
Reborn: The Unwanted Bride's Daring Comeback
9.4 / 10.0
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I was lying in a sterile hospital room, dying of cancer, with only a fake infertility report to keep me company.
Right before my heart monitor flatlined, a stranger walked in and handed me a medical file.
He told me that my fiancé, Garret, had zero sperm viability. The baby my adoptive sister, Beryl, was carrying wasn't his.
When Beryl got pregnant years ago, my adoptive parents forced me to break my engagement and take the blame for being barren.
I was discarded by Garret, mocked by Beryl's triumphant smiles, and kicked out of the house.
I was left to rot alone in a hospital bed while they lived the perfect life stolen from me.
My entire existence had been a cage built on a single, disgusting lie.
The anger burned away my despair. Why was I the only one who didn't know?
Why did I let them use me as a maid and a shield for their filthy secrets?
As the darkness swallowed me, I prayed for just one more chance.
I opened my eyes to the sound of my adoptive mother yelling my name.
The calendar on the wall read March 15, 2019—the exact day they forced me to give up Garret.
This time, I didn't cry or beg.
"You want Beryl to have Garret? Fine," I told my shocked adoptive parents. "But I want a cash buyout, and we are legally severing this adoption."
Then, I set my sights on Douglass Ward—the stranger from the hospital room.
Reborn: The Unwanted Bride's Daring Comeback Chapter 1
The beeping was the only thing that was real.
A slow, tired rhythm that counted down the final seconds of her life. Adelina Bell stared at the ceiling, at a water stain that looked like a weeping angel. It had been her only companion for weeks.
A nurse pushed the door open, her rubber-soled shoes squeaking against the linoleum. She changed the IV bag with practiced efficiency, her eyes full of the kind of pity that doesn't really see you. A ghost in a blue uniform, tending to a body that was already gone. She didn't speak. She never did.
The door clicked shut, and the silence rushed back in.
Adelina's gaze drifted to the nightstand. No flowers. No cards. Just a glass of water with a film on top and a single piece of paper, crumpled from a thousand desperate readings. The infertility report. The two words that had been her death sentence long before the cancer.
Her fingers, thin as bird talons, reached for the paper. The texture was soft, worn down by the sweat and tears of her shame.
A sound in the hallway. Footsteps.
Her breath hitched. A surge of something hot and impossible flooded her chest. Garret.
She tried to push herself up on her elbows, a pathetic, weak movement. The door swung open.
It wasn't him.
The man who stood in the doorway was a stranger. He was tall, dressed in a dark overcoat that seemed to absorb the weak light of the room. His face was all sharp angles and shadows, his jaw set like stone. He looked like he belonged in a storm, not a hospital room.
His eyes, a cold, clear gray, swept over the barren room, lingering for a second on the empty visitor's chair before landing on her. The line of his mouth tightened.
He walked toward the bed, his steps silent and deliberate. Up close, she saw the exhaustion etched around his eyes. A deep, profound pain that mirrored her own, but for reasons she couldn't guess. It wasn't pity. It was something closer to self-reproach.
His voice was low, rough, like stones grinding together. "I'm Dr. Douglass Ward. Beryl Terry's ex-fiancé."
Adelina's world tilted. Beryl. Her adoptive sister. The woman who had taken her fiancé, Garret. The woman who had gotten pregnant when Adelina couldn't.
Douglass reached inside his coat and pulled out a manila envelope. He held it with a kind of rigid control, as if it might burst into flames.
"There are some things you should know," he said, his voice flat. "Before the end."
He placed the envelope on the thin blanket covering her legs. Her hands shook as she fumbled with the clasp. Inside was a single sheet of paper. A medical report.
But the name at the top wasn't Adelina Bell.
It was Garret Stein.
Douglass's next words felt like icepicks driving into her ears. "Garret Stein's sperm viability is zero. It always has been. He's incapable of fathering a child."
The air left her lungs. The beeping of the heart monitor seemed to fade into a dull hum. She couldn't form a thought. Her lips moved, but no sound came out.
"The baby," Douglass continued, his voice even colder, devoid of any emotion. "The one Beryl is carrying. It isn't his."
The report in her hand crinkled as her fist clenched, the sound like a gunshot in the silent room.
A dam broke. Twenty years of memories flooded in, drowning her. Her adoptive parents' disappointed glances. Garret's cold withdrawal. Beryl's triumphant, pitying smiles. All of it. Every last humiliation.
Her entire life had been a cage built from a single lie. And she was the only one who hadn't known.
A tear escaped her eye, hot and sharp. It wasn't for the life she was losing. It was for the life that had been stolen from her. The anger was a physical thing, a fire in her gut, burning away the sickness, the weakness, the despair.
With a strength she hadn't possessed in months, she shot her hand out and grabbed his wrist. Her grip was so tight he flinched, his cool gray eyes widening in surprise.
Her voice was a raw, broken whisper. "Why... why are you telling me this now?"
He looked down at her hand on his arm, then back to her face. His throat worked. "Because I just found out myself," he said, and for the first time, a crack appeared in his stone facade. "I have my own regrets."
The heart monitor shrieked.
A sudden, violent alarm. The steady rhythm shattered into a frantic, chaotic scramble.
A crushing weight slammed into Adelina's chest. The strength vanished, leaving her gasping. But her mind was clearer than it had ever been. She stared at Douglass Ward's face, a face she'd never seen before today, and felt a bizarre, wrenching sense of loss.
If I just had one more chance-
The monitor's frantic beeping gave way to a single, unending tone.
The line on the screen went flat.
Darkness swallowed everything.
And then, a brilliant, searing flash of white light.
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Reborn: The Unwanted Bride's Daring Comeback 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

