
Reborn As The Alphas' Hated Mate
I woke up in a lavish bedroom, only to find a man built like a god of war chained to my wall, glaring at me with pure, unadulterated hatred.
A glowing apparition appeared and told me I had died in a car crash and transmigrated into the body of Elara, a tyrant Luna. Worse, the chained man was Ryker, one of my six fated mates whom the original Elara had brutally tortured.
Because of her sadistic crimes-starving them, exiling them, and sending two of them on a suicide mission-my affinity with them was at negative five hundred. The apparition delivered my terrifying death sentence.
"In three days, at the Marking Ceremony, you will be killed by your six mates."
No matter what I did-freeing Ryker, sharing my food, or lifting their brother's exile-they viewed every act of kindness as a sick, twisted trap. They were just waiting for the punchline to my cruel joke, ready to expose me and end my life.
I was just a librarian who organized book clubs and paid my taxes. Why did the Goddess throw me into this doomed vessel to pay for a psychopath's blood debts? How was I supposed to survive when the men destined to love me were actively plotting to rip my throat out?
Cornered by their righteous fury, I realized playing defense wouldn't work. I grabbed a dagger, sliced my own palm over the ceremonial stone, and swore a blood oath to bring their missing brothers home-or initiate a soul-shattering Rejection Ceremony myself.
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Chapter 1
Elara Valerius POV:
I woke to a pounding headache, the kind that felt like a spike being driven between my eyes. A groan escaped my lips, the sound foreign and raspy in the heavy silence. My eyelids fluttered open, heavy as lead shutters, revealing a room that wasn't mine.
A canopy of dark, blood-red silk billowed above me, held by four intricately carved posts of some dark wood. My fingers twitched against sheets that felt like spun moonlight, softer than anything I'd ever touched. The air was thick with the scent of pine, damp earth, and something else… something metallic and coppery.
Blood.
My heart hammered against my ribs. Fragmented memories, sharp and violent, sliced through the fog in my brain. A sneering laugh. The glint of jewels. The crunch of bone. They weren't my memories, but they were in my head, a vicious storm of someone else’s life.
I pushed myself up, my body screaming in protest. Every muscle ached, a deep, cellular exhaustion that left me feeling hollowed out. My gaze swept the opulent room—gilded furniture, velvet curtains, a roaring fireplace—and landed in the far corner.
And my breath caught in my throat.
A man was chained to the wall.
He was built like a god of war, all broad shoulders and corded muscle, his bare torso a canvas of scars old and new. Heavy, gleaming silver chains bound his wrists to the stone wall, the metal glowing with a faint, sickly light. His head was bowed, his jet-black hair falling over his face.
As if sensing my stare, he lifted his head.
My world tilted on its axis. His eyes were the color of molten gold, burning with a hatred so pure and intense it was a physical force. It slammed into me, stealing the air from my lungs, a promise of brutal, violent retribution.
A voice, low and guttural, echoed in the back of my mind. It wasn't my voice. It was a possessive, primal growl.
*Mine!*
I recoiled from the thought, from the animalistic claim that had risen unbidden from my soul. I tried to speak, to ask the question screaming in my mind—*who are you?*—but my throat was a desert, my lips cracked and dry.
A cruel, slow smile twisted his lips, not reaching those burning eyes. His voice was a low rasp, like stones grinding together. "Awake, are you? The Tyrant graces us with her presence." He shifted, the silver chains clinking musically, a sound that made my teeth ache. "What new torment have you devised for me today?"
*Tyrant.* The word sent a chill skittering down my spine. I was a librarian. I organized book clubs and paid my taxes. I wasn't a tyrant.
I tried to swing my legs over the side of the massive bed, but my limbs felt like water. A wave of dizziness washed over me, and I collapsed back against the pillows, weak and trembling.
