
Reborn To Reclaim: The Boss Who Never Forgot
In her past life, Isla Montclair gave everything to her sister, Vivienne, and her fiancé, Ronan - her smarts, her opportunities, everything that should have been hers - only to be betrayed on her wedding eve by the two people she trusted most.
Now reborn two months back, Isla won't sit back and let them have it all; she's going to reclaim what's hers and make sure Ronan and Vivienne get exactly what they deserve.
With her past knowledge and experience, she's building her escape plan, and no one will manipulate her, deceive her, or belittle her this time.
But in this second chance at life, she didn't expect her famous boss, Lucian Vale, to have his eyes on her.
He watches her silently, smiles at her, assists her, and his eyes bury deep secrets inside.
She doesn't understand him, and she won't let him trick her too.
But Lucian Vale is also here to reclaim what should have been his, and he won't be standing back watching anymore.
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Chapter 2
Isla POV
My head snapped up from my desk so fast my glasses flew sideways. My hand knocked my water bottle and it hit the floor with a bang that made half the office flinch.
Every head turned in my direction before going straight back to their screens. Not one person asked if I was okay.
I sat there, chest heaving. My long blonde hair half escaped from its ponytail, one side of my face almost certainly imprinted with keyboard marks.
What just happened?
I looked around slowly, confused. Was all that just a dream? Because it was way too detailed.
I took a deep inhale as I looked around. Calmly, I was in the Vale Groups office.
Except something was wrong with it. People were moving between desks with purpose, the printer ran without stopping, and someone stood at the window on the phone.
I looked around for another moment before it registered. This energy only happened for one reason.
I turned to my computer and looked at the date in the corner of the screen.
July 2nd.
I leaned forward in panic before reading it again.
July 2nd.
This was two months before my wedding. Two months before I died while Ronan and Vivienne watched without a care.
Haven't I lived this day before? With the exact same situation, too.
Today was the quarterly partnership review. The one where every department head presented directly to Lucian Vale in front of the entire senior floor. The one where I had to stand up and present my report.
In my dream—in what I had been desperately insisting was just a dream—I had printed my report that morning and the numbers had been wrong. Three months of careful analysis turned into something that looked like I had never once opened a spreadsheet in my life.
I had walked into that meeting anyway because I hadn't caught it in time.
And Lucian Vale had told me—in front of everyone, in that flat tone of his—that this was not the standard he expected. That carelessness was not something he tolerated. That I had wasted the room's time.
I had stood there and taken every word of it.
And then Vivienne had found me afterwards, her arm warm around my shoulders. He's like that with everyone. Your work is brilliant, Isla. He just can't see it.
And I had felt grateful back then. Now I wondered: was all that a fake? Was she planning my death even back then?
My hands were already moving, opening files and apps. I navigated to the report folder, begging to whatever supernatural thing that brought me back that the report was perfectly fine.
I finally opened the report and the numbers stared back at me.
The numbers were all wrong and jumbled up, column four bleeding into column five. Three months of careful work broken so thoroughly it looked like I hadn't checked it once.
I knew every number in this report. I had built it from scratch. I knew what it was supposed to say and I knew what it said now, and I had not done this.
I checked the timestamp.
Last modified: yesterday, 11:47pm.
I had left the office at six, from what I remembered.
I stared at those numbers for a long moment. Trying to figure out how and why this happened last time, and why I was back at this moment.
Was it Vivienne who ruined this report? She did have access to some of my work things.
The thought arrived quietly. And with it came a hundred horrible memories of my life that Vivienne was apparently always there for.
I pushed it down. Not now. Right now I needed to fix this before the meeting to avoid the reprimand and that embarrassing moment. I looked at the clock.
I had one hour and forty minutes.
I could try, though I didn't keep my hopes high. The corruption was too thorough.
---
I couldn't fix it.
I printed what I had and gathered my materials. I fixed my outfit and pushed my glasses up. There was nothing I could do.
I had already survived this once. I could do it again.
The executive conference room was everything I remembered and had been hoping to misremember. Floor-to-ceiling glass windows and a long table that seated twenty. Every senior staff member already seated.
Vivienne was third from the front with perfect posture, her short dark hair tucked behind one ear, completely at ease. She caught my eye and gave me a small, warm smile.
