
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 6
Elara Valerius POV:
I spent the night in a feverish, pain-filled haze. When morning finally came, the cramps had subsided, but the gnawing hunger was back with a vengeance, a hollow ache that echoed the emptiness of my situation. Simple acts of goodwill were being twisted into elaborate conspiracies. I couldn't win their trust by playing defense. I had to change the game.
My eyes fell upon the treasures littering the room. A jewelry box overflowing with necklaces, rings, and brooches. Wardrobes stuffed with silk and velvet gowns. Gilded statues and ornate vases. To the original Elara, these were symbols of her status. To me, they were currency.
A plan, desperate and audacious, began to form in my mind. I would sell these trinkets and buy what this pack truly needed: food, medicine, a future.
But I couldn't just walk into a human town. I was the Luna. My face was known, and my sudden appearance in a pawn shop would raise too many questions. I needed an intermediary, someone who moved in the shadows.
A memory, not my own, surfaced. A silver whistle, carved with the image of a raven, hidden in the back of a drawer. It was used to summon the pack's messenger, a wolf named Solwing who handled… discreet affairs.
I found the whistle and blew. The note was low and piercing, barely audible to my ears, but I knew it would travel. Moments later, a figure melted out of the shadows on my balcony, so silent I almost didn't see him. He was tall and slender, with a quiet, watchful intensity. He dropped to one knee, his head bowed.
"Luna," he murmured, his voice a dry rustle of leaves.
I didn't waste time. I had already selected several pieces of jewelry—valuable, but not so unique as to be instantly recognizable—and wrapped them in a square of velvet.
"Take these to the nearest human town," I commanded, my voice steadier than I felt. "Pawn them. Use the money to buy as much meat, bread, and basic medical supplies as you can carry. Bandages, antiseptic, pain relievers."
Solwing looked up, and for the first time, I saw a flicker of surprise in his dark, unreadable eyes. He was used to fetching luxuries for the Luna, not necessities.
"Be fast," I added. "And be discreet. No one is to know."
He gave a curt nod, took the velvet bundle, and was gone as silently as he had arrived.
The waiting was agony. Every creak of the floorboards outside my door sent a jolt of anxiety through me. Was this a mistake? Would Ryker see this as yet another move in a game he was determined to win?
I paced to the large window, peering out at the pack lands below. And then I saw him. A lone figure at the edge of the woods, leaning against the trunk of a massive oak. It was Kade, the boy whose name had appeared on my status panel. He looked thin and exhausted, a ghost haunting the edges of his own home. Even after the meal I'd inadvertently provided, years of hardship weren't erased overnight. He was an outcast, forbidden from setting foot in the Packhouse.
A sharp pang of something—pity, anger, responsibility—pierced through my own fear. It was monstrously cruel. This was his family.
In that moment, my plan solidified. It wasn't just about survival anymore. It was about fixing what was broken.
Solwing returned as dusk painted the sky in shades of bruised purple. He brought back more than I could have hoped for: several heavy sacks and crates of food, a well-stocked medical kit, and a small, heavy pouch of coins. I directed him to store the bulk of the food in an empty antechamber near the Great Hall, bringing only the medical kit and a few supplies to my room, and pressed a few of the gold coins into his hand as payment. The surprise in his eyes was back, wider this time.
I stared at the mountain of supplies. This was power. Real power. Not the cruel, arbitrary power the old Elara had wielded, but the power to heal, to provide, to unite. But if I just started handing it out, it would be seen as another bribe, another manipulation.
I needed to make a statement. Publicly. Officially.
"Solwing," I said, my voice firm. "Go to Alpha Ryker and his brothers. Inform them that the Luna is calling a pack meeting in the Great Hall. Effective immediately."
Only the Alpha or the Luna could convene the entire pack. It was a definitive, unignorable assertion of authority.
Solwing bowed and vanished once more.
I walked to my door and pulled it open. Zane was standing guard outside, his arms crossed, his expression a familiar mask of suspicion.
I looked past him, my voice ringing out in the stone corridor, loud enough for anyone nearby to hear.
"Go and bring Kade inside," I commanded. "His exile is over. As of right now."
Zane's jaw dropped. His eyes widened in stunned disbelief, the order so far outside the realm of his expectations that he couldn't seem to process it.
My gaze went to the darkening woods beyond the Packhouse walls, where I knew a lonely boy was shivering in the cold. I was going to fix this. And I was going to do it in front of them all.
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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.