
Reborn Embrace: Taming the Possessive Tycoon
I woke up gasping from a nightmare of flames devouring Chandler Finch's estate, my body wrapped in burning curtains as I died alone.
But my eyes opened to silk sheets in his penthouse master bedroom. He was alive beside me, his cedarwood scent real. This was my second chance—I'd been reborn.
His phone buzzed: Eugenia Stewart's "emergency." Her security detail reported her refusing meals, unstable. Chandler bolted without a glance, rushing to her side.
I signed the brutal cohabitation contract binding me to him, but Temperance had planted birth control pills in the trash—a trap to frame me. Chandler found them, exploded in jealous rage, crushing the pills to dust. "No child unless it's mine," he growled, possessive fire in his eyes.
Brett, Eugenia's lapdog, stormed in later, accusing me of manipulation. I fired back: Chandler demanded my womb for his heir. Brett paled, fled to tattle.
Then the storm hit—power outage, locked on the terrace in pouring rain, freezing as Eugenia faked an asthma attack on Chandler's line, stealing his focus again. I hung up, huddled with a stray puppy, nearly dying from hypothermia.
He'd never believed me before—Eugenia's lies always won, dooming me to isolation and fire. Why did her every whimper trump my screams? How could he be so blind?
This time, reborn weeks before the inferno, I wouldn't beg. I'd play his game, shatter Eugenia's web, and make Chandler mine—before the flames returned.
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Chapter 3
Hours later, the penthouse was still silent. Carolyn sat on the white leather sofa in the living room, a thick stack of papers spread across the glass coffee table in front of her. The cohabitation agreement.
Her fingers, still trembling slightly, traced the cold, typed words. Clause 7: The party of the second part (Carolyn Lindsey) shall not interfere with the social engagements of the party of the first part (Chandler Finch). Clause 12: The party of the second part must be available upon request, at all times.
It was a contract for a possession, not a person. But it was better than the damp basement she'd been locked in before. It was a start.
The soft chime of the elevator announced his return. Carolyn's heart gave a nervous flutter. She looked up as Chandler strode into the living room. He carried the faint, cloying scent of a hospital-disinfectant mixed with Eugenia's signature gardenia perfume.
His steps faltered when he saw her. He had clearly expected to come home to a scene of destruction. Instead, he found her sitting quietly, bathed in the soft light of a lamp, reading the very document that defined her captivity.
Carolyn raised her head. Her eyes were calm, devoid of the fire he was used to. She didn't ask where he'd been. She didn't scream about Eugenia. She simply stood up.
"I'll sign it."
She picked up the heavy fountain pen from the table. On the final page, below his arrogant, slashing signature, she wrote her own. The strokes were neat, deliberate, and final.
He crossed the room in three long strides and plucked the pen from her fingers. His eyes scanned her face, searching, probing. "So compliant all of a sudden? What's your new angle, Carolyn?"
She let out a small, bitter laugh, dropping her gaze to the floor. "What's the point of having an angle anymore? You wanted a dog on a leash. Fine. I'll be your dog."
The words hung in the air between them. A muscle in his jaw twitched. He hated that. He hated her defeated compliance more than her fiery resistance. It made him feel exactly like the monster she was accusing him of being.
"You'd better mean that," he sneered, turning away from her. He walked toward the open-plan kitchen to get a glass of water, his shoulders tense.
Carolyn's pulse quickened. Her heart leaped into her throat. Earlier that afternoon, she had glimpsed Temperance, Eugenia's ever-watchful personal maid, slipping through the hallway with a small paper bag. The woman was quiet, obedient, and served her mistress's whims without question. Temperance should have planted it by now. Would he see it? Her gaze couldn't help but dart toward the kitchen trash can.
