
Reborn To The Wife of a Billionaire with Disabilities
Eileen woke up in a trashed hotel room, her head pounding with the pathetic memories of a despised Hollywood actress.
Outside the window, paparazzi were already screaming about her manufactured cheating scandal, but the real nightmare was waiting at her door.
Her paralyzed, billionaire husband, Carlisle Vinson, looked at her with pure disgust while his butler shoved a divorce settlement at her chest.
"Mr. Vinson is offering a severance package of fifty million dollars, provided you sign immediately and vacate the premises."
The original owner had left her an absolute mess.
Her trusted assistant had sold her room number to the press to frame her, and a playboy had scammed her out of her entire two million dollar life savings.
If she signed those papers and lost the Vinson family's protection, the breach of contract fees and her enemies in the industry would swallow her alive in days.
Eileen felt a cold fury override the original owner's lingering panic.
Why should she take the fall and be thrown out on the streets while the parasites who set her up lived out their wealthy fantasies?
She had died once, and she wasn't about to waste her second chance playing the victim.
Eileen slammed the heavy divorce folder shut right against the butler's chest.
"I'm not signing," she said with a terrifying, absolute calm.
She stepped behind her husband's wheelchair, ready to shield him from the cameras, secretly cure his dead legs, and make everyone who betrayed her bleed.
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Chapter 1
Eileen Wolf opened her eyes. The movement felt like dragging sandpaper across her corneas.
The sour stench of fermented grapes and stale perfume coated the back of her throat. It triggered a violent heave in her stomach. She rolled to the side, her bare shoulder hitting the mattress.
Expensive haute couture dresses lay scattered across the thick wool carpet like discarded rags. Empty liquor bottles caught the dim light, forming a chaotic obstacle course on the floor.
A sharp, stabbing pain pierced the center of her skull. It was a physical intrusion.
Memories that did not belong to her forced their way into her brain tissue. They were the pathetic, desperate moments of a marginalized Hollywood actress. The sheer volume of the data made her vision blur. She pressed the heels of her hands against her temples, digging her fingernails into her scalp until the pain grounded her.
She pushed herself off the mattress. Her bare feet hit the cold, heavy carpet.
She stumbled toward the floor-to-ceiling mirror near the wardrobe. The face staring back at her was striking, even under the heavy, smeared smoky makeup. The skin was pale, the cheekbones sharp. It was a face built for high-definition cameras, currently ruined by bad choices.
A piercing wail of police sirens cut through the glass.
Shouting voices followed, a chaotic hum rising from the street below. Eileen moved to the window. Her muscles felt stiff, uncoordinated. She hooked a single finger through the blinds and pulled them down just a fraction.
The entrance of the Beverly Hills hotel was swarming.
Dozens of paparazzi crushed against the barricades. Camera flashes exploded like strobe lights, turning the dark street into blinding daylight. She could hear the distinct, aggressive shouts of reporters demanding answers about her cheating scandal.
She let the blind snap shut.
Turning back to the ruined bed, she dug through a pile of discarded silk garments. Her fingers brushed against cold metal. A smartphone was vibrating violently against the mattress.
She picked it up. The screen was a mess of notifications. Hundreds of unread messages stacked on top of each other. The Twitter icon displayed a bright red bubble with a four-digit number. Her name was sitting at the number one trending spot, permanently linked to the words 'hotel' and 'affair'.
Eileen let out a short, dry laugh.
Her chest did not tighten. Her breathing did not accelerate. The hysterical panic that the original owner of this body would have felt was completely absent. She tossed the phone back onto the bed. It landed with a soft thud.
Three heavy, rhythmic knocks struck the solid mahogany double doors of the suite.
The sound was hard. Unforgiving. It carried the weight of someone who did not expect to be kept waiting.
Eileen took a slow breath. The air filled her lungs, expanding her ribcage. She reached down and grabbed a beige trench coat off the sofa. She swung it over her shoulders, wrapping the thick fabric tightly around her exposed slip dress.
