
The Abused Sister's Spectacular Vengeful Comeback
I died as an MMA champion in an octagon halfway across the world.
But instead of finding peace, I woke up face-down in the cracked Ohio dirt, trapped in the severely malnourished body of an eighteen-year-old girl named Alissa.
Along with this frail, useless body came a flood of agonizing memories.
Her glamorous sister, Ainsley, treated her like a slave, starving her and working her to the bone while playing the perfect saint to the outside world.
Worse, her brother-in-law Kristopher, a highly respected high school teacher, was a disgusting predator.
He constantly cornered her in dark hallways, whispering sickening threats disguised as affection, waiting for the perfect moment to completely ruin her.
"You are meant to be mine, little bird. This is our secret."
The original Alissa had lived her entire life in suffocating terror.
She was completely powerless, eventually dying of sheer exhaustion and silent despair in a suffocating cornfield while her abusers lived comfortably.
They thought she was just a pathetic, broken toy they could crush without consequence.
But the dull, defeated glaze in Alissa's eyes is gone now.
In its place is the sharp, calculating focus of a killer.
My new body might be weak and starved, but my mind is a lethal weapon. The predators are about to become the prey.
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Chapter 8
The late afternoon sun cast long, orange shadows across the Knox family kitchen.
Ainsley sat at the chipped Formica table, humming a pop song off the radio. She was carefully applying a coat of bright, cherry-red polish to her fingernails, blowing on them gently.
The front door opened with a heavy creak.
Kristopher limped into the hallway. His face was a sickly, pale gray, and the dark bags under his eyes made him look like he hadn't slept in a week. His right leg dragged stiffly behind him.
Ainsley looked up, the tiny brush freezing over her pinky nail.
She took in his disheveled hair, the mud caked on his expensive trousers, and the way he leaned heavily against the wall. Her perfectly plucked eyebrows drew together in deep disgust.
"Look at you," Ainsley scoffed, waving her wet nails in the air. "Did you go drinking behind the bleachers again? You're tracking mud all over my clean floor."
Kristopher swallowed hard. He avoided her eyes, staring fixedly at the scuff marks on the linoleum.
"I... I stayed late to fix the old tractor behind the gym," Kristopher stammered, his voice trembling slightly. "I slipped off the metal pedal. Banged my knee pretty bad."
Ainsley rolled her eyes, completely buying the pathetic, logical lie. She didn't ask if he needed ice. She didn't ask if he needed a doctor.
"Whatever," Ainsley sighed, returning her attention to her nails. "Just don't expect me to make dinner. Alissa hasn't done a single chore all day. The lazy bitch is probably faking sick again in her room."
At the sound of Alissa's name, Kristopher's entire body violently flinched.
His breath hitched, and a flash of pure, unadulterated terror widened his eyes. He gripped the doorframe so hard his knuckles turned white.
"Don't... don't bother her," Kristopher blurted out, his voice cracking.
Ainsley stopped painting. She looked at her husband like he had just grown a second head.
"Excuse me?" she snapped. "Since when do you care if she rests?"
Kristopher realized his mistake. He licked his dry lips, trying to backtrack. "I just... I have a headache. I don't want to hear you two yelling. Just let her sleep."
Without waiting for a response, Kristopher turned and practically dragged himself up the stairs, fleeing the conversation.
At the end of the dark hallway, standing perfectly still in the shadows, Alissa watched him go.
She had heard every word. The tape was working. The fear was absolute.
Alissa turned and slipped quietly back into her bedroom, locking the wooden door behind her with a soft click.
She peeled off her oversized sweater, leaving her in just a thin, faded tank top and shorts.
She walked over to the cracked full-length mirror leaning against the wall.
She stared at her reflection. Her collarbones jutted out sharply. Her arms were thin, lacking any real muscle definition. The dark purple bruise on her thigh from Ainsley's pinch was turning a sickly yellow.
The fight last night had been a victory, but a costly one. Her muscles ached with a deep, throbbing soreness. She had pushed this fragile body far past its breaking point.
Tricks and leverage would only get her so far. If she faced someone who knew how to fight, she would be crushed. She needed physical strength.
Alissa stepped away from the mirror and stood in the center of the room.
She couldn't do push-ups or heavy cardio. This malnourished body would suffer from rhabdomyolysis or a heart attack. She had to rebuild from the foundation up.
She began with isometric exercises.
She stood next to the bed and lowered herself into a quarter squat. Just a few inches.
She held the position. She focused her mind entirely on her quadriceps, forcing the muscle fibers to contract and hold the tension without moving.
Ten seconds passed. Her legs began to shake violently.
A sharp, tearing pain radiated through her thighs. Sweat beaded on her forehead, sliding down her pale cheeks and dripping onto the dusty floorboards.
She gritted her teeth, breathing in a harsh, rhythmic hiss through her nose.
She held it for thirty seconds before slowly standing up. Her legs felt like jelly, but her eyes burned with a fierce, fanatical light.
She moved to the wall, pressing her palms flat against the wood, and pushed. She didn't move the wall, but she forced her chest and triceps to engage, holding maximum tension for twenty seconds.
After thirty minutes of agonizing, silent work, Alissa collapsed onto the edge of her bed, her chest heaving.
She reached into her bra and pulled out the crumpled seventeen dollars.
She stared at the pathetic amount of cash. Muscle required protein. Protein required money.
She looked out her bedroom window. Below, in the overgrown backyard, was a small, neglected vegetable garden.
The original Alissa had painstakingly cultivated a few hidden rows of late-season sweet corn at the very edge of the property months ago-her only sanctuary away from Ainsley's demands. The stunted stalks were finally bearing fruit. They were a pathetic yield, but right now, they were food, and they were currency.
Alissa tucked the money away and grabbed a towel to wipe the sweat from her neck.
Tomorrow, she was taking control of the household's resources. And she knew exactly who would try to stop her.
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9.1
Julian Laurent was known as the most notorious playboy in Rivermont, changing girlfriends as often as he changed his clothes and treating marriage like a joke.
Clara Sterling, on the other hand, had always been the most quiet and obedient daughter of the Sterling family. Raised as the heir since childhood, she had been flawless in every word and every gesture.
A family-arranged marriage forced these two complete opposites into the same life.
On their wedding night, Julian openly made out with a young model at a nightclub.
For the first time, Clara cast aside her propriety, slapping him and demanding a divorce on the spot.
But before the next day was over, their families had forced them to remarry.
This time, Julian managed to stay faithful for a month before he cheated again.
Clara filed for divorce once more, cutting ties with him completely.
However, that very same day, it was revealed that Clara was not the real daughter of the Sterling family, and she was thrown out.
At her lowest point, Julian found her and solemnly promised to protect her from then on.
They remarried again, and from that day forward, the scandals surrounding Julian ceased.
Everyone said Clara was lucky. Even her best friend insisted that Julian had truly settled down, and Clara believed it.
Until she saw him in a hospital corridor, holding her best friend's hand, his voice strained with deep emotion, "I never liked her. You're the one I've always loved!"
It turned out all of his tenderness had been a lie.
This time, she walked away and never looked back.
And the man who had once treated her as disposable only realized after she was gone that he had long since drowned in her quiet love, unable to escape.

