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Reborn Heiress: My Family's Bitter Karma

Chapter 7 7

Word Count: 420    |    Released on: 08/01/2026

was still charged with the resid

She had applied a fresh coat of bright

issed. "Did you see the logo on t

puter, typing with two

ed the screen. It showed a net wort

d. He stood up, pacing. "We raised her. We h

ling had gone down, but the pain was getting worse. It felt like invisible needles

hrieked. "Get me to the ball!

pped pacin

sor it. If I can get near them... maybe they have the key. Maybe she did

s us," Richar

talk. We have dirt on her. We know about the... the weird stuff. The fires. The time she made

Blackmail. It was a la

ded. "Put on your Sunday bes

a sleeve over her thr

r it up,"

ck. The engine sputtered and coughed

ed on the mailbox. It stared at the truck with

red. "Drive

by greed and a profound misunderstanding of who they were dealing with. They thought Seraphi

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Reborn Heiress: My Family's Bitter Karma
Reborn Heiress: My Family's Bitter Karma
“On my eighteenth birthday, the celestial pact hiding my aura finally expired. I stood on the rotting steps of the trailer, watching my foster family celebrate my eviction like they'd won the lottery. Brenda threw a liability waiver at me to sign, ensuring I'd never ask for a dime of their welfare checks again. Worse, her daughter Regina stood there smirking, flaunting the heirloom emerald bracelet she'd stolen from my secret stash-unaware it was a spiritual artifact soaked in fifty years of blood magic. "Consider it payment for room and board, freak," Regina sneered, forcing the silver band over her wrist. They thought they were discarding a burden. They didn't realize I was the only dam holding back a tidal wave of their own bad karma. As I signed the papers, voluntarily severing our ties, the air pressure plummeted. The bracelet began to constrict like a snake, turning Regina's flesh a necrotic purple as the protection I offered vanished. Before they could scream, a matte black helicopter bearing the Sterling Industries crest descended onto the muddy lawn, blowing their plastic lawn chairs into the neighbor's yard. A man in a bespoke charcoal suit stepped out, ignoring the filth to bow before me. He looked at my terrified foster family and announced, "We are here to retrieve the Sterling heiress." I smiled at Regina, whose arm was already beginning to rot, and whispered, "Keep the bracelet. You'll need it to pay for the amputation."”