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THE BILLIONAIRE'S CHRISTMAS GHOST Novel Cover

THE BILLIONAIRE'S CHRISTMAS GHOST

For five years, Eleanor Ashford mourned her husband. She wore black. She paid his debts. She rebuilt her life from the ashes of grief. On Christmas Eve, she discovered it was all a lie. Her husband didn't die—he faked his death to start a new life without her. And now he wants something from her. Enter Marcus Blackwell: a billionaire with his own secrets and a vendetta against Theodore. He offers Eleanor a deal—help him take down her "dead" husband, and he'll give her everything she lost. But revenge has a way of becoming something more. And at 52, Eleanor is about to discover that the best chapters of her life haven't been written yet.
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Chapter 1

The scent of pine needles and cinnamon filled the living room as I carefully hung the last ornament on the Christmas tree. Five years. Five long years since I'd allowed myself to celebrate Christmas, and here I was, threading silver tinsel through evergreen branches like nothing had ever happened.

"I'll Be Home for Christmas" drifted from the kitchen radio, Bing Crosby's voice wrapping around me like a bittersweet memory. The irony wasn't lost on me—Theodore would never be home for Christmas again. He'd been gone for five years, buried in Greenwood Cemetery under a headstone I'd chosen myself.

Merry's voice floated from the kitchen, humming along to the melody as she prepared our Christmas Eve dinner. My stepdaughter had been patient with me, understanding when I couldn't bear the sight of tinsel or the sound of carols. But this year felt different. This year, I was ready to live again.

The doorbell's sharp chime cut through the peaceful evening. I glanced toward the kitchen, but Merry was elbow-deep in pie dough, flour dusting her dark hair.

"I'll get it," I called, smoothing my sweater as I walked to the front door.

A young delivery man stood on my porch, his breath forming small clouds in the December air. "Eleanor Hartwell?"

"That's me."

He handed me a rectangular package wrapped in brown paper, the weight of it substantial in my hands. "Merry Christmas, ma'am."

I closed the door and examined the package. The return address was Paris, France, but no name—just a street address I didn't recognize. Must be one of Merry's college friends, I thought. She'd studied abroad there and maintained friendships across the Atlantic.

"Merry, you've got a package from Paris!" I called out, settling onto the couch.

"Just open it, Mom!" came her muffled reply. "Probably just Christmas cards!"

I smiled at being called 'Mom.' Even after all these years, it still warmed my heart. Carefully peeling back the brown paper, I revealed a white box underneath. Nothing fancy, just plain cardboard.

Inside, nestled in tissue paper, was a photograph.

My breath caught in my throat.

It was a wedding photo. A man in a perfectly tailored charcoal suit stood beside a stunning blonde woman in an elegant cream dress. Behind them, the Eiffel Tower stretched toward a cloudless sky. The man's arm was wrapped possessively around the woman's waist, both of them beaming at the camera with the kind of joy I remembered from my own wedding day.

The man was Theodore.

My Theodore. My dead husband.

My hands trembled as I flipped the photo over. Written in his familiar handwriting was a date: two weeks ago. Below that, in the same confident script I'd once loved seeing on birthday cards and anniversary notes: "To my former wife—Merry Christmas. I thought you should know I'm very much alive. And very much in love. —T"

The photograph slipped from my numb fingers, fluttering to the carpet like a fallen leaf. The room seemed to tilt, the Christmas tree lights blurring into streaks of color. Five years. Five years of grief, of rebuilding, of learning to breathe without him.

Five years of mourning a lie.

Rage, white-hot and consuming, surged through my chest. I had sold my interior design business—my life's work—to pay off his debts after the funeral. I had turned away every man who'd shown interest, convinced that my heart belonged to a ghost. I had spent countless nights crying into his pillow, clutching his shirts until his scent faded to nothing.

And he'd been in Paris. Drinking wine and falling in love.

I reached back into the box with shaking hands, finding another item beneath the tissue paper. A legal document, crisp and official. An authorization form requesting my signature to release claim on a property—a vineyard in Napa Valley I'd never heard of.

The pieces clicked into place with sickening clarity. Theodore hadn't contacted me out of guilt or love or even basic human decency. He needed something. He'd hidden assets before faking his death, but one had slipped through the cracks, been frozen by the courts. And now he needed his legally dead status cleared up just enough to claim what he believed was rightfully his.

This wasn't about me. It was about money.

It had always been about money.

"Mom?" Merry's voice seemed to come from very far away. "Mom, are you okay? You look—"

I turned toward her, the document still clutched in my fist. Her face went pale as she took in my expression, her eyes immediately dropping to the photograph on the floor.

"You knew," I said, my voice barely above a whisper. It wasn't a question.

Merry's composure crumbled instantly, tears spilling down her cheeks. "Mom, I can explain—"

"You knew," I repeated, louder this time. "You knew he was alive."

"Please, let me—"

"How long?" The words came out like shards of glass.

Merry wrapped her arms around herself, looking younger than her twenty-five years. "Three years. I saw him in Paris when I was studying abroad. He made me promise not to tell you. He said it would hurt you more to know, that you were better off thinking he was—"

"Get out."

The words hung in the air between us like a physical blow.

"Mom, please—"

"Get out of my house." I stood, my legs surprisingly steady despite the earthquake happening inside my chest. "Get out now."

Merry's sobs filled the room, but I couldn't look at her. Couldn't bear to see the face I'd trusted, the daughter I'd loved, who had watched me grieve for three years while knowing the truth.

The sound of a car door slamming outside cut through the tension. Through the front window, I saw a black Rolls-Royce parked at my curb, its polished surface reflecting the Christmas lights from neighboring houses.

A man emerged from the driver's seat—tall, silver-haired, wearing an expensive overcoat that spoke of old money and older power. He moved with the confidence of someone accustomed to getting what he wanted, his footsteps purposeful on my walkway.

In his hand, he carried a manila folder that looked identical to the one Theodore had sent me.

Marcus Blackwell had come calling on Christmas Eve.

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