9.7
Eliana Rivera is the firstborn daughter of business tycoon Cassian Rivera. When her father's company falls into debt, he marries her off to the arrogant and ruthless billionaire, Alexander Grayson, as part of a business contract and under the threat of blackmail.
Alexander, the billionaire CEO, never planned to marry, but the pressure of blackmail forces him into a union with a woman he barely knows. Although Eliana doesn't see Alexander as her ideal partner, she agrees to the marriage out of a sense of duty.
Once engaged, however, he barely acknowledges her presence and harbours disdain for her because of her father's actions and their relationship. But as they navigate their newfound relationship, the unexpected desire for each other's touch ignites-a twist neither of them planned, leading them toward an unforeseen love.

7.8
Elena Voss was sold like a debt receipt.
Her greedy aunt and uncle handed her over to Damien Blackthorn-New York's untouchable billionaire tech mogul by day, ruthless Mafia Don and Alpha of the Blackthorn Pack by night-to settle a family debt they never asked her to pay.
The moment their eyes met in that rain-soaked alley, the fated mate bond ignited like wildfire. For one reckless night, he claimed her body and soul, whispering "mine" against her skin while the Moon Goddess sealed their destiny.
Then came the betrayal.
On their first anniversary, he paraded his pureblood fiancée through their penthouse, let her kneel for him in the study while Elena watched from the shadows, and divorced her in front of the entire pack.
"Wolfless trash," he snarled. "You were never more than payment."
Heart in pieces and two tiny heartbeats growing inside her, Elena fled. She vanished into Seattle's gray drizzle, changed her name, cut her hair, and built a quiet life as a single mother. She swore the Blackthorn name would never touch her twins-Leo and Luna, the secret heirs he didn't even know existed.
Five years later, the children's first uncontrolled shifts rip through their small apartment like lightning. The only place that can teach them control and keep them hidden from rival packs is back in New York-back under Damien's shadow.
The Alpha Don who once threw her away is now obsessed.
The fated bond never died; it only waited. He feels her every laugh, every tear, every protective growl she gives their children. He'll burn his empire, his alliances, and his pride to drag her back.
But Elena isn't the broken girl he discarded anymore.
She's a mother with claws.
A luna who learned to bite.
And this time, if he wants her forgiveness, he'll have to beg on his knees.
Pregnancy. Divorce. Secret babies. Billionaire alpha. Mafia power plays. Revenge that burns slow and sweet.
Some bonds can't be broken.
Some rejections come with claws.
And some second chances are paid for in blood.