7.3
I found out my husband of three years had cheated on me and his mistress is the one who told me-because he didn't have the balls to do it himself.
I move out and get a new apartment, a job as a bartender, and try to move on with a broken heart. I wonder where it all went wrong, if I hadn't been enough for him, if I'd been stupid for marrying him in the first place.
I'm at work one night when he walks inside-the most beautiful man I've ever seen. He sits at the bar and a forest fire burns between us. I was depressed the moment before he entered, but the second I look at his blue eyes, I forget the dumpster fire that my life has become. I invite him back to my place and it's the most passionate night of my life. I expect to never see him again.
I just want him as an anti-depressant-but he wants me all to himself. I just got my heart ripped out of my chest so I want something easy and no-strings-attached, but he wants all the strings because he's hooked.
I don't get much of a say in the matter, and that's not surprising when I learn why-because he's the Butcher. The crime lord of all crime lords, the boss that overshadows all of Paris, that makes everyone abide by his rules-or pay.
And now I'm his.

7.7
My husband, Bennett, and I were New York's golden couple. But our perfect marriage was a lie, childless because of a rare genetic condition he claimed would kill any woman who carried his baby. When his dying father demanded an heir, Bennett proposed a solution: a surrogate.
The woman he chose, Aria, was a younger, more vibrant version of me. Suddenly, Bennett was always busy, supporting her through "difficult IVF cycles." He missed my birthday. He forgot our anniversary.
I tried to believe him, until I overheard him at a party. He confessed to his friends that his love for me was a "deep connection," but with Aria, it was "fire" and "exhilarating."
He was planning a secret wedding with her in Lake Como, at the same villa he'd promised me for our anniversary.
He was giving her a wedding, a family, a life—all the things he denied me, using a lie about a deadly genetic condition as his excuse. The betrayal was so complete it felt like a physical shock.
When he came home that night, lying about a business trip, I smiled and played the part of the loving wife.
He didn't know I'd heard everything.
He didn't know that while he was planning his new life, I was already planning my escape.
And he certainly didn't know I had just made a call to a service that specialized in one thing: making people disappear.

9.7
Luna Elena Frost was never chosen, only assigned.
Bound to Alpha Alaric Ashbourne through a cold contractual marriage, she endures three years as a Luna in name only. He never comes home, never defends her, and never looks at her, while his heart belongs to another woman.
At his grandmother's funeral, Alaric publicly dissolves their marriage, humiliating Elena before the entire pack. In that moment, she finally understands the truth. She was never wanted.
But the Moon has not abandoned her.
A forgotten night resurfaces. Her long-silent wolf begins to awaken. And secrets buried within her bloodline start to surface, drawing danger from every direction.
Cast out by the pack that once used her, Elena must flee, survive, and uncover her true power.
Only then does the Alpha realize his mistake.
By the time he turns back in regret, the Luna he rejected may already be gone forever.

