
Reborn To Crush My Ruthless Husband
Frances survived a horrific car crash, only to return to a suffocating life. Her wealthy husband, Baron, and his domineering mother were now relentlessly pressuring her to adopt a "poor, distant relative" named Jagger as the heir to their billionaire empire.
But on her way to sign the adoption papers, a violent vision flashed in her mind. The crash wasn't an accident. She saw her car in flames, while Baron watched with cold, calculating eyes. Beside him stood an older Jagger, who calmly muttered the chilling truth.
"The problem is solved."
A private investigator soon confirmed her worst nightmares. Jagger wasn't a charity case; he was Baron's illegitimate son. The family had been illegally funneling offshore money to fund his elite lifestyle. Worse, Baron's ultimate plan was to label Frances mentally unstable, lock her away in a Swiss sanatorium for life, and bring in Jagger's biological mother to take her place.
For years, Frances had played the perfect, obedient wife in their corporate marriage contract. How could they be so ruthlessly evil, plotting her agonizing death just to legitimize their dirty bloodline and steal her trust fund?
But she was no longer the fragile puppet they thought she was. At the high-stakes board meeting, with all eyes expecting her to submit, she put the expensive pen down.
"I refuse."
Instead of adopting their bastard son, she slammed down an SEC whistleblower threat, forced a new will, and introduced her own handpicked heir. The war had just begun.
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Chapter 4
Three days had passed since the board meeting. Three days of suffocating silence in the massive Burnett estate.
Frances sat in her private suite, the screen of her laptop glowing in the dim light. A woman's face stared back at her-a therapist hired by the family to deal with her 'trauma'.
"And how have the anxiety symptoms been manifesting, Frances?" the therapist asked, her voice soft and clinical.
Frances kept her face blank. "I still have trouble sleeping," she said. "I feel on edge."
It was a lie. She wasn't on edge. She was focused. The therapy sessions were a shield, a way to explain away her strange behavior while she plotted her next move under the guise of recovery.
A soft knock on the door interrupted her. Phoebe peeked her head in. "Ma'am," she whispered. "The Mr. has returned."
Frances's stomach clenched. She turned back to the screen. "We'll have to continue this next week," she told the therapist, ending the call abruptly.
She walked to the window. Down below, a black SUV was pulling up to the front entrance. Baron stepped out, his face set in a hard line. He didn't look up at her window.
That night, the dining room was a freezer. Baron sat at the head of the long table, Frances at the other end. The distance between them felt like a canyon. He didn't speak to her. He didn't even look at her.
Instead, he chatted amiably with Estela, pointedly ignoring Frances. They discussed the weather, a recent business deal, anything and everything that didn't involve the woman sitting ten feet away.
Frances ate her meal in silence. She tasted nothing. The roasted chicken might as well have been cardboard. But she didn't complain. She didn't cry. She simply ate, her posture rigid, her face a mask of indifference.
After dinner, Baron moved to the grand parlor. Estela sat by the fire. Herta stood silently by the fireplace, her eyes missing nothing, and a few other staff members were cleaning up.
Baron spoke, his voice carrying perfectly across the room, designed to be overheard. "Frances's condition is quite worrying," he said to Estela. "Her behavior at the meeting... it was clearly a hysterical episode brought on by the trauma."
Frances was walking past the doorway. She stopped for a fraction of a second.
"She needs more patience," Baron continued, his tone dripping with false concern. "The doctor says this kind of mental instability can last for a long time."
He was labeling her. Crazy. Unstable. Hysterical. He was laying the groundwork to have her committed, to make anything she said or did the ramblings of a madwoman.
A young maid, Coral Baines, looked up from her dusting. She shot Frances a look of pure sympathy. But a sharp glare from Herta sent the girl's eyes right back to the floor.
Frances didn't stop. She didn't confront him. She simply walked up the grand staircase, her back straight, her steps measured. She would not give him the satisfaction of a breakdown.
