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Reborn To Save My Broken Lover

Reborn To Save My Broken Lover

I was dying in a cold hospital bed, listening to the monitor count down my final seconds. As a ghost, I watched my own funeral. My popular friends and wealthy family soon moved on, but one person stayed. Cas Riley. The invisible outcast from the back of my history class. He brought a white rose to my grave every single day, withering away until he collapsed on the frozen ground, dying of a broken heart for a girl who barely knew his name. Opening my eyes again, the hospital smell was gone. I was reborn back in my high school classroom. I immediately tracked him down, only to witness the brutal hell he was trapped in. He was humiliated by a cruel foreman for pennies, violently slapped by his uncle over his sick mother's medical money, and forced into bloody street fights. He was starving, covered in bruises, and completely alone. When I tried to buy him medicine and step into his life to protect him, he violently pushed me away in the pouring rain. "Stay out of my life! To protect you, I have to fight, and when I fight, I lose everything!" He wasn't rejecting me out of hate. He was terrified that his dark, violent reality would drag me down with him. Standing soaked in the rain, my resolve hardened like steel. Gentle kindness wasn't going to save him from this hell. To protect the boy who died for me, I had to become ruthless enough to tear down his entire rotten world and build him a new one.
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Chapter 1

The beeping of the machine was the only thing that felt real. A steady, cold metronome counting down the seconds of her life. Genesis Greene felt herself floating, untethered from the body that had failed her. The air scraped her lungs with each forced breath, a painful reminder of the fight she was losing. Then, the beeping faded, replaced by the soft sound of weeping. She saw her own funeral. A polished cherrywood casket. Her mother, a ghost in a black dress, leaning on her father's arm. Friends from school, their faces pale and confused. They were all there, saying goodbye to the girl who had everything and then, suddenly, had nothing. The scene shifted. Days, weeks, months bled into one another. The mourners stopped coming. The flowers wilted. But one person remained. A boy. No, a man. Cas Riley. She knew him from school, but only in the way you know a name on a roster. He was a shadow in the back of the classroom, a ghost in the hallways. Quiet. Always alone. Always looking like he was carrying the weight of the world on his thin shoulders. Now, he was at her grave. He brought a single white rose every morning, placing it gently on the cold stone that bore her name. He never cried. He just stood there, his eyes as empty as a winter sky, his frame growing thinner with each passing season. He was withering away, just like the flowers he brought. One day, in the biting wind of a late autumn afternoon, he collapsed. His body hit the frozen ground with a soft thud, and he didn't get up. A pain, sharper and more profound than any her disease had given her, ripped through Genesis's soul. It wasn't her pain. It was his. The crushing weight of a love she had never known existed, a love so powerful it had literally stopped his heart. He loved me. The thought was a cataclysm. He loved me, and to me, he was just a name on a list. She gasped, a real, ragged gasp that filled her lungs with air that didn't hurt. The smell wasn't antiseptic and death. It was chalk dust and cheap cleaning supplies. The sound wasn't beeping. It was the low drone of a history lecture and the scratching of pens on paper. Genesis blinked. She wasn't in a hospital bed. She was sitting at a wooden desk, the sunlight of a September afternoon streaming through the large classroom window. "...Chelsea Nolan?" "Here," a familiar voice chirped from the desk beside her. Mrs. Gable stood at the front of the room, a clipboard in her hand, her lips pursed in their usual state of mild disapproval. "Cas Riley?" Silence. Genesis's head snapped up, her heart hammering against her ribs. She scanned the room, her eyes landing on the empty desk in the far back corner by the window. His desk. Mrs. Gable made a small, contemptuous sound, a little tsk of annoyance. She drew a sharp line through his name on her attendance sheet. Whispers erupted from the row behind them. "The freak didn't show up again." "Heard he was hauling cement over at the new Northgate development site downtown. Probably some illegal cash job." The words hit Genesis like stones. Freak. Weirdo. Loner. That's all he had ever been to them. To her. But she had seen the truth. She had seen the man who died for her. The memories, her old memories, felt foreign and thin. She remembered seeing him with bruises, remembered the way he flinched if someone got too close. She had dismissed it, like everyone else. She had a life to live, parties to attend, a future to plan. A future that had ended in a sterile white room. Her hands started to shake. Where was he now? Was he okay? Was someone hurting him at this very moment? The thought was a physical blow, winding her. She couldn't sit here, listening to a lecture about the Peloponnesian War, while the boy who loved her to death was somewhere out there, alone and in pain. She had to find him. Now. Without thinking, without planning, Genesis stood up. The legs of her chair scraped loudly against the linoleum floor, the sound echoing in the suddenly silent room. Every eye turned to her. Mrs. Gable's eyebrows shot up into her hairline. "Miss Greene? Is there a problem?" Genesis ignored the shocked stares, the whispers. Her gaze was fixed on the door, on the world outside where Cas was. "I don't feel well, Mrs. Gable," she said, her voice surprisingly steady. "I need to go to the nurse's office." It was the oldest excuse in the book, but her face was so pale, her eyes so wide and haunted, that it was believable. Before the teacher could grant or deny permission, Genesis grabbed her backpack from the floor, slinging it over one shoulder. "Gen, what's wrong?" Chelsea whispered, her face a mask of concern. Genesis didn't answer. She couldn't. She was a woman on a mission, fueled by a ghost's love and a second chance she didn't deserve. She bolted from the classroom, her sneakers squeaking against the polished floor. She ran down the hallway, past lockers and curious faces, and burst through the main doors of the school into the blinding afternoon sun. She didn't know where he worked. The whispers said "downtown," a vague and useless clue. But now she had a destination, a name that grounded the vague whispers into a concrete target: the Northgate development. It was a homing beacon in her soul. She ran toward the edge of the school grounds, toward the part of town her parents had always told her to avoid. Her lungs burned, but she kept going. I won't let you be alone this time, she vowed to the ghost in her memory. I'll find you. I'll protect you. I'll fix this. She reached the main road and frantically waved her arm, flagging down a yellow taxi. She slid into the back seat, the worn vinyl sticking to her skin. The driver, a man with a kind, tired face, looked at her in the rearview mirror. "Where to, kid?" She gave him the name of the construction site, a neighborhood known for its warehouses and cheap labor pools. The car pulled into traffic, the familiar sights of her hometown flying past the window. It was all so real it made her dizzy. She pinched the skin on the back of her hand, hard. The sharp sting confirmed it. This wasn't a dream. She closed her eyes, but all she could see was Cas, collapsing by her grave, a single white rose falling from his hand. A tear escaped, then another, tracing hot paths down her cold cheeks. "You okay back there, miss?" the driver asked gently. Genesis wiped her face with the back of her hand. She met his eyes in the mirror, her own gaze filled with a terrifying, beautiful certainty. "Please, drive faster," she said, her voice trembling but firm. "I'm in a hurry to save someone." ---

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Beauty In The Boy's Dorm
8.6
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Dual Rebirth: Vengeance of the Discarded Daughter
9.5
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EDEN
8.3
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7.3
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