Blood of the Mayflower: The Wright Dynasty
He died in 2026. He woke up in 1620 — sixteen years old, freezing, and three weeks from a coastline that doesn't exist on any map yet.
Thomas Wright remembers everything: which ships will sink and which will make empires, which men will be remembered as founders and which will vanish from history without a trace, and every hard-won lesson four centuries of a nation's rise and ruin can teach a man patient enough to use it quietly.
He isn't a soldier. He isn't a scientist. He's just a passenger — an orphan taken in by strangers, one of a hundred desperate souls crossing an ocean toward a "New World" he alone truly understands. But knowing the future is not the same as controlling it. In a colony where a careless word can mean the gallows, where half the ship won't survive the first winter, and where every alliance, every marriage, every whispered secret could either build a dynasty or bury one — Thomas has only one advantage no one else on the Mayflower will ever have.
He knows exactly how this story ends. Now he has four hundred years to make sure his family is the one writing it.
A slow-burn reincarnation saga of blood, ambition, and quiet empire — from a leaking ship in 1620 to the boardrooms and bloodlines of modern America.