
Reborn Heiress: Reclaiming My Monster Billionaire
Ginny was chained to a concrete pillar in an abandoned warehouse, bleeding and betrayed by the two people she trusted most.
Her fiancé, Brant, and her adopted sister, Coretta, had just slashed her face open. Brant coldly admitted she was nothing but a disposable key to a vault, right before he tossed a lighter onto the gasoline-soaked floor.
As Ginny burned alive in the roaring inferno, the heavy iron doors were violently smashed open. Bedford Parks—the notoriously ruthless, germaphobic "monster" of Silicon Valley whom Ginny had always feared—charged straight into the flames. Ignoring the blistering heat, he shielded her charred body with his own. A massive steel beam collapsed, snapping his spine.
"I love you."
He coughed up blood, whispering his final words against her blackened skin before dying to protect her.
Hovering as a ghost, Ginny's soul screamed in agonizing realization. She had spent her life terrified of Bedford, yet he was the only one who truly loved her, while her supposed family laughed at her gruesome murder.
Suddenly, a blinding white light swallowed the warehouse.
Ginny gasped for air, opening her eyes to find herself sitting in the back of a luxury Maybach. She was eighteen again, wearing the humiliating clown makeup Coretta had tricked her into wearing on the day she was brought back to the wealthy Steele estate.
Ginny stared at her reflection, her dark eyes turning cold and sharp.
This time, she would tear her betrayers apart piece by piece, and she would protect her "monster."
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Chapter 1
The pain didn't roll in. It detonated.
A solid, white-hot wall of agony slammed into Ginny all at once, ripping a wet, shredded gasp from the back of her throat. Her spine arched against the concrete pillar, every nerve screaming before her brain could even name the source.
She yanked at the restraints. Rusted iron chains, thick as her thumbs, bit deep into the delicate skin of her wrists. The metal ground wetly against bone. Blood, warm and slick, pulsed down her forearms.
She was pinned upright in the gutted heart of an abandoned industrial warehouse. Shattered skylights yawned overhead. The air hung thick and stale, layered with the stench of cold motor oil, damp rot, and the copper tang of her own blood pooling at her feet.
Ginny forced her eyes open. A thick, warm drip crawled from her hairline, past her brow, stinging her lashes and smearing her vision into a crimson blur.
Through that red fog, a silhouette emerged.
The sharp, deliberate click of designer stilettos struck the concrete like hammer taps. Coretta glided into the pale shaft of moonlight bleeding through the broken roof. She wore a pristine cream haute couture trench coat, the fabric liquid and flawless. Not a single mote of dust dared cling to it. Her golden hair was swept into an immaculate chignon. Her mouth curved into a soft, angelic smile—the exact same one she used while posing for photographs at charity galas.
Coretta stopped directly in front of her. That melodic, practiced laugh spilled from her glossed lips.
Then, without a flicker of hesitation, she lifted one foot and drove the needle-sharp heel of her stiletto straight down onto Ginny's right hand.
Bones crunched. The sound was sickeningly wet and loud in the cavernous emptiness.
Ginny's jaw locked. Her teeth clamped together with such brutal force that blood flooded her gums. She refused to scream. Not a single sound. Her vision swam, black spots dancing, but she held Coretta's gaze. She stared up at the woman she had called her sister for ten years. The mask of the devoted, perfect sibling had dissolved entirely, revealing the twisted, ugly sneer beneath.
Coretta crouched. The pristine hem of her coat skimmed the filth-slick floor. She pulled a hunting knife from her pocket. The blade gleamed dull and cold. She pressed the flat of the steel against Ginny's cheek, letting the chill seep into her skin.
"Still playing the tough girl, Ginny?" Coretta whispered, her voice a silken hiss.
Ginny jerked her head away and thrashed against the pillar. The chains shrieked, clattering off the corrugated metal walls. The iron teeth sank deeper, carving raw furrows into her wrists. Blood slid hot and fast down her arms. She couldn't break free.
Heavy footsteps echoed from the blackness behind Coretta.
