
Reborn To Win Back My Billionaire Husband
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The tip of my fountain pen hovered over the divorce agreement. Across the mahogany desk, my billionaire husband, Chandler, looked at me with cold, dead eyes, waiting for me to sign my life away.
What he didn't know was that a phantom pain was still tearing through my chest—the memory of cold steel sliding between my ribs.
In my previous life, I foolishly signed these papers, burning down my marriage for my lover, Chace, and my sweet stepsister, Annalise.
Only to be left to bleed to death in a dark alley while they laughed, planning to steal my son and Chandler's fortune.
Reborn at the exact moment of my ruin, I tore the divorce agreement to shreds.
I desperately tried to make amends, even joining a reality show with my traumatized six-year-old son to prove I had changed.
But Chace and Annalise wouldn't let me go. Seeing my public redemption, they panicked and released a hyper-realistic deepfake sex tape of me and Chace.
They demanded $300 million from Chandler, framing my newfound love for my family as an elaborate, sickening long con.
Chandler burst into the house, throwing the blackmail papers at my feet.
His eyes were filled with broken agony and absolute disgust, fully believing that my tears, my apologies to our son, and my desperate kisses were all just a performance for money.
He thought I was the exact same monster who had destroyed him once before.
The old me would have screamed, cried, and played right into their hands.
Instead, I calmly stepped forward, gently smoothed the collar of his suit jacket, and looked into his tortured eyes.
"I'm not going to explain the video, or the money."
"I'm not going to ask for your forgiveness."
"I am asking you for one thing, Chandler."
"You have to trust me."
Reborn To Win Back My Billionaire Husband Chapter 1
The tip of the fountain pen hovered over the divorce agreement.
A single millimeter of space separated Cordelia Hamilton from the end of her life. Again.
The weight of the pen in her hand felt wrong. Too light. Her fingers, long and elegant, were unfamiliar. A phantom pain, sharp and cold, shot through her chest, a memory of steel sliding between her ribs. A scream, a memory of her own death, was a ghost in her throat, threatening to break free.
She gasped, a raw, ragged sound escaping before she could stop it, that tore through the suffocating silence of the office.
Her hand jerked. The pen clattered against the mahogany desk. A bottle of expensive black ink overturned, bleeding across the crisp white paper. It spread like a dark, accusing tear, swallowing the line where her name was supposed to go.
Cordelia Hamilton.
"For God's sake," Chandler's lawyer, a man whose name she couldn't remember, muttered under his breath. He looked at her with pure, unadulterated annoyance. He thought this was a tactic. A delay.
Chandler's gaze, however, was worse. It was a physical force, cold and heavy. It landed on her, and she felt the air leave her lungs.
"Cordelia, stop the theatrics."
His voice. It wasn't loud. It wasn't angry. It was nothing. A flat, dead thing that cut deeper than any shout could.
Theatrics. He thought this was a performance.
He thought she was the same woman who had walked into this room ten minutes ago. A woman who would burn down her own life for a man who had left her to die in a cold, dark alley.
The memory slammed into her, a tidal wave of pain and regret. The betrayal of her lover, Chace Mack. The chilling smile of her stepsister, Annalise. The loss. Oh, God, the loss of her son, Case. The loss of this man in front of her, the man she had pushed away until he had nothing left to give.
Everyone in this room, everyone in New York, believed she was here, making a scene, to force Chandler into paying Chace's $300 million debt. They thought her heart was breaking for the wrong man.
Her heart wasn't breaking. It was screaming.
Tears streamed down her face, hot and real. She pushed herself up from the chair, her legs trembling. The long mahogany table felt like a canyon between them. She started to walk around it, each step an agony, a pilgrimage back to the man she'd already lost once.
The lawyer shifted, ready to intercept her.
"Let her," Chandler said, his voice unchanged. A single, dismissive wave of his hand stopped the other man. He wanted to see the show. He wanted to watch her humiliate herself one last time.