She walked to the entryway. Her bare feet made no sound on the hardwood floor.
She wrapped her fingers around the cold brass doorknob. She did not check the peephole. She did not hesitate. She turned the lock and pulled the heavy door open.
The harsh, fluorescent light of the hallway spilled into the dark room.
The first thing she saw was a man in a tailored three-piece suit. His silver hair was combed back perfectly. He stood with the rigid posture of a classic British butler.
Her gaze dropped lower.
Past the butler, her eyes locked onto a high-tech, custom-built wheelchair. Sitting in it was a man who radiated absolute zero.
Carlisle Vinson tilted his head up. His gray-blue eyes locked onto hers. They were like frozen Siberian soil. There was no heat in his gaze. No anger. Just a thick, suffocating layer of pure disgust.
Eileen's heart stuttered.
It was a biological reaction, a leftover reflex from the original body's deep-seated terror of this man. But Eileen forced her spine straight. She locked her knees. She met his stare without blinking, refusing to let her chin drop a single millimeter.
Carlisle did not speak.
He simply raised two long, elegant fingers and made a sharp, dismissive flicking motion.
Mr. Ainsworth stepped forward immediately. His face was a blank mask. He pulled a thick, gold-embossed folder from his leather briefcase and held it out toward her chest.
Eileen lowered her eyes.
The bold letters on the cover read: Divorce Settlement Agreement.
The corner of her mouth twitched upward. It was barely a smile. She did not reach for the folder. Instead, she crossed her arms over her chest, leaning her shoulder casually against the doorframe. She looked at the two men with a calm, calculating gaze.
Mr. Ainsworth frowned. The wrinkles around his eyes deepened.
"Madam," he said, his voice entirely devoid of warmth. "The terms are straightforward. Mr. Vinson is offering a severance package of fifty million dollars, provided you sign immediately and vacate the premises."
Fifty million dollars.
Eileen tapped her index finger against her bicep. She ran the numbers in her head. She calculated the purchasing power of that amount in this world. Then, she calculated her survival rate in Hollywood without the protection of the Vinson family name. The result was zero. The original owner had too many enemies. The breach of contract fees alone would swallow that money in a week.
She uncrossed her arms.
She reached out with two pale fingers and pinched the edge of the heavy folder. She pulled it from the butler's hands. She flipped open the heavy cover, her eyes scanning the first page as if she were actually reading the legal jargon.
Carlisle's jaw clenched.
His disgust deepened, visible in the slight flare of his nostrils. He thought she was exactly what he always knew she was: a gold digger checking the zeros on her payout. He reached for the joystick on his armrest, ready to turn the chair around and leave this toxic hallway.
A loud, sharp crack echoed through the corridor.
Eileen had slammed the folder shut with one hand. The sound was like a gunshot in the quiet space. Carlisle's hand froze over his controls.
She took a step forward. The distance between them vanished.
She slapped the heavy folder flat against Mr. Ainsworth's chest. The force of the impact made the older man stumble back half a step, his hands coming up to catch the slipping documents.
Carlisle stared at her. His pupils contracted.
Eileen bent at the waist. She placed both of her hands flat on the metal armrests of Carlisle's wheelchair. She leaned in, bringing her face inches from his. She could smell his cologne-cedar and cold mint.
She stared directly into his gray-blue eyes.
"I'm not signing," she said.
Her voice was crisp. It did not shake. It held no hysteria, only a terrifying, absolute calm.
Carlisle's breath hitched. The muscles in his neck pulled tight. He looked at her as if a stranger had just crawled into his wife's skin. He could not reconcile this dominant, grounded woman with the greedy, erratic creature he had married.
Eileen did not give them time to process.
She pushed off his armrests and stood up straight. She turned her back on them, walking into the walk-in closet. She grabbed a pair of heels and slid her bare feet into them.
