
Shattered Bonds: The Reborn Heiress Strikes Back
Eloise Ferguson was the legitimate daughter of a powerful Senator, yet she was treated like a hysterical burden by her own family.
In her past life, her parents forced her to marry a sadistic billionaire for political funding.
When she resisted, they locked her in a psychiatric facility, drugged her, and left her to die in restraints while her "fragile" cousin Jaylene stole her life.
She never understood why her mother hated her so fiercely.
Why did her mother treat her brother Cortez and her cousin Jaylene like absolute royalty, while throwing her own flesh and blood to the wolves?
Opening her eyes again, Eloise found herself back at age twenty-two, trapped in a restroom at a charity gala.
Escaping her abuser, she used her awakened mystic abilities to look at her family's life forces.
What she saw made her blood run cold.
Thick, red biological cords connected her mother directly to both Cortez and Jaylene, intertwining in a perfect symbiotic bond.
They weren't cousins. They were illegitimate twins born from her mother's secret affair.
Eloise was the only true outsider in her own home.
The realization hit her like a physical blow. Her entire life of abuse was just a cover-up for a nest of parasites stealing her father's name and her inheritance.
But this time, she refused to be their victim.
Armed with an unchallengeable executive order she blackmailed out of the United States President, Eloise crushed the hidden microphone in her bedroom.
"Game on, Mother."
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Chapter 3
The black SUV tore through the empty streets of Washington D.C., the streetlights bleeding in streaks across the tinted glass.
Siobhan's hands gripped the steering wheel so tightly her knuckles were translucent. "The White House? Miss Eloise, it's past midnight. You can't just show up at the gates."
Eloise didn't answer. She reached into the hidden lining of her clutch and pulled out a thick, black burner phone. It had no internet connection, no GPS, and exactly three contacts programmed into its encrypted memory.
She pressed the first button. She held the plastic to her ear. The dial tone stretched out, thick and heavy in the silent car.
Siobhan kept glancing in the rearview mirror, her chest rising and falling in shallow, panicked breaths.
Finally, a click.
"Who is this?" The voice was gravelly, exhausted, and laced with immediate suspicion.
"Josephus," Eloise said flatly.
A heavy silence fell over the line. Josephus Copeland, the White House Chief of Staff, stopped breathing for a full three seconds. "Eloise Ferguson. How did you get this number?"
"Three years ago, during the Senate Appropriations Committee hearing, a certain file regarding your offshore accounts was accidentally shredded by an intern," Eloise said, her voice devoid of any emotion. "I intercepted that intern's frantic confession email before it reached the server, and I kept a digital copy of the exact transaction logs you paid him to destroy."
She heard the squeak of leather as Josephus shifted in his chair. The physical tension radiating through the phone was palpable. "What do you want, Eloise?"
"I am calling in the debt. I need to see the President. Tonight."
"Absolutely not," Josephus snapped, his political instincts kicking in. "The President is asleep. The West Wing is locked down. Call my office tomorrow-"
"His resting heart rate dropped to forty-two beats per minute yesterday morning," Eloise interrupted, her voice cutting through his excuses like a scalpel. "His blood pressure is spiking erratically, and the White House physician has secretly doubled his beta-blockers. If you don't let me in, I will call the Washington Post and tell them Adelbert Price is dying."
Josephus choked on his own breath. "You... how do you know that?"
"Southeast gate," Eloise commanded. "Tell the Secret Service I'm a classified asset. I'll be there in four minutes." She hung up.
Siobhan swallowed hard, turning the steering wheel sharply onto 15th Street. The massive, illuminated columns of the White House loomed in the distance, a fortress of white stone against the black sky.
The SUV rolled to a stop at the outer security checkpoint. Two Uniformed Division officers stepped out of the guardhouse, their hands resting casually on their holstered weapons.
