An Alpha's Contract

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Alpha's Blood Contract
Alpha's Blood Contract
Elara was never loved. Only used. When she discovers her mate, Lucien, plans to kill her after draining her cursed blood, she runs into the forbidden forest and straight into the arms of the one man she was taught to fear. Alaric Ashford. The enemy. The ruthless Alpha who thrives on destruction. She saves him from death itself...and seals her own fate. Because one touch of her blood awakens something dark in him. Possessive. Unforgiving. Obsessed. “You saved me,” he murmurs, “so now you’re mine.” But Elara has a secret even he doesn’t know—one that could either heal his curse...or destroy everything between them.
10
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17 Chapters
The Alpha's Contract Bride
The Alpha's Contract Bride
“There’s something else, and I’m curious to know what it is.” His face inched closer to my neck, and he inhaled deeply. My grip on my purse tightened, my heart pounding against my chest as I fought the urge to whimper and curl into his chest. “There’s something about you that entrances me, but I can’t quite put my finger on it.” “If this is an attempt to coax me into accepting your proposal, you’re wasting your time. I will not marry you.” ~ ‘Alphas are heartless and egoistic creatures. They view us, omegas, as mere playthings for their twisted desires. You must never, under any circumstances, associate yourself with an alpha. It’s better to be dead than to cross paths with one.’ Those words were Arielle’s guiding principle in a ruthless world where Alphas dominated, Betas served, and Omegas—despite their intimate connection with the Alphas—were treated as nothing more than objects of desire. But when Alpha Raphael materializes out of thin air and offers her a substantial sum of money to be his contractual bride, Arielle is torn between holding onto her beliefs and sacrificing them to save her ailing mother. Arielle is left with no choice but to marry him, and although she is determined to harbor animosity towards her new spouse, there’s something about him that draws her in. However, when demonic creatures hellbent on destruction threaten her new life, will Arielle put her resentment towards Raphael aside and assist him? And what dark secret does her mother keep hidden that ensures the death of all her loved ones with each passing day?
10
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109 Chapters
Hybrid Alpha's Contract Bride
Hybrid Alpha's Contract Bride
"Take off your clothes," he ordered in his cool, baritone voice.My robe slid off my shoulders and I stood in front of him naked and ashamed.But when his wet lips worked their way down my neck, I found myself trembling in fear and desire.***I was 20 years old, a maid.I was given to the bloodthirsty Alpha, the cold and cruel demon that all had feared.Knowing my love for him was hopeless, I made a contract with him: he would take down my enemy in exchange for my life.On the day I got my revenge, I was ready to die, until I found out...***“Amber, do NOT run away from me again," he commanded as he took a step forward."Don't come any closer," I held a dagger up to my throat with one hand, and covered my abdomen with the other, my voice calm. “Or you will never meet your child.”Hybrid Alpha's Contract Bride is created by Reina Bellevue, an eGlobal Creative Publishing signed author.
9.8
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53 Chapters
The Alpha's Contract Luna
The Alpha's Contract Luna
Kylie stood by, watching her husband introduce his lover to the pack as their new Luna and all she could do was stare at them in tears, Even though she was pregnant with her husband's baby, he treated her like she meant nothing to him. But when the most important thing is being taken away from her by her husband and his mistress, Kylie must fight, and what better way to do that than seal a contract deal with her true mate, the most formidable Alpha in North America. ____________ "Marry me, and I will make your mate and his mistress pay for hurting you. I will get back everything you lost as well." His deep yet desperate voice uttered and as I stared at him, I could only wonder why he was willing to marry me instead of taking the offer I had earlier proposed, "Why Alpha Damon? I made you a better deal so why do you want me?" He took a few steps closer to me and I could feel my heart pounding in my ribcage as I heard, "Because you, Kylie Anderson is the key to what I want."
8
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218 Chapters
The Alpha's Contract Bride
The Alpha's Contract Bride
On the day Nick Grange and I hold our marking ceremony, he hands me a three-year agreement. "Our mate bond is only to solidify the alliance between the Lycus and Lunaria packs," he says. "The one I love is Zora. If you sign this contract, the mate bond will dissolve automatically after three years. When that time comes, I'll let you go." Without hesitation, I sign it. This union is something I made happen because from the moment I met Nick, I fell deeply in love with him. For three years, we live in harmony. Nick treats me well, making me form the mistaken belief that he might love me back too. But that illusion shatters. Nick brings Zora Knott, who has just returned to the Lycus pack, to his birthday banquet. Even without Nick bringing up our agreement, I know it's time for me to leave at that moment. I leave to set him free. But why is he searching for me everywhere after I'm gone?
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10 Chapters
The Alpha's Contract Mate
The Alpha's Contract Mate
When Ben cheats on Anabelle on her wedding day with her cousin.She turns to Jason out of desperation to solve the financial burden on her pack she accepts his proposal to be his wife only on one condition (To give him a heir ). Caught in a loveless marriage . Annabelle runs away in a bid to save herself and hide the secret she has been keeping because she does not trust Jason . Little does she know that Jason is madly in love with her and hot on her trail . What happens when one hot obsessive alpha and a smart-mouthed woman collide in a contract marriage?
Not enough ratings
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30 Chapters

What Genre Is 'The Contract' And Who Is Its Target Audience?

