
Sold To The Shadow King: Reborn Revenge
My husband, Hansford Burris, told me tonight was the most important night of his campaign. He handed me a glass of champagne, his face a perfect mask of concern, telling me to drink up so I could relax before meeting the "Shadow King" of D.C. who could secure his political future.
I didn't know the golden liquid was laced with a high-dose sedative and hallucinogens. He hadn't brought me to this luxury hotel to celebrate; he had brought me here to be sold, trading my body to a stranger in exchange for a seat of power.
In my past life, I trusted him. I drank the poison, woke up shattered, and spent the next five years being tormented by his abusive mother and publicly replaced by his mistress. I was eventually cornered and murdered by the very man I had supported with my family’s fortune, my death staged as a tragic accident to gain him sympathy votes.
To him, I wasn't a wife or a partner. I was just an "asset" with a shelf life, a merchant’s good to be traded away. As the life left my body, I couldn't understand how the man who promised to love me forever could watch me choke without a hint of regret.
Opening my eyes again, I was back in the St. Regis Hotel on October 14th, exactly five years ago. Hansford was standing there in his polished Armani suit, extending the same glass of drugged champagne toward me.
"Gina, darling? Are you alright? Here. Drink this. It will help you relax."
Looking at his handsome, lying face, I felt a cold clarity wash over me. I wasn't the naive rabbit he remembered. I took the glass, but I didn't swallow a single drop. This time, I was going to burn his world to the ground.
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Chapter 11
The tires of the SUV screamed against the asphalt.
Gina slammed the vehicle into park in front of the modest, two-story house in the Virginia suburbs. The smell of burnt rubber filled the cold night air.
"He's taken the bait," Gina said, her voice a low hum of controlled fury. She glanced at the navigation screen, where a tiny, flashing red dot confirmed the GPS tracker was still active. "He'll be here within the hour."
"Is that wise?" Vesper asked from the passenger seat, her tone neutral. "Leading him to your family?"
"It's necessary," Gina countered, her knuckles white on the steering wheel. "I need witnesses. I need the police report to happen here, on my territory. I'm done playing defense in his house." She unbuckled her seatbelt and turned to the backseat. Chloe was curled against the door, cradling her splinted hand against her chest. Her face was pale under the glow of the streetlights.
"Come on," Gina said, her voice tight. "You're safe here."
Gina practically dragged the young girl up the concrete walkway. She didn't bother knocking. She shoved her key into the lock and pushed the front door open.
The living room was quiet. The television was murmuring in the corner.
Mrs. Vincent walked out of the kitchen, wiping her hands on a dish towel. She was wearing a faded floral nightgown. When she saw Gina, her warm smile faltered. Then, her eyes dropped to Chloe's bandaged, swollen hand.
"Oh, my lord," Mrs. Vincent gasped, dropping the towel. "Gina, what happened? Who is this?"
Gina didn't have time for a gentle introduction. Her pulse was a frantic drumbeat in her ears. Just as she opened her mouth to explain, her phone buzzed with a high-priority notification from Vesper's network.
She glanced at the screen. The message was a single, brutal line: AUDIT ACCELERATED. NOTICE E-FILED. EFFECTIVE 0800 HRS. Hansford, stung by her departure, had moved up his timeline.
"He's not waiting," Gina muttered, a new, sharper urgency cutting through her. "Mom, get the first aid kit and some ice," Gina said, pushing past her.
She walked straight into the living room. Grandma Vincent was sitting in her favorite armchair, a reading light angled over the thick financial newspaper in her lap. She was eighty years old, but her mind was sharper than a scalpel. She was a retired tax accountant. The real matriarch of the Vincent family.
Gina stopped in front of her.
"Grandma," Gina said, her breath coming short. "Hansford is framing Dad's clinic for the Sterling money laundering scheme."
Grandma Vincent didn't gasp. She didn't cry.
She slowly lowered the newspaper. Her eyes, magnified by her thick reading glasses, locked onto Gina's face. The warmth vanished from her expression, replaced by absolute, chilling focus.
Gina pulled out her phone. She opened the encrypted file she had scanned from Hansford's safe. She shoved the screen toward her grandmother.
"These are forged invoices," Gina said, her voice shaking with adrenaline. "They route illegal campaign funds through Dad's medical supply accounts. The IRS audit notice was just filed. They'll freeze everything at eight o'clock this morning."
Grandma Vincent stared at the numbers.
"We have less than six hours," Gina whispered.
Mrs. Vincent walked into the room carrying an ice pack. She heard the last sentence. The ice pack slipped from her fingers, hitting the hardwood floor with a wet smack.
"An audit?" Mrs. Vincent's voice trembled. She grabbed the back of the sofa, her knuckles turning white. "That's a federal felony. Your father... he'll go to prison."
Grandma Vincent lifted her wooden cane and struck the floorboards.
Thwack.
The sharp sound cut through the rising panic.
"Stop crying, Mary," Grandma snapped at her daughter-in-law. She turned back to Gina. "What is your play, girl?"
Gina swallowed hard. The dry air scraped her throat.
"Asset isolation. Right now," Gina said. "We transfer the clinic's liquid capital into an offshore trust. We backdate the emails to make it look like a planned equipment purchase from a European vendor."
Grandma nodded slowly. A glimmer of respect sparked in her old eyes.
"And the old physical ledgers?" Grandma asked. "The ones with the minor clerical errors from five years ago? If the IRS digs, they will use those to establish a pattern of negligence."
"We burn them," Gina said without hesitation. "I know you keep them in the basement."
Grandma Vincent smiled. It was a fierce, proud expression. "You finally grew up, Gina. You stopped being that politician's lapdog."
The next hour was a blur of frantic motion.
Dr. Vincent stumbled down the stairs in his pajamas, rubbing his eyes. He was a brilliant doctor but a terrible businessman. Mrs. Vincent practically dragged him to the kitchen table, shoving transfer authorization forms in front of him.
The heavy, mechanical grinding of the industrial paper shredder echoed through the quiet house.
Gina stood by the window, feeding years of tax documents into the machine. The blades chewed through the paper.
Her stomach was tied in knots. It wasn't enough. Hansford was ruthless. He wouldn't just stop at an audit.
Ding-dong.
The doorbell chimed.
The sound was so normal, yet so terrifying at two in the morning.
The shredder stopped. The house fell dead silent.
Gina's blood turned to ice water. She signaled for Vesper, who was standing near the kitchen, to get ready. Vesper's hand slid under her jacket.
Gina walked to the front door. Her bare feet made no sound on the wood. She pressed her eye to the peephole.
Her lungs forgot how to pull in oxygen.
A man was sitting in a state-of-the-art wheelchair on her porch. He wore a long, black wool trench coat that draped over his legs, and a dark fedora was pulled low, casting his face in deep shadow. In this quiet, suburban neighborhood, he looked like a wolf waiting at the door of a sheep pen.
Gina cracked the door open, leaving the chain engaged.
"Are you out of your mind?" she hissed, her voice barely a breath. "My neighbors have cameras. Vesper said she looped the footage, but this is an insane risk."
The man in the wheelchair looked up. It was Brandon. He lifted a single gloved hand and pushed the brim of his hat up just enough for her to see his eyes.
"I don't like leaving my investments unattended," he said. His voice was a low, metallic rumble that vibrated right through the wooden door and into her chest.
He looked past her shoulder, his dark eyes scanning the hallway.
"I hear a shredder," Brandon noted, a dark smirk playing on his lips. "Liquidating assets? Need a professional money laundering consultant?"
Gina gripped the edge of the door. "You're tracking me."
"I'm protecting you," Brandon corrected. He tilted his head. "Are you going to invite me in, or should I have my associate here remove the door from its hinges?"
Before Gina could answer, footsteps approached from behind.
"Gina? Who is it at this hour?" Dr. Vincent asked, his voice thick with exhaustion.
Gina froze. If her father saw the Director of the NSA standing on their porch, the panic would kill him faster than the IRS.
Brandon's expression shifted instantly. The lethal predator vanished. Vesper stepped forward from the shadows of the porch.
"Good evening, Dr. Vincent," Vesper said smoothly, her voice calm and professional. "My name is Vesper. I'm with a private security firm. This is our principal, Mr. Black. We have reason to believe your daughter is in immediate danger."
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8.0
She only wanted to save her brother.
He only wanted an heir to secure his empire.
A contract bound us.
A heartbeat changed us.
I thought the ruthless Alpha was the devil in a tailored suit.
Instead, he became the man fate chained me to... the one my body recognises before my heart will ever dare.
But power demands sacrifice, and love was never part of our deal.
He promised protection, not affection.
I offered my womb, not my soul.
Now I carry his child...
And the secret of who I really am could destroy us both.

