
Reborn as the Villain's Wife
I died in a mangled wreck of metal and fire, abandoned by the man I thought was my soulmate. But instead of the void, I woke up pinned against a cold marble wall, staring into the turbulent, storm-gray eyes of Damian Vincent.
This was the night I destroyed my life. In my past world, I spat in Damian's face and ran into the arms of Eddie, a parasitic loser who was secretly plotting with my cousin Jill to strip me of my inheritance.
My "escape" turned into a slow-motion suicide. My brother Donavan died in a horrific car crash while racing to save me from another one of my messes. Damian, consumed by a toxic mix of grief and vengeance, crushed the Nelson family empire until my father was a broken man. I spent years as a drugged-up social pariah, finally dying alone while the people I trusted laughed at my funeral.
The most bitter realization didn't hit me until the end. The "controlling monster" I spent years fighting was the only person who ever truly protected me. I had traded a man who would burn the world for me for a man who would burn me for the world.
Opening my eyes three years in the past, I find myself back at the airport, the rain lashing against the windows. My brother is pleading with me to run, and Damian is standing there, braced for the slap he thinks is coming.
But I don't strike him. I press my palm to his burning cheek and give him the only piece of my soul he couldn't buy.
"I'm not going anywhere, Dami. Keep this as my collateral."
The game has changed. This time, I'm not the victim-I'm the one holding the match.
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Chapter 7
Elise walked to the Steinway. Her heels clicked rhythmically on the parquet floor.
The whispers started again.
"Is she going to play Chopsticks?"
"This is going to be a train wreck."
Elise ignored them. She reached the piano. She didn't sit down.
She turned back to the table. She extended a hand toward Damian.
"Dami," she called out. "Can I borrow you for five minutes?"
Damian stared at her. He looked confused.
"Trust me," she mouthed.
Damian stood up. He buttoned his jacket and walked to the stage. He climbed the steps and stood next to her.
"What are you doing?" he whispered.
"The attic," she whispered back. "Rainy days. Csárdás."
Damian's eyes widened.
When they were children-before the teenage years, before the rebellion-they used to hide in the attic of the Nelson estate. Damian had taught her piano. But she had preferred the old violin she found in a trunk.
They had learned one song together. A difficult, fast-paced Hungarian folk dance. It was their secret.
"You remember?" he asked.
"Every note," she said.
She reached behind the piano bench and picked up a violin case that had been hidden there earlier-she had tipped the band leader $500 to stow it.
She opened the case. It was a Guarneri copy. Not priceless, but good.
She lifted the violin to her chin. She tightened the bow.
Her posture shifted. Her back straightened. Her chin clamped down. In that second, the "party girl" vanished. A musician appeared.
Damian sat at the piano. He placed his hands on the keys. He looked at her.
She nodded.
Damian struck the first chord. A heavy, dramatic D minor.
Elise drew the bow across the strings.
The sound was rich, deep, and mournful. The Largo section of Monti's Csárdás.
The room went silent. Not the silence of awkwardness, but the silence of shock.
Elise's fingers danced on the fingerboard. Her vibrato was wide and passionate. She wasn't just playing notes; she was pulling emotion out of the wood.
She looked at Conrad as she played. The melody was sad, full of longing.
Conrad's mouth opened slightly. His hand gripped his cane. His late wife used to hum this tune.
Then, the tempo changed.
Damian hit the keys harder, picking up the pace.
Allegro vivace.
Elise's bow flew. The music became a frenzy of speed and precision. Her fingers were a blur.
Damian matched her perfectly. He watched her, his eyes burning with intensity. They moved as one organism. He anticipated her rubato; she leaned into his crescendos.
It was electric. It was intimate. It was sex set to music.
Jill's face went slack. She looked like she had been slapped.
Arthur Nelson was standing up, his napkin clutched to his chest. Tears streamed down his face. "My god," he whispered. "She's... she's incredible."
The music built to its climax. Faster. Higher.
Elise threw her head back, her hair flying. Damian pounded the final chords.
They hit the last note together. A sharp, triumphant staccato.
Elise lifted her bow.
Silence hung in the air for three seconds.
Then, Conrad Vincent started to clap.
It was a slow, heavy clap. Then Arthur joined in. Then the whole room erupted.
Elise lowered the violin. She was breathing hard, her chest heaving. She looked at Damian. He was looking at her like he wanted to devour her right there on the piano bench.
She smiled at him. A real smile.
She walked to the edge of the stage, holding Damian's hand.
"Happy Birthday, Grandpa," she said into the microphone. "Jade is cold. Music is life. This is for you."
Conrad stood up. He walked over to them. He ignored Jill completely.
"I didn't know," Conrad said, his voice gruff. "Why did you hide this?"
"I didn't want to share it," Elise said, looking at Damian. "It was ours."
Damian squeezed her hand so hard it hurt.
Elise glanced at the crowd. She saw Jill, pale and trembling with rage.
She smirked.
Then, her gaze drifted to the waiters standing by the kitchen doors.
One of them was staring at her. He had a cap pulled low. He had the same lanky build as Eddie, the same posture. For a terrifying second, her heart skipped a beat, convinced it was him, that he hadn't gone to the airport.
It wasn't a waiter.
It was a man Jill had hired, a low-level private investigator meant to catch her in a compromising position later. But from this distance, under the dim lights, the resemblance was a ghost punching her in the gut.
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9.1
"Someone will hear," I whispered, the words breaking into a tremor.
His family and the entire Castillo group were gathered just down the hall.
Smack.
My gasp tangled in my throat.
"No, they won't." His palm landed again, sharp and claiming. Smack. "Do you want to know why?"
All I could manage was a desperate, breathless sound.
"Because you'll stay quiet." His voice dropped, low and dangerous. "Won't you, Abigail?"
He rubbed the spot where he'd struck, the heat of his touch spreading like fire under my skin. Pins and needles rushed through me, making my breath hitch. I bit down hard on my lip, fighting the sound clawing its way up my throat.
"Good girl." His praise slid over me like sin, a command and a reward all at once.
*****
Abigail swore off love the night she caught her boyfriend tangled up with the neighbor's daughter. Relationships were nothing but heartbreak-until he came along.
One touch from her new employer's grandson, Christian Castillo, awakens a hunger she thought she'd buried forever. She knows it's forbidden. She knows it can't last. But desire has a way of burning through reason, and with Christian, surrender feels inevitable.
Then her world shatters. Her employer is murdered, and the blame lands squarely on her shoulders. With prison looming and her only lifeline being a man who refuses to forgive her, Abigail is trapped between ruin and a marriage she never chose.
But she won't go down quietly. Someone is pulling the strings, and she's determined to expose the truth-even if it costs her freedom, her heart, and the man she can't stop craving.
A story of love, betrayal, and the courage to fight for forgiveness-and for the truth.
*****
A steamy, suspenseful billionaire romance about love, betrayal, and redemption.