I smiled back reluctantly before I found my seat at the back—alone, the way I always ended up.
Then the door finally opened. Lucian Vale walked in.
He was the heir to the Vale fortune, and the whole country knew his face—rich, famous, and the kind of handsome that felt almost unfair. He was also the most demanding, exacting, cold person I had ever had the misfortune of reporting to.
It had always felt personal. The extra work he piled on me. The detailed criticism of everything I submitted. Even when I eventually quit—pushed out by Ronan's expectations—I had been quietly relieved to leave him behind.
He set his folder on the table, sat, and looked around the room once.
My back stiffened as I felt his gaze pause on me for a second too long before moving on. That didn't happen last time, and it didn't help my worry.
"Begin," he said.
The meeting began, and I heard none of it. I sat with my broken report in my lap and mentally recited his words from my first life.
This is not the standard I expect.
Carelessness has consequences.
I suggest you take the weekend to reconsider your approach to detail.
I knew every word, every pause, and the painful way he would look at the report without looking at me—like my presence in the room was secondary to the offense of the work itself.
"Isla Montclair."
I stood up too quickly at the sound of my name from his lips. My legs were steady, and I was genuinely impressed by them.
"The Q3 partnership analysis," I started.
And then I looked at my report and my mind went completely blank. I had sat at my desk for an hour telling myself I knew this work, that I knew every number. But the report was too wrong. How could I present this?
"The figures in section three," I said, my voice a shy whisper, "there was a file issue. Some of the numbers—"
"Present the report, please," he said, cutting me off.
I took a deep breath and just started presenting it. My panic was getting to me so that I was stumbling over my words, the jumbled numbers getting to me. I couldn't even play it off like the report was perfectly fine.
When I finished, I took a sigh of dread and turned to Mr. Vale as he stared back at me for what felt like four seconds.
"The Q3 figures," he said. "Column four."
"There was a file corruption—"
"I'm looking at column four." He didn't raise his voice, but I hated hearing that condescending tone. "Walk me through the figures."
I gave him the correct numbers from memory. My voice was a bit steadier now. And I was actually glad he had given me this opportunity to explain myself.
He listened and made a note on his notepad. I bit my lip nervously, awaiting his response.
"The presentation of this report," he said, "is not the standard I expect."
There it was. The exact same words from before.
"I understand," I said, not having enough courage to explain why.
"Carelessness—"
"It wasn't carelessness, sir." I cut him off and internally scolded myself.
The room went very still. I heard small gasps from around me, but I ignored them.
Lucian looked at me, his brows knitted together in thought.
"The file was modified at 11:47pm yesterday," I said, explaining myself.
My voice wasn't entirely steady, but it was present and it was mine. "I left the office at six. I noticed the corruption this morning and did not have sufficient time to correct it before this meeting."
"Who has access to your files?" he asked, his voice quiet.
My brows lifted at the question.
In my first life, he had said take the weekend to reconsider your approach. He had not asked who had access to my files. He had simply concluded and moved on, leaving me standing in shame and embarrassment.
He wasn't saying those things now.
"The shared drive," I said carefully. "Standard department access."
He held my gaze for a moment that lasted longer than was strictly professional. Making me a bit uneasy… he was such an uncomfortable man.
"Sit down, Montclair. We'll discuss the full report separately." He lifted his finger and rubbed his temples.
I sat down slowly, relief washing over me.
My hands were shaking under the table. I pressed them flat against my thighs, stared at my folder, and breathed.
He had not said carelessness has consequences.
He had asked who has access to my files.
And sitting there in that room, with my broken report in my lap and Vivienne's warm smile still fresh in my memory—I was starting to understand exactly what that meant.
I have been reborn.
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7.7
Nora's life turned into a nightmare after she was banished from her pack by her own husband. She was subjected to mockery, abuse and humiliation before being cast out with nothing.
Faced with the cruelty of a world that had never once been kind to her, the moon goddess decided to bless her with her fated mate.
The same man she watched slaughter others without a single trace of mercy. The man who was twice as cold and twice as ruthless as the husband who destroyed her.
Yet he would not let her go. She found herself stuck between the husband who used her and the ruthless mate who wanted her but refused to admit it. Two powerful men. One woman who was never supposed to survive any of it. And a moon goddess who was not done with her yet.

