
Reborn To Win Back My Billionaire Husband
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."
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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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7.1
For seven years, I hid my identity as a wealthy heiress to be with my boyfriend, Ewing. I followed him across the country and made myself small so he could feel big.
On Thanksgiving, he ditched our celebration for his first love, Bree, who supposedly had a "burst pipe."
Later, she posted an intimate selfie with him, calling him her "hero."
Then she sent me a video of him at a bar, laughing with his friends.
"She's just being dramatic," he slurred, smirking at the camera. "A new necklace and she'll forget all about it. She's easy."
Easy. Seven years of my life, my love, my sacrifice-all reduced to that one word. I realized I was never his partner. I was just a placeholder.
I didn't cry. I packed my bags, booked a one-way flight to New York, and sent him one final text before blocking his number.
"Don't bother coming home. I'm getting married."

9.5
Gina was locked in Blackwood Asylum for five years, framed as a violent lunatic by her own wealthy family.
Her brother suddenly dragged her out, but not to save her. He forced her into an arranged marriage with Kerr Brooks, the billionaire emperor of New York, just to save the Rollins family's failing company.
Back at the estate, her parents treated her like a biohazard. They showered her adopted sister, Hailie, with love and luxury, while forcing Gina into a freezing servant's room. They threw a brutal prenuptial agreement at her face and threatened to leak a deepfake scandal video to the press if she didn't play the perfect bride. To ensure Gina's absolute ruin, Hailie even ordered a maid to spike her dinner with a massive dose of LSD. They were ruthlessly sacrificing her to a man who was secretly in a deep, unresponsive coma.
"She is just a tool, Hailie. Do not waste your pity on a broken thing."
Her mother's cold words echoed in the foyer. They looked at Gina's faded jumpsuit and vacant eyes, fully believing she was a heavily sedated pawn they could easily manipulate and discard.
But they didn't know Gina was a master hacker, a lethal underground surgeon, and the secret owner of the world's top luxury brand. She neutralized the poison in seconds and slipped into her comatose fiancé's heavily guarded ICU. Disabling the secret neuro-suppressants keeping him asleep, Gina smiled in the dark. If they wanted her to marry a corpse, she would use his empire to bury them all alive.

9.7
I died with blood pooling and betrayal.
My fiancé never loved me-he only wanted. My stepsister never saw me as family. And when I discovered I was carrying his child and tried to expose their affair, they shoved me into a shattered glass table and left me to bleed out alone.
But I woke up a year earlier, with my voice miraculously returned and a second chance burning in my chest.
This time, I refuse to be the silent, obedient sacrifice they used and discarded. This time, I'll make them pay. And when a ruthless billionaire offers me an impossible deal-a fake marriage to save his crumbling empire, I accept without hesitation.
They still see me as that broken, voiceless girl who couldn't fight back.
They have no idea I've already won.

9.8
Haylee always thought she belonged to the wealthy Bowen family.
But on the night of her birthday, her younger sister Cynthia handed her a crushing DNA report, sneered that she was taking her trust fund and fiancé, and shoved her violently off the yacht into the freezing Atlantic.
Washing ashore on a dark island, Haylee was brutally assaulted by a drugged stranger.
When she was finally rescued, she stared at a tiny television screen in absolute horror.
Her adoptive father was calmly declaring her mentally unstable and officially dead to the press.
Meanwhile, Cynthia was on screen flaunting a massive diamond ring from Haylee's own fiancé, inheriting everything that was rightfully hers.
Discarded like trash, stripped of her identity, and suddenly pregnant with a stranger's child, Haylee was forced to flee the country with nothing but a heavy silver signet ring she found in the dark.
She never understood how the family she had loved and trusted for years could erase her existence so ruthlessly.
"Are we going to see the bad people who bullied you, Mom?"
Five years later, Haylee stepped off a plane at JFK Airport, holding the hand of her genius five-year-old son.
She was no longer a helpless victim, but a top-tier medical director holding the key to a billion-dollar empire.
"We aren't running anymore," Haylee said softly, her voice laced with steel. "We're here to take everything back."

8.9
My family's company went bankrupt, and my biological father was lying in the ICU, kept alive by machines that cost tens of thousands a day.
I thought it was just a tragic business failure, until I caught my mother in bed with my stepfather.
They had secretly transferred all our assets months ago, deliberately bankrupting the company and leaving my father to die.
To pay the hospital bills, my stepfather forced me to a private club, trying to sell me to a sleazy investor.
When I refused, he slapped me across the face, and my mother just looked at me with cold, dead eyes.
"Be realistic, Jaelynn. A woman's body is a tool. Use it to get what you need."
Later, right before my father's emergency surgery, my stepfather signed a Do Not Resuscitate order and froze the medical accounts.
"If you don't get on your knees and spread your legs for him, I will tell the hospital to pull your father's plug."
Standing in the freezing rain, covered in mud and blood, I stared at the astronomical hospital bill in my hand.
My own family had plotted to murder my father and sell me to the highest bidder. The betrayal shattered every ounce of sanity I had left.
I didn't cry or beg them anymore.
Instead, I pulled out a water-stained, gold-embossed business card.
It belonged to Dolph Valentine, the most ruthless billionaire in New York and my ex-fiancé's uncle.
If they wanted to destroy my life, I was going to sell my soul to the biggest monster of them all and drag them straight to hell.

8.6
Eleanor Sinclair always knew her stepmother and stepsister were leeches, but she never expected their betrayal to reach into her private study.
In the dead of night, she caught the family's trusted nanny of twelve years photographing confidential trust documents. The mastermind paying her off was Lillian, Eleanor's stepmother, who had been secretly embezzling estate funds and bribing tutors to deliberately ruin the academic future of Eleanor's younger brother, the only legitimate heir.
Emboldened by their deceit, the parasites grew arrogant. Her stepsister, Isabelle, deliberately flaunted her secret affair with Eleanor’s billionaire fiancé, sobbing fake tears while waiting for Eleanor to suffer a humiliating nervous breakdown.
When the tension finally peaked, Lillian played the victim so perfectly that Eleanor's own father, a powerful U.S. Senator, stormed into the room with a raised hand, ready to strike his own daughter.
"You will apologize to your stepsister immediately! I will not have this family harmony destroyed by your petty jealousy!"
They actually expected her to be a weeping, heartbroken girl. They thought cheap hotel affairs and stolen pennies could outsmart the true Sinclair bloodline. Did they really believe a few fake tears and a weak-willed father could strip her of her empire?
Eleanor didn't feel anger; she felt the cold, detached fascination of a biologist observing doomed insects. She calmly pulled out the forensic audits, locked down the estate's exits, and prepared her stepmother's psychiatric commitment papers. The merciless purge of her family had officially begun.