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Chapter 1 - A Christmas Wish Never Spoken

Snow drifted over Sterling Plaza like powdered sugar shaken from the heavens, soft and silent, settling on coats, eyelashes, and the shoulders of strangers passing beneath the towering, glittering Christmas tree. Every year, the Sterling Christmas Tree lit up the heart of the city—fifty feet of shimmering ornaments, golden ribbons, and lights that pulsed like captured stars. And every year since she was five, Aria Sterling sat beneath it and made a wish she never spoke aloud.

She wasn't five anymore. She wasn't even the hopeful teenager she once was, the girl who used to believe destiny lived in every falling snowflake. At twenty-six, she'd already learned that life wasn't a Hallmark movie. Love didn't simply arrive wrapped in a bow. Happy endings didn't follow a schedule.

But traditions were traditions.

Aria settled onto her usual wooden bench near the base of the giant tree. She tucked a strand of her long chestnut hair behind her ear and pulled her red wool coat tighter around her. The air was crisp enough to sting her cheeks, carrying hints of cinnamon from the food stalls and roasted chestnuts drifting from a nearby corner.

She inhaled slowly, letting the glow of the lights wash over her face.

Another year. Another wish she wasn't sure she deserved to make.

Please… this Christmas, let me meet the man meant for me. Someone who stays. Someone real.

She didn't whisper it. She didn't dare. The moment she spoke the wish, she was certain it would shatter.

Her grandmother once told her that unspoken wishes were the purest kind—born from truth, not performance. Maybe that was why Aria never stopped making this one, even though she'd pretended, for years, that she no longer believed in anything magic.

Her phone buzzed in her pocket.

MOM:Dinner at 7! Don't forget. Christmas planning meeting tonight.

Aria smiled faintly. Of course. The Sterling family didn't do anything small. Especially Christmas. Especially when the entire city expected the Sterling Charity Gala, the biggest holiday event of the year.

She typed back quickly:ARIA:I'll be there. Just finishing errands.

She slipped the phone away, but her heart felt heavier than before.

Errands. She always wrote that when she needed time alone.

Truthfully, today was the anniversary of the last time she had truly believed in love.

Three years ago, she stood here with a man she thought she would marry. And three years ago tomorrow, he left without a word—not a message, not a note, not an explanation. Just vanished. Leaving her waiting, humiliated, heartbroken, and colder than any December wind.

She sighed softly, brushing invisible dust from her gloves. She should forget him. She should. But heartbreak carved memory into bone.

She tilted her head back, watching snow collect in her palm. One flake landed perfectly in the center—crystal, delicate, gone the moment her warmth touched it.

"Some things aren't meant to stay," she whispered to herself.

A group of children ran past her, laughing, chasing each other with peppermint sticks. Their joy softened her chest. Maybe that was why she loved Christmas so much—children reminded her what hope felt like.

Aria stood, brushing off the snow from her coat, preparing to head home. She took one final look at the tree. "Same wish… same fool," she murmured, unable to stop the small smile tugging at her lips.

She turned—and collided straight into someone.

"Oh! I'm so sorry—" Aria stumbled back.

A man steadied her with a gentle hand on her elbow. "My fault," he said, voice warm, deep, familiar in a way that startled her.

Aria looked up.

He wore a dark coat dusted in snow, a black scarf wrapped around a strong jawline, and eyes—gray, stormy, haunted. She didn't recognize his face, yet something about him tugged at her memory.

"Are you alright?" he asked.

"Yes, I—I'm fine," Aria said quickly. "Just wasn't watching where I was going."

His gaze flicked to the tree behind her, then back to her face, lingering as if he wanted to say something more. Something important.

"Christmas wishes can be dangerous," he said quietly.

She blinked. "Excuse me?"

He gave her a faint smile—sad, knowing, nothing like the flirtatious smiles she got from blind dates or networking events.

"Be careful what you hope for," he murmured. "December has a way of giving you things you're not prepared to receive."

And before Aria could ask what that meant, he stepped aside and walked into the falling snow, disappearing into the crowd as if he had never been there.

Aria stared after him, confusion tightening her chest. Who was he? Why did his voice scrape somewhere familiar inside her?

She shook her head and began walking toward the plaza exit. It was probably nothing. Just a strange encounter in a crowded city.

But still…His words clung to her.

Christmas has a way of giving you things you're not prepared to receive.

She didn't know how true that would become.

The Sterling mansion was warm, bright, and buzzing by the time Aria arrived. Holiday decorators scurried about hanging wreaths, trimming garlands, and arranging poinsettias in perfect formation. Her family treated Christmas like a military operation—everything had to be immaculate, spectacular, photo-ready.

"Aria! There you are," her mother called from the living room, dressed in an emerald silk dress as if she'd stepped off a magazine cover. "We have catering menus to finalize. And don't forget the charity press conference—"

"I know, Mom," Aria replied, offering a faint smile. "I'll help."

She removed her coat, letting the warmth soak into her skin. She wanted to focus on family, on Christmas planning, on anything except strange men with prophetic warnings.

She moved toward the stairs to drop off her bag—When the doorbell rang.

Her father frowned. "At this hour? Did someone schedule a meeting without telling us?"

One of the butlers opened the door.

And the world shifted.

A small bundle wrapped in a pale blue blanket rested in a baby carrier on the doorstep. Snowflakes clung to the blanket's edges. A tiny hand peeked out, fingers curled softly.

Aria froze.

A baby.On their doorstep.On a winter night.

Her mother gasped. "What on earth—?"

The butler knelt, checking for a note. "There's a letter, ma'am."

Aria's heart thudded. Something in her chest whispered—a warning, a truth she wasn't ready for.

Her father unfolded the letter, eyes widening as he read.

Then slowly… he turned to Aria.

"Aria," he said, voice trembling, "this… this is addressed to you."

Her breath caught.

"What?" she whispered.

He handed her the envelope. Her fingers shook as she opened it.

Inside was a paternity test.

Her name printed on the top.

And a simple handwritten message:

"Take care of him. He is yours."

The paper slipped from her hands.

"What is this?" her mother demanded. "Aria—what have you done?"

Aria's voice trembled, barely a breath."I… I don't know. I don't—this can't be—"

Her gaze fell to the baby, his eyes opening just then—bright, clear, gray as a winter storm.

The same eyes she saw under the Sterling Christmas tree.

Her knees weakened.

"No," she whispered. "No, this isn't possible…"

But the baby blinked up at her, gaze calm, recognizing her somehow.

And from outside the window—Across the snowy courtyard—A shadowed figure stood beneath a lamppost.

Watching her.

The same man from the plaza.

Before she could speak, the figure turned and vanished into the night.

Aria's breath hitched.

Be careful what you hope for…December gives you things you're not prepared to receive.

And this Christmas—It had just given her a baby.

And a mystery that would change everything.

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