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Reborn To Ruin: The Jilted Heiress's Revenge

Chapter 9 No.9

Word Count: 507    |    Released on: 13/01/2026

nce herself that she had hallucinated th

blazer, the knee socks. She pulled her hair ba

scanning for the security booth. Usua

the booth

re was leaning

a

t perfectly, the sleeves strained against his biceps. He wore aviator sunglasses, hidi

board, looking like t

own, trying to blend i

voice cut thro

arted around her like

eckoned her over wi

er books to her chest. "Is

s, looking over the rim.

ha

s brushed the skin of her neck-warm, rough, electric.

shocking. It was something a lov

s breath

d, his voice lo

r hands

t's v

Bennet looked furious, his face red. Brittany looked conf

tudent like that?" Bennet demanded, st

d. He didn't take off the sungl

ocating. He didn't say a word. He just radia

g. His bravado evaporated. He look

ard asked. The word "son" was an i

hard. "I... she

ed your help," he said. He tur

at Bennet, th

aid clearly

along, children

practically dragged her away, casti

the guard. "You en

utting his sunglasses back

ear. "Stop hiding, Chels

inst her shoulder and walke

her skin burning wher

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Reborn To Ruin: The Jilted Heiress's Revenge
Reborn To Ruin: The Jilted Heiress's Revenge
“I lay on a mildewed mattress in a run-down motel, my body trembling from withdrawal. Once the most feared "Gossip Queen" in Hollywood, I was now a forty-three-year-old ghost staring at a cracked mirror, waiting for the end. The door clicked open, and Brittany Potts stepped in, looking immaculate in a beige trench coat that cost more than my life. She didn't come to help; she tossed a waiver of marital assets onto my bed and handed me a cup of coffee laced with something that smelled like bitter almonds. She laughed, telling me my husband, Bennet, was already in the Bahamas celebrating my death. I froze when I saw the sapphire pendant around her neck-my mother's necklace, which had vanished the day she died. As the poison began to burn through my chest, Brittany leaned in and whispered her final secret: she was the one who cut the brake lines on the car that killed my father when we were teenagers. My entire life had been a lie. The pills, the scandal, the bankruptcy-it was all a masterpiece of betrayal orchestrated by the two people I trusted most. I died on that filthy floor, suffocating on my own rage and the taste of chemicals, praying for a single chance to make them pay. But when I opened my eyes, the pain was gone. I was sitting in my old bedroom, the morning sun shining on a calendar that read September 15, 2024. My mother's voice, warm and alive, called me for breakfast from downstairs. I was eighteen again, back in my senior year at Crestview Academy, and the monsters who destroyed me were still pretending to be my friends. This time, I'm the one who holds the shears.”