
The Reborn Genius Heiress's Spectacular Comeback
My biological mother finally came to the rundown trailer park to take me to her wealthy new family in New York.
But instead of the good life she promised, I was treated worse than a stray dog.
My stepbrother broke my legs with a golf club just for fun, while my perfect stepsister smiled and watched.
My mother didn't even try to stop them. She let them lock me in a car and set it on fire.
I was burned alive, the smell of gasoline and toxic smoke filling my lungs as they walked away with my life.
Until my last agonizing breath, I couldn't understand why my own flesh and blood hated me so much.
Why did I have to die just so her new family could thrive?
Opening my eyes again, the smell of smoke vanished, replaced by the cheap coffee of the diner I worked at.
I was seventeen again, on the exact day the black Bentley pulled up to take me away.
This time, I wasn't going to be their victim.
I deliberately stalled our departure, saving us from the massive highway pileup that was supposed to be my grave.
And when my stepbrother threw a metal dart at my face on my first day back, I didn't just dodge.
I let New York's most ruthless billionaire step in, ruining his ten-million-dollar watch in the process.
"Since that hand likes to throw things, I will take the hand as payment."
Watching my arrogant stepfamily fall to their knees and beg for mercy, I knew my revenge had just begun.
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Chapter 2
Celina walked fast down the cracked sidewalk toward the trailer park. The sky above her turned a bruised, angry purple. Low thunder rumbled in the distance, vibrating against the soles of her worn-out sneakers.
Behind her, the heavy tires of the Bentley crunched over the gravel and mud.
The car was forced to stop at the edge of the dirt road leading into the park. Gary gripped the steering wheel, muttering curses under his breath as mud splattered against the pristine black paint.
Elvie sat in the back seat. She looked out the tinted window at the rusted metal siding of the trailers. Her stomach twisted. This place reminded her of the life she had clawed her way out of. She rubbed her temples, a sharp headache forming behind her eyes.
Celina stepped into her drafty, cramped trailer. The door squeaked on its hinges.
She didn't open any drawers. She didn't pack any clothes. She walked straight to the small bedside table, opened the top drawer, and pulled out a single, faded photograph of her grandmother.
She slid the photo carefully into her empty backpack.
Then, Celina sat down on the sagging mattress. She crossed her arms and stared at the cheap plastic clock hanging on the wall.
The second hand ticked. Her palms began to sweat. She wiped them on her jeans. The time of the fatal crash from her past life was approaching. Her heart beat a frantic rhythm against her ribs.
Outside, Elvie lost her patience.
"Honk the horn," Elvie ordered.
Gary pressed his palm against the steering wheel. A loud, aggressive blare echoed through the trailer park. Then another. And another. A continuous, obnoxious wall of noise designed to humiliate.
A few teenagers hanging around a rusted pickup truck turned and pointed at the Bentley, laughing and shouting obscenities.
Panic flared in Elvie's chest. She hated being looked at by these people. These were her roots—the dirt she had spent twenty years scrubbing off her skin—and now they were staring at her through the window of a car that cost more than their entire trailer park. She could feel their judgment. Their mockery. The whispers: "That's Elvie. She thinks she's better than us now."
She snatched her phone from her purse and dialed Celina's number.
Inside the trailer, Celina's cheap phone buzzed on the mattress. She looked at the screen, saw Elvie's name, and pressed the red button to decline the call. She tossed the phone back onto the bed.
The phone buzzed again. Decline. Buzzed again. Decline. Elvie called seven times in three minutes. Celina declined every single one. On the eighth attempt, she picked up, let it connect for exactly one second—long enough for Elvie to hear her breathing—and then hung up.
Inside the Bentley, Elvie stared at her phone. She had been deliberately silenced. By a seventeen-year-old. From a trailer park. The disrespect was so profound, so absolute, that her brain couldn't process it. Her hand began to shake.
Suddenly, the sky broke open.
A massive sheet of rain slammed into the metal roof of the trailer. The noise was deafening, completely drowning out the sound of the Bentley's horn.
