SECOND CHANCE CHRISMAS

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The Betrayal

Maya's POV

The wedding cake hit the floor with a loud crash.

I stood frozen in the doorway of my family's bakery, staring at white frosting scattered across the floor. Christmas lights blinked around the window display. The smell of gingerbread filled the air.

But all I could see was Marcus—my fiancé, the man I was supposed to marry tomorrow—kissing my best friend Lisa.

"Maya!" Lisa jumped away from Marcus. Her red lipstick was smeared. Her blonde hair looked messy. The Christmas tree pin I'd given her sparkled on her green sweater. "It's not what it looks like!"

I wanted to believe her. But I had eyes.

Marcus didn't even look sorry. He just stood there smiling—that smile that made my stomach feel sick.

"Actually, Maya," he said, fixing his tie. "It's time you knew the truth."

I looked down at the destroyed cake. Six hours making that red velvet cake with cream cheese frosting. Marcus's favorite.

Now it was ruined. Just like everything else.

"How long?" The words came out as a whisper. I cleared my throat. "How long has this been going on?"

Lisa's face turned red. "Maya, please—"

Marcus laughed, cold and mean. "Does it really matter? Tomorrow you'll sign those papers making me half-owner of this bakery. And then—"

"Then what?"

"Then we won't have to pretend anymore," Lisa said quietly. "Marcus and I... we're in love."

Those words hit like a punch. "But what about us? What about our wedding tomorrow?"

Marcus shrugged. "The wedding was never about love. It was business. Your family's bakery is worth millions once I tear it down and build my shopping mall here."

Ice water over my head. "Tear it down? This bakery has been in my family for three generations!"

"Not after tomorrow," Marcus said, bored. "Once we're married, I'll legally own half. And Lisa has been helping me learn all your family's secrets."

Lisa finally looked at me. What I saw made me step back. Hate. Pure, cold hate.

"You always had everything, Maya," she said bitterly. "The perfect family. The successful business. Everyone loves you. Do you know what it's like being your best friend? Always standing in your shadow?"

I couldn't breathe. "We've been friends since second grade!"

"I've been planning this for years," she said. "Every secret you told me? I told Marcus everything. He needed someone close to you, someone you trusted."

The room spun. "You're really not that smart," Marcus said, checking his watch. "Did you honestly think someone like me would marry someone like you for love?"

"Someone like me?"

"Boring. Plain. Always covered in flour, smelling like cookies. But your family's money? The bakery profits? That's worth dealing with you."

I thought about all the late nights baking his favorite desserts. All the times I'd defended him to my parents.

"The inheritance papers," I said suddenly. "You kept asking me to sign those papers early."

"Finally figuring it out?" Lisa mocked.

My heart raced. "If something happened to me after we got married... Marcus would get everything."

Marcus's smile grew. "Smart girl."

"You were going to kill me."

"Well, not immediately," Marcus said easily. "Six months. Maybe a year. A tragic hiking accident up on the mountain trails."

I couldn't believe this man I'd loved was calmly discussing murdering me.

"You're both crazy."

"Crazy rich, once this is over," Lisa said, smiling at Marcus. "We're selling this block to developers and moving to California."

I had to get out. I had to run. Call the police—

"Where do you think you're going?" Marcus blocked the door.

"Let me leave."

"I don't think so. You weren't supposed to come back tonight. But you did, and now you know too much."

I'd forgotten my phone and came back for it. If I hadn't, I never would have seen them.

"What are you going to do?" I already knew the answer.

Marcus and Lisa looked at each other. Silent agreement.

"We're going to take a little drive," Marcus said. "Up to Lookout Point. Those pretty cliffs where you can see the whole valley."

"No." I backed away. "I'm not going anywhere with you."

"Yes, you are," Lisa said. She pulled something from behind her back.

My kitchen knife. The big one with the sharp blade.

"Lisa, please," I begged. "We've been best friends for twenty years."

"We were best friends. Not anymore."

Marcus grabbed my arm, fingers digging into my skin. "Come on, Maya. Let's go look at the Christmas lights."

He dragged me toward the back door. I tried to pull away, but he was too strong. Lisa followed with the knife.

Through the front window, I could see families in the Christmas market. Kids laughing. Parents carrying gifts. Everyone happy and safe, with no idea something terrible was happening.

"Help!" I tried to scream, but Marcus covered my mouth.

He shoved me into the cold December night. His black car waited in the alley. He pushed me into the back seat. Lisa climbed in beside me, still holding that knife.

"Please," I tried one more time. "Please don't do this."

Nobody answered.

The car pulled out, and I watched Snow Valley's Christmas lights pass by. The giant tree in the town square. Decorated shop windows. Candy cane street lamps.

The car climbed the mountain road. Past the ski resort. Past vacation houses. Higher and higher until the town looked like tiny stars below.

Lookout Point—the cliff where people viewed the whole valley. A thousand-foot drop straight down.

"It really is beautiful up here," Marcus said, parking at the cliff's edge. "Too bad you won't see another Christmas, Maya."

Lisa opened her door. "Come on. Out of the car."

I couldn't move. Marcus pulled me out into the snow. My feet slipped on ice. The wind was strong and cold.

They walked me toward the edge. Toward the guard rail that seemed very low and very weak.

"Any last words?" Marcus smiled.

I looked at the man I'd loved. The man I'd planned to spend my life with. I'd never really known him at all.

"I trusted you," I said, voice shaking but clear. "I trusted you with my heart, my family, my whole life. And you threw it all away like yesterday's trash."

"Christmas wrapping," Lisa corrected with a mean smile. "Like yesterday's Christmas wrapping."

Those were the last words I heard before they pushed me.

I fell backward over the rail, arms reaching for something, anything. But there was nothing but air.

The Christmas lights spun below me, getting closer. The wind screamed in my ears. Snow filled my mouth and eyes.

This was how I died. On Christmas Eve, betrayed by the two people I'd trusted most.

But what I didn't know—what I couldn't possibly know as the ground rushed up—was that this wasn't the end.

It was the beginning.

Because sometimes, when you lose everything, the universe gives you something impossible.

Sometimes, it gives you a second chance.

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