
He Buried Me, But I Bloomed
She was dead. Or at least, that's what they thought. Now, five years later, Ivy Richardson stood at her own grave, ready to face the man who put her there.
Ivy, in a custom coat, stood at her cold, black marble gravestone. "Beloved daughter and fiancée," the inscription read—a cruel joke mirroring her heart's wasteland.
A gravedigger dropped his shovel, face ashen. Trembling, he pointed, gasping, "Oh my God... you look exactly like her." He saw a ghost; Ivy was alive.
She paid for silence. Then, Clayton, her former fiancé, appeared, shaking: "Ivy? Where have you been?" She crushed his cheap lilies, her lethal gaze replacing the girl he'd abandoned.
He snarled, blaming her, justifying her "Do Not Resuscitate" order for his mistress, Ainsley. Ivy's cold laugh mocked his pathetic lies.
"Fiancé?" she echoed, revealing her new wedding ring. "That title expired when you signed the DNR... and Ainsley was watching, wasn't she?" With an icy "Go to hell," Ivy left him slipping in the mud.
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Chapter 5
Ivy Richardson POV:
The next morning, the dense Los Angeles smog had burned off, leaving a blinding, harsh sunlight bouncing off the glass facades of the financial district.
A sleek, black Maybach silently glided to a halt at the curb in front of a towering high-rise.
I stepped out of the plush leather interior. I was wearing a razor-sharp, tailored white suit that clung to my frame like a second skin, paired with a dark pair of oversized sunglasses. Yesterday, in the cemetery, I was a ghost. Today, I was the executioner.
I tilted my head back slightly, my gaze locking onto the massive, brushed-steel letters bolted above the entrance: *Smith & Partners Trust Law Firm.*
This was the very institution my mother had trusted with her final assets before she died.
I pushed through the heavy glass revolving doors. The blast of over-conditioned, freezing air hit my face instantly, a sharp drop in physical temperature that perfectly matched the ice forming in my veins.
I walked straight to the front desk. The receptionist, dressed in a muted gray suit, immediately plastered on a practiced, corporate smile.
"Good morning. Do you have an appointment with one of our partners?" she asked, her tone dripping with the polite condescension reserved for walk-ins at elite firms.
I reached up and slowly pulled off my sunglasses. I didn't offer my name. I simply recited a string of twelve alphanumeric characters.
It was the master code to my mother's blind trust.
The receptionist's smile faltered. She quickly typed the sequence into her terminal. The second the screen loaded, all the blood drained from her cheeks. Her eyes widened to the size of saucers as she stared at the terrifying net worth attached to that single code.
She shot up from her ergonomic chair so fast it rolled backward and hit the wall.
"M-Ma'am," she stammered, bowing her head in deep reverence. "Please, the private VIP elevator to the penthouse conference room is right this way. I will alert Mr. Smith immediately."
I gave her a single, curt nod. I was completely numb to this kind of groveling.
I turned on my heel and started walking toward the frosted glass doors of the private lift.
Suddenly, a shrill, ear-piercing giggle echoed from the plush leather seating area of the lobby lounge.
The sound was like nails on a chalkboard. My stomach violently clenched. It was a noise that had haunted my nightmares for years, the soundtrack to every single moment of humiliation I had suffered in my teenage years.
I stopped dead in my tracks. I slowly turned my head, my eyes scanning the open lounge.
Sitting on a tufted leather sofa were a man and a woman.
The woman was wearing a sickeningly sweet, pastel pink Chanel tweed suit. Her hair was styled in perfect, bouncy waves. It was Ainsley. The fake heiress. The parasite who had stolen my life.
Sitting next to her, looking at her with an expression of absolute, sickening devotion, was my biological older brother, Dexter.
Ainsley was violently shaking Dexter's arm, pressing her chest against his bicep as she pouted her lips in a grotesque display of manufactured innocence.
"Please, Dexy?" she whined, her voice dripping with fake sugar. "I really, really need that necklace for the gala tonight."
I stepped behind a massive marble pillar, my breathing slowing down to a silent, predatory rhythm. I watched them like a sniper lining up a shot.
Dexter reached out and affectionately tapped the tip of Ainsley's nose. "You know I can't say no to you, Ainsley. Whatever my little sister wants, she gets."
My jaw locked so tight my teeth ached.
Five years ago, I was lying in a hospital bed, begging for my mother to come save me. Dexter never even bothered to show up to the waiting room. Yet here he was, treating the woman who had orchestrated my death like royalty.
My index finger tapped twice against the smooth leather of my Hermès bag. One. Two. It was my physical tell. The safety was off.
Ainsley clapped her hands together, her eyes gleaming with raw, unfiltered greed. "Oh, thank you! I can't wait to wear it. That pink diamond from the dead sister's mother is going to look stunning on me."
The temperature in the lobby seemed to plummet twenty degrees.
A violent, scorching rage ignited in my chest, burning away every ounce of my forced calm. That diamond was the last physical piece of my mother I had left. The thought of this leech wearing it around her neck made me want to rip her throat out.
I didn't walk toward the elevator. I pivoted sharply, my body squaring up toward the lounge.
I stepped out from behind the pillar. The sharp, aggressive *clack* of my stilettos against the marble floor echoed through the lobby like a ticking bomb.
Dexter was just pulling out his phone, ready to summon the lawyer and hand over my mother's legacy.
"That is Richardson family inheritance," I said.
My voice dropped from the vaulted ceiling like a guillotine blade—cold, absolute, and lethal.
"Who gave you the nerve to touch it?"
Ainsley's giggling abruptly choked off. Her fake smile froze, contorting into an ugly scowl as she whipped her head around to see who had dared interrupt her victory.
Dexter's brow furrowed in deep annoyance. He looked up, his mouth opening to deliver a harsh, arrogant reprimand to the stranger.
The second their eyes locked onto my face, the oxygen left the room.
Both of their expressions completely shattered, their jaws going slack in simultaneous, paralyzing horror.
"Are... are you a ghost or a person?!"
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9.0
I died alone in the medical wing giving birth to our son.
"Tell her to calm down and stop the theatrics."
Those were the last words my mate, the Alpha, said about me while I bled out.
Instead of passing on, my soul was tethered to the packhouse. I was forced to watch my best friend Seraphina seamlessly step into my life, taking my baby and my husband before my body was even cold.
To secure her place, she planted my blood-soaked birthing blanket in the woods to frame me for faking my own kidnapping.
Ryker swallowed her lies completely. He refused to send a search party, telling the entire pack my disappearance was just a pathetic plea for attention and money.
As a helpless ghost, I watched Seraphina brainwash my one-year-old son into calling her his mother and teach him to joyfully trample my beloved garden.
"Bad mommy ran away. Don't love Kaelen."
Hearing my own child parrot those venomous words was a dagger to my soul.
Whenever anyone questioned my absence, Ryker fiercely defended her, dismissing the desperate warnings of my loyal friends and his own elders.
The man I loved and died for treated my memory like a malicious joke, grateful for an excuse to replace me while living with my murderer.
But when Seraphina's mask finally slipped, and the horrifying truth of my death crashed down on him, it was far too late.
Seeing him crumble in agonizing regret brought me no comfort.
I no longer wanted his love or his desperate apologies.
Now, I only wanted his absolute ruin.