7.1
Bonnie Galvan woke up to the suffocating scent of lilies, staring at the mirror in the exact same seven-figure wedding dress she had worn seven years ago.
In the doorway stood her so-called best friend Itzel and her secret lover Erwin, desperately urging her to elope.
They warned her that her soon-to-be husband, the billionaire Arlington Townsend, was a crippled monster, and marrying him would ruin her life forever.
In her previous life, she blindly believed their lies and ran away from the altar.
Because of her public betrayal, the ruthless Townsend family completely bankrupted her father's company in retaliation.
Erwin and Itzel swooped in as her saviors, only to steal whatever was left of her family's wealth and power.
When she was finally stripped of her value, Erwin pushed her down an icy mountain slope during a brutal blizzard.
With a shattered ankle, she could only watch as Itzel smirked and Erwin coldly walked away, leaving her to be buried alive under the freezing snow.
As her lungs burned and her heart gave out in the agonizing cold, she was consumed by hatred.
Why did the man who swore to protect her and the friend she trusted with her life plot so meticulously to destroy her?
Opening her eyes again, Bonnie was back in the bridal suite, minutes before the ceremony.
This time, she didn't run.
She walked straight down the aisle, looked the terrifying Arlington Townsend in the eye, and firmly said her vows.
"I do."

7.9
Fiona spent three years in a concrete cell, taking the fall for a hit-and-run accident caused by her billionaire husband's mistress.
When she finally got out and returned home, she found him throwing a lavish party, with the mistress on his arm wearing a gown Fiona had designed. Even worse, her own seven-year-old son pointed at her in disgust.
"Go away, bad woman!"
Her husband Cecil threw her out like a stray dog. To force her into submission, he trashed her belongings and cut off the life-saving medical funding for her mentor. Driven to desperation, Fiona snuck back into the mansion to retrieve her late mother's sapphire necklace. But the mistress caught her, ripped her own clothes, and screamed that Fiona was trying to kill her. Cecil didn't even hesitate. He violently shoved Fiona backward. Her head smashed against the sharp edge of a mahogany desk, and blood immediately poured into her eyes.
Lying in a pool of her own blood, Fiona watched the man she had sacrificed her freedom for wrap his arms protectively around the woman who ruined her life. He looked at her with pure, murderous disgust, as if she were the monster.
But Fiona didn't cry. Instead, a cold smile crept onto her face as her bloody thumb secretly pressed the emergency SOS button on her phone, snapping a clear photo of him standing over her shattered body.
"My husband just violently attacked me. I am bleeding from the head. I need help."
The police were already on their way. It was time to burn his empire to the ground.

7.8
"Error. The social security number associated with this user was registered as deceased five years ago. Account legally closed." Those words, glaring from a stolen hospital iPad, confirmed my darkest fear: my family had murdered me.
I awoke in a sterile room after five years in a coma, my body weak but my mind sharp. My husband, Dante, the Syndicate Don, rushed in with fake grief. My parents, who'd raised me as a pawn, showed terror, avoiding my gaze. Armed guards outside confirmed I was a prisoner.
Dante frantically silenced me when I asked about my son, Leo, offering a flimsy excuse. My hacker skills led me to my secret trust account, where I found myself officially declared dead. Rage replaced panic.
I ripped out my IV, stumbled to the Director's office, and forced him to reveal my death certificate. It stated "Accidental drowning, brain death," signed by Dante and witnessed by my own parents.
"So, I was murdered by my entire family," I declared, my voice a dead rasp. I used the forged document to blackmail Dante, demanding to be taken to Leo, my counterattack already forming. I slapped away my mother's manipulative hand, ready to reclaim my life and my son.