She walked back to the door. She grabbed the handle and pulled the suite door shut behind her with a solid click.
She looked down at Carlisle, who was still frozen in his chair. She flashed him a bright, shadowless smile.
"Hubby," she said, the word rolling off her tongue with deliberate provocation. "Let's go home."
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7.2
Blaire woke up in a Manhattan penthouse, her body covered in bruises and her innocence stolen.
Before she could process the terror, her adoptive sister Danita burst in, acting heartbroken and accusing Blaire of shamelessly seducing the powerful Kamryn Lane. Kamryn threw a one-million-dollar check at Blaire's bleeding face, calling her a calculating gold digger.
That night, Blaire overheard a conversation in the family study that shattered her entire reality.
"Once she gives birth to the Lane family's seed, we'll stage an accident, drain her blood, and transplant her healthy heart into your chest."
Her adoptive mother and Danita were celebrating the success of their trap. She wasn't an adopted daughter; she was a living organ bank and a disposable surrogate. Even her adoptive brother, Calhoun, knew everything, trapping her in the dark hallways with a sick, possessive obsession to ensure she never escaped.
The horrific truth suffocated her. The family that had taken her in had raised her like livestock for slaughter. How could they smile at her every day while planning to carve out her heart?
Terrified but burning with a desperate will to survive, Blaire swallowed a Plan B pill to ruin their surrogate plot and fled the estate. To get the money and power she needed to crush her adoptive family, she pulled out Kamryn Lane's business card. This time, she would make a deal with the devil.

7.3
Eloise was the untouchable Brandt family heiress, just one audition away from landing a lead movie role and escaping her golden cage.
But overnight, her family's empire completely collapsed.
With her father dying of heart failure, her mother forced her to beg the only man who could save them: Christian Clarke.
Christian was the ruthless billionaire who had publicly humiliated Eloise in college, ripping up her love letter in front of a laughing crowd.
Now, he tossed a fifty-million-dollar acquisition contract on the table.
"What exactly is the Brandt heiress putting up for sale today?"
To secure her father's medical care, Eloise was forced to sign a suffocating marriage contract, selling herself as a corporate tax shield.
He moved her into his freezing penthouse and treated her like a purchased asset. He mocked her attempts to cook him dinner, yet pinned her against the wall with punishing, possessive kisses whenever she tried to pull away.
Eloise's pride was entirely shattered.
She didn't understand why he was doing this. If he hated her so much and only wanted revenge, why did his touch carry such an agonizing, desperate heat?
Determined to survive, she went to her final audition and miraculously won the lead role, crying tears of joy because she had finally earned something on her own.
She had no idea that the cold-blooded monster sleeping beside her had just secretly threatened to destroy all of Hollywood to give it to her.

8.4
Everly spent four years playing the perfect, accommodating wife to Carson Moss, swallowing every grievance just to secure medical treatments for their sick daughter.
But at a high-society banquet she exhausted herself organizing, Carson's pregnant mistress crashed the party.
The woman shoved an ultrasound of Carson's "real heir" directly into Everly's frail grandfather's face.
The shock triggered a massive heart attack.
Carson refused to use his private helicopter to save the dying old man, choosing to protect his mistress and his company's IPO instead. Her grandfather died on the hospital table.
Instead of remorse, her mother-in-law demanded Everly publicly cover up the murder.
"You will do exactly as I say, or I will freeze every single cent of the medical trust fund paying for your crippled daughter's treatments."
When a battered Everly returned to the estate, she discovered her three-year-old daughter covered in dark bruises and pinch marks. Her in-laws were deliberately torturing her disabled child.
Everly couldn't comprehend how a family could be so utterly heartless. Her only family was murdered, her child was abused, and her husband threw a five-million-dollar check at her face as hush money.
They thought she would just break and quietly disappear.