8.6
Amara's life has always been predictable-until the shadows start watching her. Footsteps follow her on empty streets, strange chills scrape down her spine, and something ancient tracks her every move from the dark.
Everything changes the night a terrifying wolf-like creature lunges out of the darkness and leaves her fighting for her life. Just when all hope slips away, a mysterious man steps in-sleek, powerful, and gone before she can speak his name.
Haunted by the memory of his golden eyes, Amara begins to unravel a truth she never imagined. A creature in the night. A man in the shadows. A bond that defies logic. Her search for answers leads her to a hidden library and a forgotten article that exposes a world she was never meant to discover, one of magic, danger, and beings who walk between realms.
From the veil of the other world, Kael watches her. Her guardian. Her burden. The one fate bound to her long before she was born. And every day, the pull between them grows stronger... and harder for him to fight.
As enemies gather in both realms, Amara must face the darkness hunting her and the bond tying her to Kael. Because when shadow meets destiny, survival demands trust, courage,
and a heart willing to walk into the dark.

9.0
Once a pampered princess, Alaina now clutched a deactivated American Express card, staring out at Central Park. Her family’s fortune was gone, her life, over.
Her family's Hamptons estate, a four-generation legacy, was seized by Dyer Capital. The name hit her: Hardin Dyer, the poor boy she’d once scorned, had returned.
Hardin marched in, serving a divorce agreement. He'd orchestrated her family's downfall for revenge, giving her 24 hours to vacate his property. Penniless, her father faced prison, needing $50 million. Her mother forced her to beg Hardin, who sneered, offering the money for her body. Alaina ripped up the contract.
Hours later, her father had a heart attack. Desperate, she became "Lexi," a club girl enduring humiliation. In the Viper Room, Hardin's lackeys demanded she lick whiskey off his shoe for $10,000. Hardin watched. Outside, her brother Ashton's hand was threatened for a $3 million debt. Spirit shattered, Alaina returned, knelt on broken glass, offering to sign. But Hardin declared her family "dead," offering $10 million for her body, commanding her to use her mouth.
In a furious act of defiance, Alaina threw whiskey in his face, snatched the check, and fled. Yet, when he finally took her, a searing, foreign pain and blood on the sheets revealed a shocking truth: he had never touched her three years ago. Why had he let her believe such a monstrous lie?

