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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 3

January arrived with bitter cold that seeped through even the Langford estate's thick walls.

I found the books first—scattered across the entrance hall floor in a deliberate pattern, spines cracked open, pages bent. Medical texts I'd been using to stay current with my nursing knowledge. They'd been arranged almost artfully in their destruction, and I knew immediately this wasn't accident.

Milo had been home from his private academy for twenty minutes.

I knelt to gather them, my fingers trembling slightly as I smoothed damaged pages. The grandfather clock ticked in the corner, each second a small hammer against my composure. These books had cost me nearly a week's salary back when I'd had a salary, back when my life had been my own.

"Mrs. Langford?" Margaret appeared at my elbow, her face creased with concern. "Let me help you with those."

"It's fine." The words came automatically now, smooth as glass. "I've got it."

But it wasn't fine. Nothing was fine.

The next day, muddy footprints tracked through the hallways I'd spent an hour cleaning that morning. Not the accidental mess of a child coming in from play—these were purposeful, each step placed with care to maximize coverage. They led from the side entrance straight through the main hall, up the grand staircase, across the landing.

I followed them with a bucket and mop, my back aching, my hands raw from hot water and cleaning solution.

Milo watched from the top of the stairs, arms crossed, expression blank.

"You know Margaret shouldn't have to clean up after you like this," I said quietly, keeping my voice level. Professional. Like I was talking to a difficult patient instead of a child who seemed determined to break me. "She has enough responsibilities managing the household."

His lips curved into something that wasn't quite a smile.

"I thought that's what you're here for." His voice carried perfectly down the stairwell, each word enunciated with cruel precision. "Isn't that why my father bought you?"

The mop handle slipped in my grip. Water sloshed across the already-wet floor.

Milo turned and walked away, his clean footsteps receding down the hall.

I stood there, surrounded by muddy water and the ruins of my dignity, and couldn't think of a single thing to say.

The wet towels appeared on the bathroom counter the next morning. Five of them, soaked through and abandoned in a heap that would certainly stain the marble if left too long. The bathroom we theoretically shared—though I'd been careful to use it only when I was certain he was elsewhere.

I carried them to the laundry room, my jaw clenched so tight my teeth ached.

Two weeks. Fourteen days of relentless, calculated hostility. Small cruelties stacked one atop another until I could barely remember what it felt like to move through this house without my shoulders tensed, waiting for the next attack.

At night, I lay awake in my too-large bed, staring at the ceiling and thinking about Jacob. His surgery was scheduled for February. Just one more month. I could survive one more month of anything if it meant my brother would live.

But the cost was higher than I'd calculated.

I started taking breakfast in my room. Then lunch. Then dinner, claiming headaches or fatigue or a dozen other small excuses that Joseph accepted with increasing concern. I timed my movements through the house like a military operation—waiting until I heard Milo's door close before venturing to the library, using the back stairs to avoid the common areas, ducking into empty rooms when I heard his footsteps approaching.

It was cowardice, maybe. But it was also survival.

Without the constant confrontations, I could breathe. I could focus on Joseph's care—checking his vitals, managing his medications, ensuring he ate properly and rested enough. That was what the contract required, after all. A nurse-companion. Not a mother.

Not to a child who looked at me like I was something he'd scrape off his shoe.

Three days into my new strategy, Joseph summoned me to his study.

The word came through Margaret, her face carefully neutral. "Mr. Langford would like to see you. After Milo's bedtime."

My stomach dropped.

I knocked on the study door at nine-thirty, my palms damp despite the house's chill. Joseph sat behind his massive desk, papers spread before him, but I could tell he hadn't been working. The papers were too neat, too deliberately arranged.

"Come in, Sarah. Please, sit."

I took the chair across from him, my hands folded in my lap. Through the window behind him, I could see snow beginning to fall, fat flakes drifting past the glass.

"You've been avoiding my son."

Not a question. An observation, delivered in that careful tone he used when he was trying to remain calm.

"I'm giving him space," I said, choosing my words with the same precision I used when charting patient symptoms. "He clearly doesn't want me around. My presence upsets him, and I thought—"

"You thought wrong." Joseph's voice cut through mine, firmer than I'd ever heard it. He leaned forward, and in the lamplight his face looked carved from stone. "This isn't what we agreed to, Sarah."

"Joseph, I'm trying—"

"Are you?" He pulled a sheet of paper from the stack, though he didn't look at it. "Our contract specifies that you would act as a maternal figure. That you would engage with Milo, guide him, provide the stability and care he needs. Not simply coexist in the same house like strangers passing in a hotel."

Each word landed like a stone.

"He doesn't want guidance from me," I said, and heard the desperation creeping into my voice. "He wants me gone. Every interaction ends in—"

"I don't believe avoidance fulfills our contract requirements." Joseph's expression remained implacable. "I need you to perform your maternal duties, Sarah. Not retreat from them."

The silence stretched between us, heavy with everything unsaid. Outside, the snow fell faster, accumulating on the windowsill.

"What exactly do you expect me to do?" The question came out sharper than I'd intended. "He hates me. He's made that abundantly clear. Do you want me to force myself on a child who sees me as—as what he called me? Something his father bought?"

Joseph flinched, but his resolve didn't waver. "I expect you to be the adult. To show him, through consistency and patience, that you're not going anywhere. That he can't drive you away with cruelty."

"And if I can't?" My voice dropped to barely a whisper. "If I'm not strong enough for this?"

"Then we'll need to revisit our arrangement."

The words hung in the air between us, carrying implications that made my blood run cold. Revisit. As in terminate. As in Jacob's surgery, the money, everything—

"I understand," I said, standing on legs that felt unsteady. "I'll do better."

But as I walked back to my room through the silent house, I wondered if doing better would be enough. Or if I was already trapped in a cycle that could only end one way.

Upstairs, a door opened and closed. Footsteps moved across the landing.

I pressed myself against the wall, waiting for Milo to pass, and hated myself for hiding.

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