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The Heiress Returns: Marrying The Ruthless Billionaire Novel Cover

The Heiress Returns: Marrying The Ruthless Billionaire

Aspen gasped for air, her body bolting upright in bed. It was the night before the Hogan family planned to sacrifice her, just as they had in her past life before she died in that freezing, blood-stained wreckage. She looked at her hands—they were unscarred, nineteen again, and filled with a cold, terrifying clarity. She remembered everything: the betrayal, the bank accounts drained by Julian, and the man she had once feared, Deron Fitzpatrick, who would burn down a city to avenge her. The Hogans were already plotting to force her into a marriage with Deron, a man the world whispered was a broken cripple. They intended to keep their precious biological daughter, Sloane, safe while throwing Aspen to the wolves as a disposable pawn. She felt the familiar, suffocating grip of the Hogan estate, the fake smiles of her adoptive parents, and the burning injustice of a life where she had always been the invisible victim, silenced and discarded by those who owed her everything. Why was she back? Why had the universe given her a second chance to witness the same cruelty? The panic in her veins turned into ice, and she realized the game had changed. She walked straight to Sloane's closet, donned a crimson silk dress, and set out to find Deron. She didn't just want to survive; she would make a deal with the devil himself, turn her sacrifice into a weapon, and ensure that tonight, she would be the executioner.
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Chapter 1

Aspen gasped for air, her upper body shooting up from the mattress.

Her lungs burned as if they were still filled with the freezing rainwater from the night she died. She clawed at her own throat, her fingernails digging into the soft skin, expecting to feel the jagged tear of the steering wheel that had crushed her windpipe.

There was no blood. There was no rain.

Her chest heaved, her heart hammering against her ribs like a trapped bird. She stared at the familiar, suffocating floral wallpaper of her bedroom in the Hogan estate. Her skin was covered in a cold sweat, making the cotton sheets stick to her legs.

She looked at her hands. They were unscarred. The calluses from her five years in the "Underworld" training camps were gone. She was nineteen again.

It was the night before the Hogan family planned to sacrifice her.

The memories of her past life crashed into her skull, bringing a sharp, throbbing pain to her temples. She remembered Sloane taking her place, Julian draining her bank accounts, and the final, agonizing moments bleeding out in the wreckage.

And she remembered him. Deron Fitzpatrick. The man the world called a cripple. The man who had burned down half of New York to avenge a woman who had never truly belonged to him.

Aspen's breathing slowed. The panic in her veins turned into something else. It turned into ice.

She threw off the covers. Her bare feet hit the hardwood floor, the chill grounding her. She walked straight to Sloane's adjoining closet. She bypassed her own cheap clothes and pulled out a crimson silk slip dress that Sloane had bought for a Hamptons party.

Aspen stripped off her pajamas and let the cold silk slide over her naked skin. It clung to her curves, a piece of armor masquerading as lingerie.

Forty minutes later, an Uber dropped her off at the service entrance of the Waldorf Astoria in Manhattan. The smell of stale pine air freshener from the car faded, replaced by the crisp, metallic scent of the city wind.

She bypassed the security cameras in the loading dock with practiced ease, slipping through the blind spots. She took the service elevator to the penthouse level.

She stood before the heavy mahogany doors of the presidential suite. She pulled a rigid piece of plastic-cut from a discarded hotel keycard-from her pocket. She slid it into the door's mechanism, wiggling it with millimeter precision.

Click.

The heavy door yielded. Aspen pushed it open and slipped inside, letting it shut silently behind her.

The suite was pitch black, illuminated only by the neon glow of the city filtering through the floor-to-ceiling windows. The air smelled of expensive scotch and a faint, sterile trace of antiseptic.

"You have thirty seconds to explain yourself before my security throws you off this balcony."

The voice came from the shadows. It was low, gravelly, and completely devoid of warmth. It made the hairs on the back of Aspen's neck stand up.

She didn't flinch. She turned her head and saw the silhouette of the man sitting in the wheelchair near the glass. Deron Fitzpatrick. Even seated, his broad shoulders and rigid posture projected a dangerous, suffocating authority.

Aspen walked toward him, her bare feet making no sound on the thick Persian rug. She stopped inches from his footrests.

"Deron Fitzpatrick," she said, her voice steady, looking straight into the dark abyss of his eyes. "I'm here to make a deal."

A muscle feathered in his jaw. He hadn't expected the intruder to know his full name, let alone speak to him without a tremor of fear.

"The Hogan family wants their precious biological daughter, Sloane, to marry you," Aspen continued, tracing the edge of her thumbnail with her index finger-a habit she used when calculating her next kill. "But she thinks you're a cripple. She thinks you're a monster. So, tomorrow, they are going to force me to take her place."

Deron's index finger tapped once against the leather armrest of his wheelchair. "And?"

"And I am willing," Aspen said, leaning in slightly. The scent of his scotch filled her senses. "I will marry you. I will secure your position in your family. I will be the most obedient chess piece you could ever ask for."

Deron let out a harsh, humorless laugh. "Why should I believe a word you say?"

Aspen closed the remaining distance. She leaned down, placing both her hands firmly on the armrests of his wheelchair, caging him in. She could feel the heat radiating from his body.

"Because in exchange, I only want one thing," she whispered, her breath brushing against his jaw. "Your absolute protection."

Deron's eyes narrowed. He didn't pull away.

"Furthermore," Aspen added, her voice dropping an octave, "I will give you a 'sincerity' the Hogan family could never provide."

Before he could process the word, Aspen closed her eyes and pressed her lips to his.

Deron's entire body went rigid. His hands gripped the armrests so hard his knuckles turned white. Shock rippled through him, followed instantly by a dark, suppressed hunger. He didn't push her away.

Aspen deepened the kiss. It wasn't gentle. It was a collision of teeth and desperation, a transaction sealed in the dark. She tasted the scotch on his tongue, sharp and burning.

Deron's hand suddenly shot up, his large fingers gripping the back of her neck, holding her in place. He took control of the kiss, turning her calculated move into a ruthless invasion. His thumb pressed into her pulse point, feeling the wild, erratic beat of her heart.

Aspen broke the kiss, gasping for air. Her chest heaved against his. She reached down to the thin straps of the crimson dress.

With a fluid motion, she let the silk pool at her feet on the rug.

"Now," she whispered into the dark room, her skin flushed and shivering. "We are allies."

The temperature in the room seemed to spike. The neon lights from the street below cast long, tangled shadows across the floor. Deron pulled her down into his lap.

Hours later, the morning sun pierced through the gaps in the curtains.

Aspen woke up in the massive king-sized bed. The sheets were tangled. Her muscles ached with a dull, heavy soreness, a physical reminder of the brutal, consuming transaction of the night.

She turned her head. The space beside her was empty.

She sat up, pulling the sheet over her chest. On the mahogany nightstand, resting next to a glass of water, was a matte black card.

Aspen reached out and picked it up. There was no name, no logo. Just a string of alphanumeric characters-an ID for an encrypted messaging app.

A slow, sharp smile touched her lips. Her stomach stopped twisting. The first step was complete.

She got out of bed, picked up the wrinkled crimson dress from the floor, and put it back on. She didn't look back as she walked out of the suite.

She took a cab back to the Hogan estate. She walked through the front doors just as the grandfather clock in the hallway struck eight. She smoothed down the silk of her dress and walked straight toward the dining room, ready to face the firing squad.

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