
Reborn Heiress: Taming The Ruthless Tycoon
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Gemma expected the tearing agony of the bullet wound that had just ended her life.
Instead, her trembling fingers met the cool, smooth friction of heavy silk.
She stared into the mirror. Her face was flawless, completely devoid of the jagged scar that had marred her cheek for the last five years.
It was exactly ten years ago. The day of her engagement party to the ruthless billionaire, Brion Hubbard.
In her past life, her "best friend" Katelyn convinced her to run away with a scheming scumbag.
Katelyn claimed Brion was a heartless tyrant who would ruin her. Gemma had foolishly believed those fake tears.
That choice led to her family's bankruptcy, her brutal disfigurement, and ultimately, a fatal bomb explosion.
The only person who tried to save her was Brion, his blood-soaked body shielding hers from the blast.
She even realized too late that the strawberry cream cakes she always made for him were full of dairy.
He wasn't leaving to cheat on her. He was locking himself in a medical bay, fighting fatal allergic shock, just to accept a tiny scrap of her affection.
Gemma had been so incredibly blind. Why did she trust the venomous snakes who destroyed her, while hating the man who died for her?
Hearing Katelyn frantically knocking on the dressing room door, urging her to run away again, a towering hatred surged through Gemma's veins.
This time, she wasn't going to run.
She was going to expose the traitors, take back her family's wealth, and claim the tyrant for herself.
Reborn Heiress: Taming The Ruthless Tycoon Chapter 1
A searing white light stabbed into her eyes, burning like hot needles. A deafening crash of a live symphony orchestra slammed into her ears, a wall of sound so violent her teeth rattled.
Gemma sucked in a violent, desperate breath. Her chest heaved as if she’d just broken the surface of freezing water after drowning forever.
Her hands flew to her abdomen, trembling fingers clawing at the silk, expecting the warm, sticky pool of her own blood. She expected the tearing, white-hot agony of the bullet wound that had just ended her life.
Instead, her fingertips met cool, smooth silk. No blood. No torn flesh.
Her heart pounded so hard it hurt, each beat a sharp ache blooming through her chest.
She gripped the edge of the mahogany vanity and forced herself upright. Her legs felt like lead. The room spun violently before snapping still.
She stared into the massive gold-leafed mirror.
The face staring back was flawless. The skin was tight, glowing with youth, completely bare of the jagged, puckered scar that had sat on her left cheek for five years. The scar carved by shattered glass during the explosion. The scar she had traced every single night before bed.
Her breath caught and locked in her throat.
Impossible.
A sharp, frantic knock slammed against the heavy dressing room door. The sound shook through the ornate wood.
“Gemma! Open up, hurry!”
Katelyn’s voice. Hushed, urgent, dripping with that familiar, sickening sweetness—honey laced with cyanide.
That voice cut like a poisoned blade, ripping open every memory from her previous life. The fake friendship. The orchestrated betrayal. The ruined face. And then the cold barrel of a gun against her forehead, Katelyn’s glossed lips curving into a smile as she pulled the trigger.
Hate surged up from her stomach, hot and thick, burning her throat. It swallowed the haze of rebirth and left behind nothing but cold, clear murderous intent. Her fingers fisted into the silk of her dress, knuckles going bone-white. The expensive fabric strained under her grip.
She snatched the phone off the vanity. The screen lit, cold blue light falling across her face.
The date in stark white numbers confirmed the impossible.
Exactly ten years ago. The day of her engagement party.
The door handle rattled violently, the brass fixture jerking back and forth. Katelyn found it locked.
“Gemma, Jair is waiting in the rain! If you don’t leave now, you’ll be trapped!” Katelyn hissed through the wood, voice pitched low and frantic.
Gemma forced down the acid burning up her throat, the bitter taste coating her tongue. She made the muscles in her face go slack, burying the hatred deep in her gut where it could fester and chill.
She crossed the plush carpet in bare feet, silent, and yanked the door open.
Her eyes landed on the woman in the hallway. Flat. Cold. Nothing living in them.
Katelyn physically recoiled, taking a half-step back. Her designer heels clicked sharply on the hardwood. The rehearsed words died in her throat, her mouth opening and closing.
It took her one second to recover. Her face twisted into a mask of exaggerated panic—brows drawn, lips trembling with manufactured concern.
She lunged forward, her perfectly manicured hand reaching for Gemma’s wrist.
Gemma didn’t blink. She shifted her weight, turning her shoulder a fraction.
Katelyn’s hand grabbed empty air.
A flicker of genuine shock cracked through Katelyn’s mask before she smothered it with a harsh whisper. “If we don’t move this second, security will lock down the perimeter. Every exit. Every window. We’ll be trapped.”
“And Brion?” Gemma asked.
The name scraped her throat raw. A visceral image slammed into her—Brion’s blood-soaked body shielding hers, the heat of the blast, his weight crushing her down, the copper smell of his blood mixing with smoke. Her chest seized with a sharp, physical ache.