A man stepped into the murky light. He wore a perfectly tailored charcoal suit that hugged his broad shoulders. A silver lighter glinted in his hand as he raised it to his mouth and lit a thick cigar. The orange ember flared, illuminating a sharp, angular jaw and cold, empty eyes.
Brant.
Ginny's stomach dropped like a stone. All the air left her lungs in a single, violent rush. Her chest constricted so savagely she thought her ribs might splinter. This was the man she was supposed to marry. The man she loved.
Brant walked forward. He didn't spare her a glance. His arm coiled around Coretta's waist, yanking her flush against his chest. He lowered his head and captured her mouth in a deep, ravenous kiss.
Ginny's throat sealed shut. She couldn't breathe. She couldn't look away.
Brant pulled back from Coretta and finally, leisurely, turned his gaze down to Ginny. His eyes were flat. Utterly devoid of anything resembling human feeling.
"I only needed the core code, Ginny," he said. His voice was steady, businesslike. "You were the key to the vault. Nothing more."
The words hit her harder than the chains, harder than the shattered bones in her hand. Her breath hitched, ragged and broken. Scalding tears flooded her eyes, spilling over her lashes, carving pale tracks through the blood smeared on her cheeks. They dripped off her chin, staining the torn fabric of her shirt.
Coretta tracked the tears. Her jaw tightened. The smug satisfaction in her eyes curdled into something uglier—a sharp, venomous jealousy. Even beaten, drenched in blood, and chained like an animal, Ginny still possessed that face. The kind of face that made men stop breathing.
Coretta's grip on the knife whitened her knuckles.
She slashed downward in a single, vicious arc.
The razor edge split the skin of Ginny's left cheek from cheekbone to jaw. The wound gaped open, a dark, wet mouth that instantly gushed hot blood. It sheeted down her neck, soaking into her collar.
The physical shock severed the emotional cord in Ginny's chest. The tears stopped cold.
Ginny looked at Coretta. A low, rasping vibration started deep in her throat. It grew, swelling into a hollow, echoing laugh that bounced off the steel walls. It was a chilling sound. Utterly unhinged.
Coretta's face flushed a violent, mottled red. She pulled back her arm and slapped Ginny hard across the face. The crack echoed. Ginny's head snapped sideways, blood spraying from her split lip.
Brant vanished into the shadows. He returned seconds later, a heavy red plastic jug swinging from his hand. He set it down beside Coretta without a word.
Coretta unscrewed the black cap. She hoisted the jug and tilted it forward.
A thick, amber cascade splashed over Ginny's head. It plastered her dark hair to her scalp, flooded into her eyes, soaked through her clothes. The sharp, chemical reek of gasoline scorched her nostrils, flooded her throat, made her gag and choke.
Coretta dropped the empty jug. It bounced hollowly on the concrete.
Brant plucked the cigar from his mouth. He pulled a heavy windproof metal lighter from his pocket and flicked the lid open with his thumb.
A bright, thin blue flame shot up.
He didn't pause. He tossed the lighter onto the gasoline-soaked floor at Ginny's feet.
The ignition was instant. A roaring wall of orange fire erupted upward with a deafening whoosh. The heat slammed into Ginny's face like a physical fist.
Coretta and Brant turned their backs. Their laughter floated back, thin and musical, barely audible over the roar of the flames. The heavy iron exit doors boomed shut. The deadbolt clanked into place.
The fire slithered up Ginny's legs. The cheap fabric of her pants melted and fused into her blistering skin. The agony was absolute. It erased every other sensation. Her flesh sizzled and cracked. The cloying, sweet-rotten stench of her own burning body filled her nostrils.
She threw her head back, throat straining, and stared up through the shattered skylight. Black smoke coiled upward, swallowing the cold pinpricks of stars.
If I get another life, the thought branded itself into her dying mind, I will tear you both apart. Piece by piece.
The superheated air seared her windpipe. Her lungs seized. No more oxygen.
The flames climbed higher, swallowing her chest, her throat, her face. Her vision collapsed into absolute black.
Her heart slammed against her ribs one final, violent time. Then, it stopped.
The blistering heat vanished. The crushing weight of the chains dissolved. A strange, featherlight buoyancy lifted her.