7.1
The last thing I remembered was the blinding flash of my starship crashing. But instead of a rescue crew, I woke up tied to a wooden post, surrounded by hostile beastmen.
My universal translator kicked in just in time to hear their priestess, Chelsea, declare that I was a cursed demon who ruined their hunt. To save the clan from winter starvation, I was to be burned alive.
The flames were already blistering my legs, and jagged stones hurled by the crowd gashed my forehead. I barely negotiated a three-day reprieve to find them food, venturing into the deadly primeval forest.
I found a massive supply of wild potatoes and even gained the protection of Bronson, a terrifyingly powerful saber-toothed tiger beastman.
But Chelsea wouldn't stop.
She labeled my food as poisonous, tried to sentence me to starve in a penitent's cave, and when my agricultural knowledge proved her wrong, she invoked an ancient law. She incited the tribe's savage warriors to fight over me, turning me into breeding property.
I was a scientist offering them endless food, yet their primitive ignorance and one woman's vicious jealousy kept pushing me toward a brutal end. I was terrified, completely powerless against their monstrous physical strength.
As five ruthless challengers drew their bone axes to claim me, I begged Bronson to leave me and run.
Instead, he pulled me against his scarred chest and kissed me fiercely in front of the entire clan.
"She is my mate," he roared, unleashing a soul-crushing aura. "Anyone who wants her, come at me together."

