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Reborn to Give Him up Novel Cover

Reborn to Give Him up

"Did you really think she'd fight for you?" Shay's voice was silk over steel. "Poor little Theo. So desperate for love she handed over everything." Dominic laughed, the sound sharp as breaking glass. "She made it almost too easy. All those years of her following me around like a lost puppy, begging for scraps of attention. When she finally got what she wanted, she couldn't see the trap until it was too late." The flames grew higher. My father's voice, weak and fading: "The company... the accounts... how did they...?" "Simple," Dominic said, his eyes reflecting the fire. "She signed everything over willingly. Love makes people so beautifully stupid." My mother's screams stopped. The silence was worse than the sound. "Goodbye, Theo," Shay whispered, and then there was only fire and darkness and the taste of my own blood.
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Chapter 3

I walked through the Plaza's marble lobby with measured steps, my heels clicking against the floor like a metronome. The whispers followed me—I could feel them crawling up my spine, but I refused to quicken my pace. Behind me, the ballroom still buzzed with the aftermath of Dom and Shay's performance.

The cool night air hit my face as I stepped outside, and for the first time in hours, I could breathe properly. My driver was already waiting, the Bentley's engine purring softly against the curb.

"Home, Miss Bennett?" James asked as he held the door open.

"Yes," I said, sliding into the leather seat. "And James? No detours tonight."

The city lights blurred past the window as we drove through Central Park. I closed my eyes and tried to process what had just happened. Dom's public humiliation had been calculated, designed to remind everyone of the pathetic girl I used to be. But Shay's words—those had carried a different weight. The way she'd looked at me, as if she knew something she shouldn't...

I shook my head. Paranoia was a luxury I couldn't afford.

The Bennett townhouse glowed warmly against the darkness, its Georgian facade a symbol of four generations of family legacy. But as James helped me from the car, I noticed the light burning in my father's study. At midnight, that could only mean one thing.

Trouble.

I found Robert Bennett standing by the window, still dressed in his evening clothes, a crystal tumbler of whiskey in his hand. He turned when I entered, his silver hair disheveled—a rare crack in his usually perfect composure.

"Theodora." His voice carried a weight I hadn't heard since my mother's funeral. "We need to talk."

I set my clutch on the side table and faced him. "About tonight?"

"About everything." He gestured to the chair across from his desk. "Sit. Please."

I perched on the edge of the leather chair, my spine straight, hands folded in my lap. The same position I'd taken as a child when called to account for some transgression.

"Three weeks ago, you threw Dominic Hawthorne's photograph into the fire," my father began, his tone measured. "Tonight, you walked away from a public confrontation without defending yourself. Yesterday, you submitted a forty-page analysis of our charitable foundation's ROI that impressed our entire board of directors."

He took a sip of whiskey, studying me over the rim of his glass.

"For five years, I've watched you chase that boy like a lovesick teenager. Now, suddenly, you're acting like... like someone I don't recognize. What happened to my daughter?"

The question hung between us like a blade. I could tell him the truth—that I'd lived another life, died another death, and been given a second chance to save our family. But the truth would only convince him I'd lost my mind.

"I grew up," I said simply.

He laughed, but there was no humor in it. "Overnight? People don't change that drastically, Theodora. Not without cause."

"Maybe the cause was finally seeing clearly." I met his gaze steadily. "Maybe it was realizing that chasing someone who didn't want me was destroying not just my reputation, but potentially our family's legacy."

Something shifted in his expression. "And Charles Easton? That wasn't just a random choice, was it?"

"No," I admitted. "It was strategic. The Easton alliance strengthens our position in ways that a marriage to Dom never could have. You've seen the preliminary projections."

He set down his glass with a sharp clink. "Strategic. My twenty-year-old daughter is making strategic marriage decisions." He shook his head. "Theodora, I need to know—are you in some kind of trouble? Has someone threatened you? Blackmailed you?"

The concern in his voice nearly broke my carefully constructed composure. This was my father—the man who'd taught me to ride horses and read financial statements with equal skill, who'd held me when I cried over scraped knees and broken hearts. He loved me, and that love made him vulnerable to the same manipulations that had destroyed us before.

"No one has threatened me," I said. "But Father, I need you to trust me. Can you do that?"

He studied my face for a long moment, searching for something I wasn't sure he'd find. Finally, he nodded.

"I'll try. But Theodora—this new version of you, this cold strategist... don't lose yourself completely. Some things are worth more than tactical advantage."

I kissed his cheek goodnight, tasting the salt of unshed tears. If only he knew that losing myself was exactly what I was trying to prevent.

The next morning arrived with all the subtlety of a sledgehammer.

Eleanor called before I'd finished my first cup of coffee, her voice tight with controlled panic. "Miss Bennett, you need to see this morning's papers. All of them."

Twenty minutes later, I sat in my study surrounded by newspaper clippings and tablet screens, each one a small dagger aimed at my reputation. The headlines varied, but the message was consistent:

*"Bennett Heiress Shows Troubling Signs at Society Gala"*

*"From Lovesick to Ice Queen: Theo Bennett's Dramatic Personality Shift"*

*"Sources Close to Family Worry About Bennett Mental Health"*

The articles were masterfully crafted, filled with anonymous quotes from "longtime family friends" and "society insiders" who painted a picture of a young woman spiraling into instability. The most damaging piece appeared in Manhattan Society Weekly, written by their star gossip columnist, Victoria Sterling.

*Last night's Whitmore Gala provided a disturbing glimpse into the fractured psyche of Bennett Group heiress Theodora Bennett. Sources close to the family report that Miss Bennett's recent engagement to reclusive Charles Easton came as a shock to those who know her best.*

*"She's been acting completely out of character," confided one longtime family friend who wished to remain anonymous. "The Theo we know would never have walked away from Dominic Hawthorne without a fight. She's always been so passionate, so emotional. This cold, calculating person... it's like she's become someone else entirely."*

*Mental health experts suggest that such dramatic personality changes often indicate underlying psychological trauma...*

I set the paper down with steady hands, though inside, rage burned like acid. The "longtime family friend" could only be one person.

Alice.

My phone buzzed with a text from an unknown number: *"Hope you enjoyed the morning reading. This is just the beginning. - A friend."*

I stared at the message until the screen went dark, then called Eleanor.

"I need you to arrange a meeting with the Bennett Group communications team," I said. "Today. And Eleanor? Start compiling a list of every media contact Alice Morrison has made in the past month."

"Yes, Miss Bennett. Anything else?"

I looked out my window at the city below, where millions of people were starting their day, unaware that a war was being fought in their newspapers and social media feeds.

"Yes," I said. "It's time to remind everyone that I'm Robert Bennett's daughter. And Bennett women don't go down without a fight."

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