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Reborn Heiress: Marrying The Disabled Billionaire

Reborn Heiress: Marrying The Disabled Billionaire

Author: : Elroy Notman
Genre: Romance
I was the sole heir to the Webster fortune, set to marry the man of my dreams and live happily ever after. But instead of a wedding, my fiancé and my step-sister gave me a brutal shove off a penthouse balcony. As I plummeted towards the New York concrete, I saw them standing side-by-side, looking down at me with cold indifference and a triumphant smirk. "Everything that belongs to the Websters is mine now, sister!" my step-sister laughed, her voice cutting through the wind. "Don't blame us. You were just in the way," my fiancé added. The truth hit me harder than the fall itself. His romantic proposal, her sweet sisterly hugs, our shared future-it was all a meticulously crafted lie to steal the company my grandfather left me. My spine shattered into a thousand pieces as I hit the rooftop below. Lying in a pool of my own blood, struggling to breathe, I was consumed by a crushing wave of nausea and regret. Why was I so incredibly naive? How could I have blindly trusted the vipers living under my own roof, letting them take everything I loved? In my final agonizing breath, I screamed silently for just one more chance to make them pay. Then, a blinding white light flashed, and I opened my eyes to the scent of clean linen. I was back in my own bed, exactly seven days before the wedding. This time, I would be the one doing the pushing.

Chapter 1

The shove was brutally simple.

One moment, the cold metal of the balcony railing was against Cordelia Webster's back.The next, there was only air.

The glittering expanse of the New York City skyline tilted violently, a sea of indifferent lights rushing up to meet her. Wind screamed in her ears, whipping her hair across her face, stealing the breath she was trying to gasp.Her last sight as she tumbled over the edge was of them.

Her fiancé, Hays Lyons, his handsome face a mask of cold indifference. And her step-sister, Kasey Pugh, a triumphant, ugly smirk twisting her pretty features. They stood side-by-side, framed against the warm light of the penthouse living room, a perfect picture of betrayal.

Kasey's shrill laugh cut through the wind. "Everything that belongs to the Websters is mine now, sister!"

Hays's voice followed, devoid of any emotion. "Don't blame us. You were just in the way."

The words hit her harder than the fall itself. A fractured slideshow of memories flashed behind her eyes: Hays slipping the engagement ring on her finger, his eyes promising forever; Kasey hugging her, whispering how happy she was for them; the three of them touring this very penthouse, their future home. Lies. It was all a meticulously crafted lie.

A gut-wrenching nausea seized her, a physical sickness born of pure, undiluted hatred. She wanted to scream, to curse them, but her lungs were empty. The air was a solid wall she was hurtling towards.

The impact was a universe of pain.

Darkness crept in at the edges of her vision. Her last coherent thought was a wave of crushing regret. Regret for her own stupidity, for trusting them, for disappointing the grandfather who had left her everything.

One more chance, a silent scream tore through her fading consciousness. Just one more chance.

The darkness consumed her.

Then, a blinding white light.

Cordelia's eyes flew open. She gasped, a ragged, desperate sound, her chest heaving. The feeling of soft sheets, not broken concrete, was beneath her. The scent of lavender and clean linen, not blood, filled her nostrils.

She shot up, her heart hammering against her ribs like a trapped bird. She was in her bedroom in the Webster family mansion. Sunlight streamed through a gap in the heavy curtains. She frantically ran her hands over her body. No pain. No blood.

Her trembling fingers fumbled for the phone on her nightstand. The screen lit up, displaying the date.

It was a week before her wedding.

A choked, hysterical laugh escaped her lips. It was real. She was back.

Today. Today was the day the announcement of her engagement party was scheduled to be published in the society pages. A cold, hard certainty settled in her gut, displacing the panic. She knew, with the chilling clarity of experience, that tonight, Hays and Kasey would be at the Pinnacle Penthouse. In their bed.

A fire, cold and vengeful, began to burn in her veins. This time, there would be no balcony, no fall. This time, she would be the one pushing.

The phone buzzed in her hand. A text from Hays.

'Morning, beautiful. Can't wait for tonight's announcement.'

The casual hypocrisy made her stomach churn. Kasey's innocent-looking face swam in her mind, the face of a viper hiding behind a sweet smile. Exposing them was just the beginning. She would take back everything. Her company, her name, her life.

But she couldn't do it alone. Her father, Harrison, was blinded by his second wife, Melissa-Kasey's mother. The company, Webster Enterprises, was riddled with people loyal to them. She needed an ally. A powerful one.

A name surfaced from the depths of her memory. Evander Hawthorne.

