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I Wish You A Merry Christmas Novel Cover

I Wish You A Merry Christmas

At eight twenty-seven, I heard it. A door slamming open upstairs with enough force to rattle the chandelier. My heart leaped into my throat. Footsteps pounded down the hallway. Fast. Angry. Joseph straightened beside me, his hand gripping the arm of the sofa. Then Milo appeared at the top of the grand staircase. His face was flushed, his chest heaving, and in his hands he clutched the telescope box I'd so carefully wrapped. For one suspended moment, our eyes met. I saw it all in that instant—the grief, the fear, the desperate need to protect himself from more loss. This child who'd lost his mother and couldn't bear the thought of anyone trying to take her place. "Milo—" Joseph started to stand. But Milo was already moving, storming down the stairs with the reckless speed of rage. He marched straight to me. "Don't try to pretend to be my mother!"
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Chapter 1

The house felt too quiet at five in the morning.

I moved through the darkened hallways of the Langford estate, my footsteps muffled by thick Persian rugs that probably cost more than my entire year's salary. The weight of exhaustion pressed against my shoulders—I'd barely slept, my mind churning with worry about Jacob's upcoming surgery and the impossible situation I'd put myself in.

Christmas morning. My first as Mrs. Joseph Langford III.

The title still felt foreign, like a coat that didn't quite fit.

I reached the main hall where the enormous Christmas tree dominated the space, its branches heavy with ornaments that looked like they'd been passed down through generations. Each one probably had a story, a history I would never truly be part of. I'd spent yesterday afternoon carefully arranging presents beneath it—gifts I'd chosen based on Joseph's stilted suggestions about Milo's interests. A new telescope. Books about astronomy. A model rocket kit.

Things a mother should know without asking.

My hands trembled slightly as I arranged the hot cocoa service on the antique side table, the fine china clinking softly. I'd made Christmas cookies last night after everyone had gone to bed, shaping them into stars and trees, trying to create something warm and inviting in this mansion that felt more like a museum than a home.

The grandfather clock in the corner chimed six times.

"You're up early."

I turned to find Joseph in the doorway, already dressed in slacks and a cardigan despite the hour. He looked tired—the kind of bone-deep weariness that came from more than just lack of sleep. His skin had that grayish tint I'd learned to recognize from my nursing training, the kind that meant his heart was struggling.

"I wanted everything to be ready," I said, forcing brightness into my voice. "For when Milo wakes up."

Joseph crossed to the sofa, lowering himself carefully. I noticed the way he pressed his hand briefly to his chest, a gesture he probably thought I hadn't seen. We sat together in the dim light, the tree's glow casting strange shadows across his elegant features.

"Thank you," he said quietly. "For doing this. For... trying."

The words settled between us, heavy with everything we didn't say. This wasn't real. This marriage, this Christmas morning, this pretense of family—it was all a transaction. I was here because my brother needed to live, and Joseph was paying me to play a role.

But somewhere in the past two weeks, the lines had started to blur.

"Do you think he'll come down?" I asked, smoothing my hands over my jeans. I'd debated what to wear this morning—something festive felt too presumptuous, but pajamas seemed too intimate. I'd settled on casual, approachable. Unthreatening.

Joseph's silence was answer enough.

We waited. Seven o'clock became seven-thirty, became eight. I poured cocoa that grew cold. Joseph made small talk about the weather, the stock market, anything but the obvious tension hanging over us like a storm cloud. I responded automatically, my nursing training allowing me to maintain conversation while my mind catalogued his symptoms—the shallow breathing, the way he kept shifting as if trying to find a comfortable position, the fine tremor in his left hand.

At eight twenty-seven, I heard it. A door slamming open upstairs with enough force to rattle the chandelier.

My heart leaped into my throat.

Footsteps pounded down the hallway. Fast. Angry. Joseph straightened beside me, his hand gripping the arm of the sofa.

Then Milo appeared at the top of the grand staircase.

He was small for eleven, with Joseph's dark hair and eyes that blazed with a fury that made him seem much older. His face was flushed, his chest heaving, and in his hands he clutched the telescope box I'd so carefully wrapped.

