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Reborn with My Bestie

Reborn with My Bestie

When my best friend and I realized we had been reborn and traveled back several decades, we locked eyes, collapsed into each other's arms, and sobbed, shouting that we wanted to break off our engagements. The entire neighborhood whispered that we had lost our minds. But only we knew the truth. In our past lives, this was the day everything was sealed: she married a battalion commander, Ned Stark, and I became the wife of a high school teacher, Robbie Stark. My husband betrayed me. For the sake of that pretentious whore, Scarlett Wheaton, he stole my university admission letter and let her take my place on campus. The world mocked me as a failure, and Robbie stood by in silence. After we married, every time he touched me, he would immediately write another love letter to Scarlett—atoning for his supposed guilt. "Scarlett, even if I can't be with you in this life, my soul will always belong to you alone." Even my own child despised me, calling me an ignorant village woman, urging me again and again to divorce so that his father could be with his "true love," Scarlett. And my best friend, Rachel Croft—born the daughter of a factory director—was tricked by her husband, Ned, under the pretense of buying a house. He drained her savings and her wages for twenty long years. It wasn't until she fell gravely ill and went to sell the house that she discovered the deed he had given her was a forgery. The real house—the one paid in full—was in Scarlett's name. One of Scarlett's dresses cost more than my friend's entire monthly salary. When Rachel begged to reclaim what rightfully belonged to her, she was met only with contempt from Ned and her child. "All you ever care about is money. You're nothing like Scarlett, who isn't materialistic at all. Your illness is retribution," Ned had said. "Exactly. Only someone as noble and kind as Scarlett deserves to be my mother!" her child had said. Rachel and I both spent our lives working ourselves to the bone, only to end with nothing—dying bitter and broken from the injustice. But this time, fate has given us another chance. I will go to university. Rachel will become a wealthy woman. This time, without us paving the way, those shameless men and that wretched woman think they can still live happily ever after? Dream on.
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Frequently Asked Questions

A lot gets said about Cregan Stark being the "Iron Hand," but I think reducing him to just being ruthless misses the point entirely. His leadership was fundamentally about restoring equilibrium, not just punishing the guilty. He arrives at the tail end of a catastrophic civil war where the concept of justice has been completely perverted. His key trait is this unshakeable, almost primordial sense of balance. It’s not personal vengeance; it’s about cosmic ledger-keeping. The realm broke its oaths, shed blood unlawfully, and someone had to be the instrument to settle the debt.

That’s why he insists on executing the perpetrators, even the ones who switched to the winning side at the last minute. People call it harsh, but I see it as him refusing to let pragmatism completely overwrite principle. He provided a brutal, terrifying clarity that the war had lacked. At the same time, he wasn’t a mindless executioner—he spared the younger participants, sent others to the Wall, and then… he just went home. He didn’t seize power for himself. That might be his most defining trait: the absence of personal ambition. He did his duty as he saw it, re-established a baseline of Stark-like honor and consequence, and then returned to the North, which needed him more than the south ever did. His leadership was a cold, necessary medicine, administered once and then withdrawn.

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