
Reborn From The Lake: My Stoic Savior
Bridget, a ruthless twenty-first-century Wall Street analyst, woke up violently coughing up murky lake water in a decaying 1978 slum.
She quickly realized she was trapped in the body of a naive, marginalized teenager who had just committed suicide over a boy's cruel rejection.
The original girl had been mercilessly bullied by a fake rich kid named Kurtis and his cruel followers. They had publicly read her desperate love letters out loud, mocking her as a toad trying to eat swan meat, and simply watched as she threw herself into the freezing water. Now, her impoverished mother was left weeping by the bed, facing catastrophic debt and total social ruin in their small town. Everyone expected the surviving girl to wake up begging and crying for the boy who humiliated her.
Instead, a cold, calculating fury took over Bridget's analytical mind.
"I already died in that lake. That stupid girl is never coming back."
How could anyone throw their life away for a pathetic, vain clown wearing a mass-produced fifty-dollar watch? To Bridget, those uncollected love letters weren't symbols of teenage heartbreak. They were toxic assets. They were reputation landmines left out in the open that threatened her new family's survival.
Locking away the dead girl's weak emotions, Bridget forced her freezing, exhausted body out of the clinic bed. She set a hard three-month deadline to drag this family out of tier-one poverty. But first, she was marching straight to the volunteer camp to liquidate those liabilities and completely destroy the people who drove this body to death.
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Chapter 11
Drake's forearm muscles corded like thick steel cables.
He absorbed the dead weight of Bridget's collapsing body instantly. His large hand clamped securely around her waist, his other arm bracing her shoulders, stopping her downward momentum just an inch before her skull could shatter against the edge of the hard wood table.
The impact of her falling against him forced a sharp exhale from his chest.
He looked down. The disgust that had been on his face a second ago was entirely wiped out, replaced by a tight, dark knot of panic. Her skin was radiating heat. The fever burned right through the thin fabric of her shirt, searing against his palms. Her face was flushed a deep, unnatural red, her head lolling back against his bicep.
A piercing scream ripped through the house.
Corda burst through the kitchen curtain, holding a serving spoon. She saw Bridget unconscious in Drake's arms. The spoon slipped from her fingers. It hit the floor, followed immediately by the ceramic plate she had been holding, which shattered into dozens of sharp white pieces across the linoleum.
Drake didn't hesitate. He didn't offer comforting words. He moved with the brutal efficiency of a soldier under fire.
He scooped Bridget up completely, lifting her into his chest. He carried her out of the cramped dining room and dropped her onto the worn corduroy sofa in the living room. He didn't set her down gently. He deposited her like a heavy sack of cargo, his movements sharp and entirely devoid of tenderness.
The second her back hit the cushions, Drake straightened up. He immediately took two large steps backward.
His jaw clenched so hard the bone looked ready to snap. He put absolute, rigid distance between himself and the sick girl, acting as if the air around her was infected.
Corda fell to her knees beside the sofa, her hands hovering over Bridget's burning forehead, sobbing hysterically.
"Alcohol," Drake barked.
His voice was a whip crack of pure ice in the chaotic room. Corda flinched, looking up at him with tear-filled eyes.
"Get rubbing alcohol," Drake ordered, his tone leaving absolutely no room for debate. "Wipe down her arms and legs. Bring her core temperature down physically. Then call a doctor."
Corda scrambled to her feet, her hands shaking violently as she rushed toward the bathroom to find the medical supplies.
Drake didn't look at Bridget again. He turned his back on the sofa and strode toward the front door. His heavy boots hit the floorboards with finality.
Through the heavy fog of her fever, Bridget felt the sudden absence of heat. The sharp, clean scent of cedarwood that had anchored her a moment ago was rapidly fading. Her body ached with an exhaustion so profound it felt like her bones were dissolving, yet her mind fought to cling to the one solid presence in the chaos. Her heavy eyelids fluttered. She tried to lift her hand to grab the sleeve of his jacket, but her fingers only caught the cold draft of air he left in his wake.
The heavy wooden front door slammed shut. The glass panes in the windows rattled violently from the force.
The sound was a bucket of ice water poured directly over Bridget's burning brain. He was gone.
The kitchen curtain was yanked aside. Brenda walked into the living room, holding a glass of water. She stopped and stared at Bridget lying on the sofa.
Brenda let out a loud, grating scoff.
"Perfect timing," Brenda sneered, her voice dripping with venom. "The princess decides to play sick right when it's time to clean up. More medical bills for us to pay."
