
The Reborn Genius Heiress's Spectacular Comeback
My biological mother finally came to the rundown trailer park to take me to her wealthy new family in New York.
But instead of the good life she promised, I was treated worse than a stray dog.
My stepbrother broke my legs with a golf club just for fun, while my perfect stepsister smiled and watched.
My mother didn't even try to stop them. She let them lock me in a car and set it on fire.
I was burned alive, the smell of gasoline and toxic smoke filling my lungs as they walked away with my life.
Until my last agonizing breath, I couldn't understand why my own flesh and blood hated me so much.
Why did I have to die just so her new family could thrive?
Opening my eyes again, the smell of smoke vanished, replaced by the cheap coffee of the diner I worked at.
I was seventeen again, on the exact day the black Bentley pulled up to take me away.
This time, I wasn't going to be their victim.
I deliberately stalled our departure, saving us from the massive highway pileup that was supposed to be my grave.
And when my stepbrother threw a metal dart at my face on my first day back, I didn't just dodge.
I let New York's most ruthless billionaire step in, ruining his ten-million-dollar watch in the process.
"Since that hand likes to throw things, I will take the hand as payment."
Watching my arrogant stepfamily fall to their knees and beg for mercy, I knew my revenge had just begun.
Chapters
Share
Chapter 3
The Bentley crawled through the storm and finally pulled into the parking lot of a cheap motel on the edge of town. A neon sign flickered above the office, buzzing loudly in the rain.
Elvie stared at the water stains on the concrete walkway.
"I am not sleeping in that disease-infested room," Elvie stated, her voice trembling with disgust. "I will sit in this car all night."
Gary sighed heavily and turned off the engine. The heater died. The temperature inside the cabin immediately began to drop, leaving only the heavy, rhythmic thud of rain hitting the roof.
Celina ignored Elvie's complaints. The air in the car was suffocating. She pushed her door open, popped her broken umbrella, and stepped out into the freezing night.
She walked toward the motel and stood under the narrow concrete awning, out of the rain. The wind whipped her wet hair against her cheeks. She crossed her arms tightly over her chest, her dark eyes staring out at the pitch-black highway.
She didn't look like a girl who had just been rescued from poverty. Her spine was straight. Her chin was high. The cheap jacket hanging off her thin shoulders did nothing to diminish the quiet, unconscious authority in the way she stood. She looked like someone who had been displaced—temporarily—not someone who had been saved.
Inside the Bentley, Elvie watched her through the rain-streaked window. A cold unease settled in her stomach. She had expected a tearful, grateful orphan. Someone she could mold. Someone she could control. Instead, she had found a girl who looked at her like she was the one being weighed and found wanting.
Down the road, a pair of blinding xenon headlights pierced through the heavy rain.
Two massive, black, full-size SUVs cut through the standing water on the road. Sandwiched between them was an extended-wheelbase Maybach. The convoy moved with a slow, heavy, and terrifyingly dominant presence.
Inside the back of the Maybach, the air smelled faintly of expensive agarwood. The lighting was dim.
Donovan Suarez leaned his head back against the headrest. His jaw was clenched tight. A vicious migraine, born from years of severe insomnia and PTSD, pounded behind his eyes like a physical hammer.
In the driver's seat, Preston Vance glanced at the rearview mirror. He saw the tight lines of pain around Donovan's mouth and immediately eased his foot off the gas.
"This storm is a nightmare," Preston muttered. "I-80 being closed completely screws our schedule back to the city."
Donovan didn't answer. He raised his long, elegant fingers and roughly loosened his silk tie. His breathing was shallow. He reached out and pressed the button on the door panel.
The bulletproof glass rolled down a third of the way.
A blast of freezing rain and cold air rushed into the cabin. It hit Donovan's face, offering a tiny fraction of relief to his burning skull.
The Maybach rolled slowly past the flickering neon sign of the motel.
Donovan turned his head. His dark, heavy gaze drifted through the rain and landed on the figure standing under the awning.
At that exact second, Celina lifted her head.
The Maybach slowed to a crawl, its heavy tires displacing the standing water with a deep hiss. The neon sign above the motel buzzed and flickered, casting a brief, sickly pink glow through the rain. For one suspended heartbeat, the light cut through the darkness of the Maybach's cabin, illuminating the sharp, shadowed profile of the man in the back seat. Celina's eyes cut through the heavy, blinding rain and locked straight onto his.
Donovan froze.
He saw her eyes. There was no fear in them. There was no despair. There was only a raw, untamed defiance and a chilling coldness that looked like she had already walked through hell and survived.
And something else. Something Donovan recognized because he had spent his entire life surrounded by old-money dynasties. The way she held his gaze—steady, unblinking, unimpressed—belonged to someone who had never learned to lower her eyes. It was the gaze of inherited power. The kind you couldn't fake.
It was a look that absolutely did not belong to a girl standing in front of a trashy roadside motel.
In the depths of those eyes, Donovan saw something that made his breath catch—a reflection of his own darkness. This girl hadn't just suffered. She had been broken and rebuilt herself into something lethal. He recognized it because he had done the exact same thing.
Donovan's heart gave a single, hard thump against his ribs.
Instantly, the violent throbbing in his head stopped. The silence in his brain was so sudden and absolute it felt like magic.
For the first time in three years, the screaming in his skull was gone. Just... gone. He inhaled sharply, his hand instinctively pressing against his temple, as if physically checking that the pain had truly vanished. It had.
Celina stood still. She could only see the sharp, shadowed outline of a man's face in the back seat. He radiated a cold, dangerous energy, like a predator resting in the dark. A shiver of recognition prickled at the base of her spine—not from fear, but from the unsettling sensation of being truly seen for the first time in two lifetimes.
The Maybach didn't stop. It rolled past her and disappeared into the black rain.
"Stop the car," Donovan commanded. His voice was low, raspy, and carried absolute authority.
Preston jumped. He slammed on the brakes. "What's wrong? Is the headache worse?"
Donovan hit the button to roll the window down completely. He twisted in his seat and looked back.
The rain was too heavy. The motel was swallowed by the dark.
Donovan closed his eyes. The image of the girl's defiant stare was burned into his retinas. His chest rose and fell evenly. The pain in his head was completely gone.
"Run the plates on that Bentley parked at the motel," Donovan ordered. Preston's fingers blurred across the console. A few seconds later, he had a hit. "It's registered to the Hayes family in New York," Preston said, his voice laced with confusion. "Find out exactly who that girl is," Donovan ordered, his eyes still fixed on the dark rearview mirror. Preston leaned in, tapping the screen to pull up the Hayes family's recent movements and background checks. He straightened, his expression clearing. "Sir, it appears the Hayes family just picked up a stepdaughter from this exact town. That must be her."
Donovan tapped his index finger slowly against his knee, the rhythmic motion betraying the sudden, intense focus in his mind. A slow, dangerous smirk touched the corner of his mouth.
"A stepdaughter," Donovan murmured. He paused, his eyes narrowing slightly. "She doesn't carry herself like a Hayes."
Preston frowned. "Sir?"
"Nothing." Donovan's smirk deepened. "I'll see for myself tomorrow."
"Hayes," Donovan murmured. The name rolled off his tongue like a death sentence.
He opened his eyes. "Change of plans, Preston. We aren't going straight to the penthouse tomorrow. We are going to pay Warren Hayes a visit."
Preston's eyes widened in shock. Donovan Suarez never wasted his time on new-money families like the Hayes. But Preston knew better than to question him.
"Yes, sir," Preston said. He put the car in drive, and the convoy moved forward into the night.