
Chasing The Reborn Heiress
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Sophia died hating the man she once loved. Then she woke up ten years younger with a chance to make him pay.
Alexander Sterling destroyed her in ways he'll never remember. Now she'll become the woman he can't forget, and can't have. But he's dreaming of her death. She's planning his downfall. And neither knows they're both pawns in someone else's game.
Chasing The Reborn Heiress Chapter 1
CHAPTER ONE
*SOPHIA*
"You look beautiful, sweetheart. Alexander won't be able to take his eyes off you."
My mother's voice cut through the darkness like a knife, and I jolted awake, gasping. The words echoed in my head Words she'd said ten years ago. Words that had started everything.
I sat up, heart hammering, and looked around wildly. Pink walls. Floral curtains. The poster of Monet's Water Lilies I'd taken down when I turned nineteen. My hands flew to my face, touching smooth skin where fine lines should be. No wedding ring. No bruises hidden under makeup.
My phone sat on the nightstand, and I grabbed it with shaking fingers. The date glowed back at me: March 15th. My eighteenth birthday.
"No," I whispered. "No, no, no."
But my reflection in the mirror across the room told the truth. I was eighteen again. A decade had vanished like smoke.
I stumbled to the bathroom and vomited.
Three days passed in a fog. I stayed in my room, claiming illness, while my brain tried to process the impossible. I'd died. I knew I'd died. The car had spun off that cliff, and I'd felt the impact, felt everything stop. Alexander's face had been my last thought not because I loved him, but because I hated that he was my last thought.
Now I was here. Young. Alive. With ten years of memories that hadn't happened yet.
On the fourth day, my mother knocked. "Sophia? The gallery opening is tonight. You promised you'd come."
The gallery. I'd gone to that opening in my previous life, had met Mrs. Laurent who'd encouraged me to pursue art seriously. Then I'd met Alexander six months later and abandoned everything for him.
Not this time.
"I'll be ready in an hour," I called back, and my voice sounded different. Harder.
I stood in front of my closet and pulled out the demure pink dress my mother had picked out. The one I'd worn like a good daughter. I threw it on the floor and reached for something else a simple black dress I'd bought on impulse and never worn because Mother said it was too mature.
When I walked downstairs, my mother's smile faltered. "That's not the dress we chose."
"I changed my mind."
"But sweetheart, pink is more appropriate for"
"I'm eighteen, not twelve." The sharpness in my tone made her blink. I'd never spoken to her like that before. Never pushed back. "I'm wearing this."
My brother Marcus appeared in the doorway, coffee in hand, and raised an eyebrow. "Someone woke up with opinions."
"Someone always had them," I said quietly.
The gallery was exactly as I remembered white walls, soft lighting, wealthy patrons pretending to understand abstract art. Mrs. Laurent spotted me immediately and waved me over, but I barely heard her greeting. My mind was racing, cataloguing everyone I recognized, remembering which artists would become famous, which investments would pay off, which people in this room would matter.
"Your mother tells me you paint," Mrs. Laurent was saying.
In my previous life, I'd blushed and demurred. Said it was just a hobby. This time, I looked her directly in the eye.
"I do more than paint. I create." I pulled out my phone and showed her photos I'd taken yesterday pieces I'd recreated from memory, paintings I'd made in my first life that critics had praised after I'd abandoned art entirely. "I'm building a portfolio. I want to open my own gallery within two years."
Mrs. Laurent's eyes widened. "Two years? That's ambitious."
