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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 2

The doorbell rang again, three sharp chimes that cut through the tension like a blade. I stood frozen in my living room, the torn pieces of Theodore's photograph scattered at my feet like confetti from hell.

"I'll get it," Merry whispered, her voice thick with tears.

"No." The word came out harder than I intended. "You've done enough."

I walked to the door on unsteady legs, my hand trembling as I turned the knob. The man standing on my porch commanded attention without trying—tall, silver-haired, wearing an overcoat that probably cost more than my monthly mortgage. His eyes were steel gray, sharp and calculating, but there was something else there. Something that looked like pain.

"Mrs. Hartwell," he said, his voice smooth as aged whiskey. "Or should I say, Ms. Hartwell—your husband has been quite busy these past five years."

The casual way he delivered those words made my stomach drop. "Who are you?"

"Marcus Blackwell." He stepped forward slightly, and I caught the scent of expensive cologne mixed with winter air. "May I come in? We have a great deal to discuss about your very much alive husband."

I should have slammed the door. Should have called the police. Instead, I stepped aside, my curiosity overriding every instinct for self-preservation.

Marcus moved through my living room like he owned it, his gaze taking in the Christmas tree, the scattered photograph, Merry huddled in the corner with mascara streaking her cheeks. He set a manila folder on my coffee table with deliberate precision.

"Theodore Hartwell," he began, opening the folder to reveal a stack of documents, "has been operating under at least three different identities since his supposed death. Jonathan Mills in Switzerland. Thomas Harper in Monaco. And most recently, Theodore Ashford in Paris."

My legs gave out, and I sank onto the couch. "How do you—"

"Know all this?" Marcus settled into the chair across from me, his movements controlled and predatory. "Because your husband didn't just fake his death to escape his debts to you, Mrs. Hartwell. He's been running a sophisticated investment fraud scheme across three countries. And my family is one of his victims."

He pulled out a photograph—Theodore shaking hands with an older man in front of what looked like a Swiss bank. Theodore's smile was the same one I'd fallen in love with fifteen years ago, charming and confident. The same smile that had lied to me for God knows how long.

"Two point seven million dollars," Marcus continued, his voice never losing its measured calm. "That's what he took from the Blackwell Foundation. Money meant for children's hospitals and education programs."

Rage flared in my chest, hot and consuming. "Why are you telling me this?"

"Because I need your help." Marcus leaned forward, his gray eyes intense. "As Theodore's legal widow, you have access to information and documents that I cannot obtain through conventional means. Bank records, property deeds, insurance policies—things that could help us trace where he's hidden the money."

"And what do I get out of this arrangement?"

"Everything that's rightfully yours. Every asset he transferred before his death, every penny he stole from your business, every lie he told." Marcus's voice dropped lower. "I'll help you destroy him, Mrs. Hartwell. Completely and utterly."

I stared at this stranger offering me vengeance on a silver platter. "Why? You're clearly wealthy enough to hire an army of investigators. Why do you need me?"

Something shifted in Marcus's expression, a crack in his polished facade. He was quiet for a long moment, his fingers drumming against his knee.

"What did he do to your wife?" I asked, the words coming from some deep intuition.

The drumming stopped. Marcus's jaw tightened, and for a moment, I saw past the billionaire exterior to the man underneath—a man carrying his own weight of grief and rage.

"She discovered something she shouldn't have," he said finally. "Victoria was always too curious for her own good. She found discrepancies in some investment documents, started asking questions." His voice grew quieter. "A week later, her brakes failed on Highway 1."

The room fell silent except for the soft ticking of my grandmother's clock and Merry's muffled sobs. I felt the pieces clicking together, forming a picture too horrible to fully comprehend.

"You think Theodore—"

"I don't think, Mrs. Hartwell. I know." Marcus's eyes met mine, and I saw a fury there that matched my own. "Your husband is a killer."

Before I could respond, Merry burst from the corner where she'd been hiding, dropping to her knees in front of me. Her face was blotchy with tears, her hands shaking as she reached for mine.

"Mom, please, let me explain," she sobbed. "Three years ago in Paris, I was broke. I'd just lost my internship, and I couldn't afford rent. I was walking past a café when I saw him—Dad—sitting at a table with that blonde woman."

My heart clenched as I watched my stepdaughter fall apart.

"He saw me before I could run. He bought me coffee, acted like nothing had happened, like he hadn't destroyed our lives." Merry's voice cracked. "When I threatened to call you, to tell you he was alive, he showed me papers. My trust fund, the one he set up when he married you—he said he could make it disappear with one phone call."

I pulled my hands away from hers. "So you chose money over the truth."

"I was scared!" she cried. "I was twenty-two and stupid and terrified. He said telling you would only hurt you more, that you were better off thinking he was dead. He said he'd make sure I never worked again if I said anything."

The betrayal cut deeper than Theodore's lies. This girl I'd raised, loved like my own daughter, had watched me grieve for three years while protecting her inheritance.

"Get out," I whispered.

"Mom—"

"Get out of my house."

Merry stumbled to her feet, her sobs echoing through the room as she grabbed her coat and fled. The front door slammed behind her, leaving Marcus and me alone with the weight of terrible truths.

I picked up the authorization form Theodore had sent, the paper that would give him access to the Napa vineyard. With deliberate slowness, I tore it in half. Then in half again. And again, until the pieces fluttered to the floor like snow.

"I won't sign this," I said, meeting Marcus's gaze. "And I won't rest until he pays for everything."

Marcus nodded, reaching into his folder for another document. "Then we have a deal. But there's one more thing you should know about Theodore's new wife."

He slid a personnel file across the table. The photograph clipped to the corner showed the same blonde woman from Theodore's wedding photo, but this was a corporate headshot. Professional. Innocent.

"Her name is Sophia Chen," Marcus said. "She used to work for me. She was Victoria's personal assistant—the one who had access to her schedule, her appointments, her route to work the day she died."

I stared at the photograph, pieces of a larger puzzle beginning to form in my mind. Theodore hadn't just faked his death and stolen money. He'd orchestrated something far more sinister, and this woman had been his accomplice from the beginning.

"Tell me about this deal," I said, my voice steady for the first time all evening.

Marcus smiled, and it was sharp as a blade. "With pleasure."

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