
Reborn with 10 Billion to Conquer the Apocalypse
She has thirty days. Ten billion dollars. And a quantum space that can swallow anything.
Kinsey Elliott died cold, starving, and betrayed—pushed into a frozen abyss by the uncle who stole her fortune.
Then she woke up.
Back in her penthouse. Back in her perfect body. Back with a silver mark on her wrist that lets her store entire warehouses of supplies in a dimension where time stands still.
The world has thirty days until a global ice age freezes everything.
Her family has thirty days to try to lock her away, steal her money, and have her killed.
And Kinsey? She has thirty days to turn ten billion dollars into an invisible fortress—and burn every last one of them to the ground.
She's not surviving the apocalypse.
She's building it.
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Chapter 2
The biting chill of the late autumn wind slapped Kinsey's face as she stepped out of the Manhattan luxury high-rise. It felt refreshing. It cleared the last remnants of sleep from her brain.
She raised a hand. A yellow taxi screeched to a halt at the curb. Kinsey slid into the cracked leather backseat.
"Where to, lady?" the driver asked, chewing loudly on a piece of gum.
"Brooklyn," Kinsey said. "The abandoned industrial park on 4th and Miller."
As the cab merged into the heavy New York traffic, Kinsey pulled out her phone. She bypassed the standard browser and booted up an encrypted dark web application. She needed to move fast.
She contacted a shadow broker specializing in offshore shell companies. She transferred a massive, non-refundable Bitcoin fee for expedited service. Within ten minutes, she had ten different procurement companies registered in the Cayman Islands, all under fake corporate identities.
The taxi jerked to a stop in front of a massive, graffiti-covered warehouse. The area was desolate. Weeds grew through the cracked concrete.
Kinsey dropped a crisp hundred-dollar bill on the center console and stepped out.
She walked up to the rusted rolling metal door. A heavy padlock secured it. Kinsey pulled a pair of heavy-duty bolt cutters from her designer tote bag. She clamped the jaws around the steel shackle and squeezed with all her body weight.
The lock snapped with a sharp crack.
She kicked the small side door open. A thick, suffocating smell of mold, dust, and stagnant air hit her face. She walked inside, her heels clicking against the empty concrete floor. She scanned the ceiling. No cameras. No blind spots. Just thousands of square feet of empty space.
Perfect.
Kinsey pulled an iPad from her bag. She logged into the largest military surplus supplier network on the dark web.
Her fingers flew across the screen. She didn't look at the prices. She added ten thousand crates of MREs (Meals Ready-to-Eat) and high-calorie compressed survival biscuits to her cart.
A red warning box popped up on the screen: Insufficient Stock.
Kinsey's jaw tightened. She typed in a custom order request, offering a thirty percent premium above market price to force the supplier to reroute inventory from every state in the country.
Next, she bypassed the public retail websites entirely. Instead, she leveraged her dark-web logistics broker to trigger synchronized buy-orders across her newly formed shell corporations. She systematically purchased massive volumes of Canada Goose polar expedition parkas and Arc'teryx Gore-Tex tactical shells directly from the brands' largest wholesale distributors, operating under the highly credible guise of outfitting a massive, privately-funded arctic research expedition.
Her phone vibrated in her pocket.
It was a text from the Swiss Bank. Transfer Complete. First tranche of $5,000,000,000 USD has cleared into your offshore accounts.
Kinsey didn't even smile. She immediately wired twenty million dollars in non-refundable deposits to the various suppliers to lock in her orders.
She walked out of the warehouse, securing the door behind her. She walked three blocks down the street to a massive Costco wholesale store.
Kinsey grabbed three oversized flatbed carts. She moved through the aisles like a machine. She didn't browse. She swept entire shelves of tactical seasonings, high-sodium canned meats, and dense, high-calorie chocolate bars directly into her carts.
Other shoppers stared. Two middle-aged women in yoga pants stopped in the aisle, pointing at Kinsey's overflowing carts and whispering to each other with mocking smiles.
Kinsey ignored them. In thirty days, those same women would be stabbing each other over a single, half-melted chocolate bar.
She pushed the heavy carts to the register. The cashier looked overwhelmed. Kinsey pulled out her black American Express Centurion card and slapped it on the counter.
"Ring it up," Kinsey said. "And I need three of your delivery trucks to bring this to my warehouse immediately. I'll pay ten thousand dollars extra for the transport."
Two hours later, the roar of heavy diesel engines echoed through the empty Brooklyn industrial park. Three Costco box trucks backed up to Kinsey's warehouse.
Sweat poured down the faces of the delivery workers as they unloaded the massive pallets of food. They stacked the cardboard boxes in the center of the warehouse, creating a small mountain.
The lead worker, a burly man with a thick beard, wiped his forehead with a dirty rag. He looked Kinsey up and down, taking in her expensive suit and the fact that she was completely alone.
"Hey, sweetheart," he said, taking a step closer, his tone dripping with sleazy confidence. "That's a lot of food for a little girl. You need some company to help you eat it?"
Kinsey's eyes went dead. She didn't step back. She reached into her pocket, pulled out a stack of hundred-dollar bills, and threw them hard against the man's chest.
"Get in your trucks and get out of my warehouse," Kinsey said. Her voice was terrifyingly calm, carrying the weight of someone who had killed before.
The worker flinched. The predatory look in his eyes vanished, replaced by sudden, instinctual fear. He scrambled to pick up the money. "Yeah. Crazy bitch. Let's go, boys."
The trucks sped away. The heavy metal warehouse door slammed shut, leaving Kinsey in total silence.
She walked up to the mountain of boxes. She placed her bare palm flat against the rough cardboard.
She pushed her mind into the quantum matrix.
A massive, invisible vacuum force erupted in the air around her. The air pressure dropped so fast her ears popped.
In the blink of an eye, the hundreds of boxes vanished. Not a single speck of dust remained on the concrete floor.
Kinsey closed her eyes and looked inward. Inside the space, the supplies were perfectly categorized and stacked on sterile, floating shelves. Time inside the space was frozen. The food would never rot.
A deep, visceral sense of satisfaction washed over her, temporarily silencing the gnawing, panic-driven hunger of her PTSD.
Her iPad chimed. A new dark web auction had just gone live. A massive shipment of military-grade, broad-spectrum antibiotics was counting down.
Kinsey typed in a number that was triple the current highest bid. She hit send. The life-saving medicine was hers.
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7.9
I woke up in a sterile hospital room, my head split open from a horrific car crash.
But the pain in my skull was nothing compared to the memory burned into my retinas just before the impact: my billionaire husband, Dawson, walking into a luxury hotel with a woman who looked exactly like his dead first love.
When Dawson finally arrived at the ward, there was no panic or relief in his eyes. He just coldly looked at my bloody bandages.
"Your reckless driving just forced me to postpone the quarterly board meeting."
Even our seven-year-old son, who I almost died giving birth to, didn't spare me a single glance. He kicked my hospital bed in annoyance.
"The Wi-Fi here is garbage. You're a bad mom! Dad said Aunt Angelita should be the one living with us!"
My blood turned to ice. For five years, I had bent over backward, wearing the hideous pale dresses he picked, starving myself to maintain a fragile figure, all to be a perfect, obedient substitute for a ghost.
And this was what I got. An unfaithful husband who would rather bury me in debt than grant me a divorce, and a son who wished I was dead.
The weak, subservient Charlene died on that wet asphalt.
When the doctor pointed to Dawson and asked for his name, I looked at my husband with a hollow, defensive stare.
"Who are you?" I whispered.
Using retrograde amnesia as my shield, I was going to tear their perfect world apart.