Gary pushed his door open, intending to run to the trailer. The wind caught the door, nearly ripping it from his grip. A wall of water hit him in the face, soaking his expensive suit jacket instantly. He cursed loudly and slammed the door shut.
"This is your fault!" Elvie shrieked at him, as if Gary had summoned the storm. "You should have dragged her out of that hovel the second we arrived!"
Gary bit his tongue. He had worked for the Hayes family long enough to know that arguing with Elvie was like arguing with a rabid dog—pointless and dangerous.
"That ungrateful little brat!" Elvie screamed inside the car, her voice shrill. "She belongs in the garbage! I should have left her to rot in this town!"
Celina stood by the small window of the trailer. She watched the Bentley sitting in the mud, trapped by the storm. She could see Elvie's silhouette through the tinted glass—rigid with fury, arms gesticulating wildly. She imagined the curses, the threats, the venom being spat inside that leather-lined cabin. And she smiled.
Thirty minutes passed.
Celina looked at the clock. The time of the crash had come and gone. The tight knot in her shoulders finally uncoiled. She let out a long, shaky breath.
She picked up her flat backpack, grabbed a broken umbrella by the door, and stepped out into the pouring rain.
She walked to the Bentley at a leisurely pace. Not rushing. Not hurrying. Strolling through the downpour as if she were taking a Sunday walk in the park. The rain plastered her hair to her skull and soaked through her cheap jacket, but she didn't speed up. She didn't care.
She reached the car and pulled open the heavy rear door.
Celina slid onto the leather seat. She brought a rush of freezing air, wet mud, and the smell of rain into the pristine cabin. Water dripped from her clothes onto the hand-stitched leather. Mud from her sneakers smeared across the custom floor mats.
Elvie shrieked and pressed herself against the opposite door.
"You're ruining the leather!" Elvie yelled, her eyes wide with horror. "Do you have any idea how much this car costs? More than you'll earn in your entire miserable life!"
Celina turned her head slowly. She met Elvie's outraged stare with eyes that were utterly dead. No anger. No tears. No apology. Just... nothing. The void of a girl who had already died once and had absolutely nothing left to fear.
"You're right," Celina said. Her voice was flat, emotionless. "I have no idea. Tell me, Elvie—how much does a car cost? Is it more than a daughter?"
The question hung in the air, sharp and unexpected as a knife between the ribs.
Elvie's mouth opened. Closed. Opened again. No sound came out. Because there was no answer to that question—not one that made her look like anything other than a monster.
"I'm done packing," Celina said, turning away. "We can go."
Gary slammed his foot on the gas pedal. The tires spun in the mud before catching traction. He sped out of the trailer park, desperate to leave the town behind.
The rain was blinding. The windshield wipers slapped back and forth at maximum speed, but visibility was near zero.
Suddenly, the smooth jazz playing on the car radio cut out. A sharp beep filled the cabin.
"Emergency traffic alert," the radio announcer said, his voice tense. "A massive twelve-car pileup has just occurred on Interstate 80. The highway is completely shut down. Multiple fatalities reported."
The color drained from Elvie's face. Her skin turned the color of chalk.
Gary slammed on the brakes. The Bentley fishtailed on the wet asphalt before coming to a hard stop on the shoulder of the road.
If Celina hadn't delayed them by packing her bags, they would have been exactly on that stretch of Interstate 80.
Elvie's hands shook violently. She pressed her palm against her chest, her breathing shallow and rapid. She stared at Celina—this girl who had insisted on packing, who had sat in that trailer for thirty minutes, who had ignored every honk and every call. And a terrifying, impossible thought clawed its way into her mind.
She knew. Somehow, this girl had known.
"You," Elvie whispered, her voice trembling. "You stalled us on purpose."
Celina turned her head. For the first time since getting into the car, she let a tiny, cold smile touch her lips. It wasn't a smile of warmth or forgiveness. It was the smile of someone who had just watched fate hand her enemies exactly what they deserved.
"If I did," Celina said softly, "you should be thanking me. We'd all be dead right now."