Later that night, Frances sat in the small study adjacent to her bedroom, reviewing financial statements. The door clicked open.
Baron leaned against the doorframe, his arms crossed over his chest. He watched her with a predator's gaze, looking for a crack in her armor.
"What do you want, Frances?" he asked, his voice low and condescending. "More money? Or are you just acting out to get my attention?"
He was trying to fit her into the old box. The needy wife. The jealous woman. It was the only way he knew how to control her.
Frances closed the laptop slowly. She stood up, smoothing her robe. "I don't want anything, Baron," she said, her voice flat. "Especially not your attention."
She moved to walk past him, out of the study. But as she passed, his hand shot out. His fingers clamped around her wrist like a vise, the pressure sharp and immediate.
"Don't play games with me," he snarled, his face inches from hers. "You are still my wife."
Frances looked down at his hand, then back up at his face. There was no fear in her eyes. No love. No hate. Just a vast, empty coldness that seemed to unnerve him.
"Contractual wife," she corrected, her voice barely a whisper. "Remember? You said it yourself. We are just a business arrangement."
She twisted her arm, breaking his grip with a sudden, sharp movement. She didn't look back as she walked out of the room.
Baron stood there, staring at his empty hand. His jaw clenched. The familiar script had been torn up. He didn't know what to do with a wife who didn't want him.
Upstairs, Phoebe was waiting in Frances's bedroom. She poured a glass of warm milk and set it on the nightstand. "Ma'am," she said hesitantly. "You shouldn't have to endure this. Mr. Burnett, he's..."
Frances held up a hand, silencing her. "Phoebe, sympathy is a weapon for the weak. I don't need it."
Phoebe's mouth snapped shut. She looked at Frances, really looked at her. The woman standing before her was not the same fragile girl who had married into this family. She was someone else entirely. Someone dangerous.
Frances walked to the vanity mirror. She stared at her own reflection-the pale skin, the dark circles under her eyes. The war was just beginning. If she didn't find a way to fight back, they would bury her alive.
She picked up her phone. A new email had arrived, the sender hidden behind a string of encrypted numbers. The subject line read: Initial Report on Gia Hobbs.
Frances opened it. Her eyes scanned the text, her mind racing. If Baron wanted to play dirty, she was more than ready to get her hands muddy.
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9.3
On her wedding night at The Plaza Hotel, Clara went looking for her husband.
Instead, she found him in the dimly lit parking garage, passionately pinning down her bridesmaid.
She couldn't even scream or expose them. Just hours before the ceremony, Julian had tricked her into signing away her twenty percent shares of their co-founded company, leaving her completely penniless and unable to pay her grandmother's life-saving medical bills.
Fleeing in absolute despair, a sudden hotel blackout plunged her into a second nightmare. She was dragged into a pitch-black room and brutally violated by a heavily drugged stranger.
When a shattered Clara returned to the office to audit the books and reclaim her power, Julian demoted her to a dusty desk by the trash cans.
He flaunted his mistress in the executive suite and deliberately sent Clara into a horrifying trap. He arranged for vicious clients to drug and assault her, demanding high-definition blackmail photos so he could divorce her with absolutely nothing.
"Since you want to play rough, you can service Mr. Petrocelli tonight," the thug sneered, locking the VIP room door.
Clara was pushed to the brink of hell. Why was the man she devoted three years of her life to trying to destroy her so completely? And why did the freezing cedarwood scent of the stranger who ruined her in the dark perfectly match Conrad Vance, the ruthless CEO and Julian's untouchable uncle?
Rather than let Julian win, Clara smashed a glass bottle, held the jagged edge to her own throat to force the men back, and threw herself off the second-floor balcony into the freezing night.
But the bone-crushing impact never came. A massive figure shot out from the shadows and caught her, and her brutal counterattack finally began.