3 Answers2025-06-14 07:09:13

I've read 'The Contract' multiple times, and it's a perfect blend of legal thriller and romance. The story follows a high-powered lawyer who gets entangled in a marriage contract with a rival, mixing intense courtroom battles with sizzling chemistry. The target audience is clearly adults, especially those who enjoy smart, fast-paced narratives where love and law collide. It appeals to fans of authors like John Grisham but with a steamy twist that romance readers adore. The legal jargon is kept light enough for casual readers while satisfying legal drama enthusiasts. If you like your books with equal parts tension and passion, this one's for you.

Why Did Thomas Hobbes Trust A Social Contract To Prevent War?

3 Answers2025-08-29 04:24:21

When I first dug into 'Leviathan' during a rainy weekend and a stack of philosophy texts, what hit me was how practical and desperate Hobbes sounded. He had just watched England tear itself apart during the Civil War, and he wasn’t writing dreamy ideals — he was trying to stop people getting slaughtered. For Hobbes, the state of nature wasn't a poetic garden; it was a brutal scramble where everyone has roughly the same ability to kill or be killed, which produces constant fear. That fear, plus the basic drive for self-preservation, makes life in the state of nature intolerable, even if everyone is otherwise reasonably capable and intelligent. So the social contract is a kind of pragmatic trapdoor: give up some freedoms to a common authority so you stop living in perpetual danger.
He trusted the social contract because it replaces fear with predictability. If individuals agree, even tacitly, to transfer certain rights to a sovereign who can enforce rules, then everyone gains protected time to pursue projects, commerce, and safety. Hobbes thought people were basically rational calculators when it came to survival: when the expected cost of violence outweighs any gain, consenting to authority is just common sense. Importantly, the sovereign must be able to impose sanctions; otherwise promises are meaningless. That’s why Hobbes leans toward a strong central power — fragile enforcement means the contract collapses back into conflict.
I also find his view painfully human in its limits. He assumes fear and self-interest dominate, underplays solidarity and institutional habits, and doesn’t give democratic deliberation much credit. Still, as a diagnosis born out of warfare and chaos, the social contract makes a lot of grim, convincing sense to me — it’s less an ideal and more a peace treaty we reluctantly accept so life can go on.

Is Fated To My Ex'S Uncle, My Contract Alpha On Webtoon?

4 Answers2025-10-20 16:04:12

I got curious about this title and went down a little rabbit hole in my head — here's what I can tell you from what I've seen around the community. 'Fated to My Ex's Uncle, My Contract Alpha' doesn't ring as a Webtoon Originals title; Webtoon's Originals usually have consistent chapter formatting, the creator's profile linked, and an obvious imprint on the episode list. If you search the Webtoon app or site and only find fan-upload mirrors or partial chapters on sketchy aggregator sites, that's usually a red flag that it isn't officially hosted there.

A lot of series with long, dramatic titles like that pop up as web novels or on platforms like Tapas, Webnovel, Tappytoon, or Lezhin instead. Sometimes a Korean or Chinese manhwa/manhua gets licensed to different platforms regionally, so it could be officially published somewhere else. My quick checklist when something feels iffy: check the author name, look for official translation credits, see if the publisher is listed, and follow the author or publisher on social media for release announcements. Honestly, I’d love it to be on Webtoon because that platform is so easy to read on my phone — but until there's a clear official listing, I'd suspect it's not there in an official capacity. That's my gut take after poking through what I know and what the community usually shares.

Is Rejected But Desired: The Alpha'S Regret Being Adapted?

5 Answers2025-10-21 21:38:54

Can't hide my excitement whenever this title pops up—'Rejected But Desired: The Alpha's Regret' has a devoted following and I always check for adaptation news. So far, I haven't seen any official studio or publisher announcement confirming a TV, anime, or live-action adaptation. There are the usual fan translations, discussion threads, and fan art that keep the community buzzing, and sometimes that kind of activity gets mistaken online for a production leak.

If an adaptation were to happen, I'd expect a few clear signs first: an official licensing tweet or press release, teaser art from the original creator or publisher, or early casting rumors from reputable entertainment outlets. For titles with this kind of passionate niche audience, sometimes adaptations start as audio dramas or limited web series before big studios take them on, so that's another thing I'd watch for.