Siobhan's hands were shaking violently. Eloise rolled down her window. The freezing air rushed in. She handed over her driver's license.
Before the officer could ask a single question, the heavy steel door of the guardhouse opened. A man in a dark trench coat stepped out. The earpiece coiled behind his ear marked him as senior Secret Service.
He glanced at the license, looked at Eloise's pale face, and gave a sharp nod to the officers. "She's cleared. Let them through."
The heavy steel bollards lowered into the asphalt with a mechanical grind.
Siobhan drove into the inner perimeter, parking near the East Wing entrance.
"Stay in the car," Eloise ordered. She pulled Siobhan's cashmere coat tighter around her torn dress and stepped out into the freezing wind.
The Secret Service agent approached her. "Hands away from your body, ma'am."
Eloise raised her arms. The agent ran a metal detector wand over her body, the device remaining silent. He patted down the pockets of the coat, his face completely blank. "Follow me."
They didn't walk through the main doors. The agent led her down a concrete stairwell into the subterranean tunnels beneath the White House, bypassing the press briefing room entirely. The air down here smelled of ozone and old floor wax.
They reached an elevator. The agent pressed his thumb to a biometric scanner. The doors slid open.
When the elevator chimed on the ground floor of the West Wing, Josephus Copeland was standing in the corridor. His tie was loosened, and a thin layer of cold sweat coated his forehead.
He grabbed Eloise's arm the second she stepped out. "Listen to me," he hissed, his breath smelling of stale coffee. "He is in a terrible mood. You have exactly five minutes before I let the agents drag you out of here."
Eloise looked down at Josephus's hand on her arm. She didn't move. She just stared at his fingers until he slowly let go.
"Lead the way," she said.
They walked in silence past the Cabinet Room. The thick carpet absorbed their footsteps. The portraits of dead presidents stared down at her from the walls.
They stopped in front of the heavy mahogany door. Two armed agents stood on either side. They nodded at Josephus and pushed the doors open.
Eloise stepped into the Oval Office.
The room was bathed in the soft, yellow light of the desk lamps. Behind the Resolute Desk sat Adelbert Price. His shoulders were slumped, his face lined with deep, grayish wrinkles that the television cameras never captured.
He slowly spun his chair around, his sharp, tired eyes locking onto her.
Eloise stood perfectly straight, ignoring the throbbing agony in her ankle. She offered a precise, formal nod.
"Mr. President."
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7.0
Eight years ago, Alaina forced herself to say the most vicious, heartless things to break up with her fiercely loyal college boyfriend, protecting him from his billionaire family's wrath.
Now, she is a top maxillofacial surgeon, and Jarred Mcknight has returned as the ruthless CEO of Wall Street's most powerful corporation.
Their worlds collide in the ER, but Jarred isn't alone. He is accompanying his rumored heiress fiancée.
His eyes are pure ice. He treats Alaina with a suffocating, clinical detachment, fiercely protecting the heiress from Alaina's medical examination. The professional slap in the face shatters Alaina's heart all over again.
Later, at an exclusive restaurant, Jarred catches Alaina on a miserable, forced blind date. Still believing she left him for money and status, he publicly mocks her for working herself to the bone just to climb the ladder.
Her sleazy date, humiliated by the billionaire's sheer dominance, turns his bruised ego on Alaina. On the dark street outside, the lawyer aggressively grabs her arm, trying to force himself on her.
Alaina thought Jarred despised her. She thought he had completely moved on, leaving her to drown in the memories of the future they never had.
But why did Jarred suddenly explode from the shadows like a lethal predator, brutally snapping the lawyer's wrist just for touching her?
Pinning her trapped against the cold brick wall, Jarred's dark eyes burn with a terrifying, unhinged possessiveness.
"Is this the kind of garbage you date now?"
The eight years of separation mean nothing. The billionaire hasn't let her go, and this time, there is no escape.