Chandler stopped dead by the stainless-steel trash can. His entire body went rigid. His gaze was fixed on something inside it.
It was a small, torn cardboard box from a pack of birth control pills. A few of the tiny white tablets had spilled out, stark against the dark trash.
The temperature in the room plummeted.
He turned his head slowly, his eyes locking onto hers. They were no longer cold; they were burning with a terrifying, possessive rage.
"What," he began, his voice a low, guttural growl, "is this?"
Carolyn feigned a look of panic. It wasn't hard. The memory of his rage was real enough. This was Eugenia's work, she knew. Her maid, Temperance, must have planted it, a perfect little trap.
"I... that was from before..." she stammered, playing the part of a woman caught in a lie. Her fumbled excuse was all the confirmation he needed.
He stalked toward her, closing the distance in an instant. His hand shot out and clamped around her jaw, forcing her head back. "Whose baby are you trying to have? Vince Kowalski's?"
The name Vince, his business rival and her supposed lover, was the match to the gasoline. The jealousy in his eyes was a raw, wild thing. It was terrifying. It was magnificent.
Tears, real and hot, welled in her eyes. She shook her head frantically. "No! I'm not trying to have anyone's baby!"
"Then you're trying to use a pregnancy to get away from me?" His fingers tightened, his expression murderous. "Dream on."
He released her so abruptly she stumbled. He spun around and kicked a nearby dining chair, sending it crashing against the wall. The sound exploded in the silent apartment.
Carolyn flinched, but her eyes remained fixed on him. This was her chance. She had to use his fury.
He stormed to the trash can and, without a shred of hesitation, plunged his hand inside. He came out with a fistful of the small white pills.
He squeezed his hand shut, his knuckles white. The pills turned to dust, a fine white powder sifting through his fingers and onto the pristine floor.
"As long as you are mine, you will not have anyone's child," he bit out, his voice thick with a chilling possessiveness. "Unless it's mine."
Carolyn watched the powder settle. A cold, triumphant smile touched her heart, but not her lips. Checkmate, Eugenia.
She moved toward him, her steps silent. She came up behind his stiff, furious form and wrapped her arms around his waist, pressing her cheek between his shoulder blades.
He flinched as if electrocuted, his whole body tensing to throw her off. But she held on tight.
"Then you've destroyed the pills," she whispered, her voice a soft, seductive murmur against his back. "So I won't take them anymore. Okay?"
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7.8
Alexis signed the divorce papers, leaving her with no assets, no alimony, and just the clothes on her back.
To forget her abusive husband Carlos, she got drunk and bought a high-end gigolo for the night with her last 800 dollars.
But the man she slept with wasn't an escort. He was Jarrett Hughes, a ruthless billionaire CEO.
And while she was gone, her ex-husband was busy destroying her entire life.
Carlos framed her with fake photos of her cheating to justify the penniless divorce.
Then came the real nightmare.
Carlos and her own aunt secretly drained her family's corporate accounts, driving her father to jump off a building.
At the hospital, her grieving mother blamed her for the tragedy, violently attacking her in the ER.
To top it off, her cousin Josie—who was secretly sleeping with Carlos—held her father's ashes hostage.
"Crawl on your knees and pick it up, or the ashes go in the river," Josie sneered, throwing cash into the freezing slush.
Stripped of her marriage, her father, and her dignity, Alexis sat bleeding in the snow.
She couldn't understand why the people she loved most had coordinated such a brutal slaughter against her.
But Carlos and Josie made one fatal mistake.
They didn't know the "gigolo" Alexis had accidentally bought was the most powerful man in New York.
Alexis looked at the towering billionaire standing behind her, a vengeful fire burning in her eyes.
"I need you to get my father's ashes back," she said, pulling him into a kiss right in front of her ex-husband. "I don't care what it takes."