Until something concrete drops, I'm keeping hopeful but skeptical—I'll be refreshing the official publisher's feed and creator posts like a fiend, because this story deserves a faithful adaptation in my opinion.

Who Is The Author Of Alpha'S Hated Mate And Other Works?

4 Answers2025-10-20 06:33:37

You'd be surprised how many indie romance and paranormal authors use variations of the phrase 'Alpha's Hated Mate' for their stories, so pinning down a single canonical author can be tricky without a cover or store page to look at. In my own dives through Kindle, Wattpad, and Goodreads, I've encountered several stand-alone novellas and serials that use that exact wording or something close to it—often self-published under pen names. That means if you search for 'Alpha's Hated Mate' you'll likely find different results depending on the platform and the region, and each listing will show the author name tied to that particular edition.

If you want to track down the specific writer behind a version you like, here's the quick method I always use: open the storefront page (Amazon Kindle, Apple Books, Kobo, or Wattpad), and check the top of the listing for the author name and their profile link; that usually leads to other works and an author bio. Look for an ISBN or ASIN on ebook pages—that's helpful for differentiating editions. Goodreads is amazing for cross-referencing: the community tends to consolidate editions under a single title entry and shows the credited author and user reviews, which often mention pen names or the series the book belongs to. If the book is a serial on Wattpad or Royal Road, the author's username and a link to their profile will be on the story page, and many writers list other titles there. Social media and author pages (Instagram, Facebook author pages, or a personal website) are gold mines too; indie authors often link all of their series and cover reveals there.

While I don't want to point to a single name unless I'm looking at a specific listing, I will say the 'alpha/hated mate' trope is super popular among indie werewolf and paranormal romance circles. If you enjoy that flavor, you'll probably find a lot of similar vibes from authors who specialize in small-town packs, enemies-to-lovers heat, and protective-alphas-with-a-dark-past. Browsing the “customers also bought” or “readers also enjoyed” sections on a product page tends to surface reliable names and titles, so that’s a neat shortcut when a title is ambiguous. Personally, I love getting lost in these niche communities—there’s always a new writer with a voice that clicks, and discovering who wrote a particular twisty, snarky, or angsty take on the alpha/omega dynamic is part of the fun. Happy hunting; finding the exact author often leads to a whole backlog of bingeable reads that hit the same sweet spot.

What Happens At The End Of THE ALPHA'S DOOM?

4 Answers2025-10-20 08:17:51

That finale of 'THE ALPHA\'S DOOM' absolutely refuses to let you breathe — it strings together revelation, sacrifice, and a gutting emotional payoff in a way that still has me replaying scenes in my head. The climax takes place at the lunar convergence, a ritual site that’s been built up throughout the story as the hinge between the world of the pack and the older, darker magics that have been whispering doom. Our protagonist, Mara, finally corners the alpha, Dorian, after a chase that feels like every grudge and secret in the book comes tumbling out. The big twist is that the doom everyone feared isn’t a simple assassination or takeover — it’s a chain curse bound to the alpha line, fed by blood and ancient bargains. Dorian isn’t an evil tyrant; he’s been the prison keeping that curse from overflowing, and the more you learn about him in the last act, the more heartbreaking his choices become.

The fight itself is equal parts physical and moral. There’s an explosive battle with pack factions and corrupted beasts, sure, but the heart of the ending is a conversation — painful, raw, and loaded with regret — where Mara confronts the truth that to end the doom she can’t just kill the alpha or break his crown. The ritual to sever the chain requires a willing transfer of burden: someone must take the curse with intent to die holding it. Dorian, who’s carried generations of suffering, chooses to make that sacrifice. He accepts the ritual, not purely as repentance but as protection, because he believes the pack deserves freedom even if it costs him everything. Mara and the inner circle scramble to rewrite the ritual subtly — it isn’t a clean escape; Dorian’s death ruptures memories and leaves a hollow place in the pack, but it prevents the larger, more terrifying unravelling that the prophecy promised.

What really sold me was how the book handles aftermath. The pack doesn’t instantly heal; there’s political fallout, grief, and the practical consequences of losing an alpha who was both tyrant and guardian. Mara doesn’t want his role, but she steps up in a different way: not as an iron-fisted leader but as a keeper of the stories and a bridge between the old bargains and new beginnings. The epilogue skips forward a little — we see small, human moments: a rebuilt ritual stone with new carvings, a cottage where the alpha used to linger, and kids asking questions about courage and choice. It ends on a bittersweet note rather than a neat bow: the doom is broken, but the scars remain, and the real victory is that the pack now gets to decide its fate free from a curse. I loved that the finale trusted readers with moral complexity and let grief sit next to hope; it felt honest and earned, and I keep thinking about how messy bravery can be.

Is Marriage By Contract With A Billionaire Getting An Adaptation?