8.2
The prophecy didn't save me, it claimed me.
Death was not her ending...... it was her rebirth.
Awakened into a world of gods, bloodlines, and ancient curses, she learns that her second life is bound to a prophecy written long before she existed. Marked by divine blood and hunted by fate, she becomes the one Olympus never wanted to rise again.
As secrets unfold and forbidden bonds form, she must decide whether to obey the destiny forced upon her or defy the gods who control her future. But prophecies always demand a price, and some rebirths are meant to destroy the world that created them.
Because being reborn under a cursed prophecy means there is no escape, only fate.

9.7
The Moon Goddess doesn't make mistakes. But as Alpha King Damien Blackmoor stood before his entire kingdom and rejected his fated mate, he wondered if the goddess had finally lost her mind. Aria Thornwood was weak. Wolfless. Worthless. And the only woman destiny had chosen for him. Humiliated before thousands, Damien cast her into exile, choosing pride over prophecy. He told himself it was for the best. He told himself the Moon Goddess made a mistake. He told himself these lies for five years. Until the curse came. Until his kingdom began to die. Until the ancient prophecy revealed that only the True Luna could save them all.
Now Damien must journey into the wilderness to find the woman he destroyed and beg for her help. But Aria is no longer the broken girl he rejected. She has become something the world has never seen, a True Luna, more powerful than any Alpha in history. She doesn't need a king. She doesn't need a mate. And she is not interested in forgiveness. The Moon Goddess doesn't make mistakes. Damien did. And winning back his rejected mate will require more than his crown. It will require his heart. Some bonds cannot be broken. Some kings must learn to kneel. And some love is worth any price.

9.5
As a highborn succubus, I somehow managed to starve myself to death-thanks to my obsessive cleanliness and ridiculously picky appetite.
When I opened my eyes again, I had transmigrated into Vivian Hartwell-the long-lost "real" daughter with a tragically cursed fate.
I had barely been taken back into the Hartwell family before they forced me to attend a so-called "death matchmaking" event in Kingsford-on behalf of Natalie Hartwell, the fake heiress-to meet Damian Blackwood, the infamous "living reaper."
Rumor had it Damian was brutal and bloodthirsty-every woman who'd ever been involved with him either ended up dead or driven insane.
At the event, over a hundred socialites were trembling on their knees, silently praying they wouldn't be the one chosen.
Just as Damian let out a cold smirk and reached to pick his unlucky victim, I took a deep breath from the back of the crowd.
The scent emanating from him was a rare, potent masculine essence-something encountered perhaps once in ten millennia.
For a painfully picky succubus like me, this was nothing short of salvation.
I kicked aside the girl blocking my way, my eyes practically glowing as I threw both hands up. "Pick me! Hurry, pick me!"

7.8
"This isn't right..." I whispered.
But my stepbrothers wouldn't let me go.
"You're ours now," Sylver said quietly. "And that's not going to change."
My mother and I have been running for three years-from Eryndor Blackshade, the vampire cult leader obsessed with finding me.
Just when he finds us again, my mother makes a desperate move: she marries King Reid Thornevale, the most powerful Lycan in the Blood Hollow Pack.
But Reid comes with a dangerous secret-triplet hybrid sons, born of vampire and werewolf blood. They're ruthless, cursed... and now, my stepbrothers. From the moment Sylver, Cassian, and Rylan Thornevale lay eyes on me, something ancient stirs-twisted, forbidden, and hungry.
A fire that scorches morality and melts all reason. Our connection isn't just wrong. It's deadly. Because the Thornevale bloodline is cursed, descendants of Elder Varek, the first vampire–werewolf hybrid, were sealed away centuries ago.
The curse awakens under every Red Moon, turning them into monsters driven by bloodlust and desire. Now I'm caught in the middle. Between a cult that wants to sacrifice me... And stepbrothers who want to claim me. And I don't know which fate will destroy me first.

8.7
I woke up from a coma in the hospital, universally condemned as the vicious daughter who pushed the beloved fake heiress, Georgina, down the stairs.
My ruthless billionaire brother, Angelo, stood over my bed with cold eyes, ready to destroy me for hurting his precious sister.
But as I looked at him, a terrifying prophecy from my coma flooded my brain. Our entire family was doomed.
In the original timeline, Georgina would team up with corporate rivals to bankrupt the company, frame Angelo, and send him to federal prison, while our parents would abandon me to die miserably.
Lying there, I didn't dare speak. I just desperately cursed my idiot brother in my head.
"This stupid brother is still yelling at me for that fake heiress. He doesn't even know he's going to be framed and sent to prison next month!"
I just wanted to stay quiet, let them ruin themselves, and run away from this toxic family.
But strangely, Angelo didn't strangle me. Instead, his attitude took a shocking turn.
He abruptly fired the driver plotting to kill him, destroyed the abusive fiancé of a family ally, and publicly humiliated Georgina at a high-society gala.
He even shielded me from our abusive parents, declaring to the world that I was the only sister he would ever protect.
I was completely terrified and confused. Why was the tyrant brother suddenly acting like a protective beast?
It wasn't until he flawlessly crushed a massive corporate attack using the exact financial secrets I had just complained about in my mind that a horrifying realization hit me.
He could hear my inner thoughts!