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The Burned Wife Reborn For Spectacular Revenge

The Burned Wife Reborn For Spectacular Revenge

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I lived my entire life in a beautiful, naive bubble, completely trusting my husband and my best friend. That was until they tied me to a chair, slit my vocal cords, and set my family's estate on fire. As the flames crept closer, my husband Demarco calmly crushed my diamond wedding ring under his leather heel. My best friend Cristin walked in, leaning against his shoulder and pouring her champagne onto the floorboards to fuel the fire. "Your grandfather didn't just have a stroke. The medication swap was incredibly easy to arrange." Looking down at my bleeding body, they casually confessed to murdering the only person who had ever truly protected me, all to swallow the Bridges empire. I couldn't even scream. I could only suffocate in the thick black smoke as they turned their backs and locked the heavy oak door behind them. Why was I so blind? How could the two people I loved most treat me like disposable garbage? In my final moments of agonizing pain and pure, concentrated fury, I pulled out the detonator my grandfather had secretly left me. I pressed the button, blowing the estate and all of us to hell. But the burning stopped. When I opened my eyes, I was staring up at a pristine crystal chandelier. I was fifteen years old again, lying in my childhood bedroom, right before my treacherous uncle and those parasites started tearing my family apart. And I didn't come back empty-handed. This time, I am not the naive heiress.

Contents

The Burned Wife Reborn For Spectacular Revenge Chapter 1

"The Bridges empire is bankrupt, Ava."

Demarco Hines delivered the words with the same smooth cadence he used to order his morning espresso. He stood in the center of the master bedroom of the Bridges estate in Long Island. Thick, black smoke rolled across the ceiling. The heat in the room was a physical weight, pressing down on Ava's shoulders. The flames licked at the edges of the million-dollar Persian rug, turning the intricate silk threads into curling black ash.

Ava sat immobilized. Thick, rough hemp rope bound her wrists and ankles to the heavy brass-carved mahogany chair. The coarse fibers bit into her skin, grinding against her bones with every shallow breath she took.

She could not speak. A thick layer of gauze wrapped around her throat, rapidly soaking through with fresh, warm blood. The sharp ache radiating from her severed vocal cords pulsed in time with her frantic heartbeat. The blade had been precise. Fatal enough to silence her, slow enough to let her watch.

The heavy oak door of the bedroom had been kicked open moments ago, the wood splintering around the lock.

Demarco walked toward her. He wore a bespoke Italian suit, the dark fabric immaculate against the backdrop of the burning room. His leather oxfords clicked against the hardwood floor. He stopped right in front of her. He raised his foot and brought his heel down hard on the diamond wedding ring lying on the floor. The platinum band warped. The diamond shattered into dull fragments under his sole.

Ava forced her eyes wide. Her chest heaved. She pushed air up her windpipe, trying to form a scream, a question, a curse. Only a wet, mechanical wheeze escaped her lips. The sound was pathetic, like a broken bellows.

Demarco leaned down. He pinched her jaw between his thumb and index finger. His grip was tight, digging into the skin that had been eaten away by chemical burns. The raw, exposed tissue screamed in protest. He forced her head up, making her look into his eyes.

"It is all gone," he whispered.

The sharp clatter of high heels echoed from the hallway.

Cristin Kerr walked through the broken doorway. She held a crystal flute half-filled with champagne. She did not cough. She did not look at the flames. She walked straight to Demarco and slipped her arm through his. She rested her head against his shoulder. The shoulder that belonged to Ava's husband.

Ava's pupils contracted until they were tiny black pinpricks. Her chest stopped moving. The oxygen in the room seemed to vanish. Cristin. Her best friend. The woman who had held her hand through every crisis.

Cristin tilted her glass. The pale yellow liquid spilled onto the floorboards. The alcohol hit the creeping flames, and the fire flared higher, sending a wave of blistering heat against Ava's legs.

"You lived your whole life in a bubble, Ava," Cristin said, looking down at her. "A beautiful, stupid little bubble we built for you."

Demarco let go of Ava's chin. "Even Conrad," he said, his voice flat. "Your grandfather didn't just have a stroke. The medication swap was incredibly easy to arrange."

The words hit Ava's chest like a physical blow. Her stomach violently contracted. A sharp, tearing pain ripped through her heart. Grandpa Conrad. The only person who had truly protected her. A thick tear mixed with blood slid down her ruined cheek, dropping onto her collarbone.

Demarco pulled a silk handkerchief from his breast pocket. He wiped his fingers meticulously, scrubbing away the residue of Ava's burned skin. He tossed the silk square directly into the fire.

He wrapped his arm around Cristin's waist. They turned their backs to Ava and walked out of the room. They did not look back.

The heavy oak door slammed shut. The metal deadbolt slid into place with a loud, definitive click.

Thick, black smoke poured into Ava's lungs. She coughed violently. The motion tore at the fresh wound on her throat. Hot, coppery blood spilled down her chest. The heat blistered her arms. The fire was inches away now.

But the heat inside her chest was hotter. A pure, concentrated fury pumped through her veins, overriding the physical agony.

She twisted her right wrist against the rough rope. The skin peeled back, exposing raw muscle, but she did not stop. She forced her hand downward. From the sleeve of her silk nightgown, a tiny plastic detonator slid into her palm. Her fingers curled tightly around it.

She had found the financial discrepancies weeks ago. In the naive, stupid bubble of her past life, she would never have known how to orchestrate this. But Grandpa Conrad had known. On his deathbed, slipping into the shadows of his stroke, he had pressed a burner phone into her palm. "If you ever need a weapon to flip the board," he had rasped, his voice barely a whisper, "call this number." It was only in her final, desperate days that she finally understood his warning. She had made the call. She had bought the C4 on the black market and wired it into the hidden safe behind the bedroom wall. A dead man's switch for a dying empire.

Ava stared through the wall of fire at the locked door. The corners of her cracked, bleeding lips pulled up into a rigid smile.

She pressed her thumb down on the red button. She pushed it until the plastic cracked under her nail.

The sound was absolute. The shockwave tore the roof off the estate. The floorboards disintegrated. A blinding, pure white light swallowed the chair, the fire, the room, and the hallway outside.

Then, the burning stopped.

A freezing chill slammed into Ava's body. She gasped. Her eyes snapped open.

There was no smoke. There was no fire. She was staring up at a pristine crystal chandelier.

Her clothes were soaked in cold sweat. Her muscles trembled violently, weak from a massive fever. She turned her head. The calendar on the wall of the Hampton estate guest room stared back at her. The year printed in bold black ink was the year she turned fifteen.

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