"I know exactly what I'm doing."
And I did. I knew which emerging artists to invest in. Knew which art dealers were about to go bankrupt. Knew that the sculptor currently being ignored in the corner would have a piece in the Guggenheim by 2020. I'd lived this already.
Over the next eighteen months, I worked like someone possessed. I took out student loans and maxed out credit cards, buying pieces from artists no one else wanted yet. Used my trust fund the one I'd signed over to Alexander in my previous life to rent a tiny gallery space in a neighborhood that would gentrify within a year.
Marcus thought I was insane. Mother thought I was throwing away my future. I didn't care.
By the time I was twenty, Sera Morningstar Gallery was being written about in art magazines. I'd made back my initial investment three times over. And I'd carefully, methodically changed my name professionally so that when Alexander Sterling searched for Sophia Chen, he'd find the political daughter my mother had groomed, not the artist I'd become.
The night of the charity gala, I stood in front of my mirror in a red dress that cost more than my first month's gallery rent. In my previous life, I'd worn pink to this event. Had been nervous, eager to please, desperate to fit in with the society mothers watching.
Tonight, I didn't give a damn what they thought.
"You look different," Marcus said when I came downstairs. He'd agreed to be my date, though he kept giving me strange looks. "When did you get so..."
"So what?"
"Cold."
I smiled without warmth. "I grew up."
The gala was being held at the Sterling Hotel downtown Alexander's flagship property. I'd walked into this building once as a naive girl who believed in fairy tales. I'd left it three years later as a woman who knew exactly what monsters looked like in expensive suits.
The ballroom was full of people I recognized. There was Victoria Ashford in silver, already positioning herself near the bar where Alexander would stand. There was Eleanor Sterling, surveying the room like a queen inspecting her kingdom. And there, across the room, was Alexander.
Thirty-two years old. Devastating in a custom tuxedo. Every inch the billionaire heir who'd charmed me senseless in another lifetime.
He was talking to a congressman, that practiced smile on his face the one that didn't reach his eyes. I'd thought that smile was mysterious once. Now I knew it just meant he was bored.
I turned away deliberately and headed for the bar.
"Champagne," I told the bartender.
"Make that two."
The voice came from behind me, smooth and confident. I didn't need to turn around to know who it was. I could feel Alexander's presence like a cold wind.
I took my champagne and turned slowly, meeting his eyes with complete indifference.
"Do I know you?" I asked, though of course he'd just watched me walk away from his conversation range.
His smile widened slightly, intrigued. "I don't believe we've met. Alexander Sterling."
"How unfortunate for you."
I walked away, leaving him standing there with two champagne flutes and confusion written across his perfect face.
Marcus materialized at my elbow. "Did you just blow off Alexander Sterling?"
"I did."
"Why do I feel like you just started a war?"
I smiled into my champagne glass, watching Alexander's reflection in the mirrored wall as he stared after me.
"Because I did."
"Sophia, what the hell is going on with you?"
I looked at my brother the only person in my previous life who'd suspected something was wrong, who'd tried to help when I was too broken to accept it.
"Would you believe me if I said I've done all this before?"
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Chasing The Reborn Heiress of Contents
Chapter 1 Ch. 1Chapter 2 Ch. 2Chapter 3 Ch. 3Chapter 4 Ch. 4Chapter 5 Ch. 5Chapter 6 Ch. 6
Chapter 7 Ch. 7
Chapter 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.