She stopped in front of his chair. He didn't look up at her, his eyes fixed on the ink-stained document. She could smell the faint, clean scent of his cologne, a scent that was once her home.
"Chandler," she whispered, her voice cracking. "Don't do this. Please. Don't leave me."
He finally looked up. A flicker of something-not pity, but a weary, cynical amusement-crossed his face. He'd heard this line before. He'd heard all the lines.
"The papers are already drawn, Cordelia," he said, his voice impossibly calm. "It's over."
Over.
The word echoed in the space where her soul used to be. No. Not again. She wouldn't lose him again.
Desperation was a wild animal clawing its way up her throat. She reached past him, her hand shaking, and snatched the second, clean copy of the agreement from the desk.
Before the lawyer could shout, before Chandler could move, she ripped it in half.
And again.
And again.
The sound of tearing paper was loud, violent, in the quiet room. White scraps fluttered to the floor around her feet like dead confetti.
The lawyer's jaw was on the floor.
Chandler's eyes widened, his pupils dilating in shock. This was new. This was not in the script he'd imagined.
But she knew it wasn't enough. A tantrum would be seen as a threat, a negotiation tactic. She had to do something the old Cordelia, the foolish, selfish Cordelia, would never, ever do.
She had to show him.
In the split second of his shock, she moved. She lunged forward, her fingers tangling in the silk of his tie, and pulled.
He was yanked from his chair, his face a mask of disbelief. She rose on her toes, clumsy and frantic, and pressed her mouth to his.
His lips were cold. Stunned. For a moment, he was completely still, a statue of surprise. Her kiss was a mess of salt and sorrow, of chapped lips and the desperate, trembling force of a woman who had come back from the dead. It was nothing like the careless, performative pecks she'd given him for years. This was a drowning woman's last grasp for air.
He could feel the frantic, terrified thud of her heart against his chest. He could taste the raw despair on her lips.
And his mind screamed one word: Performance.
A violent shudder went through him. He shoved her away. Hard.
The force sent her stumbling backward, her heel catching on the rug. She nearly fell, catching herself on the edge of the desk. The rejection was a physical blow, knocking the breath from her body.
He stood there, breathing heavily, his hand coming up to wipe his mouth as if her kiss were poison. Disgust and confusion warred in his eyes. But what truly unsettled him was that for a terrifying second, it hadn't felt like a performance. The despair was too raw, the terror in her heartbeat too real. This must be her new masterpiece, he thought, a three-hundred-million-dollar kiss designed to make him lose his mind. This was how much she wanted the money for Chace. She was willing to do this. The thought made his stomach turn.
He straightened his tie, a sharp, angry tug that put the world back in its place. His composure returned, a mask of ice locking over his features.
"We're done for today," he said to the stunned lawyer, not looking at Cordelia. "Reschedule."
The lawyer, flustered, scrambled to gather his papers, stuffing them into his briefcase and practically fleeing the room.
The heavy office door clicked shut, leaving the two of them alone in the wreckage. The air was thick with the scent of ink and her desperation.
Chandler walked to the door without a single backward glance. His hand rested on the brass knob.
"Cordelia," he said, his back to her. "Whatever game you're playing, it won't work. I'll give you one week. After that, my lawyers will contact you directly."
He expected a scream. A sob. A threat. The usual closing act.
He got silence. A heavy, unnerving quiet that was more unsettling than any outburst. A new game, he thought, had just begun.
Cordelia stood perfectly still amidst the scattered pieces of her broken marriage, watching the rigid line of his back.
One week.
She had one week to undo a lifetime of mistakes.
The door closed, shutting him out. And her new life, a life of vengeance and redemption, had just begun.
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Reborn To Win Back My Billionaire Husband of Contents
Chapter 1 Ch. 1Chapter 2 Ch. 2Chapter 3 Ch. 3Chapter 4 Ch. 4Chapter 5 Ch. 5Chapter 6 Ch. 6Chapter 7 Ch. 7
Chapter 8 Ch. 8
Chapter 9 Ch. 9
Chapter 10 Ch. 10
Chapter 11 Ch. 11
All Chapters all
New Release Novels

8.6
I woke up choking on rotting air in an alien jungle, surrounded by giant bioluminescent ferns and a three-eyed, armor-plated beast charging straight at me.
