
Reborn As The Billionaire's Wife:The Despised Wife Shines On Live TV
Cecile jolted awake from months of prescription haze, only to realize she was trapped in a live reality show designed to destroy her.
Her billionaire husband had orchestrated the broadcast to publicly humiliate her and elevate his own PR image. He ordered her to follow a degrading script. What was worse, her five-year-old son, Damien, was genuinely terrified of her. When an empty wine bottle rolled across the floor, the tiny boy instantly threw his arms over his head, bracing for a hit.
The production crew shoved microphones into the trembling child's face, trying to trigger his trauma for ratings. The live chat cursed Cecile as a toxic abuser. The show's golden girl maliciously tried to poach Damien on camera to prove Cecile was an unfit mother. The crew even rigged the game, forcing Cecile and her son into a freezing, rotting mud shack with a collapsed roof. They were all just waiting for her to break down and beg.
"A toxic woman like you doesn't deserve to be a mother."
The crew read the hateful comments aloud, expecting a hysterical meltdown. The realization that she had been manipulated into destroying her own child hit Cecile like a physical blow. How could a father subject his own son to this public cruelty?
The weak, easily manipulated Cecile was dead. She threw the PR script away, rolled up her sleeves, and picked up a rusted hammer. This time, she would protect her son and tear down anyone who stood in her way.
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Chapter 7
The sun dipped below the tree line, plunging Rust Creek into a bitter, grey twilight. The wind howled through the empty streets, kicking up dust and dead leaves.
Cecile wrapped her grey sweatshirt tightly around Damien's shoulders, leaving herself shivering in the thin t-shirt. She navigated the unfamiliar streets, keeping her eyes peeled for any signs of industrial activity. After a few minutes of walking, she spotted a weathered wooden sign with a carving of a hand saw hanging at the end of a narrow dirt side street.
At the edge of town, a large, barn-like structure stood surrounded by stacks of raw timber. A faded wooden sign above the door read: Kowalski Woodworks. The deafening screech of a table saw echoed from inside.
Cecile pushed open the heavy wooden door. The rich, sharp scent of sawdust and pine sap hit her lungs.
A massive man with a thick grey beard and forearms like tree trunks stood over a workbench. This was Gus Kowalski.
Gus hit the kill switch on the saw. The blade whined to a halt. He turned around, wiping his hands on a filthy canvas apron. He took one look at Cecile, Damien, and the cameraman hovering behind them, and his face twisted into a scowl.
"Get out," Gus barked, his voice like grinding stones. "I don't do business with Hollywood phonies. This ain't a petting zoo for your reality show."
The cameraman zoomed in on Cecile's face, eager to capture her humiliation.
Cecile didn't flinch. She walked straight past Gus, ignoring his hostility, and stopped at his workbench. She stared down at the piece of wood he had just been cutting.
"Red oak," Cecile said, her voice calm and authoritative. "High density, but prone to splitting. Your blade angle is off by about three degrees. That's why the edge of your tenon joint is tearing out."
Gus's mouth snapped shut. The anger in his eyes was instantly replaced by profound shock. He stared at the woman in the dirty clothes as if she had just grown a second head.
He lunged forward, grabbing the piece of wood. He ran his calloused thumb over the cut. She was right. There was a microscopic tear-out on the edge.
"How the hell do you know that?" Gus demanded, his voice dropping an octave.
Cecile didn't answer. She turned and pointed out the window toward the yard. "And your ash wood out there? You stacked it without enough ventilation gaps. The bottom layers are already drawing moisture. They'll warp before winter."
Gus inhaled sharply. That was a detail only a seasoned veteran of the trade would catch. He threw the red oak onto the bench and crossed his arms, looking at Cecile with newfound, grudging respect.
"Who are you?" Gus asked. "And what do you want? I told production I ain't selling you finished furniture."
"I don't want your finished furniture," Cecile said, meeting his hard gaze without blinking. "I need to borrow your tools and access to your scrap pile."
