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Merry Christmas, You Filthy Cheater Novel Cover

Merry Christmas, You Filthy Cheater

Ten years of marriage. Two beautiful children. One perfect Christmas Eve. Or so I thought. While I was burning my hand on the turkey and wrapping gifts until my fingers bled, my husband, Ryan, was "stuck at the office." I drove through the blizzard to bring him his favorite forgotten scarf. I didn't find him at his desk. I found him in the glass-walled conference room, lit by the city lights, unwrapping his real Christmas present: his twenty-three-year-old assistant, Bella. I watched them do things he hasn't done with me in years. I heard him whisper the same promises he made at our altar. I didn't scream. I didn't barge in. I recorded it. Ryan thinks he’s coming home to a warm wife and a hot meal. He is. But the main course isn't turkey. It’s ruin. Total, absolute ruin.
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Chapter 2

The next three days passed in a haze of forced normalcy. I threw myself into holiday preparations—wrapping gifts with military precision, baking cookies that filled our apartment with the scent of cinnamon and false cheer. Ryan complimented my sugar cookies with the same distant politeness he'd use with a helpful stranger.

By Thursday evening, I'd almost convinced myself that Christmas morning might somehow reset us, bring back the couple we used to be. Then Ryan's key turned in the lock at 11:47 PM.

"Sorry, babe," he called out, his voice carrying that practiced exhaustion I'd grown to recognize. "Johnson needed those quarterly projections tonight. You know how it is."

I looked up from the couch where I'd been pretending to read, marking the same page for the past hour. Ryan stood in the entryway, shrugging out of his charcoal wool coat with movements that seemed almost theatrical. His hair was slightly mussed, his tie loosened just enough to suggest a long, stressful day.

But as he hung his coat on the hook by the door, something else drifted toward me on the apartment's stale air—a scent that made my stomach clench with sudden unease.

Vanilla. Sweet, cloying, artificial vanilla.

Not the warm, natural vanilla of my baking that still lingered faintly in the kitchen. This was cheaper, more aggressive. The kind of scent that clung to discount perfumes and car air fresheners.

"How was your day?" I asked, setting down my book with careful casualness.

Ryan was already heading toward the bedroom, loosening his tie completely. "Brutal. Absolutely brutal. I barely had time to grab lunch."

The vanilla scent followed him across the room, and I found myself taking a deeper breath, trying to place it. It was familiar somehow, like something I'd smelled in passing—in an elevator, maybe, or a department store.

"Did you take an Uber home?" The question slipped out before I could stop it.

Ryan paused in the bedroom doorway, glancing back with mild confusion. "Yeah, why?"

"Just... there's this smell. Like vanilla air freshener."

His expression cleared, and he let out a tired laugh. "Oh, that. Yeah, the driver had this obnoxious car freshener hanging from his mirror. Nearly gave me a headache. I had to roll the window down halfway home."

The explanation was so reasonable, so perfectly mundane, that I felt foolish for even noticing. Of course it was the Uber. Ryan took rideshares all the time when he worked late—it was more practical than dealing with downtown parking.

"Sorry," I said, forcing a smile. "I didn't mean to interrogate you."

"It's fine." Ryan disappeared into the bedroom, and I heard the rustle of clothes being removed. "I'm going to shower and crash. Tomorrow's going to be another nightmare."

I nodded to the empty doorway, then settled back into the couch cushions. Through the thin walls, I could hear water running, the familiar sounds of Ryan's evening routine. Everything normal. Everything explainable.

So why did I still feel like something was wrong?

Twenty minutes later, Ryan emerged from the bathroom in his pajamas, hair damp and skin flushed from the hot water. He kissed the top of my head as he passed—a brief, brotherly peck that somehow felt worse than no affection at all.

"Night, Sarah."

"Goodnight."

I waited until I heard him settle into bed before getting up to turn off the lights. As I passed through the bedroom to use the bathroom, I noticed Ryan's work clothes in a heap by the hamper. His white dress shirt lay crumpled on top, and even in the dim light, I could see a dark stain on the collar.

Coffee, probably. Ryan was always spilling something on his shirts during those long, stressful days.

I gathered up his clothes without thinking, the way I'd done hundreds of times before. Being a good wife meant taking care of these small things, making his life easier. As I lifted the shirt, that vanilla scent wafted up again, stronger now, mixed with something else I couldn't identify.

In the bathroom, under the harsh fluorescent light, I examined the stain more closely. It was reddish-brown, smeared rather than splattered, as if someone had tried to wipe it away. Coffee would have been more obvious, wouldn't it? This looked... different. Deliberate.

I turned on the cold water and began working the stain with my fingers, watching the water run pink, then clear. The vanilla scent seemed to intensify as the fabric got wet, clinging to my hands like an accusation I couldn't quite voice.

*Stop it,* I told myself firmly. *It's coffee. Or wine from a client dinner. You're being paranoid.*

But as I scrubbed at the stubborn mark, my mind wandered to all the late nights, all the perfectly reasonable explanations. The way Ryan had started showering immediately when he came home. The way he guarded his phone like it contained state secrets.

The way he looked at me now—not with love, not even with indifference, but with something that might have been guilt.

The stain finally began to lift, and I scrubbed harder, my knuckles white against the porcelain sink. The vanilla scent mixed with the harsh smell of hand soap, creating something sickly sweet that made my stomach turn.

*Be a good wife,* I reminded myself, the words echoing in my head like a mantra. *Don't ask questions. Don't make trouble. Just take care of him.*

But as I rinsed the shirt one final time, holding it up to check for any remaining traces of the stain, I couldn't shake the feeling that I was washing away more than just a coffee spill. I was washing away evidence of something I wasn't ready to face.

The shirt came clean, just like always. By morning, Ryan would have fresh clothes waiting, pressed and perfect, and he would kiss my cheek and tell me I was wonderful for taking such good care of him.

And I would smile and pretend that the vanilla scent hadn't followed me into my dreams, sweet and cloying and wrong.

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