Thank her. The words hit Elvie like a slap. Thank the trailer park trash she had just screamed at. Thank the girl she had called an ungrateful brat. Thank the daughter she had abandoned and only reclaimed because it was convenient.
Elvie's jaw clenched so hard her teeth ached. She wanted to scream. She wanted to slap that smug look off Celina's face. But she couldn't. Because Celina was right. And the sheer, burning humiliation of being saved by the person she despised most in the world was a poison she would be swallowing for a very, very long time.
"Ma'am," Gary stammered, his hands gripping the steering wheel so hard his knuckles were white. "The highway is closed. We can't make it to New York tonight."
Elvie closed her eyes. The thought of sleeping in this town made her physically sick, but the fear of the crash was stronger. She had no choice. She was trapped—trapped by the storm, trapped by the closed highway, trapped by the knowledge that the girl she had discarded like garbage had just saved her life.
Celina pulled a pair of cheap wired earphones from her pocket and put them in her ears, shutting out the sound of Elvie's ragged breathing. She had survived step one. And Elvie knew it.
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9.2
Jacqueline Blackburn, a desperate Ivy League tutor, walked into the sleazy Veridian VIP club just to save her job.
But her billionaire client, the ruthless Christian Montgomery, mistook her for a cheap escort, blowing cigar smoke in her face and treating her like trash.
When she furiously turned to leave, a drunk former client attacked her in the hallway, tearing her white dress open and pinning her by the throat.
She fought back, stabbing the man's hand with a pen, only for Christian to emerge from the shadows and brutally crush the attacker's bleeding hand under his heel.
Instead of letting her go, Christian draped his heavy suit jacket over her exposed skin, trapped her in his dark suite, and forced her to sign a suffocating contract.
"You have exactly ninety days, or I will personally ensure you cease to exist in my city."
She thought she could just keep her head down, teach his nephew, and survive.
But she didn't understand why this terrifying underground tyrant was suddenly so fixated on her.
Why did he use his immense power to isolate her, publicly claim her at a billionaire gala, and track her every move?
When she received a chilling midnight text demanding she pack her bags and move into his sprawling estate by 8:00 AM, the terrifying reality set in.
She hadn't escaped the wolf. She had just walked directly into his cage.

8.4
Cari Butler woke up in a damp, smelly dorm room, realizing she had transmigrated into the body of a disgraced fake daughter who had just been kicked out of a wealthy family.
Before she could even process her reality, the real daughter's friends kicked her door open to mock her, flaunting a custom Tiffany necklace that supposedly cost a mere eighty cents.
Cari thought they were crazy, until she saw the news: a top Manhattan mansion had just sold for a record-breaking $3,500.
The entire world's currency value had shrunk by ten thousand times!
This meant the original owner's bank balance of $854,000 gave Cari the purchasing power of eight and a half billion dollars.
But a mysterious system froze her funds, forcing her to work demeaning gig jobs to unlock the money bit by bit.
While working as a hotel server for twenty cents a day, she caught her ex-boyfriend kissing up to the real daughter, mocking Cari for being a desperate beggar.
Even her snobby roommates laughed at her, claiming she couldn't afford a ten-cent iPhone.
What truly angered Cari wasn't the humiliation, but receiving a five-cent transfer from her poor biological brother, who was starving himself just to keep her fed.
Yet, the system strictly forbade her from giving her unlocked billions directly to her family.
Looking at the restrictive system and the arrogant elites who thought they owned the city, Cari's eyes turned icy cold.
"If I can't just hand them the cash,"
Cari sneered, pulling out her phone to outright buy the luxury hotel and fire everyone who wronged her.
"Then I will just buy the entire world and place it at their feet."

8.0
My abusive step-family isolated me completely, holding my mother's medical funds hostage to control my every move.
Yesterday, they finalized my sale.
"You will marry Rudy Petrov next month. He is fifty, wealthy, and willing to overlook your lack of pedigree."
Pushed to the absolute edge, I did the insane. I posted an ad online offering my life savings of $50,000 for a contract husband. A stranger named Brennan agreed.
But my family wouldn't let me go. They forced me back for a dinner by threatening my mother's life-saving prescriptions.
