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The Secret Pregnancy of the Billionaire's Ex-Wife novel Chapter 297

Chapter 297: Ghosts of Christmas Past

Christopher POV

The Italian villa was exactly as she’d left it. I insisted on that. The cleaning staff came twice a week, dusting and vacuuming, keeping mold from the bathrooms and insects from the kitchen. But they had strict instructions: nothing was to be moved. Nothing was to be thrown away. Not even things that seemed like garbage.

Sir, the children’s old drawings are fading in the sunlight, Maria, the head housekeeper, once pointed out. Perhaps we could move them to-

Leave them, I’d interrupted. They stay exactly where they are.

She’d nodded, lips pressed together in that way people do when they think you’ve lost your mind but are paid too well to say so.

Maybe I had. Lost my mind. It would explain why I found myself here again, alone on Christmas Eve, in a house full of ghosts.

I walked the familiar path from the front door to the living room, my fingers trailing along the wall where pencil marks stili recorded the twinsgrowth. Each line had a date beside it, some in my handwriting, some in Angela’s.

Ethan, age 3. Aria, age 4 and two months. Both, age 5.

The living room was still arranged the way Angela had set it up years ago. The oversized sectional where we’d spent countless nights watching movies, the twins squeezed between us. The coffee table with a faint ring where I’d once set down a hot mug without a coaster, earning Angela’s exasperated sigh.

You’re the one who insisted on real wood,I’d teased.

And you’re the one who insisted on ignoring basic furniture care, she’d shot back, but there was no real anger in it.

I crouched down by the toy chest in the corner, lifting the lid slowly. Inside, Aria’s collection of stuffed animals stared up at me with glassy eyes. Ethan’s wooden puzzles were stacked neatly, just as he’d always left them. I reached for the small pink blanket folded at the bottomAria’s special blankiethat she’d carried everywhere until age four.

The fabric was soft with age and countless washings. I pressed it to my face, inhaling deeply, but any trace of that baby scent was long gone, replaced by dust and time. Still, I folded it carefully and placed it back exactly as it had been.

On the bookshelf, a row of Dr. Seuss books stood alongside Italian fairy tales. I remembered reading to them each night, Ethan serious and attentive, Aria constantly interrupting with questions.

But why is his heart too small?she’d demanded when we read about the Grinch.

Some people just don’t know how to love properly,I’d explained, catching Angela’s eye over Aria’s head.

That’s sad,Ethan had concluded solemnly.

I moved to the kitchen next, where a child’s plastic cup still sat on the counter. It was Ethan’s favoriteblue with dinosaurs that changed color when filled with cold liquid. He’d refused to drink from anything else for months. Angela had finally bought three identical cups to rotate when one needed washing.

In the drawer next to the sink, I found a small rubber pacifier. Aria had been almost three before she’d given

up, and only after

I’d convinced her that big girls didn’t need pacifiers. She’d handed it over with great ceremony, extracting a promise that I’d keep it safe just in case.

I never broke that promise.

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Chapter 297: Ghosts of Christmas Past

Upstairs was harder. Their bedrooms remained frozen in timetwin Beds with cartoon character sheets, toys arranged on shelves, glowin-thedafy stars still stuck to the ceiling, I’d helped them place those stars, lifting each child in turn so they could reach, Aria had insisted on making the Little Dipper, though her version looked wore like a deformed spoon.

In Angela’s bedroom, her scent lingered faintly. I’d purchased her signature perfumeAcqua di Parma Gelsomino Nobileand Instructed Maria to spray it lightly around the room once a month. Ap artificial reminder, but necessary, I couldn’t bear the thought of the last traces of her disappearing completely.

On her vanity, a silver hairbrush still held strands of her dark hair. I found myself hefe more than once, gently removing a single strand, wrapping it around my finger like a promise, before forcing myself to place it back. Beside the brush stood a halfempty bottle of the lotion she’d used every night, the one that smelled like vanilla and something uniquely her.

I opened the closet, running my fingers along the clothes she’d left Behind. The sleeves of her sweaters, the silk of her robes. The sundress she’d worn on Aria’s fourth birthday, when we’d had a picnic by the lake. The faded jeans with a small paint stain from when we’d repainted the kitchen and she’d insisted on helping

In the back corner of the closet, wrapped in tissue paper, I found what I’d come fora small box of Christmas ornaments the children had made. Construction paper stars covered in glitter. Popsicle stick frames with their school photos. Salt dough handprints painted in bright colors.

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