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Reborn for Revenge on Ryan Novel Cover

Reborn for Revenge on Ryan

I hummed softly as I rummaged through the stacks of papers on Ryan's mahogany desk. The utility bill had to be somewhere—I'd promised to handle it before the weekend. Three years together, and this was our routine: I managed our household while he built his empire. Perfect, balanced, loving. My fingers brushed against a manila folder tucked beneath a leather portfolio. Not where bills would be, but something about its placement—slightly hidden, deliberately casual—caught my attention. I pulled it out, expecting investment documents or property deeds. "Matthews–Chen Divorce" was printed in bold black letters across the tab. My hand froze. Matthews was Ryan's surname.
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Chapter 1

I hummed softly as I rummaged through the stacks of papers on Ryan's mahogany desk. The utility bill had to be somewhere—I'd promised to handle it before the weekend. Three years together, and this was our routine: I managed our household while he built his empire. Perfect, balanced, loving.

My fingers brushed against a manila folder tucked beneath a leather portfolio. Not where bills would be, but something about its placement—slightly hidden, deliberately casual—caught my attention. I pulled it out, expecting investment documents or property deeds.

"Matthews–Chen Divorce" was printed in bold black letters across the tab.

My hand froze. Matthews was Ryan's surname. Chen... Isabella's surname.

"That can't be right," I whispered to the empty study.

I opened the folder with trembling fingers. Legal language swam before my eyes, but certain phrases stood out with terrible clarity: "dissolution of marriage," "irreconcilable differences," and worst of all, two signatures I recognized instantly. Ryan Matthews. Isabella Chen.

The room tilted. I sank to the plush carpet, folder clutched to my chest, as my reality cracked and splintered around me.

Isabella wasn't Ryan's cousin. She was his ex-wife.

Every tender moment I'd spent with her—holding her hand during treatments, bringing her homemade soup, listening to her grateful whispers—replayed in my mind like a horror film. Every time Ryan had canceled our dates to care for her. Every sympathetic nod I'd given when he explained why his sick "relative" needed to live so close by.

All lies.

I don't know how long I sat there, my body numb against the carpet. The setting sun cast long shadows across the room when I finally stood. My legs carried me mechanically to the wall safe behind Ryan's favorite painting—a Rothko in deep crimson that now seemed like a warning I'd failed to heed.

I needed our tax documents. That's what I told myself as I punched in the combination—my birthday, a detail that once made me feel cherished. Now it felt like another calculated move in whatever game he was playing.

The safe swung open. No tax documents greeted me. Instead, a thick medical file with my name on it sat at the front.

Natalie Parker: Kidney Donor Compatibility Report.

My fingers felt disconnected from my body as they flipped through pages of medical jargon, blood type analyses, and tissue matching statistics. At the bottom of the final page, circled in red: "Excellent match for recipient: Isabella Chen. Urgent."

The room spun again, but differently now—not with shock but with a dawning horror so profound it made my knees buckle. I clutched the edge of the desk to stay upright.

The front door clicked open downstairs. Ryan's voice drifted up, speaking in hushed tones. I moved silently to the door, the file still clutched in my hand.

"—just need a few more weeks," he was saying. "She has no idea, Isabella. The proposal is set for next month, and once she says yes, she'll do anything for us. She's always been pathetically eager to please."

A pause. He was on the phone.

"Of course I don't love her," he continued, his voice dropping to a cruel whisper that sliced through me like a scalpel. "She's a means to an end. Your donor. Nothing more."

Three years. Three years of kisses, promises, shared dreams—all fabricated to harvest my kidney.

I backed away from the door, bile rising in my throat. The files slipped from my numb fingers, scattering across the floor like the pieces of my shattered life.

When Ryan found me twenty minutes later, I was sitting in the library, the divorce papers and medical files arranged neatly on the coffee table before me. His face, when he saw what I'd discovered, performed a remarkable transformation—shock, calculation, and then a mask of wounded sincerity slipping into place with practiced ease.

"Natalie," he said, his voice soft with manufactured concern. "I can explain."

"Please do," I replied, my voice steadier than I felt. Inside, I was screaming.

He crossed the room slowly, as if approaching a frightened animal. "Isabella is my cousin, but..." He sighed heavily, running a hand through his perfectly styled hair. "She's also my ex-wife. We married young, before her illness progressed. The divorce was amicable—we realized we were better as family than spouses."

He knelt before me, taking my hands in his. The touch I once craved now made my skin crawl.

"I didn't tell you because I didn't want to complicate things," he continued, his thumb stroking my wrist where he could feel my pulse racing. "And these medical reports—yes, you're a match for her. I was going to ask you, properly, after we were engaged. It would be a gift of life, from the woman I love to the family I cherish."

His eyes, those beautiful eyes I'd gazed into countless times, held mine with perfect sincerity. But now I could see what lurked behind them—calculation, manipulation, and not a shred of genuine love.

He was still talking, spinning his web of lies, but one terrible question echoed in my mind: What would happen when I said no?

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