9.0
On their seventh wedding anniversary, Kiley's billionaire husband, Aden, slid a thick stack of papers across the restaurant table.
It was a petition for divorce.
He was leaving her for his college sweetheart. Thanks to a ruthless prenup, Kiley was being thrown out with absolutely nothing.
That very night, their young son Jules was rushed to the ER, bleeding profusely. The doctor's diagnosis was a death sentence: acute leukemia.
When Kiley frantically called Aden for help, he dismissed the emergency as a simple nosebleed.
"I'm not paying for this. Deal with it," Aden sneered, the sound of his mistress giggling in the background.
To force Kiley to sign the divorce papers, Aden froze all her credit cards and canceled their son's health insurance. He refused to pay a single cent for the chemotherapy.
Even Kiley's adoptive parents sided with the wealthy Aden, calling her a burden and telling her to stop fighting him.
Driven to the brink of despair, with a dying child and no money, Kiley didn't understand how a father could be so monstrous to his own flesh and blood.
Until a news article on a friend's phone caught her eye.
It featured a fallen 9/11 firefighter hero from the ultra-wealthy Whitfield family. The man in the photo looked exactly like Jules, down to the very bone structure.
Kiley's mind raced back to the fertility clinic and the anonymous sperm donor.
Could this dead billionaire hero be her son's biological father?
Looking at her sleeping, fragile boy, Kiley wiped her tears and crushed the divorce papers in her hand.
She was going to find the Whitfield family, save her son, and make Aden lose everything he held dear.