Gus snorted. "Why should I let you touch my tools?"
Cecile tilted her head, listening to the hum of the machinery in the background. "Because your vintage lathe in the corner has a worn spindle bearing. It's vibrating too much, ruining your precision work. Let me use your tools, and I'll fix it for you."
Gus's jaw actually dropped. That lathe had been driving him insane for a month, and the local mechanic couldn't figure it out. She diagnosed it by sound?
He stared at her for a long, tense moment. The craftsman in him respected raw talent more than he hated Hollywood.
"Deal." Gus grunted.
The live chat exploded.
WHAT JUST HAPPENED?
Did she just out-woodwork a master carpenter?!
Cecile led Damien to a safe corner of the shop, away from the sawdust. She walked over to a pegboard, grabbed a pair of safety goggles and heavy canvas gloves, and slipped them on. The movements were fluid, automatic.
She walked over to the rattling lathe. She picked up a heavy wrench. With surgical precision, she began dismantling the housing.
Gus stood over her shoulder, watching her hands move. His eyes widened as she bypassed the obvious bolts and went straight for the hidden tension rods. Within ten minutes, she had the housing off, adjusted the bearing seating, and tightened the belt.
She hit the power button. The lathe hummed to life—a smooth, flawless purr. No vibration.
Gus slapped his thigh and let out a booming laugh. "Well, I'll be damned!" He clapped Cecile on the shoulder, nearly knocking her over. "The shop is yours, kid."
Cecile walked over to the scrap pile. Her eyes scanned the discarded cuts of wood. She picked up several thick blocks of dense hard maple. Her mind was already drawing the blueprints. As she turned back toward the bench, her eyes scanned the messy back shelves, past rusted cans of stain and varnish, finally landing on a dusty, half-empty tin labeled 'Industrial Fire-Retardant Sealant'. She quietly grabbed it and tucked it under her arm.
As she passed Damien, she noticed his small blue canvas backpack sitting beside him. The zipper was slightly open, revealing the corner of a thick, dark blue hardcover book. Damien saw her glance and quickly pushed the zipper closed, his cheeks flushing as if caught with a secret treasure. Cecile didn't ask. She simply smiled and ruffled his hair. She had seen the book before—a worn children's encyclopedia of space he had found in the Beverly Hills library months ago. He carried it everywhere now, though he rarely opened it in front of anyone.
The back door of the shop opened. Gus's wife, Marge, walked in carrying a tray. The smell of fresh-baked apple pie filled the room.
Marge saw Damien sitting quietly in the corner. She smiled warmly, cut a massive slice of pie, and handed it to him on a paper plate. Damien looked at Cecile. Cecile nodded. He took the plate, whispering a tiny "thank you."
The table saw roared to life. Cecile pushed the first block of maple into the blade. The real work had begun.
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8.0
Elva used a spare key card to quietly enter the hotel penthouse, only to find her boyfriend of two years panting heavily on the king-sized bed with her own cousin.
Instead of showing remorse, her cousin shamelessly mocked her background, while her ex aggressively lunged at her to destroy the photographic evidence she had just captured.
"You think you can just walk away? Warren already made the deal. By next week, you're being shipped off to marry that fifty-two-year-old crippled freak from the Ramirez family!"
Her ex spat the words to threaten her, and the nightmare only escalated when Elva returned to her uncle's estate, where Warren confirmed he was indeed selling her off for a business connection.
Her family eagerly joined the abuse, threatening to permanently freeze her late mother's trust fund and even plotting to secretly drug her morning milk so she couldn't fight back when the groom's family arrived.
They looked at her like a pathetic, orphaned burden they could bleed dry, fully expecting her to drop to her knees, cry, and accept her miserable fate without a single word of defiance.
But they had no idea that just hours ago, Elva had already signed a marriage certificate with Bronson Ramirez, the undisputed billionaire king of the dynasty, and she was stepping into the living room ready to watch their greedy world burn.