His golden eyes raked over my form, disgust and contempt rolling off him in palpable waves.
My frantic gaze darted around the room again, searching for anything familiar. This wasn't my small, cluttered apartment. This was a medieval fantasy, a gilded cage. Then I saw it—a full-length mirror with an ornate silver frame.
With a surge of adrenaline, I forced myself off the bed, my bare feet sinking into a plush fur rug. I stumbled, my legs threatening to buckle, and half-crawled, half-walked to the mirror.
The face that stared back was not my own.
It was a face of impossible beauty—high cheekbones, a full, petulant mouth, and eyes the color of amethysts. Long, dark chocolate waves of hair cascaded over slender shoulders. She was exquisite. And she was a stranger.
A short, sharp scream tore from my throat. It was a sound of pure, unadulterated terror.
The sound seemed to agitate the man in the corner. A low growl rumbled in his chest, and he strained against the chains, his muscles bunching. The silver links groaned under the pressure.
"Stop your games, Elara," he snarled.
Just then, a figure shimmered into existence between me and the mirror. It was translucent, a being of soft, ethereal light.
The chained man—Ryker, a name whispered by the foreign memories—couldn't see it. His furious gaze was locked on me, his suspicion deepening at my bizarre behavior.
"Do not be alarmed, Elara Valerius," the apparition said. Its voice was calm, androgynous, almost digital. "Or rather, the soul currently occupying this body."
I stared, speechless, at the being who called himself Finn Shaw.
"You died," Finn stated, with no preamble, no gentleness. "A car accident. The Moon Goddess has summoned your soul to this world, to this body. The previous Elara's soul has… faded."
He gestured with a luminous hand towards the corner. "He is Ryker Blackwood. One of your six fated mates. The original Elara, your vessel's previous owner, has been torturing him."
I looked at the raw, red welts on Ryker's wrists where the silver seared his skin, at the faded lines of old scars. I finally understood the inferno of hate in his eyes.
Finn's next words were a death sentence. "According to the threads of fate, in three days, at the Marking Ceremony, you will be killed by your six mates. A joint execution."
The floor seemed to drop out from under me. Three days. I had three days to live.
"Is there... is there any way to stop it?" I whispered, my voice trembling.
Finn's expressionless form remained unchanged. "The Goddess has given you a chance. A gift. But it is up to you to unlock it."
My inner wolf, the beast that had claimed Ryker as *mine*, paced restlessly in my mind, a confusing mix of primal desire for the man who wanted me dead. I, on the other hand, was terrified of him.
Ryker watched me, his face a mask of contempt as I stared at empty air. He probably thought I was insane. Or worse, plotting something even more depraved.
Gathering every ounce of courage I possessed, I met his golden eyes. My voice was a broken whisper. "I... I'm not going to hurt you."
A harsh, barking laugh erupted from him, a sound utterly devoid of humor. It was the most heartbreaking sound I had ever heard.
Finn's form began to fade, his light dimming.
"Remember, your every choice now determines whether you live or die."
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8.4
Seraphina died betrayed. She perished in flames-poisoned by Darius, the fated mate she'd foolishly loved. Her childhood sweetheart, who sacrificed her only to save his mistress.
Reborn five years earlier, Seraphina vows: Never again. No more submissions. No more suffering his cruelty. This time, she'll rewrite her destiny - then she meets Kairos.
The Untamed Alpha King who loathes the mate bond after his own betrayal. Her second-chance mate - a bond that will kill her if she rejects it.
Now, caught between Kairos' relentless pursuit and Darius' desperate attempts to reclaim her, Seraphina faces an impossible choice:
Drown the world in vengeance... or risk her shattered heart on the mate who could either heal her scars or destroy her completely?

