My Reborn Fiancé Has A Dark Obsession with Me Novel Cover

My Reborn Fiancé Has A Dark Obsession with Me

8.2 / 10.0
I pressed my palms against the cool glass, watching my reflection blur through unshed tears. In my past life, I had worn white on my wedding day—a mockery of purity when I was nothing but a pawn in Elena's power games. Lachlan had barely looked at me during the ceremony, his jaw set with resentment, his eyes already searching the crowd for her. For Sophia. The phantom pain of old humiliations burned in my chest. I remembered standing in the corner of countless social gatherings, watching him laugh with Sophia while I pretended not to notice the pitying glances from other wives. The way he would introduce me as "my wife" with the same enthusiasm one might use to mention a piece of furniture. The night Sophia had hurled that wine bottle at me over a simple emerald bracelet, and Lachlan—my own husband—had immediately taken her side, accusing me of provoking her. "Never again," I whispered to my reflection, my voice steadying with resolve. "This time, I choose."

My Reborn Fiancé Has A Dark Obsession with Me Chapter 1

I stood before the full-length mirror in my apartment, my hands trembling as I smoothed the silk fabric of my engagement dress. The pale blue material felt foreign against my skin, despite having chosen it myself weeks ago.

Everything about this moment should have felt like a dream come true, yet my chest tightened with each breath.

The memories crashed over me like ice water—Elena's cold voice echoing through that opulent drawing room, announcing my fate as if I were livestock being traded.

"You will marry Lachlan Mills. The arrangement has been finalized."

I could still feel the weight of that gilded cage, the suffocating helplessness as I was forced into a union that would destroy me piece by piece.

I pressed my palms against the cool glass, watching my reflection blur through unshed tears.

In my past life, I had worn white on my wedding day—a mockery of purity when I was nothing but a pawn in Elena's power games.

Lachlan had barely looked at me during the ceremony, his jaw set with resentment, his eyes already searching the crowd for her.

For Sophia.

The phantom pain of old humiliations burned in my chest. I remembered standing in the corner of countless social gatherings, watching him laugh with Sophia while I pretended not to notice the pitying glances from other wives.

The way he would introduce me as "my wife" with the same enthusiasm one might use to mention a piece of furniture.

The night Sophia had hurled that wine bottle at me over a simple emerald bracelet, and Lachlan—my own husband—had immediately taken her side, accusing me of provoking her.

"Never again," I whispered to my reflection, my voice steadying with resolve. "This time, I choose."

Isaiah, the man I chose for myself this time, was everything Lachlan had never been—kind, attentive, genuinely interested in my thoughts and dreams.

When he proposed, there had been no family politics, no business mergers, just a man who loved me asking me to build a life together. This engagement party would be the first step toward a future where I held the reins of my own destiny.

I applied my lipstick with careful precision, each stroke an act of defiance against the woman I had once been—meek, powerless, forgotten.

Tonight, I would stand beside a man who saw me as an equal, not a commodity.

The engagement hall buzzed with warm conversation when I arrived, the golden light from crystal chandeliers casting everything in a soft, romantic glow. Isaiah spotted me immediately, his face lighting up with genuine joy as he crossed the room to take my hand.

"You look breathtaking," he murmured, pressing a gentle kiss to my knuckles. The simple gesture sent warmth spreading through my chest—no performance, no calculation, just honest affection.

I moved through the crowd on his arm, accepting congratulations from friends and colleagues, my smile growing more natural with each kind word. These people were here because they cared about us, not because of some business obligation or social maneuvering.

The contrast to my first wedding reception—where guests had whispered behind fans about the "unfortunate bride"—couldn't have been starker.

"Mrs. Chen was just telling me about her daughter's law practice," Isaiah said, guiding me toward a group of his business associates. "She mentioned they could use someone with your expertise in family law."

The consideration in his voice, the way he naturally wove my career aspirations into casual conversation, made my heart swell.

In my past life, Lachlan had never once asked about my interests, let alone actively supported them.

"I'd love to hear more about it," I replied, meaning every word. This was what partnership looked like—mutual respect, shared dreams, the freedom to grow together rather than being diminished.

As the evening progressed, I found myself relaxing in a way I hadn't thought possible.

The phantom weight of surveillance that had followed me through my previous marriage began to lift. No one was watching my every move, cataloging my failures, waiting for an excuse to humiliate me. I was simply Willow Bennett, celebrating her engagement to a man who treasured her.

Isaiah was in the middle of a charming story about our first date when I noticed the shift in the room's energy.

Conversations faltered mid-sentence, glasses paused halfway to lips, and a ripple of whispers began spreading from the entrance like a stone dropped in still water.

My blood turned to ice before I even turned around.

I knew that presence—commanding, predatory, impossible to ignore. It was the same aura that had dominated every room in our past life, the same suffocating weight that had crushed my spirit day by day. My hands began to shake as I slowly pivoted toward the entrance.

Lachlan Mills.

He stood in the doorway like an avenging angel, his dark suit impeccable, his posture radiating the kind of power that made lesser men step aside.

But it was his eyes that confirmed my worst nightmare—they held recognition, memory, the weight of a shared past that should have been buried with our previous lives.

He too had been reborn. He too remembered.

The realization hit me like a physical blow, stealing the breath from my lungs. All my careful planning, all my hope for a different future—it could all crumble in an instant if he chose to destroy it.

His gaze swept the room with casual indifference before locking onto mine with laser focus. The intensity in those dark eyes made my knees weak, not with desire but with pure, primal fear.

I had seen that look before—the night he had publicly announced his intention to move Sophia into our marital home, the morning he had coldly informed me that my opinions on household matters were "irrelevant."

Isaiah's hand found my elbow, steadying me as he followed my stare. "Do you know him?" he asked quietly, concern creeping into his voice.

I couldn't answer.

My throat had closed completely, my body remembering every moment of powerlessness, every instance of calculated cruelty. The elegant engagement party around us faded into background noise as Lachlan began walking toward us with deliberate, unhurried steps.

Guests parted before him like the Red Sea, their curious murmurs following in his wake. Some recognized him—his family's influence reached far beyond business circles—but none dared to intercept his path.

He moved with the confidence of a man accustomed to taking whatever he wanted, consequences be damned.

My heart hammered against my ribs as he drew closer, each step bringing back memories I had fought so hard to bury.

The way he would dismiss my presence with a casual wave. The evening he had forced me to serve drinks to his guests while Sophia lounged in my chair, wearing my jewelry. The final, crushing blow when he had told me I was "a disappointment in every conceivable way."

"Willow." His voice cut through the ambient noise like a blade, smooth and cultured but carrying an undertone that made my skin crawl. He stopped directly in front of us, completely ignoring Isaiah's protective stance and the scandalized faces of our guests.

The single word held layers of meaning that only I could decode—possession, challenge, and something darker that I couldn't name. This was no chance encounter. He had come here with purpose, and that purpose involved destroying the new life I had so carefully constructed.

My worst fear had materialized: the past had found me, and it wore the face of the man who had once broken me completely.

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My Reborn Fiancé Has A Dark Obsession with Me of Contents

Ch. 1 Ch. 2 Ch. 3 Ch. 4
Ch. 5
Ch. 6
Ch. 7
Ch. 8
Ch. 9
Ch. 10
Ch. 11
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