8.3
For three years, I hid my identity as a billionaire heiress to build a life with the man I loved. I gave up everything to support Ben's career, believing we were creating a future together from the ground up.
The day before our engagement, I overheard him with his boss, Haylie. He called me a "stepping stone," a poor, simple girl he was using to climb the corporate ladder and get closer to her.
He laughed about our "humble" life and mocked the silver ring on my finger, calling it a necessary prop. He was sleeping with her, taking credit for the multi-million dollar deal I secretly engineered, and saw my love as a naive distraction.
The man I sacrificed my entire world for saw me as less than nothing. My love didn't just die; it turned into ice-cold rage.
So I walked out of his life and straight into the arms of my family's biggest rival.
He offered me a deal I couldn't refuse.
"Marry me," Jaxson Banks said with a smirk. "And together, we'll burn their world to the ground."

7.4
My mother was dying and desperately needed a half-million-dollar deposit for an experimental heart surgery by tomorrow.
I swallowed my pride and begged my wealthy husband, Garrick, to save her life.
Instead of helping, he laughed coldly and threw a thick stack of divorce papers right in my face.
"A hen that can't lay eggs gets slaughtered," he sneered, ruthlessly poking my flat stomach.
He revealed that his secretary, my supposed friend Lacey, was already pregnant with his heir.
To him, our three years of marriage was just a business transaction, and now that my family was bankrupt, I was nothing but damaged goods.
He flicked a humiliating five-thousand-dollar check at me as his final act of charity, then locked me out of our townhouse into the freezing, pouring rain.
I had spent years enduring agonizing hormone treatments for a fertility issue that wasn't even my fault, only to be discarded like trash when I needed him the most.
Was my dignity, my absolute devotion, and my mother's life really worth nothing to him?
Driven by pure, reckless desperation, I threw myself directly into the path of a moving Rolls-Royce Phantom on Fifth Avenue.
It belonged to Holden Tillman, the ruthless patriarch of the Tillman empire—and the uncle Garrick lived in absolute terror of.
I thought I was walking into my death, but instead, I became his fiancée, ready to make Garrick and Lacey pay for every tear I shed.

7.9
On my wedding day, my fiancé Connor received an urgent phone call.
He told me a D-list actress had broken her leg on set, then abandoned me right at the altar.
In my past life, I cried until my throat bled, begging him not to leave.
But my tears only brought endless humiliation. My mother and adopted sister mocked me, framed me, and forged my signature to steal my multi-million dollar trust fund.
They kicked me out of the family estate without a single dime.
I ended up freezing to death in the minus-twenty-degree New York blizzard, listening to my mother's voicemail telling me to die in the street as long as I didn't bleed on her carpets.
Until my last breath, I couldn't understand why my own blood relatives hated me so much, yet treated an adopted daughter like a precious princess.
The only person who showed me any mercy—draping his wool coat over my frozen corpse and giving me a proper burial—was Connor's ruthless, untouchable uncle, Harding Snow.
Opening my eyes again, I was back in the bridal suite, right as Connor was rushing out the door.
This time, I didn't shed a single tear.
I let him run to his actress, then walked straight into the VIP room to face the most feared billionaire on Wall Street.
"The wedding proceeds as planned, but the groom's name changes to yours."

8.6
For years, Elvera lived as the despised charity case in the cramped Wright household.
When she caught her foster sister Donita straddling her fiancé, they didn't even panic. Instead, they loudly framed Elvera for stealing a diamond necklace to justify kicking her out.
Her foster parents immediately sided with the cheaters, screaming at her to pack her trash and starve in the gutters. Only her dying foster brother tried to sneak her his medical savings, but the family violently shoved him away, mocking him as a walking corpse.
Standing in the freezing Brooklyn wind, Donita and Crockett followed her outside just to laugh. They waved a crisp twenty-dollar bill in her face, mocking her biological family as a bunch of unemployed street thugs.
They really thought she was going to freeze to death on the pavement with nothing but a faded backpack.
But then a roaring, matte-black supercar pulled up.
The man who stepped out wasn't a street thug; he was her real brother, an FBI task force commander.
He effortlessly snapped Crockett's shoulder out of its socket, put Elvera in the passenger seat, and drove her straight to a sprawling billionaire estate in the Hamptons.
Sitting by the fire in her biological parents' palace, watching them casually display an eight-million-dollar sculpture she had secretly designed, the head butler suddenly walked in.
"Sir, the fake heiress has returned from Europe."
Elvera took a slow sip of her coffee. The real game was finally about to begin.

8.8
Bella Danvers aka Isabella Powell is a 20-year-old college student who encountered the hot and ruthless CEO of the Rinaldi Corporation, Gabriel Rinaldi. They had a forgetful one-night stand that took a turn for the worst. Will he be able to find her before he is forced into an arranged marriage? Will she be able to tell him the news? Or will they be forced apart?