Ginny looked down. She was floating ten feet above the concrete floor, suspended in the thick, black smoke, staring at her own charred, burning body.
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9.3
Chandler was the secret wife of Avery Osborn, a powerful media heir who kept their marriage hidden to avoid the scandal of her illegitimate birth.
After catching him openly flirting with a rival at a gala, Avery mocked her low status and told her she was nothing without his money.
Instead of crying, Chandler immediately signed a zero-payout divorce agreement, left her wedding ring on his glass table, and walked out.
To numb the pain of her shattered life, she went to a notorious underground club.
Drugged by a bartender, she lost her mind and ended up having a wild night with a handsome stranger she mistook for a high-end male escort.
Panicking the next morning, Chandler transferred her entire life savings of $50,000 to the man to buy his silence, then fled to her corporate job.
But at the afternoon executive meeting, her blood ran cold.
The man she had paid off was standing at the head of the boardroom table. He wasn't a gigolo. He was Brennan George, the ruthless new COO of her company.
Cornering her in the women's restroom, Brennan held up a printed copy of her $50,000 wire transfer.
"Wiring a massive sum of cash to your direct superior after a night together is classified as commercial bribery and solicitation," he whispered dangerously.
Chandler was terrified, realizing she had handed him the exact evidence needed to destroy her career and sue her into bankruptcy.
"Marry me," Brennan demanded coldly. "It's the only way to make this HR problem disappear."

8.0
I sat at a table for two in the center of Le Coucou, clutching a gift box that had cost me two months of savings. It was our three-year anniversary, and I was waiting for Gavin to finally ask the big question.
But when the heavy oak doors opened, Gavin didn't walk toward me with a ring. He walked in with a polished blonde heiress tucked under his arm, her hand resting protectively over a small baby bump.
"This is Tiffany Stone. My fiancée," he said, his voice devoid of any warmth. He didn't apologize for being late or for the three years we'd spent together. Instead, he pulled out a checkbook, scribbled a number, and slid a ten-thousand-dollar check across the white tablecloth.
"Consider it severance for your time," he added, as Tiffany mocked my cheap drugstore dress. "Don't contact me again. Tiffany doesn't need the stress." I was the entertainment for the entire restaurant—the pathetic girl dumped for a better model. By the time I walked out into the rain, I had lost my boyfriend, my home, and the funding for my secret medical research project.
I was an orphan with no safety net, facing an eviction notice and a ruined career. I had given Gavin everything, and he had discarded me like a broken tool. The injustice burned in my chest, a hot, sharp rage that replaced my tears.
Desperate and freezing, I ducked into a coffee shop where I met Colton Bentley, a reclusive billionaire in a wheelchair. After I defended him from a cruel date, he offered me a contract: a marriage of convenience and a seven-figure payment to act as his shield. I signed the papers that night, ready to use his wealth to rebuild my life. But as I watched my new husband navigate his penthouse, I noticed his "paralyzed" legs tense with a strength that shouldn't exist.

7.4
I was a broke clinic doctor drowning in debt, so I took a confidential job to evaluate a billionaire heir's fertility.
I marched into the VIP ICU, pinned the struggling patient down, and injected a sedative. I finished the extraction and loudly declared to the family lawyer that the Holt heir was completely sterile.
But then, a chilling laugh echoed from the doorway.
The real heir, Jarrod Holt, the tyrant of Wall Street, stepped in. I had just sterilized his younger brother right in front of him.
Facing a decade in federal prison, I was completely at his mercy. To make things worse, my arrogant ex-boyfriend tried to publicly humiliate me, and my greedy uncle threatened to burn my dead mother's belongings for ransom. I was pushed to the absolute brink of ruin.
But instead of destroying me, Jarrod offered a terrifying lifeline. He bought out a Manhattan high-rise in five minutes just to ruin my ex, then handed me a marriage contract.
I was terrified and deeply confused. Why would this ruthless billionaire force a nobody into a fake marriage? He knew details about my past that no one should know. Did he discover my hidden identity as 'E', the underground surgeon the entire medical world was hunting for?