“Why would I run from him?” Gemma said, a dark, mocking amusement threading her voice that never reached her eyes.
Katelyn’s eyes flew wide, the whites stark around her pale irises. “Because of Jair! He’s freezing out there for you. Standing in the cold rain like some tragic hero. You said you loved him!”
Gemma stared at the pathetic display. The instincts she’d sharpened through years of surviving the underground cut straight through the fake tears and locked onto the raw, naked greed blazing in Katelyn’s pupils. It was a hunger so consuming it practically glowed.
Heavy footsteps echoed down the corridor. The head butler, Marcus, flanked by two earpiece-wearing guards with shoulders like refrigerators, marched toward them. His polished shoes struck the hardwood with military precision.
Panic seized Katelyn’s features. A gray pallor broke through her carefully applied foundation. She reached out again, both hands this time, aiming to physically drag Gemma toward the emergency stairwell.
Gemma’s hand shot out. Her fingers clamped around Katelyn’s wrist like a steel vice. She pressed her thumb into the hollow just below the joint, a precise, brutal pressure.
Katelyn gasped, her knees buckling. A hot, numbing pain shot up her arm from wrist to shoulder. Her mouth opened in a silent scream.
Marcus stopped a few feet away, spine ramrod straight. He eyed the two women with deep suspicion, his bushy gray brows pulling together. “Miss Vargas. The ceremony is about to begin. Your father is waiting.”
Gemma released the pressure instantly. Her fingers uncurled with the grace of a flower opening. She curved her lips into the flawless, empty smile of a high-society heiress—perfectly symmetrical, utterly meaningless.
“I’ll be right down, Marcus,” she said smoothly, voice dripping with honeyed compliance.
The butler gave a stiff nod, his thin neck corded with tension, and turned on his heel. The guards followed in perfect sync, their heavy footfalls fading down the corridor.
Katelyn cradled her red, throbbing wrist against her chest, her fingers massaging the angry marks blooming there. “Are you out of your mind?” she hissed, her voice trembling with genuine anger now. The mask had slipped completely.
Gemma stepped into Katelyn’s space, close enough to smell the expensive perfume layered over the sharp stench of fear sweat. The air between them turned suffocatingly cold.
“Keep your dirty little thoughts in the dark where they belong. The light doesn’t suit them,” Gemma whispered, her breath ghosting across Katelyn’s ear.
Katelyn stumbled backward. Her spine hit the wallpapered wall with a soft thud, the floral pattern crinkling behind her. A cold sweat broke out on the back of her neck, glistening in the dim hallway light.
Gemma turned her back on her. Deliberately. Contemptuously. She walked to the vanity and picked up the velvet box resting beside her discarded hairbrush. The navy blue case was embossed with a famous jeweler’s crest in faded gold leaf. Inside lay the multi-million-dollar diamond necklace Brion had sent her that morning—a collar of ice and light.
She lifted the heavy platinum chain, feeling its satisfying weight. She fastened it around her own neck, the clasp clicking shut with cold finality. The diamonds settled perfectly over the small mole on her collarbone, each stone catching the chandelier light and scattering it into tiny rainbows.
Her reflection in the mirror was no longer a victim.
It was a predator.
Katelyn stood frozen in the doorway, one hand still cradling her bruised wrist, too terrified to step inside. The plush carpet might as well have been a minefield. She watched the prey she had spent years grooming—years of whispered manipulations and carefully planted doubts—calmly fix her makeup. Gemma swept a brush of rouge across her cheekbones with steady, unhurried hands.
Gemma picked up a crystal flute of champagne from the side table. The liquid was pale gold, effervescent. She downed the burning alcohol in one continuous swallow, letting it sear her throat and burn away the last lingering tremors of her rebirth. The glass hit the marble tabletop with a sharp clink.
She set it down and turned.
Her heels struck the hardwood, each step measured and cold, as she walked right past Katelyn, not giving her a single glance. Not a flicker of recognition. Not a whisper of acknowledgment. She headed straight down the corridor toward her father’s private study, the diamond necklace throwing sparks of light against the dark-paneled walls.
Below them, the muffled voice of the MC echoed through the grand hall, amplified by speakers hidden in the crown molding, announcing the imminent arrival of the bride-to-be.
The crowd murmured in anticipation. Glasses clinked. Cameras flashed.
Gemma kept her eyes fixed on the heavy oak door ahead, its brass handle gleaming under the wall sconces. Each step was deliberate. Each breath was controlled.
She was going to take everything back.
Continue Reading
Reborn Heiress: Taming The Ruthless Tycoon of Contents
Chapter 1 Ch. 1Chapter 2 Ch. 2Chapter 3 Ch. 3Chapter 4 Ch. 4Chapter 5 Ch. 5Chapter 6 Ch. 6Chapter 7 Ch. 7Chapter 8 Ch. 8
Chapter 9 Ch. 9
Chapter 10 Ch. 10
Chapter 11 Ch. 11
All Chapters all
New Release Novels

