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Reborn as a Mind-Reading Empress

Falling for his warm touch despite his usual coldness, she loved him only to be disappointed and betrayed in the end. When love turns to darkness, it festers to be poisonous and consumes the soul. The naive Arabella evolved. . . . “Thank you for becoming my wife,” was her cold husband’s last words before he died, coupled with a smile that had never before graced his lips. Not on their wedding day. And not even at the birth of their only child. Emperor Ferdinand, someone Arabella loved so much, killed their son. She became a villainess and vowed revenge for her beloved son. For a decade, she used everything she could to make Ferdinand pay. Until finally, he fell to ruin. With her revenge complete, Arabella's life soon ended with her dead husband right beside her. But fate wasn’t done playing with her. All of a sudden, she was back two decades ago right after their wedding. Was it a curse or a blessing? It doesn’t matter. Because there is only one thing she needed to do. “I will ruin you in this lifetime too,” that was her hateful promise to herself upon realizing she was reborn. And in her second life, Arabella was bestowed a gift to uncover the truth. Who was wrong and who was right? Only time will tell.

Athena_Varinder · Fantasy
Not enough ratings
827 Chs

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Only seventy percent (70%) of Adolfo's earnings from the Prudencians were left, but it was still a huge amount. It would rather greatly boost and hasten the recovery of Prudencia.

They would no longer need to shell out the budget from the Imperial Palace to help Prudencia since the remaining amount from Adolfo's earnings was more than enough to support the Prudencians for years.

If the money wasn't for the Prudencians, Ferdinand would have donated all of it out of pride. Valeria wasn't lacking, and if it does, he could just get the budget from his island back in Estrella.

Thus, they could simply say Valeria didn't need the money since they could give Prudencia all the support they needed.

However, it was money earned from the suffering of Prudencians themselves, so it had to at least reach them after what they went through due to it.