7.5
I was Nyx, a top-tier covert operative. But when I opened my eyes, I was trapped in the unfamiliar, overweight body of a bullied girl named Eliza.
Before I could even process the body swap, the bedroom door splintered open. I was in bed with Julian Malone, a wealthy military heir, both of us heavily drugged. Cameras flashed wildly. It was a vicious setup to ruin his career, and I was the bait.
To save his family's reputation, Julian was forced to marry me. But the moment the wedding was over, he abandoned me. His elite family treated me like a disease. His mother froze my only bank account, trying to starve me into submission.
I even intercepted a private conversation between his parents.
"Once she's in a private facility, she loses all legal standing. We can sign anything we want on her behalf."
They planned to lock me up in a mental asylum and erase my existence entirely to get rid of the "trailer park trash."
To them, I was just a weak, pathetic pawn they could crush without a second thought. They thought they had backed a helpless girl into a corner.
They had no idea they had just declared war on a lethal weapon.
I didn't cry or beg. Instead, I bypassed their state-of-the-art security, cracked their safe, and stole the financial secrets that could destroy their entire empire.
"I want five hundred thousand dollars, or these files go to the IRS."
This time, I was playing by my own rules.

7.6
I went to the City Clerk's office to update my passport, desperate to feel alive again after losing my ability to draw.
Instead, the clerk handed me a reality that killed me.
"Mrs. Crosby," she whispered, her face drained of color. "You aren't married to Bennet. The divorce was finalized three years ago. On October 12th."
The date hit me harder than a physical blow.
October 12th was the day my right hand was crushed.
The day Gianna Skinner, a woman obsessed with my husband, shattered twenty-seven bones in my drawing hand with a marble bust.
Bennet, the most ruthless Don in New York, had promised me justice. He swore he locked Gianna in a dungeon to rot for hurting his "Angel."
But the screen in front of me told a different story.
He had married Gianna the very same day he divorced me.
I drove to the Lake House where she was supposed to be suffering. I didn't find a prison; I found a modern glass palace.
There they were, sitting on a swing set I had designed.
Gianna wasn't rotting. She was laughing in his lap, wearing a silk robe.
"She is so pathetic," Gianna purred, tracing his jaw. "Five years and she still thinks she is the Lady of the house."
Bennet chuckled, the sound dark and terrifying.
"She is broken, Gianna. A bird with no wings. She has no value to the Family anymore, except as a trophy on my shelf. She is my pet. You are my fire."
My phone buzzed in my pocket. A text from Bennet.
"Happy Anniversary, my Angel. Tonight, I give you the world."
He wasn't giving me the world. He was building a cage out of lies.
Through a bugged ring, I later heard his endgame: he planned to institutionalize me for "mental instability" so he could bring Gianna into the light.
I didn't go home to cry.
I went to my office and opened a secure browser on the dark web.
*Subject: Protocol Erasure.*
*Target: Harper Cline.*
*Execution: Immediate.*
Bennet thought he had broken his pet.
He was about to realize he had just unleashed a lioness.

7.7
My husband, Hansford Burris, told me tonight was the most important night of his campaign. He handed me a glass of champagne, his face a perfect mask of concern, telling me to drink up so I could relax before meeting the "Shadow King" of D.C. who could secure his political future.
I didn't know the golden liquid was laced with a high-dose sedative and hallucinogens. He hadn't brought me to this luxury hotel to celebrate; he had brought me here to be sold, trading my body to a stranger in exchange for a seat of power.
In my past life, I trusted him. I drank the poison, woke up shattered, and spent the next five years being tormented by his abusive mother and publicly replaced by his mistress. I was eventually cornered and murdered by the very man I had supported with my family’s fortune, my death staged as a tragic accident to gain him sympathy votes.
To him, I wasn't a wife or a partner. I was just an "asset" with a shelf life, a merchant’s good to be traded away. As the life left my body, I couldn't understand how the man who promised to love me forever could watch me choke without a hint of regret.
Opening my eyes again, I was back in the St. Regis Hotel on October 14th, exactly five years ago. Hansford was standing there in his polished Armani suit, extending the same glass of drugged champagne toward me.
"Gina, darling? Are you alright? Here. Drink this. It will help you relax."
Looking at his handsome, lying face, I felt a cold clarity wash over me. I wasn't the naive rabbit he remembered. I took the glass, but I didn't swallow a single drop. This time, I was going to burn his world to the ground.