He Lied About Christmas Until She Saw The Hotel Reflection-hihehu

Snow fell over Queens like the city was trying to hush itself.

It softened the roofs of parked cars, gathered along the edges of fire escapes, and turned the streetlights outside Marissa Cole’s apartment into blurry yellow moons.

Inside, the radiator clicked and hissed like an old man with a bad chest.

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The heat never quite reached the living room.

Marissa sat on the couch with her five-year-old son asleep against her, his warm cheek pressed into her sweatshirt and one hand still curled around the Christmas book he had refused to let go of.

The apartment smelled like cinnamon wax, damp mittens, and the macaroni she had made because Liam called it “Christmas pasta” and she did not have the heart to tell him it was just the last easy thing left in the cabinet.

Outside their window, families moved through the building with foil-covered plates and tired laughter.

Somebody down the block was singing along badly to a holiday song.

Somewhere in Manhattan, Daniel Cole was supposed to be changing flights, answering work calls, and sending his wife the kind of update a decent husband would send on Christmas.

He had done none of that.

He had left two days earlier with his suitcase rolling behind him and a rushed kiss pressed to Liam’s forehead.

“Last-minute business meeting,” he had said.

“Chicago.”

He said it with the bored confidence of a man who had learned that if he sounded irritated enough, Marissa would stop asking questions.

She had asked why a meeting had to happen over Christmas.

Daniel had sighed.

Not an ordinary sigh.

The kind he used like a door closing.

“You’re paranoid,” he said.

Then came the rest, familiar as bruises nobody could see.

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