9.3
I woke up in a freezing, desolate wasteland, my body weak and covered in sores. A mechanical voice in my head informed me that I was a defective rabbit-mutant, and if I didn't conceive within twenty-four hours, I would die permanently.
The terror was suffocating, but the system left me no choice. To survive the brutal cold and the decay of my own heartbeat, I had to force a pregnancy with a stranger.
I stumbled through the snow, my fingers turning blue, until I found a massive, wounded Arctic Fox-mutant in a dark cave. He was a Tier-9 predator, dying and radiating the exact heat I needed to stay alive. I threw away my dignity, crawling into his fur to merge our energies, desperate to trigger the life-reset protocol before my time ran out.
I felt like a monster, forcing myself onto a man who didn't even know I existed, just to keep my own heart beating. How could I ever face him if he woke up? Why did I have to be the one to pay the price for this twisted, mechanical ultimatum?
The fusion was a success, but when I woke up the next morning, the apex predator had me pinned under his massive claws, his fangs inches from my throat. I didn't beg for mercy. I stared into his feral, ice-blue eyes and made a deal that would change everything: I would be his anchor, and he would be my protector. But then I dropped the final, terrifying truth: I was pregnant, and he was the only one who could save us.

8.4
Ayleen Avery was just a struggling hotel worker trying to survive her shift. But during a sudden blackout, she accidentally stumbled into the pitch-black VIP suite of a ruthless billionaire driven mad by chronic insomnia.
Calmed only by her unique natural scent of roses and rain, the terrifying man attacked her from the shadows and forced himself on her. Terrified and broken, Ayleen fled at dawn, unknowingly leaving behind her late mother's antique rose necklace in his bed.
Her greedy coworker found the necklace, claimed to be the woman from that night, and was instantly swept into a life of luxury. Meanwhile, Ayleen was blackmailed into a forced marriage with her attacker—Cassius Doyle—to save her adoptive father from prison. Deceived by the stolen necklace, Cassius believed Ayleen was a manipulative spy. He brought the coworker into their home and paraded her around the master bedroom.
"In this house, you are lower than the dirt on my shoes."
He choked Ayleen, forced her to sleep in a damp storage room, and treated her with violent disgust while pampering the thief.
Ayleen was suffocating in absolute despair. She had lost her innocence, her freedom, and her mother's only relic to a vicious liar. She couldn't understand how this all-powerful man could be so completely blind. Why couldn't he recognize the very scent that had cured his agonizing madness?
Staring at the dark bruises he had just left on her neck, Ayleen wiped the blood from her lip. She would endure this three-month marriage to secure her family's safety, but once the contract ended, she would expose the truth and tear down the fake savior he cherished so much.

