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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 2

The kitchen was spotless, every surface gleaming under the warm lights, but my hands wouldn't stop shaking.

I'd been working for three hours straight, and the adrenaline that had carried me through the prep was finally wearing off. The menu was spread across the marble counter—notes scribbled in margins, timings carefully calculated, ingredients arranged in perfect mise en place like I was preparing for a surgery instead of a meal.

Herb-roasted chicken with a honey-lemon glaze. Roasted root vegetables with rosemary and garlic. Wild rice pilaf with cranberries. And for dessert, individual chocolate lava cakes that I prayed would turn out right.

Margaret had helped me navigate Joseph's dietary restrictions—low sodium, heart-healthy fats, nothing too heavy. But I'd also consulted her about Milo's preferences, trying to find that impossible balance between what a sick man could eat and what might actually appeal to an eleven-year-old boy who hated me.

"It smells wonderful, Mrs. Langford," Margaret said from the doorway, and I still flinched at the title.

"Thank you." I wiped my hands on my apron, staring at the perfectly golden chicken. "Do you think... do you think he'll at least try it?"

Her silence told me everything.

But I'd made a promise. And I was going to keep it.

At six-thirty, I called them to dinner.

The formal dining room looked like something from a magazine—candles flickering in silver holders, the good china arranged just so, everything perfect and cold. I'd wanted to use the smaller breakfast room, somewhere that felt less like a state dinner, but Joseph had insisted. "It's Christmas," he'd said. "We should make an effort."

Joseph arrived first, pausing in the doorway to take in the spread. Something softened in his face—surprise, maybe, or gratitude. He crossed to where I stood by my chair and touched my elbow gently.

"Sarah, this is... you didn't have to go to such trouble."

"I wanted to." The lie came easily now. Or maybe it wasn't entirely a lie anymore. "It's Christmas."

Footsteps echoed in the hall. Slow. Deliberate. Milo appeared in the doorway, his expression carefully blank. He'd changed for dinner—Margaret must have insisted—but his jaw was set in that stubborn line I'd come to recognize.

He took his seat without looking at me.

I served the plates, my hands steady through years of practice. Joseph made conversation about the food, asking about the recipe, complimenting the presentation. I responded automatically, hyperaware of Milo's silence like a third presence at the table.

"The chicken is excellent," Joseph said. "Milo, you should try—"

Milo's arm swept across his place setting in one smooth motion.

The crash was deafening. China shattered against marble, food scattering across the floor in an explosion of color and sound. The lava cake split open, chocolate bleeding out like a wound.

I froze, my fork suspended halfway to my mouth.

Milo stood, his chair scraping back, and walked away. His footsteps receded down the hall, growing fainter, until a door slammed somewhere in the house.

Joseph's face had gone gray. He stared at the destruction, his hands gripping the edge of the table.

"I'm sorry," he whispered. "Sarah, I'm so—"

"It's fine." My voice sounded distant to my own ears. I set down my fork carefully, as if normal movements could make this normal. "I'll clean it up."

I knelt on the cold floor, gathering broken pieces of china that had probably been in Joseph's family for generations. My vision blurred, but I blinked hard, focusing on the task. Practical. Manageable. Just broken dishes. Nothing I couldn't fix.

Except I couldn't fix this. Any of this.

Margaret appeared with a dustpan, crouching beside me without a word. We worked in silence, Joseph still sitting at the table like a statue.

When the floor was clear and the ruined food disposed of, I stood and smoothed my dress. "I'm tired. I think I'll turn in early."

Joseph opened his mouth to speak, but I was already moving toward the door.

I made it to my room before the tears came.

The next days blurred together into a pattern of small failures.

I tried offering help with homework. Milo looked through me like I was invisible, gathering his books and moving to a different room without a word.

I suggested we could bake cookies together—wasn't that something mothers and sons did? He laughed, sharp and cutting. "My mother used to bake with me. Real mothers, I mean. Not whatever you are."

I found him in the library one afternoon, curled in a window seat with a worn copy of *The Hobbit*. Something about the way he held it—carefully, reverently—made me think it must have been his mother's.

"That's a wonderful book," I ventured, keeping my distance. "I loved it when I was your age."

He looked up slowly, his dark eyes cold. "My mother used to read to me. Every night before bed. She did all the voices." He paused, letting the words sink in. "But she's dead. And you'll never be half what she was."

The cruelty in his voice—in this child's voice—stole my breath.

I retreated to the hallway, pressing my back against the wall, my heart hammering. Somewhere in the house, a clock chimed the hour. I counted the strikes, focusing on something, anything other than the ache in my chest.

This was the job. This was what I'd signed up for.

But knowing that didn't make it hurt less.

New Year's Eve arrived with heavy gray skies that threatened snow.

I suggested a quiet celebration over breakfast—nothing elaborate, just the three of us staying up to welcome the new year. Joseph's face brightened at the idea, and I saw hope flicker there. A fresh start. New beginnings.

I should have known better.

I spent the afternoon preparing sparkling cider and finger foods—things Milo might actually eat. I set everything up in the smaller sitting room, the one with the comfortable furniture and the fireplace that made it feel almost cozy. Not the formal spaces that reminded us all we were playing roles we didn't quite fit.

At eleven, Joseph called for Milo.

We waited. The clock ticked toward eleven-fifteen. Eleven-thirty. Eleven-forty-five.

Milo appeared at 11:47, his timing so deliberate it was almost impressive. He slouched into the chair farthest from me, pulling out his phone.

"Put that away, please," Joseph said quietly. "Let's be present for this."

Milo complied with exaggerated slowness, his every movement radiating resentment.

We sat in uncomfortable silence, the only sound the crackling fire and the ticking clock. I tried to think of something to say, some way to bridge this impossible distance, but every word died in my throat.

At midnight, fireworks erupted from a neighbor's estate, visible through the windows. Joseph raised his glass with a tired smile.

"To new beginnings," I said softly, lifting mine. "To family. To—"

Milo stood. He walked slowly toward me, his face expressionless, and I felt a flicker of hope. Maybe this was it. Maybe we'd finally—

He stopped directly in front of me, raised his glass, and poured the entire contents over the plate of food I'd arranged.

The liquid soaked through the sandwiches, turning them into sodden mush. It pooled on the antique table, dripping onto the Persian rug below.

Milo met my eyes for just a moment. Then he turned and walked out.

The door to his room slammed a moment later, the sound echoing through the too-quiet house.

Joseph's glass slipped from his hand, shattering on the hearth.

And somewhere upstairs, I heard the faint sound of a child crying.

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