
Dual Rebirth: Vengeance of the Discarded Daughter
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Alina was the eldest daughter of the prestigious Padilla family, but everyone mocked her as a defective dud who couldn't cast a single spell.
The moment she woke up, her father and younger sister Karina barged into her room, demanding she sign a transfer agreement to the Aethelgard Order-the most brutal faction on the continent.
It wasn't just a transfer; it was a legal disownment. In her past life, Alina didn't realize Karina was also reborn. She had dropped to her knees and begged to stay. Her reward? Her magic was violently drained from her veins by her own family. Her fiancé drove a blade through her chest, and her sister stood over her bleeding body, smiling. She had ruined her hands making potions for them, only to be discarded like trash.
The phantom pain of her chest being ripped open still burned behind her ribs. Looking at the hypocritical family waiting for her tears, she felt nothing but exhausting disgust. Why should she ever be their stepping stone again?
"For the honor of the family, you leave today."
Her father sneered as she calmly bit her thumb and pressed her bloody fingerprint onto the contract. This time, Alina didn't cry. She packed a single bag and walked out the door, heading straight for the deadly Aethelgard Order to show them what a true monster looked like.
Dual Rebirth: Vengeance of the Discarded Daughter Chapter 1
Alina shot up from the mattress.
She's still alive? No, she should be dead. She was killed by her so-called "family."
Sweat stung her eyes. She blinked rapidly, forcing her vision to clear.
The heavy mahogany wardrobe. The silver-trimmed vanity. The silk curtains drawn tight against the morning sun.
This was her bedroom in the Padilla estate. The room she hadn't seen since she was fifteen.
Footsteps echoed in the hallway outside. Fast. Urgent.
Alina's spine snapped straight. The overwhelming hatred in her chest threatened to choke her. She forced her jaw to unclench. She took a sharp breath in through her nose, held it for two seconds, and let it out. She smoothed her features into a mask of groggy confusion just as the brass doorknob turned.
The door swung open. Karina rushed in.
"Alina! Are you awake?" Karina's voice pitched high with manufactured panic.
Her younger sister reached out, aiming to grab Alina's hands.
Alina's body reacted before her mind did. She shifted her weight, pulling her hands back and pressing them flat against the mattress.
Karina's fingers grasped empty air. She froze for a split second, the practiced panic on her face faltering into genuine surprise. Then, as if remembering her role, she quickly morphed the expression into a wounded pout.
"Why are you being so cold?" Karina asked, her lower lip trembling. "I was worried sick."
Alina stared at the face of the girl who, in another life, had stood over her bleeding body and smiled. Her stomach churned, but her voice came out flat.
"I have a headache. Don't touch me."
Heavy boots thudded against the hardwood floor of the hallway. The sound vibrated through the heavy wooden bed frame, a familiar tremor she had learned to dread deep in her bones.
Marcus Padilla stepped into the room. He didn't look at her face. He didn't ask if she was well. His sharp eyes immediately dropped to the center of her chest, as if he could see the magic core inside her.
"Your Prismatic Core is a disgrace," Marcus said. His voice was a low rumble that usually commanded absolute silence in the household. "The academy board is questioning my leadership because of your inability to cast a single basic spell."
Karina stepped closer to their father. "The Aethelgard Order is taking exchange students, Father. Maybe Alina would do better there. It's... a different environment."
Alina caught the micro-expression. The slight tightening of Karina's cheek muscles. The hidden gleam in her eyes.
Karina knew.
Karina was reborn too, and she was already making moves to steal Alina's resources by shipping her off to the most dangerous, brutal faction in the continent.
"It is decided," Marcus said, taking Karina's suggestion as his own. "For the honor of the Padilla name, you will accept this transfer. You leave today."
The room went dead silent. Marcus squared his shoulders. Karina tilted her chin up. They were waiting for the tears. They were waiting for Alina to drop to her knees and beg to stay in the luxurious estate, just like she had done before.
Alina didn't cry.
She threw the velvet blanket off her legs. She swung her legs over the edge of the bed. Her bare feet hit the freezing hardwood floor. She stood up.
She walked right up to Marcus, stopping inches from his chest. She tilted her head up and looked him dead in the eyes. Her breathing was perfectly even.
"Fine."
Marcus blinked. His mouth opened slightly, the long speech he had prepared dying in his throat.
Karina's eyes widened. "Aethelgard is harsh, Alina. They don't have servants. They don't care about our family name. You could get hurt."
Alina took one step toward her sister. The temperature in the room seemed to drop.
"Do you actually care if I get hurt, Karina?" Alina asked. Her voice was barely a whisper, but it cut through the air like a razor.
Karina physically recoiled, stumbling back half a step.
"Watch your tone with your sister," Marcus snapped, stepping between them. He reached into his tailored coat and pulled out a thick roll of parchment.
He unrolled it. The paper glowed with harsh, red magical runes.
"This is the transfer agreement," Marcus said. "It also legally separates your resource allocation from the main family vault. Sign it."
It wasn't just a transfer. It was a disownment.
Alina didn't bother reading the dense paragraphs of predatory clauses. She lifted her right hand. She brought her thumb to her mouth and bit down hard on the pad of her finger.
The sharp pain grounded her. The metallic taste of blood coated her tongue.
She pressed her bleeding thumb directly onto the bottom of the parchment.
The red runes flared bright white, searing the blood into the magical weave. The contract was sealed. The physical tie to the Padilla family was severed.
Marcus stared at the bloody fingerprint. A muscle in his jaw twitched. He looked at his eldest daughter, a sudden, inexplicable unease settling in his gut. She was too calm.
Karina hid a smile behind her hand. She had done it. She had pushed the useless sister into the meat grinder.
"Get out," Alina said.
She pointed a bloody finger toward the open door.
"I need to change."
Marcus's face flushed red. He scoffed, turning on his heel. "You will regret this arrogance." He marched out of the room.
Karina lingered for a second. She tried to give Alina a look of deep pity, but Alina's eyes were completely dead. Black, empty voids. Karina swallowed hard and hurried out, shutting the door behind her.
The heavy wood clicked into place.
Alina let her shoulders drop. A cold, sharp smile stretched across her face.
She walked over to the vanity mirror. Her reflection showed a pale, sickly fifteen-year-old girl. But the eyes were ancient.
"Never again," she whispered to the glass.
She held up her right hand. She focused inward. A chaotic, multi-colored light flickered in her palm-the Prismatic Core. The world called it a defect. A dud. But she could feel the terrifying, pulling gravity hidden beneath the colors.
She closed her fist. The light vanished.
She walked to the wardrobe. She bypassed the silk dresses and corsets. She pulled out a pair of dark, heavy-duty trousers, a plain black shirt, and a thick leather jacket.
She dressed quickly. She grabbed a canvas duffel bag from the bottom drawer and shoved a few basic necessities inside. No jewelry. No family crests.
She slung the bag over her shoulder, opened the door, and walked out.
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Dual Rebirth: Vengeance of the Discarded Daughter of Contents
Chapter 1 Ch. 1Chapter 2 Ch. 2Chapter 3 Ch. 3Chapter 4 Ch. 4Chapter 5 Ch. 5Chapter 6 Ch. 6Chapter 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