9.0
Allegra woke up in a sterile alien hospital with no memory, no ID chip, and a terrifying snow leopard General claiming responsibility for her crash.
But a routine ID scan at a local boutique shattered her fragile cover.
The machine shrieked, flashing a fatal red warning: NO NEURAL LINK DETECTED.
She was a "Ghost"—an illegal, unregistered biological entity in a ruthless Hybrid Empire.
The boutique locked down instantly. Heavily armed police swarmed the plaza, laser sights painting her chest red.
She was dragged into a subterranean military black site, where a manic geneticist tested her blood and discovered the impossible truth.
She wasn't a Hybrid. She was a pure Homo Sapiens—an extinct race whose mere presence could cure the Hybrids' fatal Psyche collapse.
To keep her all to himself, the scientist lied to the General, branding her a toxic, mutating bio-weapon.
Forced by Imperial law, the General abandoned her to the scientist's cruel custody.
Allegra was locked inside a reinforced glass cage in the deepest isolation ward, waiting to be dissected.
She huddled on the floor, trembling in absolute despair.
She didn't belong in this nightmare world. Why was she being treated like a monster? Why did this madman look at her like a prize to be torn apart?
Watching the scientist's fox ears twitch in manic stress outside the glass, her human empathy momentarily overrode her terror.
She stood up and pressed her palm against the glass, perfectly aligning it with his.
"Don't be so nervous, Mr. Fox."
Instantly, an invisible wave of human resonance flooded his core, shattering his genetic madness.
The terrifying predator was reduced to a whimpering, devoted puppy, pressing himself against the window in absolute submission.
Allegra slowly pulled her hand back, her heart skipping a beat.
Well, she thought, that changes things.

7.4
The house was a living inferno, the heat devouring the air in my lungs as I clutched my five-year-old daughter to my chest. Emily was dead weight, her skin already cooling even as the room turned into a furnace of orange and black.
Through the stinging smoke, I saw my husband, Kenney, crawling toward the door with a wet handkerchief pressed to his face. He didn't look back at the crib, and he didn't call my name; he was simply leaving us to burn.
I lunged forward and grabbed his ankle, my nightgown catching fire, but he didn't reach down to save me. He recoiled in horror at the sight of my burning hair and our dead child, kicking me back with a panicked shriek.
"Let go!" he shrieked.
I died as a massive, flaming timber snapped from the ceiling and crushed us both into silence. I couldn't believe that the man I loved would leave his family to die just to save his own skin, but the rage I felt was colder than the death that followed.
But then the burning stopped instantly, replaced by a cold so sharp it made my teeth ache. I gasped, jerking upright in my bed to find the velvet duvet cool under my palms and the nursery quiet, with Emily still breathing softly in her crib.
I had returned to the winter morning two years before the fire, the exact day Kenney finalized the deal to sell me to the King for a promotion. As Kenney stepped into the room with a practiced mask of concern, I realized I was no longer the victim of this story.
"A nightmare, my love?" he asked, reaching out to touch my shoulder.
I flinched away, my eyes burning with a hatred he couldn't yet understand. Tonight was the Winter Masquerade, the night he planned to offer me to the King as a prize, but this time, I was going to turn his social ladder into a gallows.

8.9
I died in the apocalypse, only to wake up as Kenzie Banks, a bankrupt high-society monster in an interstellar beast-world.
But before I could even process my new reality, a cold AI voice informed me of my impending death.
"Your contract beast-husbands possess the legal right to execute you at the end of the two-month trial period."
I rushed to the basement and saw the horrific truth. The original Kenzie had starved them, whipped them with thermal blades, sent their brothers to die as cannon fodder, and framed the youngest to rot in a maximum-security prison.
Now, these lethal, broken men were methodically planning to rip my organs out the second the contract dissolved. To make matters worse, she had squandered her fortune on a man who despised her, leaving me two million credits in debt and facing imminent exile to the deadly wastelands.
I had survived rotting zombies on Earth, only to be trapped in a weak, universally hated body, doomed to be butchered by the very people I was supposed to call family. Why did I have to pay the ultimate price for a psychotic woman's deadly sins?
I refused to just sit around and wait for my execution.
Tapping into my apocalyptic subspace inventory, I hauled out military-grade rations, healed their bleeding wounds, and slammed a legally binding divorce contract on the table.
If I wanted to survive this sixty-day countdown, I had to turn my executioners into my loyal allies—starting with breaking the husband she framed out of prison.