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Reborn From The Lake: My Stoic Savior

Chapter 6 

Word Count: 663    |    Released on: 30/04/2026

erately tried to claw back her sense of sup

some stupid letters back wouldn't change t

ged that Kurtis came from old money on the Eas

ed coat. She spat that the shoes on Kurtis's fee

lifeline. She didn't dare look directly at Bridget, but she and Gretel puffed up their chests. They s

h anger. She looked at them with the mild fascinati

breath, Bridget tilted her head.

economic data and social structu

oice was ice-cold and surgical as s

ly an heir to a New York syndicate, he wouldn't b

ld money families didn't do manual labor; they b

ze. The confidence in he

watch Kurtis wore on his left wrist. The

in a department store window downtown, priced at under fifty dollars, noting it w

to look at Julieta, her eyes silently aski

screamed at Bridget to shut her mo

d away the final layer of the lie. She called Kurtis a vain,

eyes. She whispered that Juli

ayed along with Kurtis's lie because it made he

ll the blood drained from her face. He

riginal Bridget crying in the dirt while

over Bridget. Not just for these stupid g

d into flint. She was

hot out and clamped onto the s

the bag. But the adrenaline in Bridget's recover

ap zipper busted open with a loud tearin

and a stack of pink envelop

She dropped to a crouch and snatched

nting the edges. The number didn't matc

She stood up slowly, towering over Julieta,

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Reborn From The Lake: My Stoic Savior
Reborn From The Lake: My Stoic Savior
“Bridget, a ruthless twenty-first-century Wall Street analyst, woke up violently coughing up murky lake water in a decaying 1978 slum. She quickly realized she was trapped in the body of a naive, marginalized teenager who had just committed suicide over a boy's cruel rejection. The original girl had been mercilessly bullied by a fake rich kid named Kurtis and his cruel followers. They had publicly read her desperate love letters out loud, mocking her as a toad trying to eat swan meat, and simply watched as she threw herself into the freezing water. Now, her impoverished mother was left weeping by the bed, facing catastrophic debt and total social ruin in their small town. Everyone expected the surviving girl to wake up begging and crying for the boy who humiliated her. Instead, a cold, calculating fury took over Bridget's analytical mind. "I already died in that lake. That stupid girl is never coming back." How could anyone throw their life away for a pathetic, vain clown wearing a mass-produced fifty-dollar watch? To Bridget, those uncollected love letters weren't symbols of teenage heartbreak. They were toxic assets. They were reputation landmines left out in the open that threatened her new family's survival. Locking away the dead girl's weak emotions, Bridget forced her freezing, exhausted body out of the clinic bed. She set a hard three-month deadline to drag this family out of tier-one poverty. But first, she was marching straight to the volunteer camp to liquidate those liabilities and completely destroy the people who drove this body to death.”