8.4
Grace, after three years of silence from a crash that stole her voice and family, finally uttered a hoarse syllable. It was her first sound, a breakthrough she desperately wanted to share with Josiah, her childhood protector. Instead, through a slightly ajar door, she heard his careless chuckle, followed by a sharp, entitled voice.
Alexandria's voice sliced through the air: "Josiah, are you really planning to bring that little mute to the banquet? She's a walking trailer park tragedy. It's embarrassing." Grace froze, waiting for Josiah to defend her. He didn't. Instead, he sighed, calling her "a responsibility" and "a lifeless ghost," then pulled Alexandria closer.
The words were serrated blades. Her silent devotion, her self-erasure for his peace, had made her a punchline. He was relieved she was broken. The bitter realization of his betrayal ignited a cold, white-hot fury.
Wiping away tears, Grace met Josiah, feigning her usual submissive smile, and quietly refused his "hush money." As he walked away without a glance, her inner voice was clear, sharp, and resolute: "I'm done playing your game."

9.5
My boyfriend, Jefferson, convinced me to give up my Yale scholarship for him. He was my secret, my escape from the shame of my mother's past, and I threw away my future for our love.
Then, at a gala, he publicly announced his engagement to Aubrey Carroll-the girl who made my high school years a living hell.
He trapped me in his mansion, forcing me to become her personal servant. She tortured me daily, culminating in her brutally killing our dog, Charlie, with a garden trowel.
When her friends arrived, they joined in, stripping me half-naked and live-streaming my panic attack for the world to see.
The man who once promised to protect me watched as they destroyed me.
But as I lay bleeding out on the floor, it wasn't an ambulance that arrived. It was the private security of Alexzander Stevens-my estranged, billionaire grandfather.
He revealed I was his sole heiress, and now, we were going to make them pay for every last tear.

7.2
Genevieve woke up choking on her own blood, a fatal gash tearing through her abdomen. The memories of a primitive world crashed into her mind—she had transmigrated into the body of a sadistic beastman Mistress.
But the five powerful beastmen "mates" standing over her hadn't come to her rescue. They had come to watch their tormentor die.
"We should just leave her," Kameron sneered coldly. "The scavengers will clean up the mess."
Gilberto spat in disgust, while Angelo, a silver-scaled snake-man, trembled in pure terror at the sight of her. The original owner had whipped them, humiliated them, and driven another mate to suicide. Now, they were letting her bleed out in the mud, their eyes filled with undisguised loathing and satisfaction.
She was a top-tier apocalyptic survival expert, yet here she was, paying the ultimate price for a stranger's monstrous sins. It was a bitter, unacceptable irony to die helplessly in the dirt while her supposed protectors waited for her corpse to rot.
She refused to accept this ending.
Forcing a chaotic surge of energy through their shared Biological Link, she brought all five men to their knees in agonizing pain, commanding them to carry her back. In the dark cave, without a single scream, she plunged her bare hands into a fire and brutally cauterized her own gaping wound with searing ash. As the beastmen stared in horrified awe at the unbreakable soul now occupying the tyrant's body, Genevieve wiped the blood from her face and began to rewrite her fate.