9.2
Clara was drowning in student debt and barely making rent when she downloaded a fantasy mobile game to escape reality.
Inside the game, an exiled prince named Alex was freezing to death. Pitying him, she spent her last few dollars on microtransactions to fix his shelter and cure his poison.
But the game was far too real.
Every time she paid, the prince reacted. When she complained aloud about going broke, the in-game army suddenly halted, as if the prince had heard her voice.
Then, the terrifying real-world consequences hit.
Clara woke up to find her water glass and a box of Kleenex had vanished from her locked bedroom overnight.
She frantically searched the tiny apartment, her heart pounding in her chest.
She thought she was losing her mind. Had she thrown them out in her sleep? Was there a stalker hiding in her home?
How could physical objects just disappear into thin air behind a deadbolted door?
Until she looked at her nightstand.
Sitting exactly where her missing items used to be was a glowing, weightless crystal cup that defied all logic.
And on her laptop screen, the exiled prince was carefully holding her Kleenex box, offering a mountain of real gold on an altar.
She hadn't just downloaded a mobile game; she had opened a cross-dimensional trade route with a desperate future king.

9.4
I was lying in a sterile hospital room, dying of cancer, with only a fake infertility report to keep me company.
Right before my heart monitor flatlined, a stranger walked in and handed me a medical file.
He told me that my fiancé, Garret, had zero sperm viability. The baby my adoptive sister, Beryl, was carrying wasn't his.
When Beryl got pregnant years ago, my adoptive parents forced me to break my engagement and take the blame for being barren.
I was discarded by Garret, mocked by Beryl's triumphant smiles, and kicked out of the house.
I was left to rot alone in a hospital bed while they lived the perfect life stolen from me.
My entire existence had been a cage built on a single, disgusting lie.
The anger burned away my despair. Why was I the only one who didn't know?
Why did I let them use me as a maid and a shield for their filthy secrets?
As the darkness swallowed me, I prayed for just one more chance.
I opened my eyes to the sound of my adoptive mother yelling my name.
The calendar on the wall read March 15, 2019—the exact day they forced me to give up Garret.
This time, I didn't cry or beg.
"You want Beryl to have Garret? Fine," I told my shocked adoptive parents. "But I want a cash buyout, and we are legally severing this adoption."
Then, I set my sights on Douglass Ward—the stranger from the hospital room.

7.5
I thought my best friend Mila and my lover Preston were my only salvation from Essex Langley, the ruthless billionaire who kept me caged in his estate.
I trusted them blindly when they planned my grand escape.
But it was all a cruel setup.
Mila deliberately leaked the plan to Essex's guards to win his favor, and Preston only wanted my family's shares to pay off his massive debts.
When we were caught in the rose garden, Preston shoved me toward the guards and ran for his life.
"You're insane if you think I actually loved a freak like you!"
I was dragged back into the manor, my ribs cracking under heavy boots.
I bled out on the freezing marble floor, staring into Essex’s unhinged, mad eyes as I took my last agonizing breath.
Until the moment I died, I couldn't accept it.
I had ruined my own life, adopting a hideous punk look with fake tattoos and piercings just to make Essex hate me, all for two people who saw me as nothing but a sacrificial lamb.
Why was my blind rebellion rewarded with such a brutal betrayal?
Opening my eyes again, the white-hot pain was gone.
I was back in the freezing bedroom on my eighteenth birthday, the very night Mila would come to orchestrate my ruin.
I looked at the rebellious, smudged stranger in the mirror.
This time, I calmly washed off the black makeup, took out my lip ring, and put on a pristine white dress.
If fighting the devil got me killed, then in this life, I would tame him and make them all pay.

8.0
She has thirty days. Ten billion dollars. And a quantum space that can swallow anything.
Kinsey Elliott died cold, starving, and betrayed—pushed into a frozen abyss by the uncle who stole her fortune.
Then she woke up.
Back in her penthouse. Back in her perfect body. Back with a silver mark on her wrist that lets her store entire warehouses of supplies in a dimension where time stands still.
The world has thirty days until a global ice age freezes everything.
Her family has thirty days to try to lock her away, steal her money, and have her killed.
And Kinsey? She has thirty days to turn ten billion dollars into an invisible fortress—and burn every last one of them to the ground.
She's not surviving the apocalypse.
She's building it.

9.0
I was the wolfless orphan taken in by the Blackwood pack, secretly in love with Ryker, the future Alpha.
At the Mating Moon ceremony, the Goddess miraculously chose me as his fated mate.
But instead of a blessing, it became my ultimate nightmare. He dragged me onto the sacred stone in front of the entire pack to publicly humiliate me.
"I reject you, Elara Vance, as my mate!"
He chose a powerful she-wolf over a freak like me. The severing of the bond nearly killed me. I accepted his rejection and fled, living as a rogue for three years to bury the agonizing echo of his betrayal.
When I finally returned to visit his sick father, I was no longer that pathetic, broken girl.
Yet, the very night I arrived, he threw a lavish engagement party with his chosen Luna, a deliberate slap in the face.
I refused to run this time. I walked into his ballroom with my head held high to prove I was finally free of him.
But the moment our eyes met across the crowded room, a soul-crushing agony exploded in my chest.
Across the hall, Ryker let out a harsh gasp, clutching his heart in identical, terrifying pain.
The sacred bond he had so ruthlessly destroyed three years ago wasn't dead.
And now, it was going to destroy us both.