Before the monster could tear me apart, I was saved by a squad of men with metallic wings and laser rifles, but my nightmare was just beginning.
When they brought me back to their high-tech military base, every soldier we passed stopped dead, staring at me with a feverish, starving hunger that made my skin crawl.
In the medical wing, a manic doctor bypassed all protocol, pulling out a wicked silver needle to forcibly extract my blood, looking at me not as a patient, but as a winning lottery ticket.
Even their highest-ranking commander, a giant, scarred Admiral, immediately tried to claim me, demanding I be moved into his personal bedroom for "protection."
I didn't understand why I was being treated like a caged miracle, nor why a simple, accidental touch of my hand could bring my winged protector to his knees and silence his feral instincts.
"In the Aethel Empire, there are no females," my protector whispered, his icy blue eyes filled with raw desperation. "You are the only one."
The portal that brought me here was fading, trapping me in a universe of eighty billion shapeshifting Alpha males. Looking at the terrifying devotion in his eyes, I realized my life as an ordinary human was over, and to survive this, I had to tame the beasts.

7.3
Ten years ago, I was banished from my pack, branded a whore and a traitor for allegedly drugging and stealing my sister's fated mate.
Now, I was summoned back because my father, the Alpha who disowned me, was dying from a poisoned attack.
Standing by his deathbed, a locked memory finally surfaced—I didn't drug anyone. My husband and I were both victims, poisoned with wolfsbane to force our mating.
But before my father could reveal who orchestrated the setup, his heart monitor flatlined.
My brother instantly shoved me to the ground, pointing a trembling finger at my face.
"You killed him. I will hunt you, I will break you, and I will make your life a living hell."
Even my husband, Kieran, the man I was forced to marry to save our unborn child, walked right past me in the hospital corridor.
He didn't spare me a single glance, choosing instead to gently comfort my mother while I sat bruised and shattered on the cold floor.
I didn't understand why my own family hated me so blindly, and I understood even less who had framed me a decade ago.
What terrified my father so much in his final moments that he couldn't even speak the culprit's name?
Watching my cold husband walk away with the family that abandoned me, the last shred of my naive hope died.
I wiped my tears and stood up. This time, I was going to tear this pack apart to find the truth.

8.3
Half a month into our cold war, I, Claire Parker, found an abortion procedure slip tucked inside Daniel Carter's suit pocket.
The patient's name belonged to the fragile little childhood sweetheart he had always protected so fiercely-Sophie Bennett.
I folded the paper calmly and slipped it back where I had found it.
Daniel noticed the movement immediately. His eyes flicked toward me through the rearview mirror, resignation coloring his voice.
"What are you overthinking now? Sophie was just keeping a friend company at the hospital. She accidentally left it there."
I turned toward the window and said nothing.
This was Sophie declaring war on me, yet the man who could crush competitors without mercy in the business world believed her completely.
The silence inside the car grew suffocating until Daniel finally stopped outside an upscale jewelry boutique.
He reached over and ruffled my hair with easy familiarity, his tone indulgent and affectionate.
"Come on. Pick out a ring. Your birthday's next month anyway, so we might as well register our marriage too."
I bit down hard on my lip as tears fell soundlessly onto the back of my hand.
What he still didn't know was that I wouldn't live long enough to see next month.

8.5
Alexandrea woke up with a splitting headache in a strange hotel bed, terrified to find a brutally handsome, half-naked stranger beside her.
Before she could even scream, the door burst open. Her adoptive mother, Ivette, stormed in with a swarm of reporters and flashing cameras.
"How could you disgrace our family name like this?"
Ivette sobbed, putting on a theatrical performance of a heartbroken mother. It was a setup to completely ruin Alexandrea's reputation in front of New York's elite.