8.7
Brought back from a humble life in Montana, Nora found out she was the true biological heiress of the ultra-wealthy Beaumont family.
But her biological parents didn't love her; they loved the fake daughter, Olivia, much more.
The moment she arrived, her father pushed an engagement termination agreement across his massive desk, forcing her to give up her wealthy fiancé so Olivia could have him.
Her mother looked at her with pure disdain.
"You should know your place. Don't reach for things that were never meant for you."
To break her spirit, they moved her into a cramped, dusty servant's room. They even ordered the butler to feed her cold kitchen scraps and gristle.
They wanted to humiliate her, to make her feel like a piece of trash rather than a daughter.
They expected her to cry, to beg, and to be absolutely crushed by the realization that her own flesh and blood saw her only as a liability to their reputation.
They thought the country girl would easily fold under their united front of cruelty.
But Nora felt no sting of betrayal, only the calculating clarity of a chess player.
She calmly signed the paper, pulled out the Beaumont family trust rules, and looked them dead in the eye.
"Since I am the legal heir, I demand what belongs to me. I'm taking the master bedroom."

8.4
Cari Butler woke up in a damp, smelly dorm room, realizing she had transmigrated into the body of a disgraced fake daughter who had just been kicked out of a wealthy family.
Before she could even process her reality, the real daughter's friends kicked her door open to mock her, flaunting a custom Tiffany necklace that supposedly cost a mere eighty cents.
Cari thought they were crazy, until she saw the news: a top Manhattan mansion had just sold for a record-breaking $3,500.
The entire world's currency value had shrunk by ten thousand times!
This meant the original owner's bank balance of $854,000 gave Cari the purchasing power of eight and a half billion dollars.
But a mysterious system froze her funds, forcing her to work demeaning gig jobs to unlock the money bit by bit.
While working as a hotel server for twenty cents a day, she caught her ex-boyfriend kissing up to the real daughter, mocking Cari for being a desperate beggar.
Even her snobby roommates laughed at her, claiming she couldn't afford a ten-cent iPhone.
What truly angered Cari wasn't the humiliation, but receiving a five-cent transfer from her poor biological brother, who was starving himself just to keep her fed.
Yet, the system strictly forbade her from giving her unlocked billions directly to her family.
Looking at the restrictive system and the arrogant elites who thought they owned the city, Cari's eyes turned icy cold.
"If I can't just hand them the cash,"
Cari sneered, pulling out her phone to outright buy the luxury hotel and fire everyone who wronged her.
"Then I will just buy the entire world and place it at their feet."

8.4
Everly spent four years playing the perfect, accommodating wife to Carson Moss, swallowing every grievance just to secure medical treatments for their sick daughter.
But at a high-society banquet she exhausted herself organizing, Carson's pregnant mistress crashed the party.
The woman shoved an ultrasound of Carson's "real heir" directly into Everly's frail grandfather's face.
The shock triggered a massive heart attack.
Carson refused to use his private helicopter to save the dying old man, choosing to protect his mistress and his company's IPO instead. Her grandfather died on the hospital table.
Instead of remorse, her mother-in-law demanded Everly publicly cover up the murder.
"You will do exactly as I say, or I will freeze every single cent of the medical trust fund paying for your crippled daughter's treatments."
When a battered Everly returned to the estate, she discovered her three-year-old daughter covered in dark bruises and pinch marks. Her in-laws were deliberately torturing her disabled child.
Everly couldn't comprehend how a family could be so utterly heartless. Her only family was murdered, her child was abused, and her husband threw a five-million-dollar check at her face as hush money.
They thought she would just break and quietly disappear.
But when a terrifyingly powerful billionaire unexpectedly blocked Carson's security team from locking her up, Everly finally saw her window.
She grabbed her sleeping daughter and ran out into the freezing storm, making a blood-bound vow to make the entire Moss family bleed.

8.8
On the eve of my glamorous Waldorf Astoria wedding, I went to the penthouse to surprise my fiancé, Hugh, wearing my late mother's heirloom pearls.
Instead, I heard my stepsister's familiar laugh and caught them tangled together on the sofa.
Through the cracked door, I heard Hugh slur that he was only marrying me for my family's financial backing.
"As soon as I secure my inheritance, she's the first thing I'm getting rid of," he promised her.
Floy giggled and asked for my mother's pearl necklace, my only legacy. Hugh agreed without hesitation, mocking my dead mother's naivety and my desperate dreams of building a family.
Every sweet word he had ever said was a lie, a knife he had been patiently sliding between my ribs for years. They planned to strip me of everything the moment I signed the prenup.
I didn't cry or scream. The crushing weight of their betrayal hollowed me out, leaving behind a terrifying, absolute calm.
Why should I be the one to lose everything while they stole my future and insulted my mother's memory?
I calmly walked down the hall, set the prenuptial agreement on fire, and vanished into the rainy night.
If Hugh wanted to play dirty for the Maxwell empire, I would play for keeps.
Using a forgotten, century-old family covenant, I was going to marry Hugh's uncle-the comatose, paralyzed war hero, Fleet Maxwell.
I would return not as a naive bride, but as their worst nightmare: his aunt, and the new lady of the house.

8.8
Alaia Dudley spent her life playing the devoted partner, completely unaware that her fiancé Austen was sleeping with another woman.
She thought the worst he could do was break her heart, until she found herself pinned to a cold operating table.
Austen held her down with a cruel smirk while a scalpel sliced through her sternum.
They cracked her chest open while she was still fully conscious.
The agonizing pain of her heart being cut out burned into her nerve endings.
She realized then that to him, she was never a lover—just a spare organ, a boring piece of wood to be discarded the second his true love needed it.
She died in excruciating agony, choking on her own blood while the man she loved walked away with her heart.
Until her last breath, she didn't understand why she had to suffer so brutally.
Why did she waste her life begging for a monster's attention? Why did they get a happy ending while she was carved up like an animal?
But then, ice-cold water flooded her lungs, and Alaia violently broke the surface of her bathwater.
Her trembling fingers touched her smooth, flawless chest. No scars. Her heart was still beating.
The date on her phone glared back at her: it was exactly five years ago.
Tonight was the exact night Austen first took his mistress to a hotel room.
This time, she wouldn't just expose them. She would use Wall Street's most terrifying tyrant as her personal weapon to strip them of everything they had.