7.6
Kaylee's family was drowning in debt, and her stepmother locked her inside a freezing bedroom.
To save their bankrupt company, they decided to sell her off to a sixty-five-year-old man with a disgusting reputation.
They cut off her allowance and confiscated the only precious keepsake her dead mother had ever left her.
"Put on the engagement dress, or I will smash your mother's crystal box into a million pieces."
Terrified of the old man, Kaylee risked her life by jumping out of the second-story window into a violent storm.
She hit the muddy ground hard, twisting her ankle and tearing her skin on rusted iron gates as she escaped into the pitch-black night.
Dragging her bleeding bare feet across the cold sand, her lungs felt like they were filled with broken glass.
She didn't understand why she had to be the sacrifice for their endless greed, or how they could be so cruel as to hold her dead mother's memory hostage.
She had absolutely nowhere to go, and the old man's cars were already pulling into the estate to claim her.
Cornered by the blinding headlights of a motorcade on the beach, she threw herself at the feet of Ernest Blackwell, the most ruthless billionaire in New York.
"Marry me! You need a wife, and I need a husband right now!"
To buy her freedom and crush the family that sold her, she chose to sign a twenty-million-dollar fake marriage contract with the devil himself.

9.6
Brenda Vincent thought her biggest nightmare was catching her boyfriend cheating with her roommate on her own sofa.
But her life truly derailed after a drunken night led her into the bed of Bryon Reeves, the ruthless billionaire CEO and older brother of the student she tutored.
Trying to pay off the most dangerous man in New York with a crumpled twenty-dollar bill was her first mistake.
Fleeing the hotel, she accidentally rear-ended his custom Maybach. Bryon used the massive repair bill to blackmail her into being his fake date, parading her at a gala just to make his sister-in-law jealous.
When Brenda finally snapped and fled the humiliation, only to be rescued by his biggest corporate rival, Bryon's twisted possessiveness turned completely destructive.
"If you feel kidnapped, call the police. But your teaching license will be permanently revoked."
He didn't just threaten her. He systematically dismantled her life, using his influence to force the university to freeze her tenure and suspend her without pay.
Brenda couldn't understand why this terrifying man was going to such extreme lengths to ruin a simple tutor who just wanted to be left alone.
Now, stripped of her career, her income, and her independence, she was forced into the sprawling Reeves Manor.
Hearing the heavy mahogany door lock from the outside in her signal-jammed bedroom, Brenda's panic slowly morphed into a cold, clinical rage.
She was trapped, but she refused to be his helpless pawn.

8.0
Finley's stepfather gave her a sickening ultimatum: marry her predatory stepbrother Shane tonight, or he would throw her fragile mother out on the street.
To escape this hell, she used a matchmaking agency and hastily married a complete stranger. Garrison Strickland claimed to be an ordinary data analyst making $95,000 a year, driving a beat-up Honda Civic, and needing a wife in name only. They got their marriage license at City Hall that very afternoon.
But when Finley returned home to pack her bags and threw the certificate on the table, her family just laughed. Dozier ordered Shane to drag her into the bedroom to "teach her a lesson" and trap her forever.
"Come on, little sister," Shane crooned, lunging at her. "Don't fight it."
Finley's own mother just stared at the floor, blaming Finley for ruining the family, watching blindly as Shane cornered her.
Terrified and desperate, Finley smashed an ashtray over Shane's head and frantically dialed her new husband's number. Shane snatched the phone, mocking the "imaginary husband" before the line went dead. Finley felt a bottomless despair. Garrison was just a normal guy; he would never risk his life against her violent family. She was completely on her own, waiting for the end.
Suddenly, deafening bangs echoed through the house, and Garrison stepped into the living room radiating a cold, terrifying fury. This supposedly "frugal data analyst" effortlessly snapped Shane's wrist, leveled a ruthless death threat that made Dozier tremble, and whisked Finley away in a waiting Bentley. Looking at the powerful man beside her, Finley's heart raced: just who exactly had she married today?

9.3
For years, Gabriela believed the man beside her would be the one she grew old with. They had loved each other since they were young, but in the end, all those years meant nothing beside a younger woman's smile.
Returning from a business trip, she uncovered his betrayal with brutal clarity. Still, she did not cry or beg. She took out her phone, recorded every damning second, and filed for divorce the moment she could.
Afterward, she rebuilt her life into something brighter, richer, and stronger, even marrying a powerful tycoon. As for her ex and his shameless mistress, they could rot together.

7.7
Jaclyn woke up in the sterile hospital room after falling down the stairs. The nurse delivered the devastating news: she had bled heavily and lost her baby.
But before she could even cry, her trusted cousins, Katelyn and Cherri, locked the door and revealed the horrifying truth.
"It wasn't an accident," Katelyn smirked, pinning Jaclyn's arm down. "The lubricant on the top step was a very deliberate choice."
They needed her broken and unstable. They had forged her signature, draining her massive trust fund to save their uncle's bankrupt business.
What shattered Jaclyn's world was the fresh hickey on Cherri's neck. Her lover, Bradford, had helped plan the entire murder.
When Jaclyn tried to scream, they smothered her with a pillow, framing her as a lunatic having a mental breakdown.
Two weeks later, when she confronted them, Bradford violently shoved her through a second-story glass window to silence her forever.
As she fell to her death, the husband she had spent her life hating—the ruthless billionaire Gaines—burst through the doors.
He threw himself forward, his face filled with pure terror, desperately trying to catch her.
When her body hit the stone patio, Gaines fell to his knees in her blood, weeping and begging her not to close her eyes.
Until her last breath, Jaclyn was consumed by suffocating regret. Why did she trust the monsters who killed her, and hate the only man who truly loved her?
Opening her eyes again, she was back in the penthouse, exactly one month into her marriage with Gaines.