A man she'd only heard of in her past life, the reclusive, marginalized heir to the Hawthorne fortune. She remembered a news report, a small article buried in the business section. A chemical plant explosion on the outskirts of the city. The Hawthorne convoy had been caught in the blast.

Today. It was happening today.

This was her chance. Her only chance to reach the one man in New York whose power could rival the Lyons family.

She swung her legs out of bed, the sudden movement making her head spin for a second. She steadied herself against the nightstand, her reflection in the vanity mirror showing a girl she barely recognized. The naive optimism was gone from her eyes, replaced by a chillingly sharp focus.

She deleted Hays's message without a reply. Then, she dialed the number for the family's head of security.

Her voice was steady, cold as ice. "I need a car. Unmarked. Now."

Her mission was no longer to be a happy bride. It was to become a queen of vengeance.

Chapter 2

The engine of the nondescript sedan whined in protest as Cordelia pushed it past the speed limit. The industrial outskirts of New York City blurred into a grim landscape of concrete and steel. Ahead, she saw it: a convoy of three black cars, a Bentley leading the procession like a hearse. Evander Hawthorne's cars.

Her knuckles were white on the steering wheel. According to her memory, they were less than two miles from the chemical plant. Less than ten minutes until the explosion.

There was no time for subtlety.

She took a deep breath, the air tasting of metal and her own fear. Then she stomped on the accelerator. The sedan surged forward, weaving past a slow-moving truck. She pulled into the opposite lane, directly into the path of the Bentley.

The screech of tires was deafening. Cordelia slammed on her brakes, bringing her car to a halt sideways, completely blocking the two-lane road.

The Bentley stopped inches from her driver's side door. The two SUVs behind it fanned out, boxing her in. Doors flew open and men in dark suits, professional and menacing, emerged, their hands inside their jackets.

Cordelia ignored them. She threw her door open and walked directly towards the Bentley's rear passenger window, her heart pounding a frantic rhythm against her ribs. The tinted glass was an impenetrable black mirror.

She didn't hesitate. She knocked sharply on the glass.

"Evander Hawthorne!" Her voice was louder than she expected, cutting through the tense silence. "Get out of the car. If you don't, you're going to die here in the next five minutes."

For a moment, nothing happened. Then, the window slid down with a soft, electric hum.

The man inside was even more striking than the society photos suggested. His face was all sharp angles and cold control, his eyes a piercing, intelligent gray that seemed to see right through her. They held no warmth, only a chillingly calm assessment.

"Who are you?" he asked. His voice was a low, quiet rumble that carried an unmistakable weight of authority.

"Who I am doesn't matter," Cordelia said, her words tumbling out in a rush. "What matters is that the chemical plant up the road is about to explode."

The driver, a burly man with a thick neck, snorted, catching her eye in the rearview mirror. "Ma'am, that's a new one. We've heard better pickup lines."

Evander's gaze remained fixed on her, unwavering. He was weighing her, judging the frantic sincerity in her eyes against the sheer insanity of her claim. She could see the flicker of doubt, the tiny seed of caution she had planted.

The driver's hand moved to put the car in gear.

"No!" Cordelia acted on pure instinct. She reached back into her own car, yanked the key from the ignition, and hurled it into the tall grass by the side of the road. "Nobody is going anywhere until we are clear of this place."

Her car was now a dead barricade. One of the bodyguards moved towards her, his face set in a grim line.

"Three minutes!" her voice was firm.

As if on cue, a low, deep rumble started, a vibration she felt in the soles of her feet. It grew rapidly into a deafening roar.

Then the world turned white and orange.

A massive fireball erupted from the direction of the plant, climbing into the sky like a malevolent sun. The shockwave hit them a second later, a physical punch of air that rocked the heavy cars and bent the trees along the road. The sound was a physical blow, a cataclysmic CRACK that vibrated in her bones.

The driver and the bodyguards were frozen, their faces pale with shock, staring at the pillar of black smoke now dominating the horizon. They looked from the inferno back to her, their professional composure shattered, replaced by raw disbelief.

If they had kept driving... they would have been at the epicenter. This woman, this crazy, screaming woman, had just saved all of their lives.

Cordelia's legs felt weak, but she forced herself to stand tall. She met Evander's gaze through the open window. For the first time, his expression had changed. The cold assessment was gone, replaced by something deep and unreadable. He raised a hand, a subtle gesture that made his men stand down.

She walked back to his window, her adrenaline-fueled bravado returning. She leaned down, her voice low and steady.

"I saved your life, Mr. Hawthorne. Now, I need you to repay me."

One of his eyebrows arched slightly, the only sign of his surprise. "What do you want?"

