Follow
Chapters
Share
The Christmas Eve I Witnessed Your Betrayal Novel Cover

The Christmas Eve I Witnessed Your Betrayal

"Who is that man?" I heard Mrs. Ashford ask as I passed, her voice pitched just loud enough to be deliberately audible. She was looking directly at me, her expression a mixture of curiosity and disdain. Margaret's response came without hesitation, smooth as aged whiskey. "Just my daughter's husband. He helps with the arrangements." Just. That single word landed in my chest like a stone dropping into still water, sending ripples of pain outward. Five years of sacrificing my career, five years of twenty-hour days managing Collins family projects, five years of swallowing my pride at every family gathering—all reduced to 'just' her daughter's husband. The helper. The arrangement-maker. The outsider.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The crystal chandeliers cast warm light across the Collins mansion's grand ballroom, but I felt none of that warmth as I adjusted another centerpiece for what had to be the fifth time that evening.

Christmas Eve.

The most wonderful time of the year, they said. But for me?

It was just another day of invisible labor.

"Excuse me, could you take this?" A woman in a pearl-encrusted gown thrust her mink coat at me without looking at my face. I wasn't a person to her. Just another piece of the household machinery.

I took the coat silently, adding it to the growing pile on my arm.

Around me, guests swept past in waves of expensive perfume and champagne-soaked laughter. Designer gowns brushed against my simple dark suit—the one presentable outfit I owned that Margaret hadn't openly criticized. Not that it mattered. I could have worn Armani, and they still would have mistaken me for the help.

Maybe that's all I was.

"Elias." Margaret's voice cut through the ambient noise like a blade through silk. "The caterers are asking about the timing for the main course. Handle it."

No please. No thank you. Just commands, as if I were staff she'd hired rather than her son-in-law.

I nodded and moved toward the kitchen, catching a glimpse of Elizabeth near the entrance. She stood beside her mother, a vision in emerald green silk that complemented her dark hair perfectly. They greeted guests together, Margaret's hand possessively on Elizabeth's shoulder, both wearing matching smiles that never quite reached their eyes. Elizabeth laughed at something Senator Morrison said, and for a moment, I remembered the woman I'd fallen in love with five years ago.

That woman felt like a stranger now.

"Who is that man?" I heard Mrs. Ashford ask as I passed, her voice pitched just loud enough to be deliberately audible. She was looking directly at me, her expression a mixture of curiosity and disdain.

Margaret's response came without hesitation, smooth as aged whiskey. "Just my daughter's husband. He helps with the arrangements."

Just.

That single word landed in my chest like a stone dropping into still water, sending ripples of pain outward.

Five years of sacrificing my career, five years of twenty-hour days managing Collins family projects, five years of swallowing my pride at every family gathering—all reduced to 'just' her daughter's husband.

The helper. The arrangement-maker. The outsider.

I continued toward the kitchen, my jaw tight enough to ache. The marble floors beneath my feet cost more than my childhood home in Chicago. Everything here did. The paintings, the furniture, even the damn Christmas tree probably cost more than my father earned in a year before he died. I'd never quite fit into this world of casual wealth and inherited importance, no matter how hard I tried.

And God, had I tried.

The kitchen was controlled chaos—caterers moving in practiced synchronization, plates being assembled with precision, the head chef barking orders. I coordinated the timing, ensured everything would flow smoothly, then slipped back toward the ballroom. Through the service corridor, I could hear the string quartet starting a new piece, something classical and elegant that Elizabeth had selected.

But it was a different sound that stopped me cold.

Elizabeth's laugh.

Not her polite, social laugh—the one she used with her mother's friends and business associates. This was something else. Unguarded. Intimate. The laugh she used to give me, back when I still believed our marriage meant something.

I shouldn't have followed the sound. Some instinct warned me to turn back, to return to my invisible duties, to maintain the careful blindness that had let me survive five years in this house.

But I couldn't stop myself.

The laugh led me up the curved staircase to the second floor, away from the party's glittering heart. The hallway here was dimly lit, doors to guest rooms standing closed and dark. All except one, at the far end, where a sliver of light escaped into the corridor.

My feet carried me forward despite the dread pooling in my stomach.

Through the partially open door, I saw them.

Elizabeth and Clint Cole.

His hand rested on her waist with casual possession, fingers splayed across the emerald silk. Her head tilted back as she looked up at him, that unguarded laugh still playing at the corners of her mouth. They stood close—too close—their bodies angled toward each other in a way that spoke of intimacy and shared secrets.

Clint murmured something I couldn't hear, and Elizabeth's smile widened.

The scene burned itself into my memory with cruel clarity: the way her hand rested on his chest, the way he leaned toward her, the way neither of them seemed to remember or care that she was married to someone else.

My hand pushed the door open before my brain could override the impulse.

They sprang apart, but not quickly enough. The damage was done. I'd seen everything I needed to see.

Elizabeth's face flashed with something—guilt, maybe, or surprise—before settling into an expression I'd come to know too well over the years. Cold. Defensive. Closed.

"Elias." My name from her lips sounded like an accusation rather than a greeting.

"What's going on here?" My voice came out steadier than I felt, but I could hear the tremor underneath. Hurt. Anger. Five years of swallowed pain threatening to break free.

Elizabeth smoothed her dress with deliberate calm, her composure clicking back into place like armor. "Don't be ridiculous, Elias. It's just friendly contact. You're being paranoid."

Just friendly contact.

Clint adjusted his cufflinks, that trademark smirk playing at his mouth. "Come on, man. We've known each other since childhood. Don't make this awkward."