For one suspended moment, our eyes met.

I saw it all in that instant—the grief, the fear, the desperate need to protect himself from more loss. This child who'd lost his mother and couldn't bear the thought of anyone trying to take her place.

"Milo—" Joseph started to stand.

But Milo was already moving, storming down the stairs with the reckless speed of rage. He marched straight to me, and I stood automatically, my hands raised in a gesture that was meant to be calming.

He pointed at me, his finger inches from my face.

"Don't try to pretend to be my mother!" His voice cracked on the words, shrill with emotion. "You're not worthy! I won't spend Christmas with someone like you!"

Each word hit like a physical blow. I stood frozen, my face burning, every instinct screaming at me to defend myself, to explain, to make him understand.

But what could I say? That he was right? That I was here for money, that this was all an arrangement, that I was exactly what he accused me of being?

"You're just a gold-digger!" Milo's voice rose higher, tears now streaming down his face even as he shouted. "An opportunist! You think you can replace her? You think you can just—just—"

His foot lashed out, connecting with the neatly wrapped presents. They scattered across the marble floor, ribbons tearing, paper ripping.

"Milo, that's enough!" Joseph was on his feet now, moving toward his son with more speed than I'd seen from him in days. But Milo shoved past him.

"I hate you!" The words were directed at me, but they seemed to encompass everyone, everything. "I hate this! I hate Christmas! I hate—"

Joseph caught his shoulders, his voice stern in a way I'd never heard. "You will not speak to Sarah that way. Apologize. Now."

But Milo twisted away, his face a mask of misery and defiance, and ran back toward the stairs.

That's when Margaret appeared, the butler who'd served the Langford family for twenty years. She must have heard the commotion. With practiced efficiency, she intercepted Milo, speaking in low, soothing tones as she guided him back upstairs. His protests echoed through the hall, gradually fading as a door slammed somewhere above us.

The silence that followed felt deafening.

I became aware of my hands clenched at my sides, my breath coming too fast. Joseph turned to me, and the look on his face—exhaustion mixed with apology mixed with something that might have been shame—made my chest tighten.

"Sarah, I—"

"It's fine," I heard myself say, though my voice sounded strange to my own ears. I forced my face into something resembling a smile. "He needs time. It's understandable."

But Joseph was already shaking his head, gesturing toward his study. "Please. Let's talk."

I followed him through the house, past family portraits of Langfords stretching back generations, past rooms full of furniture that cost more than most people earned in a lifetime. In his study, Joseph closed the door behind us and sank into his leather chair with a sigh that seemed to come from somewhere deep in his bones.

I moved automatically to his side, my fingers finding his wrist to check his pulse. Too fast. Too irregular.

He let me check for a moment before gently catching my hand. Not romantic—just a gesture of connection between two people trying to navigate an impossible situation.

"Was this the right decision?" His voice was barely above a whisper, but the question filled the room. "This arrangement. This... marriage. Am I helping my son, or am I making everything worse?"

I looked down at our hands—his pale and thin, mine still strong from years of nursing work. Outside, I could hear the faint sound of Margaret's voice upstairs, still trying to calm Milo.

"I believe," I said slowly, choosing each word with care, "that decisions made from love will eventually bear good fruit. Even if the path there is harder than we expected."

Joseph's eyes searched my face, looking for—what? Certainty I didn't have? Absolution for a choice he couldn't take back?

"He's hurting," I continued. "And hurt children lash out at the safest targets. Right now, that's me. But I knew what I was signing up for when we made this agreement."

Did I, though? Had I truly understood what it would feel like to be hated by a child who had every reason not to trust me?

"I'll keep my promise," I said firmly. "I'll care for Milo. I'll be patient. However long it takes."

Even if it breaks me. Even if he never accepts me.

Because Jacob was alive, and getting stronger every day, and that had to be worth something.

Joseph nodded slowly, releasing my hand. But as I turned to leave, I caught my reflection in the window—a young woman playing dress-up in someone else's life, trying to be a mother to a boy who saw right through her.

Upstairs, I could still hear Milo crying.

And I wondered, not for the first time, if any amount of money was worth this kind of heartbreak.

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