9.2
My world shattered twice. First, the ocean claimed my son. Then, the mountain road took another, a direct sacrifice to the man I loved and the woman he chose. In the hospital, beeps marked the emptiness where my second son used to be, echoing the first loss, both involving Holden and Giana.
During the car crash, I was pinned, bleeding, and trapped. Holden, my partner, looked me in the eyes, then chose to save Giana, abandoning me and our unborn child.
Soon, I overheard Holden praising Giana for turning our tragedy into a PR win. His hollow apologies and focus on Giana’s "miracle work" reignited the brutal memory of her push and his past denials.
A decade of sacrificing my life and two children for a man who saw me as a liability left a bitter taste. His choice was clear; only profound abandonment remained.
But this time, I was choosing me. From my profound loss, a dangerous spark ignited: I would not just survive; I would find freedom and make him pay.

7.3
Clara came home from a fourteen-hour board meeting to the sound of a piercing scream in the playroom.
When she rushed in, she found her husband, Chadwick, kneeling on the floor in a panic.
But he wasn't looking at their five-year-old son, Leo, who had a massive bleeding welt on his forehead.
Instead, Chadwick was trembling as he held the nanny's daughter, Autumn, who barely had a microscopic scratch.
"She needs ice. And antibacterial ointment," Chadwick snapped, carrying the nanny's daughter away and leaving his bleeding son behind.
From that moment, the nightmare only escalated.
Chadwick ordered Clara to cook a three-hour meal for the nanny's kid, threw away Leo's favorite toys because Autumn sneezed, and even secretly took the nanny and her daughter on Leo's promised Disney trip.
The final humiliation came at the Met Gala.
Right before their sponsor speech, Chadwick received a frantic call from the nanny claiming Autumn was having a panic attack.
He abandoned Clara in front of hundreds of flashing cameras, sprinting out of the ballroom.
Clara stood completely alone, the humiliation eating through her veins like acid.
She couldn't understand how a father could call the nanny's kid his "little princess" while watching his own son cry.
Why was he treating his own flesh and blood like garbage just to play savior to another woman's child?
Suddenly, the blinding camera flashes were blocked by a massive shadow.
Erasmo Chase, the heir to New York's largest financial dynasty, stepped out of the darkness and shielded her.
"A man like that is unworthy of your grief, Ms. Best," he whispered, pressing a silk handkerchief into her trembling hand.
Looking at the sharp profile of the powerful man beside her, Clara's shock hardened into a lethal, cold fury.
She was going to dump her family's shares, crash the board, and make Chadwick lose absolutely everything.

8.8
Mate's VENGEANCE
8.8
To destroy him, I've traded my pride for a maid's uniform.
My plan is simple: infiltrate his estate, seduce him into breaking his royal engagement, and lead his enemies to his doorstep. I want to see his pack burn. I want to see the light leave those storm-grey eyes as how he did to my mate

8.8
My little boy died on the operating table during a minor, routine surgery.
That exact same night, my billionaire husband bought out the Hudson River for a massive, million-dollar fireworks show.
It wasn't to mourn our child. It was to celebrate his first love's son being discharged from the hospital.
When I confronted him with our son's death certificate, he sneered and accused me of hiding the boy to get his attention.
He held his mistress in our home, watched her fake a panic attack, and threatened to bankrupt my family if I didn't get on my knees and apologize to her.
But the most horrifying truth came from a terrified hospital nurse.
My son's anesthesia was deliberately kept low during the procedure to keep his tissue viable to save the mistress's child.
He was awake and in agonizing pain while his own father planned a grand celebration for another man's son.
I couldn't understand how a father could be so completely heartless.
How could he sacrifice his own flesh and blood just to please a woman who constantly manipulated him?
Looking at the ashes on my son's favorite toy, my paralyzing grief evaporated, replaced by a cold, unyielding rage.
I arranged my little boy's funeral alone in the freezing rain, left my wedding ring on the counter, and walked straight into the private hotel suite of my husband's most ruthless business rival.
"Let's take him down," I said.