For ten years, Alexandrea had lived in a house of horrors. Her back and arms were covered in silvery scars and puckered cigarette burns left by Ivette's vicious abuse.
Yet to the public, Ivette had carefully crafted Alexandrea's image as a wild, ungrateful, and manipulative liar.
Trapped under the duvet, Alexandrea was drowning in shame, her voice lost in the storm of accusations.
She didn't understand why her adoptive family hated her so much, treating her worse than a stray dog while using her brother's future to keep her chained.
But what she understood even less was the stranger beside her.
Instead of panicking, the man slowly sat up, his presence alone silencing the frantic room. He was Ace Griffith, the billionaire heir who owned half of Manhattan.
He wrapped his suit jacket around her trembling shoulders, looked Ivette dead in the eye, and dropped a bomb.
"I will be marrying her."
Then, he carried Alexandrea away from her ten-year prison, ordering his men to dig up the Terry family's darkest secrets and her true identity.

8.8
Clara supported her boyfriend Leo for four years, paying his rent and buying his headshots while working dead-end extra gigs.
On his twenty-sixth birthday, she caught him in their bed with Veronica, a wealthy producer's daughter who constantly stole Clara's roles.
Leo mocked Clara as a "pathetic, poor stepping stone" who was just there until he got his foot in the door.
Veronica threatened to ruin Clara's career forever.
Clara dumped him, packed her bags, and impulsively entered a contract marriage with a cold stranger she met at City Hall.
But her nightmare wasn't over.
When her mother suddenly needed a $200,000 emergency brain surgery, Clara was forced to take a demeaning extra gig to survive.
There, Veronica and her starlet friend cornered Clara.
They mocked her cheap clothes, ridiculed her new wedding ring as fake glass, and intentionally poured scalding coffee on her feet.
"Well, maid, you better clean that up."
Veronica laughed, forcing Clara to her knees to wipe up the burning liquid while snapping photos.
Clara swallowed her burning humiliation, secretly recording their abuse on her phone.
She endured the pain, desperate for the $300 day rate to save her mother's life, feeling entirely crushed by their overwhelming wealth and power.
What she didn't know was that outside the soundstage, her new contract husband—the man she thought was just a struggling, broke tech worker—was sitting in a sleek black Maybach.
He watched his wife kneeling on the floor, and his dark eyes filled with a lethal, terrifying rage.

8.5
Aileen transmigrated into a dark, unfinished novel as the villainous, abusive wife of a powerful billionaire.
The moment she opened her eyes, her husband's calloused hand was crushing her throat, and her six-year-old stepson was pointing a box cutter at her face, screaming for her to die.
A cold system voice suddenly exploded in her brain, forcing a mandatory mission: save the villainous father and son, or face immediate death.
To survive the system's strict Out-Of-Character warnings, Aileen had to keep playing the role of the deranged, hateful wife.
She was despised by everyone. Her husband threatened to drag her to an asylum, and her terrified stepson scrubbed the floor with his own pajamas just to avoid her wrath.
Things escalated when the novel's original female lead publicly framed Aileen in Central Park, throwing herself onto the grass and clutching her pregnant belly.
"She pushed me. She tried to hurt the baby!"
Archer rushed over, shoved Aileen aside with absolute disgust, and looked at her with the eyes of a murderer.
Aileen felt a bitter wave of exhaustion. She had discovered the original owner's hidden antipsychotic pills; the woman wasn't just evil, she was severely mentally ill and completely broken by this loveless marriage.
Yet, no one cared, and her husband would always choose to believe his childhood sweetheart's fake tears.
Since everyone in this world was convinced she was an unpredictable lunatic, she decided to give them exactly what they expected.
Aileen turned her back on the ridiculous scene, a cold smile forming on her lips.
She was going to stage a massive, undeniable psychological breakdown, using her "insanity" as the perfect shield to play the system and rewrite her fate.