Cordelia looked him directly in the eye, letting the weight of her next words sink in.

"I hope you will honor the verbal marriage agreement made by our grandfathers.I want you to marry me."

The proposal hung in the air, more shocking than the explosion itself. In the middle of the chaos, surrounded by the evidence of a disaster she had predicted, she was no longer just a madwoman. She was a mystery he couldn't afford to ignore.

He stared at her for a long, silent moment, his gaze intense, as if he were trying to peel back the layers of her skin to see the truth beneath. Then, he turned his head slightly.

"Turn the car around," he ordered his driver. "Get us out of here."

Then his piercing gray eyes found hers again.

"Get in."

Chapter 3

The ride away from the burning horizon was silent. Cordelia sat on the plush leather seat opposite Evander, the air in the car thick with unspoken questions.

He didn't speak to her. Instead, he made a series of quiet, efficient calls on a satellite phone, his voice a low monotone as he gave orders to secure the area, deal with the authorities, and, she was certain, to dig up every piece of information that existed on Cordelia Webster.

The silence was her ally, allowing the magnitude of what had just happened to settle. It gave her time to let her own racing heart slow to a steady, determined beat.

Finally, he ended his last call and placed the phone on the console beside him. His gray eyes pinned her in place.

"Cordelia Webster," he said, his voice flat. "Daughter of Harrison Webster. Fiancée of Hays Lyons. The wedding announcement is tomorrow. So I'll ask you again. Why would you want to marry me?"

The speed of his information gathering didn't surprise her. A cold smile touched her lips. "That wedding is not going to happen."

His question only solidified her resolve. She couldn't negotiate with Evander Hawthorne as another man's fiancée. She needed to sever that tie, publicly and brutally.

"Drop me at the corner of 5th and 58th," she told the driver, her tone leaving no room for argument.

Evander watched her, his expression unreadable, but he gave a slight nod to the driver. The moment the Bentley pulled to the curb, Cordelia was out, melting into the mid-day crowd without a backward glance.

She didn't hail a cab. She walked two blocks to a small coffee shop, ordered a black coffee she didn't touch, and used their public Wi-Fi on a burner phone she'd brought with her. She sent a single encrypted email to a private investigator she'd used once before to check on a flaky charity donation. The message was simple.

'Pinnacle Penthouse. All security and internal camera footage from the last 24 hours. Urgent.'

Thirty minutes later, a secure download link appeared in her temporary inbox. She clicked it. The video feed from the master bedroom loaded. And there they were. Hays and Kasey, tangled together in the sheets of the bed that was supposed to be hers. The sight didn't spark pain, only a chilling, surgical rage. She saved a few key clips to a secure cloud drive.

She left the coffee shop and walked the few blocks to the gleaming glass tower of the Pinnacle. She stood on the sidewalk across the street, looking up at the penthouse that was supposed to represent her future. It represented nothing now but a stage for her revenge.

She didn't go up. She didn't storm in. She took out her personal cell phone and dialed three numbers: 9-1-1.

When the operator answered, Cordelia pitched her voice to a perfect frequency of fear and vulnerability.

"Hello? I... I need to report a break-in," she said, letting a convincing tremor enter her words. "My apartment... the Pinnacle Penthouse. I think someone's in there. I'm too scared to go up."

The operator took down the details, her voice calm and reassuring. Police were on their way.

Cordelia disconnected the call, her face a mask of cold composure. This was better than a confrontation. A police report. Bodycam footage. Official records. These were objective, irrefutable weapons. It was her property; she had every right to report a trespass.

That 911 call was the sound of her old life being severed. She was no longer the victim. She was the hunter.

Two police cruisers, sirens screaming, pulled up to the building minutes later. Cordelia approached the officers, showing them her ID and the digital deed to the property on her phone. She gave them the master code.

"I just got a security alert," she lied smoothly, her eyes wide with feigned worry. "I'm so sorry to bother you."

The officers were professional, telling her to wait downstairs where it was safe. She watched them enter the building. Then she waited, a statue of patience on the bustling New York sidewalk.

Soon, she saw them. Hays and Kasey, being escorted through the lobby by the police officers. They were hastily dressed, their hair a mess, faces a mixture of confusion and panic. Hays was trying to argue with the officers, while Kasey looked like she was about to burst into tears.

Hays's eyes scanned the street and locked with hers. A flash of pure shock, followed by dawning horror, crossed his face.

Cordelia met his gaze and allowed a look of innocent, bewildered confusion to form on her own face, as if to say, Hays? What on earth is going on?

His world was about to come crashing down. And she had just handed the demolition crew the detonator.

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