it tonight."
"Oh no! Is everything okay? Is it the hospital?"
Always the hospital. Everyone always understood when it was the hospital.
"Yes," I lied, the word tasting bitter on my tongue. "Emergency surgery. You know how it is."
"Of course! Tell John we understand completely. Rain check for New Year's?"
"Absolutely," I said, though I had no idea if there would be a New Year's, or a John, or anything resembling the life I'd had this morning. "Have a wonderful party."
I ended the call before she could hear the crack in my voice, before the careful facade I was maintaining could crumble completely. The phone slipped from my numb fingers and landed on the passenger seat with a soft thud.
I couldn't go home. Not yet. Not to the empty house with its blinking Christmas lights and the wine still sitting on the counter, waiting for a celebration that would never come. Not to the bed I shared with a man who had just looked at me with such cold indifference after I'd caught him with another woman.
So I started the car and began to drive, with no destination in mind, letting muscle memory and traffic lights guide me through the city streets. Around me, the world continued its Christmas Eve celebration—couples walking hand in hand beneath the holiday lights, families hurrying home with last-minute gifts, the warm glow spilling from restaurant windows where people were sharing meals and laughter and the kind of easy intimacy I'd thought I had just hours ago.
Everything looked the same as it had this morning, but I felt like I was seeing it all through glass, separated from the warmth and joy by an invisible barrier that I couldn't cross. The Christmas lights that had seemed magical this morning now felt like they were mocking me, their cheerful blinking a cruel reminder of how quickly everything could change, how completely a life could shatter in the space between one heartbeat and the next.
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