7.1
I was the top commander of a black-ops military program. After slaughtering my way through a hellish mission, I reached the extraction helicopter, trusting my second-in-command to watch my back.
But the moment our hands locked, he didn't pull me up. Instead, he plunged a syringe of lethal neurotoxin directly into my neck.
He aimed his gun at my chest, coldly stating that I was too dangerous to live. My lungs stopped, and I died in a pool of my own blood. But the endless blackness suddenly shattered. My consciousness violently forced its way into a new, broken shell. I woke up in a freezing alley, soaked in muddy rain.
This body belonged to seventeen-year-old Eliza Wyatt. A massive wave of foreign memories crashed into my brain. Her own younger sister had just stood at the top of the stairs with a mocking smile, watching street thugs beat Eliza to death.
"Take good care of the Wyatt family's eldest daughter. Tonight is the night she finally disappears."
The endless humiliation, the cold stares of her family, and the brutal betrayal by her own blood flashed before my eyes. Why was this fragile girl treated like garbage and pushed to her death by the very people who should have protected her?
I looked down at my pale, trembling hands. The top commander was dead, but in this bleeding shell, Eliza Wyatt was very much alive. I picked up a switchblade from the bloody puddle and stood up in the storm. It was time to hunt.

8.5
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.

9.3
Candice Luna thought her marriage to Julius Hansen was a lifeline to save her father's struggling company.
She didn't know it was a death sentence until Julius coldly slid divorce papers across his mahogany desk.
His true love, Amina Rowe, was nestled in his arms with a triumphant, mocking smile. The "merger" Julius promised had been a brutal, hostile takeover designed to bleed the Luna Group dry from the inside. Bankrupted and utterly broken, Candice's father stepped off the roof of their corporate tower. Meanwhile, Candice was publicly humiliated, stripped of her dignity, and mocked by all of Wall Street as a discarded stepping stone.
She died in a car accident, her final moments consumed by an agonizing, feral scream. She hated herself for letting her blind devotion destroy the father who had always believed in her.
But when Candice opened her eyes to the harsh fluorescent lights of a hospital room, she realized she wasn't dead.
She was twenty-two again. Three years before the wedding. Three years before her father's suicide.
When Julius's assistant walked in holding a bouquet of blue roses to discuss the preliminary merger, he expected a docile, desperate heiress.
Instead, Candice grabbed a glass of water from the nightstand and flung it directly into his smug face.
"Tell Julius Hansen to never, ever send his dogs to my door again."
This time, there would be no engagement. This time, the Hansen family would choke on her family's legacy.

9.1
At the project kickoff party, Isabelle casually mocked the new capital representative, calling him a suit with a trust fund.
A low, magnetic voice spoke from the shadows right behind her.
It was Bennett Lloyd, the man holding the purse strings for the entire project.
But as Isabelle turned around, her blood ran cold.
He wasn't just her new boss. He was the stranger she had a desperate one-night stand with five years ago.
The man she had fled from before dawn, leaving only a fake name.
In her panic to escape him, Isabelle tripped on the marble stairs and left behind a single, custom-made diamond heel.
Bennett found it, but instead of exposing her, he began a terrifying game of cat and mouse.
He forced her to be his exclusive on-site consultant, vetoed her vacation time, and isolated her from her team.
He trapped her in his office, his touches lingering just enough to remind her of that night, slowly suffocating her professional life as payback.
Pushed to the brink of a breakdown by his relentless torment, Isabelle sat in a hotel bar, drowning her panic in vodka.
She pulled out her phone, intending to send a voice memo to her best friend to confess the suffocating guilt she had hidden for years.
"I can't do this anymore. I'm a sinner. I killed her... I killed my mother."
She hit send, only to realize her screen didn't show her friend's name.
The confession had gone straight to Bennett Lloyd.

8.4
After raising Dakota for years, the wealthy Walton family mercilessly kicked her out of their mansion.
Her adopted father threw a crisp check for five hundred dollars onto a stripped mattress.
"That is more than enough for a bus ticket back to whatever slum your real parents live in. Do not ever contact us again."
Her adopted sister Cindy tried to violently snatch her faded canvas backpack, smugly bragging that she was already engaged to Dakota's former fiancé. The entire family stood on their grand balcony, sneering in disgust as Dakota left in a broken-down, smoking rental car.
"You are going to die in the gutter!"
They treated her like a contagious disease, truly believing she was nothing more than an ungrateful, bottom-feeding street rat destined to rot in poverty and beg for their charity.
But what the arrogant Waltons didn't know was that on her way "home," Dakota would casually save the dying matriarch of the country's most powerful family using a mythical medical technique. She traded her smoking junk car for a million-dollar reward and a flawless Rolls-Royce Cullinan. And the filthy "slum" she was returning to? It was the palatial estate of the ultra-billionaire Su empire. As her true parents wept with joy and ordered their staff to buy out every luxury brand in the world just to welcome her back, Dakota prepared to show the people who threw her away what real power looked like.