
THE BILLIONAIRE'S CHRISTMAS GHOST
Chapter 3
The Christmas tree lights blurred through my tears as I sat in the darkness, watching dawn creep through the windows. I hadn't moved from this spot on the couch in hours, surrounded by the scattered pieces of Theodore's photograph like evidence of a crime scene.
The house felt different now. Hollow. Even the cheerful red and gold ornaments seemed to mock me, their festive glow a stark contrast to the devastation in my chest. Five years of grief, five years of rebuilding myself from nothing, and it had all been built on a foundation of lies.
Merry huddled in the corner chair, her knees drawn to her chest. She hadn't spoken since her confession, just sat there watching me with red-rimmed eyes. The distance between us felt like an ocean.
"Mom?" she whispered as the first rays of sunlight touched the Christmas tree. "Can I—"
"Don't." The word came out sharper than I intended. I couldn't look at her. Not yet.
The doorbell rang at exactly eight o'clock, three measured chimes that cut through the morning silence. I knew who it would be before I opened the door.
Marcus Blackwell stood on my porch holding a paper bag that smelled of fresh coffee and warm pastries. He'd traded his expensive overcoat for a charcoal cashmere sweater, but his gray eyes held the same intensity as the night before.
"You look like you haven't slept," he said, stepping inside without invitation.
"I wonder why." I closed the door, watching as he set the bag on my kitchen counter with the same deliberate precision he'd used with his documents.
"Coffee. Black. And croissants from that French bakery on Fifth." He turned to face me, his expression serious. "We need to talk. Theodore's moving faster than we anticipated."
My stomach clenched. "What do you mean?"
Marcus pulled out his phone, showing me a screen full of legal documents. "My sources in Switzerland say he's filed expedited paperwork to unfreeze the Napa vineyard assets. If you don't sign that authorization form by New Year's Eve, he's planning to come back himself to 'convince' you."
The words hit me like ice water. "He's coming here?"
"To collect what he believes is rightfully his." Marcus's jaw tightened. "Which means you're going to face your dead husband in less than a week."
I sank onto a kitchen stool, my hands trembling as I reached for the coffee. The bitter warmth did nothing to steady my nerves. "I can't. I can't see him. Not after—"
"Then we don't let him dictate the terms." Marcus moved closer, his presence somehow both commanding and comforting. "We force his hand first."
"How?"
A smile played at the corners of his mouth, sharp and calculating. "You're going to throw a party."
I stared at him. "A party?"
"A New Year's charity gala. Black tie. Five hundred guests." Marcus pulled out a leather notebook, already filled with neat handwriting. "Every business contact Theodore ever had, every investor he charmed, every society figure who attended your wedding. We'll use your status as his grieving widow to draw them all in."
The audacity of it took my breath away. "You want me to—"
"Expose him before he can control the narrative." Marcus's eyes gleamed with something dangerous. "If Theodore wants to come back from the dead, he'll walk into a room full of people who know exactly what he is."
For the first time since opening that package, I felt something other than despair. It was small, flickering, but unmistakable: hope. And beneath it, something darker. Hunger for justice.
"The Hartwell Foundation," I said slowly. "I still have access to the charity accounts. I could host it as a memorial fundraiser for Theodore."
"Perfect." Marcus made a note. "Nothing says 'devoted widow' like honoring your dead husband's memory while secretly planning his destruction."
Merry's voice came from the doorway, small and hesitant. "I want to help."
I turned to look at her properly for the first time since her betrayal. Her face was pale, her dark hair tangled, but there was determination in her eyes that reminded me of the little girl who used to help me bake cookies.
"Why?" I asked.
Tears spilled down her cheeks. "Because I've been a coward for three years. Because you deserved better from me. Because—" She took a shaky breath. "Because I have something that might help."
She disappeared upstairs, returning with a small metal box I'd never seen before. Her hands shook as she set it on the counter.
"Before Dad left, he hid this in my closet. I was supposed to throw it away, but I couldn't. I thought maybe someday—" She opened the lid, revealing a stack of documents and a small flash drive. "Financial records. Account numbers. Names of people he was working with."
Marcus reached for the papers with careful hands, his expression growing more intense as he scanned the contents. "These are offshore banking documents. Swiss accounts, Cayman Islands—" He looked up at me. "This could be the evidence we need to prove the fraud."
I stared at my stepdaughter, this girl who had protected her father's secrets while watching me suffer. But she was also the girl who had kept evidence that could destroy him.
"Why now?" I asked.
"Because last night, watching you break apart, I realized something." Merry wiped her eyes with the back of her hand. "He didn't just steal money from you. He stole five years of your life. And I helped him do it."
The anger in my chest shifted, making room for something else. Not forgiveness—not yet—but the possibility of it.
"We'll need a venue," I said, turning back to Marcus. "Somewhere elegant enough to attract the right people."
"The Blackwell Foundation has a ballroom," he offered. "It seats six hundred."
For the next three hours, we planned. Marcus made calls to caterers and florists while I compiled guest lists from my old address books. Merry worked quietly at the kitchen table, organizing the financial documents and researching the names mentioned in Theodore's papers.
It felt surreal, planning a memorial gala for my living husband while plotting his downfall. But with each phone call, each detail arranged, I felt stronger. More like the woman I'd been before Theodore's lies broke me.
Around noon, my laptop chimed with a new email. The sender was listed as 'A Friend,' and my blood ran cold as I opened the attachment.
It was a video file. Grainy security footage from what looked like a parking garage. The timestamp showed a date from two years ago—the day Marcus's wife died. In the corner of the frame, barely visible, was a blonde woman in a dark coat. She stood by a silver sedan for several minutes, then walked away.
The woman was Sophia Chen. Theodore's new wife.
I turned the laptop toward Marcus, watching his face go white as he recognized the location.
"That's the parking garage at Victoria's office building," he said, his voice barely above a whisper. "The day she died."
The email's message was brief: "She was there an hour before the accident. Thought you should know. Be careful who you trust. —A friend who knows too much."
Marcus and I stared at each other across my kitchen table, the weight of this new revelation settling between us like a loaded gun.
"Someone else knows the truth," I said slowly. "And they're trying to help us—or trap us."
Marcus closed the laptop with deliberate care, but I could see the fury burning behind his controlled facade. "Either way," he said, "we're running out of time."
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