At the table, they relentlessly mocked my new "poor IT guy" husband and intentionally burned my hand with boiling tea.
Worse, the housekeeper locked me in a guest room and forced drugs down my throat so Rudy could come in and assault me.
I lay there paralyzed on the floor, bleeding from Rudy's slap, utterly terrified. I couldn't understand why my own family would throw me to the wolves, and I felt a crushing guilt for dragging an innocent, ordinary guy into my nightmare.
Until a pitch-black Maybach smashed through the estate's wrought-iron gates at eighty miles an hour.
My "poor" husband kicked the solid oak doors off their hinges, beat Rudy half to death, and carried me out into the rain.
I didn't know it yet, but the ordinary man I hired to save me was a ruthless billionaire, and he was about to erase my family's entire empire by morning.

8.1
Desperate for a way out of rejection and poverty, Pearl Augustine accepts a nanny job with an outrageous salary-working for billionaire Ace Warren. What she doesn't expect is his daughter.
Mia Warren is spoiled, sharp-tongued, and feared by everyone in the mansion. Behind her cruelty is a lonely child longing for a mother. As Pearl becomes the only one who can reach her, walls begin to fall-especially those around Ace, a grieving man hiding behind wealth and control.
What started as "just a job" quickly turns into something dangerous: attachment.
Sometimes, healing begins where you least expect it.

9.1
On our fourth wedding anniversary, I prepared a perfect home-cooked dinner for my husband, Carlisle.
But the moment he walked in, he threw a marital settlement agreement right onto the table.
"Sign it. Celine is back. There's no place for you here anymore."
His mother and sister immediately marched in to supervise my packing, calling me a barren gold-digger and trying to smash my late mother's only keepsake.
I signed the papers and walked out into the freezing night, thinking the nightmare was finally over.
But the next day, a heavily edited video of a childhood friend helping me into his car went viral online.
Carlisle's PR team released a public statement branding me a cheating wife, completely destroying my reputation.
He let the world tear me apart, using my ruined name to play the victim and justify bringing his first love home.
I had sacrificed my own dreams and endured his family's endless abuse for four years, only to be discarded like trash and framed for the exact emotional cheating he had been doing all along.
Watching the vile comments flood my screen, my heartbreak hardened into pure, unbreakable ice.
I calmly picked up my phone and dialed my father's number.
"Dad, it's time. I want to come home and take over Mcneil Industries."

8.3
For three years, Adriene Rodgers gave up her brilliant Wall Street career to be the perfect, devoted wife to billionaire Dallin Morales.
But one night, she overheard him talking to his lawyer, a confession that shattered her world.
"Adriene is exactly what I need her to be. A perfect social shield to keep the cameras busy so Elaina can live in peace."
Elaina was his late brother's widow. Dallin coldly admitted that touching his wife made him physically sick, and he only stomached it by closing his eyes and thinking of Elaina.
From that moment, the nightmare escalated. Elaina framed Adriene at every turn—slashing Adriene's beloved dog to death and throwing herself into a pool to play the victim. Dallin blindly believed the widow. He shoved Adriene so hard she cracked her head open on the marble deck, leaving her bleeding on the ground while he tenderly carried Elaina away.
The ultimate betrayal came when Adriene's father went into sudden cardiac failure. Desperate, she begged Dallin for the life-saving hospital funds.
Instead, Dallin ruthlessly froze every single one of her bank accounts.
"Go get on your knees and apologize to Elaina. Do that, and I will unfreeze your cards."
Standing in the freezing rain while Dallin's Rolls-Royce sped off to comfort Elaina's fake panic attack, Adriene's heart finally turned to ice. How could she have wasted three years of devotion on a man who would use her dying father as a bargaining chip for a manipulative parasite?
She didn't shed another tear. After borrowing money to save her father, she secretly signed the divorce papers and left them in a Hermès anniversary box on his desk. Then, she pulled out her old resume and sent it directly to his biggest corporate rivals. The submissive wife was dead, and it was time to burn his empire to the ground.