9.0
Once a pampered princess, Alaina now clutched a deactivated American Express card, staring out at Central Park. Her family’s fortune was gone, her life, over.
Her family's Hamptons estate, a four-generation legacy, was seized by Dyer Capital. The name hit her: Hardin Dyer, the poor boy she’d once scorned, had returned.
Hardin marched in, serving a divorce agreement. He'd orchestrated her family's downfall for revenge, giving her 24 hours to vacate his property. Penniless, her father faced prison, needing $50 million. Her mother forced her to beg Hardin, who sneered, offering the money for her body. Alaina ripped up the contract.
Hours later, her father had a heart attack. Desperate, she became "Lexi," a club girl enduring humiliation. In the Viper Room, Hardin's lackeys demanded she lick whiskey off his shoe for $10,000. Hardin watched. Outside, her brother Ashton's hand was threatened for a $3 million debt. Spirit shattered, Alaina returned, knelt on broken glass, offering to sign. But Hardin declared her family "dead," offering $10 million for her body, commanding her to use her mouth.
In a furious act of defiance, Alaina threw whiskey in his face, snatched the check, and fled. Yet, when he finally took her, a searing, foreign pain and blood on the sheets revealed a shocking truth: he had never touched her three years ago. Why had he let her believe such a monstrous lie?

7.9
Valerie Ashford, a girl who had just turned twenty-one, was introduced by her father to his business associates at a grand party, where she met a frightening, cold-blooded man.
That man was none other than her father's business partner, the CEO of a major corporation. He was taken with Valerie and had wanted her from the moment he first laid eyes on her.
For Rovano Morvane, whatever he desired was absolute and he had to have it, even by the worst means possible.
That night Valerie vanished without a trace and Rovano became the prime suspect, yet the Ashford family could not prove their allegations.
"P-please, I don't want to die, sir..." Valerie whispered so softly that Rovano had to bend down even lower.
"Didn't you just say you didn't care whether you were kidnapped or not? So shut your mouth." Rovano ordered.
Cold, Valerie felt the other side of the folding knife pressed against her cheek.
Rovano was going to mark Valerie.
It felt like something was missing if Rovano didn't take out his psychopathic urges on someone.
And this time, for the first time, he wanted a girl: Valerie Ashford.
Would Valerie's life end here?

9.5
Bridget left the office early on her anniversary, her pocket heavy with a custom velvet ring box meant for her fiancé.
But when she pushed open the bedroom door, she found him tangled in their bed with her best friend, Chloe.
"Bridget! Wait, it's not what it looks like!" Jacob stammered, his eyes wide with panic.
"Evidence," Bridget stated coldly, snapping a photo of their naked bodies before fleeing into the freezing New York night.
Desperate to numb the betrayal, she got blackout drunk at an underground lounge and threw herself at a dark, terrifyingly handsome stranger.
She woke up in a penthouse suite alone, finding only a limitless black credit card left on the nightstand.
Humiliated and feeling like a cheap escort, she ran away, swearing to forget the nightmare.
But the nightmare had just begun. When she rushed into the office, she discovered the stranger was Jevon Rocha—the ruthless billionaire CEO of her company.
He didn't fire her. Instead, he trapped her in a twisted, obsessive power game, forcing her into his private life and demanding she report to his penthouse.
Bridget couldn't understand why a ruthless billionaire was so dangerously fixated on a low-level employee.
Until she stumbled upon his secret social media account and saw a crayon drawing of a little kid, captioned with a single word: "Finally."
A wave of absolute horror washed over her. He wasn't just playing games; he was hiding a secret child and a messy, high-stakes family drama.
She refused to be the naive collateral damage in a billionaire's twisted life.
Trembling, Bridget hit "Block" on his profile, determined to escape his dangerous web.

7.4
I was freezing to death in an abandoned cabin, desperately waiting for my fiancé to save me.
Instead, my phone flickered with a video from my adopted sister.
She was smiling as she confessed that she and my fiancé had orchestrated my kidnapping, and my parents' fatal plane crash, just to steal my family's trust fund.
When I called him with my dying breath, he mocked me for faking a PR stunt and hung up.
I died in the sub-zero blizzard, consumed by absolute despair.
But as a ghost, I watched my greatest business rival, the ruthless billionaire Collins, kick down the doors of my mansion.
He didn't just mourn me.
He shot my fiancé, trapped my sister, and set the entire place on fire, choosing to burn alive in the inferno just to avenge me.
I couldn't understand why the man I had publicly despised for a decade loved me so fiercely, while the people I gave everything to wanted me dead.
Opening my eyes again, I was back backstage on the night I won my Oscar, four years ago.
My fiancé smiled, holding out his arms to hug me.
I pushed him away in disgust, marched straight into the crowded theater, and kissed my billionaire rival on live television.
"Let's get married tomorrow."
This time, I would use him to burn them all to the ground.