9.1
He postponed putting my name on the deed 18 times.
Each time, his mentee Ciera had an “emergency.” Each time, he ran to her.
I watched him give her his prized Montblanc pen—the one he wouldn’t even let me borrow. I saw her post their late nights on Instagram. I ate anniversary dinners alone while he “mentored” her.
Then he bought me a necklace—identical to the one she just flaunted online.
That was when I stopped feeling anything.
I didn’t cry. I didn’t fight. I simply packed two suitcases, resigned from our firm, and booked a one-way ticket to London.
He thinks I’m coming back in a week.
He has no idea I’m gone for good.
Nineteen broken promises. One silent goodbye. And a new life waiting across the ocean.

8.5
Five years ago, Nina Hale lost everything... her family, her reputation, and the man she once loved. Betrayed by her own sister and abandoned by those she trusted most, she disappeared without a trace.
Now she's back.
With a new identity and a burning determination, Nina is ready to reclaim her life and chase the dream she once gave up: becoming a star actress. But her return awakens old enemies, and her scheming sister Lydia is determined to ruin her again.
Just when Nina thinks things can't get worse, she's caught in another trap... and unexpectedly crosses paths with a quiet, lonely little boy.
Ethan Grant hasn't spoken in years.
Feeling responsible for him, Nina agrees to stay and help the child come out of his shell. But she didn't expect Ethan's dangerously charming father, Lucas Grant, to enter the picture.
Cold, powerful, and impossible to read, Lucas slowly finds himself drawn to the woman who brightens his son's world.
What begins as a simple act of kindness soon turns into something far more complicated, because Nina came back for revenge.
She never planned to fall in love.
**********
"I saw you with him," Lucas said quietly, but the tension in his jaw gave him away.
Nina exhaled, crossing her arms. "You don't get to care."
"Don't I?" He stepped in, close enough that she had to tilt her head back to meet his eyes.
"This is just a contract."
"Then why does it bother me?" His hand hovered near her waist, not touching-yet.
"It shouldn't." Her breath faltered.
His gaze darkened, "And yet it does."