Bridget forced her eyes open. Her vision swam, the edges of the room blurring together from the high temperature. But Brenda's sharp, bitter face came into perfect, terrifying focus.
Corda ran back into the room, clutching a brown plastic bottle of rubbing alcohol. She heard Brenda's comment.
Corda's face turned purple with rage. Her entire body shook. "Shut your mouth, Brenda!" she screamed, her voice tearing at her throat.
Brenda rolled her eyes dramatically. She walked over to the chipped coffee table and slammed the glass of water down hard. The water sloshed over the rim, splashing directly onto the cuff of Bridget's sleeve.
The cold water soaked into the fabric, chilling Bridget's skin.
The twenty-first-century financial analyst inside Bridget's mind woke up. The sheer disrespect, the blatant hostility-it bypassed her physical weakness and ignited a cold, calculated fury in her chest.
She gripped the rough fabric of the sofa armrest. She pushed her weight onto her elbows, forcing her heavy, leaden body to sit up. Her muscles screamed in protest, her head spinning wildly.
Brenda saw her moving. She took a quick step forward. Under the guise of helping, Brenda placed her hand heavily on Bridget's shoulder and shoved her back down against the cushions.
Brenda leaned in close. Her breath smelled of stale coffee.
"If you think you're going to lay around and leech off my husband's paycheck," Brenda hissed in a low, vicious whisper, "I will throw your pathetic ass out on the street myself."
Bridget stopped fighting the pressure on her shoulder. She let her head rest against the sofa.
She tilted her chin up. Her eyes, bloodshot and burning with fever, locked onto Brenda's. There was zero fear in Bridget's stare. It was the dead, hollow look of an apex predator assessing a very stupid piece of prey.
"Do not," Bridget rasped, her voice a broken, gravelly whisper that cut through the room, "mistake my silence for weakness."
Brenda physically recoiled. The sheer malice in Bridget's eyes was so intense it felt like a physical blow. Brenda's grip on Bridget's shoulder loosened for a fraction of a second.
Corda shoved Brenda hard from the side.
"Get away from her!" Corda shrieked, placing her body like a shield between her daughter and her daughter-in-law.
A screaming match erupted. Brenda yelled about money, Corda yelled about family.
Bridget tuned out the noise. She lay perfectly still on the sofa, her brain running a rapid, ruthless audit of her current situation.
This house was a toxic asset. Brenda was an active liability. As long as Bridget and Corda lived under this roof, they would be subjected to this emotional and financial drain.
Corda uncapped the alcohol bottle. She poured it onto a rag and began frantically wiping Bridget's arms. The freezing liquid hitting her boiling skin made Bridget's entire body violently shudder.
But the shock of the cold cleared her mind completely.
Brenda cursed loudly, turned on her heel, and stomped back into the kitchen, intentionally ripping half the curtain off its rod as she passed.
Bridget reached out. Her hot fingers clamped down hard over Corda's shaking wrist, stopping the rag.
"Mom," Bridget said. Her voice was still a broken rasp, but every syllable carried the heavy, undeniable weight of iron. "We have to leave this house."
Corda froze. She stared at Bridget, her eyes wide, thinking the fever was making her daughter hallucinate.
Bridget turned her head. She looked out the window into the pitch-black night.
"We are leaving," Bridget repeated, her thumb pressing hard into Corda's pulse point.
She knew the absolute rule of corporate restructuring. To save the core business, you had to amputate the rotting limbs. It was time to cut Brenda out of their lives completely.
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8.6
I was the youngest Paladin in history, the absolute pride of the Azure Blade.
But after a disastrous mission in the snow, I was falsely accused of slaughtering my own squad.
Grand Master Bernardo Rowe didn't just exile me; he surgically severed my connection to the magic Aether, turning me into a crippled mortal.
Desperate to survive, I tried to climb the Holy Stairs to reclaim my legendary sword, "Rebellion."
Instead of answering my call, my own blade shrieked in absolute rejection and blasted me down the thousand stone steps.
My bones snapped like dry twigs, and I was left in a pool of my own blood.
The pilgrims laughed at me. The guards declared me a lost cause and left me to rot in the dirt.
I should have died there, betrayed by the Order and the holy magic I once served.
But a silent, massive laborer named Cato Sims dragged my mangled body into the shadows.
He healed my shattered skeleton in mere days with impossible skill, yet he allowed lowly servants to spit on him and beat him just to keep my presence hidden.
I didn't understand why my holy sword had abandoned me, and I understood even less why this stranger was protecting a condemned criminal.
When I finally snapped and demanded to know his price for saving my life, he didn't ask for money or my body.
"The mountain does not forget its debts. I am reclaiming what was taken from it."
Staring into his unyielding eyes, I realized my exile wasn't the end, but the beginning of a terrifying truth.