With my back against the wall, I signed the prenuptial agreement.
"I do," I whispered at City Hall.
He shoved his heavy, antique family ring onto my finger. It was supposed to be strictly business with absolutely no physical contact, but when his lips crashed violently onto mine, I knew I had just sold my soul to the devil.

8.2
My son Leo had just died, and the silence in our cramped apartment felt like a physical weight crushing my chest.
Before I could even process the grief, my husband, Preston, kicked the door open and threw divorce papers onto the table.
Behind him stood Gloria, wearing a pristine cashmere coat and the diamond pendant Preston swore he had pawned to pay for Leo's hospital bills.
"Sign it," Preston said coldly. "You get nothing."
Gloria smirked, mocking me for failing to keep my sick child alive. When I tore up the papers in a blinding rage, Preston slapped me to the floor.
Then, my biological mother, Jerilyn, walked in. Instead of helping me, she pulled a serrated kitchen knife from her bag and plunged it deep into my stomach.
As I lay dying in a pool of my own blood, Jerilyn leaned in and whispered the devastating truth.
"I swapped you in the nursery. Gloria is my blood, and you belong in a Manhattan mansion. I can't let you ruin her life."
Until my lungs stopped working, I was consumed by a roaring, violent hatred. My own mother had traded my life of privilege for poverty, let my son die, and then murdered me to protect the fake.
Opening my eyes again, the dingy ceiling and the agonizing pain were gone.
I was sitting at a wooden desk, surrounded by the chatter of teenagers.
I was back in high school. And this time, I was going to make them pay.

7.6
Cassie was sold to a terrifying billionaire as a substitute bride.
To protect herself, she glued a grotesque, fake burn scar to her face.
Her adoptive family and her ex-fiancé had stolen her massive trust fund, locked her in an asylum for years, and finally threw her to the wolves. They expected the ruthless Dane Frederick to torture and kill her the moment he saw her ruined face.
At her ex's grand engagement party, her family publicly humiliated her. They mocked her cheap clothes, laughed at her scarred cheek, and even raised their hands to beat her, fully believing she was a helpless freak with no one to rely on.
"Get on your knees and apologize, and I'll write you a check so you don't starve on the streets."
But they didn't expect the billionaire to kick down the doors, wrap his coat around her, and bankrupt their entire bloodline overnight.
Yet, as Cassie stood in the dark and peeled off her fake silicone scar to reveal her flawless face, a deeper terror gripped her.
Tracing her stolen funds, she uncovered a name that made her blood run cold: The Syndicate.
It was the exact nightmare organization that had locked her in the asylum. Why were they controlling her family? And why did the billionaire look at her with such desperate, hidden nostalgia?
Cassie opened her encrypted laptop and dropped into the Dark Web.
She wasn't just a discarded bride. She was the legendary hacker "Nyx," and she was going to burn them all to the ground.

7.4
Frieda married Dewitt believing he was just a struggling middle-manager, living in a cramped apartment with only seventy-two dollars left to her name.
She had no idea her cold husband was actually a ruthless billionaire running a cruel psychological test on her. Convinced she might be a gold digger, Dewitt gave her a meager allowance, keeping the divorce papers ready the moment she showed any greed.
While Dewitt secretly judged her every move, Frieda suffered endlessly. At her toxic workplace, she was relentlessly bullied by her arrogant in-laws and mocked for her scuffed shoes. Even after she risked her life to protect his grandmother from an armed mugger and exposed her own hidden tech genius, her coworkers still treated her like trailer-park trash. They cornered her on the street, pointing fingers in her face.
"You are a shameless, gold-digging whore! A billionaire would never want you!"
She endured the humiliation, having just rejected a priceless no-limit black card from his family out of pure principle. She truly believed she and her husband were fighting through poverty together. She had no idea her "poor" husband was watching her every struggle from the tinted windows of a hidden Maybach across the street.
But when her bullies finally pushed too far and raised a hand to strike her, the icy wall around the billionaire's heart completely shattered. Dewitt tore up the divorce papers, his eyes turning pitch black with murderous rage.
"If anyone ever raises a hand to her again, break it."