8.6
In my past life, the Cerberus strain leaked, turning the world into a blood-soaked hell of rotting flesh and mutated monsters.
I thought my boyfriend Declan and my best friend Hailee would have my back as we fled the quarantine zone.
Instead, when the surging crowd of the infected cornered us, they didn't hesitate.
They shoved me backward into the horde just to buy themselves three seconds to run.
As I fell into the mud, I saw them fleeing without a single backward glance.
"She's dead weight anyway!" Hailee screamed.
"Just keep running, she'll distract them!" Declan yelled back.
I was torn apart, feeling the agonizing tear of rotting teeth sinking into my neck and the hot spray of my own blood.
Before the apocalypse, my greedy uncle had locked away my ten-million-dollar trust fund, leaving me with nothing but a fake boyfriend who only wanted me for my money.
Until my last breath, I couldn't understand how the people I loved most could trade my life for a head start.
Why did I blindly trust them? Why didn't I see through their perfectly choreographed lies?
Opening my eyes again, the stench of decaying flesh vanished, replaced by the sterile smell of my college dorm room.
Hailee and Declan were standing over my bed, faking tears of concern over my meningitis fever.
I was back exactly seven days before the world ended, and my spatial vault ability had come back with me.
This time, I'm extorting my uncle for every cent, hoarding the city's supplies, and leaving them all to rot.

7.6
After an exhausting fourteen-hour flight, Katia returned to her Upper East Side penthouse, expecting the quiet comfort of the life she had built.
Instead, she found a pair of familiar red stilettos in the foyer and her fiancé, Caleb, tangled in their bedsheets with his twenty-two-year-old assistant.
She didn't scream or cry. She simply took off her three-carat engagement ring, threw it at his bare chest, and demanded he buy out her half of the penthouse by Friday.
Seeking to numb the sickening disgust, she got blackout drunk and crashed at a luxury hotel, accidentally stumbling into the wrong suite.
Thinking the imposing man inside was a high-end escort hired by her friend, she threw him over her shoulder and spent a wild night with him.
The next morning, she left five thousand dollars on his nightstand with a lipstick-stained note.
"Good Job."
For six years, she had funded Caleb's dreams and built his startup from the ground up, only to be treated like a lifeless ATM.
With ruthless precision, she spent the next two months systematically bankrupting his company, cutting off his venture capital, and erasing his life's work.
She felt no heartbreak, only a cold, calculating need to cleanse herself of his betrayal.
But when Katia finally returned to corporate headquarters to co-lead a massive merger, she literally crashed into the new Vice President.
Strong arms caught her waist, and the sharp scent of cedarwood and whiskey hit her like a freight train.
"You came back," Jackson whispered, his eyes burning as he stared at the woman who had treated him like a cheap gigolo.

7.5
On the morning of our twenty-fifth wedding anniversary, I found a cream-colored document tucked inside my husband's suit pocket.
It was a twenty-million-dollar asset transfer for his former receptionist, Carmen. But what made my blood run cold was the contingent beneficiary: Leo, my newborn son who the hospital claimed was kidnapped twenty-three years ago.
When I confronted Devonte, he didn't even try to explain. He handed me a fake Cartier watch, canceled all my credit cards, and publicly called me delusional.
The next day, he moved Carmen into our mansion and emptied all our joint accounts into offshore trusts.
"If you don't sign these papers and walk away, I will have you committed," he threatened, his mother nodding in agreement.
They had orchestrated the kidnapping of my baby, hiding him with the mistress while I spent half my life sedated and screaming in grief. Now, to keep his secret, Devonte was going to lock me in a psychiatric ward and bury me in debt.
I didn't understand how the man I loved could be such a monster. Why did he steal my child? What else was hidden in that confidential adoption file?
Pushed to the absolute brink, I refused to be his victim.
When his goons came to my temporary apartment to drag me away, I turned to the rugged union electrician who had just fixed my lights.
"If you need a husband to keep you out of a psych ward, I'll marry you," he said, offering himself as my legal shield.
I took his hand. It was time to tear my husband's perfect life apart.







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