8.5
Everyone knew Caroline loved Jacob, the frail man in a wheelchair, even giving up her chance at marrying into wealth for him.
She devoted everything to his recovery, enduring hardship and humiliation to help him stand again.
When he finally recovered, they were praised as perfect together-until danger came.
Faced with saving her or her sister, Jacob chose the latter without hesitation. Only in her final moments did Caroline realize his heart was never hers.
Reborn, she made a different choice, choosing power over love.
When Jacob later begged, she looked down coldly. "I have no interest in men who can't stand on their own."

7.7
BAD REPUTATION
7.7
It was her hair that fascinated him. The reddish-brown mass was parted high to one side, windswept almost. And then there was her make-up, neutral save for the liner around her eyes and the bold lip colour... was that purple?
His gaze narrowed over it and she must have sensed his attention, her eyes flickering in his direction. "You know, it's rude to stare."
Her voice was husky, a crisp edge that rasped along his spine and sealed her appeal. Derek was hooked. Her eyes were back on the doors, her lack of interest obvious.
He should've taken it as a sign, but since when had he backed off from anything he fancied?

9.1
Waking up with a cold, scaly hand wrapped around my throat wasn't the worst part.
The worst part was realizing I'd transmigrated into the body of Terra Mason—the most despised woman in the entire Enclave. She drugged high-level beast-men and forced them into life-binding bio-contracts. She locked an aquatic warrior in a dry basement until his organs failed. She treated the most lethal males in the city like broken toys.
Zev, the Level 6 serpent who's currently choking me, would rather blow up his own heart than spend another day as my slave. His affection metric? Negative ninety. His trust? Zero.
Then my system activates: the Kore AI. It gives me exactly 500 credits, a medical nano-gel, and a recipe for neutralizing the radioactive poison in mutant meat. Real food. In this world, that's worth more than gold.
I save Rhys, the dying aquatic male everyone left for dead. I season a slab of purple mutant steak until Sam, a battle-scarred grizzly shifter, groans at the taste—and his trust points finally tick above zero. When my backstabbing ex-best friend tries to steal my males and destroy me, I don't scream or throw a tantrum like the old Terra. I dismantle her with the truth.
But earning their trust means more than grilling meat. A scorpion swarm ambushes us at midnight. Sam throws himself between me and a stinger the size of my arm. As he stands over the corpse, fur receding from his claws, he stares at me and whispers, "You were testing me."
Yes. I was. Because in this world, the weak don't survive. And I refuse to be weak again.
Four beast-men. Four contracts. One system. And a whole lot of steak. Let this dystopian wasteland know—I'm not the monster they remember. I'm worse. I'm the one who's going to feed them until they'd kill for me.

8.6
"What do you think people would say if they found out you don't have a dick?" Christian asked, his voice low and dripping with seduction. His hand pressed firmly against my crotch, fingers exploring the flat, unfamiliar emptiness there. A devilish smirk curved his lips. "Or if they discovered these voluptuous breasts you've been hiding so well?"
A strangled moan slipped from my throat as his hand slid under my shirt, his fingers brushing over my hardened nipples, teasing them with slow, deliberate strokes.
"Which do you think they'd call you?" he murmured, eyes gleaming. "A boy with tits... or a dickless little fraud?"
I stared into his hungry blue eyes, words failing me.
"The term you're looking for is 'girl,'" came Xavier's smooth voice from the bathroom doorway. He stepped inside, closing the door behind him with a soft click, his gaze raking over me with open interest. "So tell me, little girl... what the hell is someone like you doing in an all-boys dorm?"
Christian's smirk widened. "She wants to be devoured by boys like us." His fingers gave my nipple one last firm pinch before he leaned in closer, breath hot against my ear. "And I'll be more than happy to give her a taste."

8.2
For three years, nineteen-year-old Ella Campbell rotted in a freezing psychiatric isolation room.
Her billionaire family didn't visit her once, only pulling her out today to force her to publicly apologize to Ashlyn, the perfect sister who had framed her.
At Ashlyn's glamorous engagement gala, Ella was treated worse than a stray dog and forced to watch her childhood sweetheart propose to her sister.
When Ella showed no jealousy, her brother Ivan dragged her onto a dark balcony and nearly choked her to death.
Her mother didn't even check if Ella was breathing, merely ordering a makeup artist to paint thick concealer over the dark purple handprints on Ella's neck so the family's stock price wouldn't drop.
Standing under the blinding stage lights in a shapeless gray dress, facing three hundred mocking Wall Street executives, Ella was supposed to be the broken, obedient psycho the Campbells needed.
"I am deeply sorry for the pain I caused."
She was supposed to end the apology there and bow to her abusers, but Ella didn't shed a single tear.
"My only regret is that I didn't insist on waiting for the police to arrive that night. I deeply regret that I didn't demand a full, legal toxicology report to prove to everyone exactly what happened."
As the ballroom erupted into suspicious whispers and her paralyzed twin brother finally saw the violent bruises hidden beneath her makeup, Ella's counterattack against the Campbell family officially began.











