
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.
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Chapter 6
The silver tip of the dart caught the light of the chandelier, flashing like a tiny blade as it flew straight at Celina's face.
Celina didn't flinch. Her muscles remembered the brutal street fights from her past life. Her body naturally coiled, ready to execute a perfect, minimal-effort dodge to the left. She had already calculated the trajectory; the dart would miss her cheek by exactly two inches.
But before she could shift her weight, the heavy oak doors burst fully open.
A rush of cold wind swept into the foyer. A tall, broad figure in a black suit cut across the marble floor with the terrifying speed of a striking viper.
Donovan stepped directly in front of Celina.
He didn't duck. He reached his hand out. His long, powerful fingers snapped shut in mid-air, intercepting the dart's path. The razor-sharp tip stopped a hair's breadth from his palm, caught between his index and middle fingers as if plucking a flower from the air.
For one suspended heartbeat, Donovan stood there—the dart trapped in his grip, his body a wall of black suit and cold fury between Celina and the boy who had tried to blind her. The image was seared into the minds of everyone in the foyer: the most powerful man in New York, personally shielding a girl the Hayes family had called trash.
Then, with a flick of his wrist, Donovan sent the dart spinning back.
It didn't hit Dock. It slammed into the wooden railing exactly two inches from Dock's right hand, embedding itself so deep the shaft vibrated with a low, angry hum.
Dock screamed. He snatched his hand back as if burned, stumbling away from the railing. His face was the color of sour milk.
The momentum had been too violent. As Donovan deflected the dart, the razor-sharp metal tip had scraped across the crystal face of the custom watch strapped to his left wrist. A sickening screech of metal on glass echoed through the room.
Donovan slowly raised his left arm.
A deep, ugly gouge tore straight across the face of his custom Patek Philippe.
The temperature in the room plummeted. Donovan's eyes turned pitch-black, radiating an aura of pure, murderous rage.
"It seems," Donovan said, his voice a low, terrifying rumble that vibrated in the chest of everyone in the room, "the Hayes family greets their guests with weapons."
The words dropped like a bomb. But Donovan wasn't finished. He turned his wrist slightly, letting the damaged watch catch the light of the chandelier. The scratch glittered like a scar.
"And destroys the property of their betters."
Warren Hayes stumbled through the front door just in time to hear those words. He saw the shattered Ming vase on the floor—the vase he had bragged about for years, the vase he had used to prove his family belonged in high society.
Warren's knees physically buckled. The blood drained from his face until he looked like a corpse.
Up on the second floor, Dock hadn't realized who had just walked in. Still shaking from the dart that had nearly taken his fingers, his fear curdled back into rage. He only saw the broken vase.
"You stupid bitch!" Dock screamed, pointing a shaking finger down at Celina. "You dodged! You made me break dad's vase! That thing was worth more than your entire worthless life!"
Elvie panicked. She knew Warren loved that vase more than he loved her. She immediately pointed at Celina too.
"Look what you've done the second you walked in!" Elvie yelled, her voice shrill with desperation. "We bring you into our home, and this is how you repay us?"
Karrie hid behind Elvie, pretending to cry. "Sister, why would you do that? Daddy loved that vase..."
Three voices. Three accusations. Three people piling blame onto a girl who had done nothing but stand there while a dart was thrown at her face.
Celina felt a dark, violent laugh building in her chest. She stepped out from behind Donovan. Her spine was straight. Her chin was high. Her eyes swept over the three of them—Dock, Elvie, Karrie—with a look of such absolute, freezing contempt that it stopped their voices mid-sentence.
"Let me understand this," Celina said. Her voice was quiet, but it cut through the foyer like a blade through silk. "Your son threw a metal dart at my face. A stranger had to shield me because my new family tried to blind me the moment I walked through the door." She paused, letting the silence crush them. "And you're blaming me?"
She turned her head and looked directly at Warren, who was still frozen near the door. "Is this the Hayes family's idea of a welcome? No wonder everyone in New York laughs behind your back."
The insult hit Warren like a physical blow. His mouth opened and closed, but no sound came out.
Donovan slowly turned his head. He looked at Celina with an expression that was equal parts surprise and dark admiration.
Then he turned back to face Warren. His eyes were dead. Empty. The eyes of a man who had already decided someone's fate.
"Warren," Donovan said, and his voice was almost gentle—the gentleness of a predator playing with its food. "Your son threw a weapon at a guest. Your wife and daughter blamed the victim. And your prized possession is in pieces on the floor." He tilted his head. "I would say your family has a discipline problem."
He paused, letting the silence stretch until Warren was visibly trembling.
"Fortunately for you, I am in a generous mood." Donovan's lips curved into a smile that didn't reach his eyes. "I will give you a choice. Your son's throwing hand, or..." He let the word hang in the air. "You get down on your knees, Warren. Right here, in front of everyone. And you apologize to her. Not to me. To her."
The room went dead silent.
Kneel. The great Warren Hayes, on his knees, apologizing to the trailer park girl he had stuffed into a servant's room. In front of his wife, his children, his butler, his maids.
It was a punishment far worse than losing a hand. It was the complete and total annihilation of his authority in his own house.
Warren stared at Donovan. For one horrible second, his pride warred with his terror.
Pride lost.
Warren Hayes—the man who ruled his household with an iron fist, who had built his empire through ruthless deals and iron will—dropped to his knees on the shattered porcelain. The sharp edges cut through his tailored pants. Blood seeped into the expensive fabric, but he didn't dare move.
"I... I apologize," Warren choked out, his voice cracking. "On behalf of my entire family. We were wrong. We treated you... unfairly."
Each word looked like it was being dragged out of him with hot pincers.
Celina looked down at him. The man who had made her past life a living hell was on his knees before her, bleeding, begging. The satisfaction was so intense it was almost dizzying.
She let the silence stretch. Let him kneel. Let him bleed. Let him feel every second of his humiliation.
Finally, she spoke. "I didn't quite catch that, Mr. Hayes. Who are you apologizing to?"
Warren's jaw clenched so hard she heard his teeth grind. "To you... Celina. I apologize to you."
"And what exactly are you apologizing for?" Celina asked, her voice soft, curious, almost gentle—and infinitely cruel.
"For... for my son's actions. For my wife's words. For..." He swallowed hard. "For failing to protect you in my home."
Celina stared at him for another long, agonizing moment. Then she nodded once. A queen accepting a peasant's tribute.
"Accepted," she said. "You may get up now."
The "you may" was deliberate. She was granting him permission. In his own house. And he had to take it.
Warren staggered to his feet, his pants torn, blood staining the fabric. He didn't meet anyone's eyes.
Donovan watched the entire exchange with an expression of profound, hungry fascination. This girl—this angry kid from the Rust Belt—had just publicly eviscerated a man three times her age without raising her voice.
"Preston," Donovan said, his eyes never leaving Celina's face. "Have someone bring a dustpan for the vase. And Warren?" He paused at the door. "If I hear of any retaliation against this girl—any at all—I will come back. And next time, I won't give you a choice."
He turned and walked out, Preston at his heels.
The heavy doors shut.
The crushing pressure lifted.
But the damage was done. Warren Hayes had knelt to his own stepdaughter. And every servant in that house had seen it.