9.1
I drowned in freezing pool water, the mocking laughter of the elite Savage family echoing in my ears.
When I opened my eyes, I was an eight-year-old orphan again, right on the day those monsters came to adopt me.
Terrified of repeating my hellish past, I ran down the hallway and desperately grabbed the shirt of a random, dumpy IT guy, begging him to take me instead.
I thought I had chosen a weak, boring suburban dad to hide behind.
But I was completely wrong.
My new mom greeted me with a ceramic tactical knife hidden in her apron.
My clumsy dad sliced dinner ribs with the terrifying precision of a seasoned hitman.
My ten-year-old brother was a dead-eyed sociopath who immediately calculated my bone density.
They were a family of lethal underworld monsters, yet they frantically pretended to be a normal, pathetic household just for me.

7.2
Stepping out of the women's correctional center, Karli took her first breath of freedom in three years.
But the luxury SUV waiting for her didn't bring her home. Instead, her adoptive parents tossed a prenuptial agreement onto her lap.
They demanded she marry a violently unhinged, disfigured man so their company could secure a massive commercial deal.
When she refused, her adoptive mother slapped her hard across the face.
The blow brought back the suffocating nightmare from three years ago—how they had drugged her, framed her for a crime she didn't commit, and sent her to prison just so her stepsister could steal her fiancé.
Now, to break her again, her adoptive father ordered his bodyguards to drag her into the estate's freezing, pitch-black basement.
"You can rot in the dark without food or water until you sign that paper!"
Sitting on the damp cement, bleeding and shivering, a white-hot fury burned away Karli's panic.
They had stolen her youth, her reputation, and her grandfather's inheritance. She would rather die than be their sacrificial lamb again.
She smashed the basement window with a hammer, dragged her bleeding body through the shattered glass, and sprinted blindly into the stormy night.
Under the flickering neon sign of a convenience store, she grabbed the sleeve of a terrifyingly cold stranger.
"Are you single? Marry me right now."
She just needed a legal marriage to escape her family, entirely unaware she had just proposed to the most ruthless billionaire in Chicago.

9.4
Dorene survived a terrifying night with a bleeding, dangerous intruder in her hotel penthouse, only to receive a far more devastating blow the next morning.
A black and gold envelope arrived. It was an engagement invitation. Her boyfriend of seven years, Kadyn, was marrying her sweet, innocent best friend, Dolly.
Refusing to hide, Dorene crashed the gala in a blood-red gown. But Dolly was ready. Grabbing Dorene's wrists, Dolly purposely threw herself backward into a tower of champagne glasses, shrieking about her stomach and her unborn baby.
"If anything happens to Dolly or my child, I swear to God, I will destroy you!"
Kadyn roared, holding the weeping Dolly in the broken glass. He didn't ask a single question. He branded Dorene a jealous monster. To completely break her dignity, he publicly handed her over to the city's most notorious, sleazy playboy just to appease Dolly's fake tears.
"Give him a shot," Kadyn told her coldly.
Seven years of love were ground into the marble floor. She was framed, publicly humiliated, and discarded like trash by the two people she trusted most.
Dorene didn't shed a single tear. She gave them a smile of pure, freezing mockery and walked out of the gilded cage into the freezing Manhattan night. She didn't know that as she left, the lethal, blood-stained man from her penthouse was watching from the shadows, ready to help her burn their world to the ground.

9.6
I woke up alone in a cold hospital room after a near-fatal car crash.
My husband of three years, Bryant, claimed he was too busy with back-to-back meetings to visit me.
But when I dragged my bruised body into the hallway, I caught him pinning his pregnant mistress against a vending machine.
"As soon as my company IPOs next month, I'm dumping my useless wife."
"She's so pathetic. She'd be living on the streets if it wasn't for my charity."
For three years, Bryant and his mother had humiliated me for being an orphan, treating me like a penniless burden while he secretly bought a multi-million-dollar townhouse for his new family.
A cold knot formed in my stomach. I had almost died in that wreckage, yet my husband was disgusted by my very existence, eagerly waiting to throw me away.
But Bryant didn't know about the damp, sealed envelope the paramedics had recovered from my wrecked car.
The DNA report inside proved I wasn't a nobody from the gutter.
I was the biological daughter of the Beaumonts—New York's wealthiest, most ruthless billionaire dynasty.
I didn't scream or confront them.
Instead, I calmly pulled out my phone, recorded their affair in high definition, and dialed a Wall Street financier I hadn't spoken to in years.
"I'm done playing the happy housewife. Pull his algorithmic backdoors and drain the accounts."