7.2
The Royal Pack’s glowing moonstone token rested in my palm.
Before I could even process the miracle of my rebirth, my half-sister Alyssa snatched it right out of my hand.
"This destiny is mine, little sister. Enjoy your cursed Alpha," she sneered.
My family easily caved to her whining. They forced me to take her place and marry Alpha Kaelen, a man they called an insane, crippled monster with three feral adopted sons. They laughed, expecting his beast to tear me apart before the honeymoon was over.
Alyssa thought she was stealing my crown. She didn't know she had just stolen my death sentence.
In my previous life, that exact token had made me the Alpha King’s Luna. But I was just a convenient, disposable meat shield for his true human mate. I died agonizingly, choking on poison meant for her, while the King didn't even blink.
I lowered my head, forcing my shoulders to tremble as if holding back terrified sobs. I played the part of the pathetic, wolfless Omega they all believed me to be.
But beneath my fake tears, I felt a profound relief.
I remembered the Kaelen from my past life. He wasn't a monster. He was powerful, agonizingly lonely, and slowly destroyed by a dark magic no one understood.
I wisely accepted the marriage pact and walked right into his freezing manor.
I know exactly who cursed him. And this time, I will save him, protect his boys, and make his entire pack mine.

9.8
When I woke up on the muddy bank of the freezing river, I unlocked a brutal, unfiltered preview of my actual future.
For the past six months, I had been the town's ultimate joke, chasing after a city boy who looked at me like a diseased insect. Everyone thought I jumped into the river because he rejected me.
But the nightmare didn't stop there. In the future I foresaw, my entire family was destroyed. My eldest brother was handcuffed and dragged into a squad car. My second brother died in a pool of blood on the asphalt. My parents passed away from sheer grief and humiliation, and our farm was foreclosed.
Meanwhile, Bart Hawkins—my family's sworn enemy, the boy everyone accused of pushing me, but who actually jumped in to save my life—became a billionaire tech mogul. I ended up starving to death in a damp, moldy basement, completely alone.
I finally understood that I was just a pathetic, tragic side character meant to drag my family into hell. My own sister-in-law, Felicie, had been stealing our food and money, laughing at my misery behind my back.
But right now, my mother was still alive, my brothers were safe, and the farm was ours.
When Felicie walked into my bedroom, playing the devoted sister-in-law with a bowl of clear, meatless broth while a stolen roasted chicken thigh leaked grease through her apron pocket, I didn't play along.
"What's in your pocket, Felicie?"
This time, I was going to tear that horrific future apart with my bare hands.

8.1
I died on an apocalyptic battlefield, only to wake up pinned down by a lead-lined blanket of my own fat.
A violent download of memories hit me. I had transmigrated into the body of an exiled, sadistic noblewoman who was three million coins in debt.
The original owner was an absolute monster. She had purchased beastman guards just to torture them for fun. In the corner of the filthy room, a golden retriever boy cowered, his back shredded by her barbed whip. In the basement, a snake guard was frozen and scarred from constant electro-shocks. When the white tiger guard returned from hard labor, he looked at me with pure, murderous hatred, ready to tear me apart to protect the others. Even the local elites kicked down my door to mock my pathetic life and try to steal my men.
I was a decorated commander who bled for humanity. Why was I trapped in this ruined vessel, bearing the sins of a degenerate abuser?
It was all a setup by her sweet-faced cousin, Debera, who stole her royal life and sent her to this outer-rim hellhole to rot.
I gritted my teeth and plunged a military-grade gene repair serum into my arm, letting the agony burn away the black filth and weakness.
"The crazy woman you knew before is dead."
I tossed a medical kit to the trembling guards, loaded my old electromagnetic pistol, and headed for the deadly Demon Hunting Zone to start my revenge.

9.7
Agent Alivia Sanford opened her eyes to the suffocating stench of wild animal musk and raw sex.
She hadn't just transmigrated into a savage beastman world; she had woken up in the body of a 300-pound, diseased, and universally despised woman. Worse, the original owner had just drugged the tribe's strongest warrior, trying to force a mating.
Now, the warrior pinned her to the cave floor with murderous fury.
"You think you can trap me, you disgusting pig?" he snarled, ready to rip her throat out.
After kneeing him and escaping, a "Super Charm AI" bound to her mind demanded she conquer her five designated mates to survive. But these men treated her like a walking plague. They mocked her bloated face, threw bloody raw meat into the mud for her to eat, and publicly announced they would starve her to death. Even her own family looked at her with utter disgust.
In her past life, she was a legendary survivor who could have crushed these arrogant men with her bare hands. Now, she was trapped in a weak shell, threatened with soul erasure by a system if she didn't grovel for their affection. Why should she beg for love from beasts who wanted her dead?
Looking at the five "-100" hostility scores on her system panel, Alivia coldly drew a mental cross over each of their faces. Enduring agonizing pain, she forced her bio-manipulation ability to violently purge the toxins from her fat body. She wasn't going to play their twisted game; she was going to find her own resources and make them pay.

8.5
I spent six months choking down bitter herbs to cure my silver poisoning, just so I could finally bear pups for my mate, Alpha Holden.
But on the day I got my medical clearance, I discovered he was cheating on me with a low-level Omega intern.
Worse, I overheard him and my own brother talking in his office. My four-year marriage was a grotesque trap. My fake sister, Kylie, was the one who hired a rogue to cripple my wolf, and Holden only mated me to protect her from being exiled.
My entire family knew the truth, yet they protected the culprit while treating me like a cursed, wolfless burden.
When my brother violently spilled boiling soup on my stomach at a family dinner, exposing my horrific scars, my parents just rolled their eyes.
"Stop the pity play, Ariana," my mother sneered.
Holden didn't care about my burns either. He abandoned me on a freezing mountain road in the rain the moment his mistress called.
I couldn't understand how my own flesh and blood could sacrifice me for a fake daughter, or how my mate could turn our sacred bond into a sickening lie.
But I didn't shed a single tear. I secretly secured my Pack Identification Papers and gathered ironclad proof of his infidelity. I just needed one month to execute the Rejection ritual and walk away forever.