7.3
I was tracing the gold paint on my own tombstone when a hand tapped me on the shoulder.
It was Clayton.
The same man who, five years ago, had left me bleeding out in a ditch because he didn't want to be late for my sister's engagement party.
"Die quietly, Ivy," he had said over the phone before hanging up.
Now, standing over my grave, he dropped his cheap plastic flowers in shock.
"Ivy? You're... we buried you."
They hadn't buried me.
They had buried an empty box to save face, mourning a "troubled" daughter they had actually discarded like broken trash the moment I became a liability.
Clayton's shock quickly turned to that familiar, arrogant anger.
He accused me of faking my death for attention.
He told me I was sick for putting the family through such pain.
He even reached out to grab my arm, intending to drag me back to my father to apologize.
"You're coming with me," he spat. "You owe us an explanation."
But he made a fatal mistake.
He thought he was talking to Ivy Dillard, the soft girl who cried when she skinned her knees.
He didn't notice the town car waiting at the curb, or the man stepping out of it.
Before Clayton's fingers could graze my coat, a hand made of steel caught his wrist.
Collin Richardson, the most feared Capo in Chicago, stepped between us.
"Touch my wife again," Collin whispered, his voice promising violence. "And you lose the hand."
I smiled at the terror draining the color from Clayton's face.
I didn't come back from the dead to explain myself.
I came back to bury them.

7.7
Not only was I drugged, blinded and assaulted. I was deceived into carrying a baby by a stranger I never knew. Then he appeared and took my child away.
I was sent to a militia by the father of my child. I thought I was rescued but I was recruited to be a weapon for killing. Who was manipulating me, I didn't know. The answers were far from what I knew.
Forced to blend into the world that I could never believe I would be to, a place where brutality reigned, kill or be killed was the only language. I have survived but he has to pay for everything he did to me, because I believed every phase of my life was set by him and him alone. Have I really survived?
Who would have thought, he existed twice in the same world? Do I really know who I should take revenge on? Him or the person I would sacrifice everything for?
Was my mother the one who orchestrated everything? What kind of pawn am I?

7.1
I was the Architect who built the digital fortress for the most feared Don in New York.
To the world, I was Brendan Wiggins’s silent, elegant Queen.
But then my burner phone buzzed under the dinner table.
It was a photo from his mistress: a positive pregnancy test.
"Your husband is celebrating right now," the caption read. "You are just the furniture."
I looked across the table at Brendan. He smiled and held my hand, lying to my face without blinking.
He thought he owned me because he saved my life ten years ago.
He told her I was just "functional." That I was a barren asset he kept around to look respectable, while she carried his legacy.
He thought I would accept the disrespect because I had nowhere else to go.
He was wrong.
I didn't want to divorce him—you don't divorce a Don.
And I didn't want to kill him. That was too easy.
I wanted to erase him.
I liquidated fifty million dollars from the offshore accounts only I could access. I destroyed the servers I had built.
Then, I contacted a black-market chemist for a procedure called "Tabula Rasa."
It doesn't kill the body. It wipes the mind clean. A total hard reset of the soul.
On his birthday, while he was out celebrating his bastard son, I drank the vial.
When he finally came home to find the empty house and the melted wedding ring, he realized the truth.
He could burn the world down looking for me, but he would never find his wife.
Because the woman who loved him no longer existed.







![[Dubbed Version]The Last Spark of Kindness](https://v.melolo.com/b1265344voduse1318177724/54b012e95145403705286269287/xa2CN3UlRGwA.webp)
![[Dubbed Version]The Last Word Belongs to Her](https://v.melolo.com/b1265344voduse1318177724/29c936ff5145403705299309314/YCmiHWqgPzsA.webp)
![[Dubbed] Evil Scheming in My Role as the Supporting Lady](https://v.melolo.com/b1265344voduse1318177724/657a56cd1397757912472841920/oUrtLA34TCwA.jpg)