Don't make this awkward.

As if I were the problem. As if my hurt feelings were the real issue here, not his hands on my wife, not her laugh that she no longer gave to me.

I looked at Elizabeth, searching for some sign of the woman I'd married, some indication that this mattered to her at all.

She met my gaze with cool indifference, and I saw the truth written in her eyes.

I didn't matter enough to even warrant a real explanation.

You may also like

After Public Humiliation, I Became His CEO Boss Novel Cover
9.2
I stood in the corner of the ballroom, my camera a shield between me and the glittering crowd. Through my lens, I captured Marcus's triumph—his easy smile as he accepted congratulations, the way his hand gestured animatedly when describing his vision for "Midnight Embrace." My vision. Our vision. But no one knew that part. The Beverly Hills hotel ballroom sparkled with Hollywood royalty. Crystal chandeliers cast golden light over actresses in couture gowns, producers with perfect teeth, and critics whose words could make or break careers. I adjusted my aperture, focusing on Marcus as he threw his head back in laughter at something a studio executive said. "Perfect," I whispered, capturing the moment. Three years of late nights, endless networking, and silent sacrifice had led to this—his breakthrough. I should have felt proud.
BOUND BY HIS NAME  Novel Cover
9.2
"Isabella this is the right time for you to choose between me or Hector, because any one you choose now will be your husband till the contract end." "Think well Isabella don't make mistake." She spilled coffee on the wrong man. Isabella Ramirez is drowning in debt, exhaustion, and fear-working double shifts to keep her dying mother alive. One mistake in a crowded café brings her face-to-face with Alejandro De La Vega, a billionaire feared for his cold heart and ruthless power. His punishment is cruel. His offer is worse. One year as his wife in exchange for her family's freedom. But inside his mansion, Isabella learns that marriage without love is a cage. Betrayal hides behind charming smiles. A former wife returns with secrets. A cousin watches from the shadows. And the contract that binds her may destroy her heart. When lies explode and power turns brutal, Isabella must choose between survival and love-before she loses herself completely. Tropes Contract Marriage Poor Girl × Billionaire CEO Forced Proximity Inheritance Deadline Emotional Abuse & Redemption Love vs Power Public Scandal Love Triangle One True Love
Boyfriend's Costly Mistake Novel Cover
9.6
The email notification lit up my phone screen at exactly 3:47 PM, and for a moment, I just stared at it, afraid that if I blinked, it would disappear. *Ms. Campbell, we are pleased to confirm your invitation to the Campbell Enterprises Annual Charity Gala...* My hands trembled as I read the words again. Three months. Three months of networking events, of presenting my senior care community project to skeptical board members, of refining every detail until my proposal was perfect. Fifty invitations total, reserved exclusively for major donors and industry leaders who could make real change happen. And one of them was mine. I pressed my fingers against my university ring, that familiar gesture when emotions threatened to overwhelm me. This wasn't just an invitation to a fancy party. This was validation.
He Traded Our Babies for Her Artificial Womb Novel Cover
9.7
After being married to Clayton Wheeler for seven years, he forced me to terminate five pregnancies. He said, "Because of you, Talia can't be a mother; she can't have kids anymore. When she's okay with you having a child, then you can have one for me." Recently, I discovered I was pregnant again, and he transferred a million dollars to me. Then he said, "Take care of it; Talia still doesn't want you to have the baby." This time, I finally became disillusioned. I went through the procedure and then left to become a foreign correspondent, covering conflicts around the globe. I doubt I'll ever return. --- As the million dollars came through, Clayton stood by, saying, "Talia can't have children now because of you. When she's ready, then you can have a baby." His eyes were devoid of compassion as he spoke. Seven years of marriage, and this was the sixth time he forced me to terminate a pregnancy. "Come on, don't be upset," he said.
Husband's Affair Costs Her All Novel Cover
9.3
I stared at the pregnancy test in my trembling hands, the two pink lines blurring through my tears of joy. Four times. This was the fourth time I'd held such a test, but unlike the previous three that had ended in devastating loss, something felt different about this moment. Maybe it was the way the evening light filtered through our penthouse windows, casting everything in golden warmth, or maybe it was simply the stubborn hope that refused to die despite everything we'd endured. "This time will be different," I whispered to the empty apartment, my voice echoing off the marble floors. "This time, our baby will make it." Lawson wouldn't be home for another hour, which gave me time to prepare something special. I wanted this announcement to be perfect—a moment we'd remember forever when we told our child about the night we first knew they existed. Moving through our home with renewed purpose, I lit dozens of vanilla candles throughout the living room, their soft glow transforming the sterile elegance into something intimate and magical. I selected Lawson's favorite wine from our collection, a bottle of Château Margaux we'd been saving for a special occasion. What could be more special than this?
Marrying the Chairman in the Wheelchair Novel Cover
8.9
On her wedding day, Hannah Sears is forced to hand over her wedding dress to her stepsister, Aspen, who is carrying the child of Hannah's lover, Jeffrey. Betrayed and heartbroken, Hannah must watch her beloved marry her stepsister. The pain deepens when she is forced to marry someone previously intended for Aspen, all to pay off her family's debts. Enter Alden Harrison, the son of a near-bankrupt billionaire. Known for his rough and cold demeanor, Alden is confined to a wheelchair after a tragic accident. Marrying Alden becomes an endless nightmare for Hannah. But Alden makes Hannah an offer: "Follow my lead and I will take revenge on all those who have wronged you." Will Hannah and Alden's union be a beneficial alliance? Can Hannah seek her revenge and find closure in this unexpected marriage?