But when a terrifyingly powerful billionaire unexpectedly blocked Carson's security team from locking her up, Everly finally saw her window.
She grabbed her sleeping daughter and ran out into the freezing storm, making a blood-bound vow to make the entire Moss family bleed.

9.3
Grace finally decided to end her toxic, one-sided relationship with Adelbert, the arrogant heir to a global empire, by texting him to terminate their family trust.
His response was a single, freezing word: "Done."
When they accidentally bumped into each other in a law firm elevator, Adelbert looked right through her.
"I don't know her," he stated coldly to his frat brothers, treating her like invisible trash.
Humiliated and completely exhausted, Grace sought an escape in a brutal shooter game called PUBG.
But by a sick twist of fate, the random matchmaking threw her into a squad with Adelbert's frat brothers and a god-tier, toxic player named 'Ø'.
'Ø' relentlessly mocked her terrible skills, humiliating her and calling her a "pig" over the voice chat.
Yet, during the final shootout, this ruthless player suddenly threw his character in front of hers, taking a fatal barrage of bullets just to keep her alive.
Grace soon uncovered the terrifying truth: the top-ranked 'Ø' was actually Adelbert himself.
She was utterly confused and furious.
Why would the untouchable billionaire who ignored her legal texts and publicly humiliated her suddenly sacrifice himself for her in a cheap video game?
Refusing to swallow her pride in both the real and digital worlds, Grace sent a direct challenge to his gaming profile.
"I'll prove I'm not a pig."
Across the city, Adelbert stared at the notification, a dark smirk curling his lips, and clicked accept.

7.5
I am the biological daughter of the wealthy Fitzpatrick family, but I spent my childhood eating out of dumpsters.
When I was finally brought back to the estate at age seven, I thought I would experience my parents' love.
Instead, my biological parents looked at my dirty clothes with raw disgust. They only cared about Hallie, the fake daughter who lived like a princess.
The moment I walked in, Hallie hurled a heavy ceramic cup at my head, slicing my hand open.
"Get out of my house!"
My father didn't even look at the blood. He raised his hand to strike me, accusing me of bringing trailer park rules into his home.
In my past life, I dropped to my knees and begged for their forgiveness. I endured their abuse, hoping they would eventually love me.
But they let the maids humiliate me, let Hallie steal my identity, and eventually threw me back onto the streets to die. Even my playboy Uncle Byron, the only person who ever showed me mercy, was driven to suicide by them.
I didn't understand why my own flesh and blood hated me so much, or why a vicious liar deserved everything while I was treated like a jinx.
Opening my eyes again, I was back on the exact day I first returned to the estate.
As my father raised his hand to hit me, I didn't cower.
Instead, I looked at the family patriarch and pointed directly at my notorious, alcoholic uncle.
"I want him to be my new guardian."

7.0
I was the Stanton family heiress, engaged to the President's son to secure a vital military alliance.
But he cornered me in the White House sitting room, slamming a thick manila folder onto the marble table.
"I said, sign the annulment agreement, Hester."
He looked at me like I was dirt, demanding I step aside so he could be with a manipulative intern named Tricia.
In my past life, I was a naive lamb. I cried and begged him not to end it. My devotion was rewarded with absolute cruelty. He ordered my bones broken and my reputation completely shredded. My trusted assistant forced poison down my throat, and I was left to die with a rope burning my neck.
Until my last breath, I didn't understand. I had done everything perfectly for the family. Why did my unwavering loyalty only bring me a gruesome death? Why did the monsters who tortured me get to live happily in the highest seats of power?
Opening my eyes again, the suffocating terror of the noose suddenly washed away. I was sixteen again, staring at the exact same annulment papers.
"Hester, please. Just let us be happy," Tricia whimpered, reaching out her trembling hand.
This time, I didn't cry. I picked up the solid gold fountain pen, stabbed it violently through the center of the contract, and prepared to drag the entire First Family straight to hell.