5 Answers2025-10-20 01:40:51

the short version is: there hasn't been a widely confirmed, big-studio adaptation announced as of mid-2024, but the situation is lively with rumors, fan hopes, and all the usual industry hustle. Lots of web novels and manhwa get picked up for dramas or live-action sooner or later, especially if they rack up strong readership and shareable moments, and this title has that kind of viral, shipping-friendly energy that producers drool over. That said, I haven't seen an official press release from a publisher, streaming platform, or the author confirming a TV or anime project — just speculative headlines, social media whispers, and occasional casting wishlists from fans.

If you're wondering what would realistically happen next, here's how these things usually play out (and why it's so easy for rumors to spin up): first an adaptation option is bought by a production company, often quietly; then there's a period of script development and maybe a formal announcement with cast and director; after that comes pre-production and filming, and then post-production and release. For a title like 'Marriage By Contract with a Billionaire', the most likely adaptation routes are a live-action drama — think K-drama or C-drama style — or a web drama produced by platforms like Netflix, iQIYI, Viki, or WeTV. An anime adaptation is less common for romance-heavy web novels unless the IP becomes undeniably huge, but never say never. Fans usually spot hints first on the author’s social media, on publisher pages, or via industry trades, so those are the feeds I tend to keep an eye on.

Personally, I would love to see a polished adaptation that leans into the chemistry and comedic beats of the contract-marriage trope while giving the characters some emotional depth. The story's beats — the cozy-bizarre logistics of a contract, the slow-burn of real feelings, power dynamics with a billionaire lead — translate really well to screen when done with a slightly glossy but grounded aesthetic. If it gets adapted, casting will make or break it; you want actors who can sell the banter and the quiet moments. Until there’s an official announcement, I’ll be following the author and publisher channels and rejoicing quietly whenever a reliable outlet posts a confirmation. If it does get greenlit, I’ll probably be first in line to binge the episodes and gush about the lead couple.

What Themes Does Alpha'S Betrayal, Luna'S Revenge Explore?

4 Answers2025-10-16 12:33:12

Rain slapped the window while I read 'Alpha's Betrayal, Luna's Revenge', and I couldn't put it down. The book dives hard into betrayal and loyalty—not just the dramatic backstabbing you might expect, but the quieter, slow erosion of trust between people who once swore to protect each other. There's a real focus on leadership and the cost of power; what it does to someone when they sacrifice intimacy and honesty to hold a position. That theme is threaded through personal relationships and wider political upheaval alike.

What hooked me most was how grief and revenge are treated as two sides of the same coin. Revenge isn't glamorized; it's heavy, messy, and morally ambiguous. The narrative asks whether justice can ever be worth the destruction it causes, and whether cycles of retaliation just birth more monsters. Alongside that, identity and transformation play big roles—characters reshape themselves after trauma, sometimes for survival, sometimes as a conscious rejection of their past.

On top of the emotional stuff there's a gorgeous use of lunar imagery: the moon isn't just backdrop but a living symbol of memory, cycles, and hidden truths. I left the book thinking about how fragile trust is, and how brave it takes to rebuild it. It stayed with me for days, in the best possible way.

How Does An Alpha'S Duty Shape The Protagonist'S Arc?

3 Answers2025-10-16 09:33:29

Stepping into the alpha role often forces characters to grow in brutal, beautiful ways.

I find that an alpha's duty becomes the engine of the protagonist's arc more than their powers or destiny ever are. The duty introduces stakes that are social, ethical, and deeply personal: protecting a group, making impossible choices, carrying the history and expectations of predecessors. That pressure warps private desires into public responsibilities, so a hero who once chased freedom or revenge suddenly learns to weigh every whim against the lives depending on them. In fiction this creates amazing tension—romance, rebellion, or selfish ambition all get tested on a communal scale.

On top of that, the duty reshapes relationships. Allies become mirrors that reflect whether the alpha is growing kinder or harder. Enemies teach lessons about justice and compromise. Sometimes the plot uses duty to strip the protagonist down to essentials: who they are when they have no title left, or who they become because they accept the title fully. I love when writers use that grind—slow training sequences, public failures, quiet moments of doubt—to make leadership feel earned rather than conferred. Ultimately, the alpha's duty isn't just a label; it's a narrative crucible that forges the protagonist into someone new, and I always get hooked watching that transformation play out in micro and macro ways.

Which TV Series Feature Love In Contract Storylines?

5 Answers2025-09-22 00:42:34

Sprinkling in some magic and charm, 'Contract Love' immediately comes to mind. The show's plot revolves around two individuals who enter a contractual relationship, only to find themselves grappling with real emotions as the story unfolds. Scene after scene, the way their interactions flip from strictly business to tender moments had me binge-watching through late nights. Another standout is 'Goblin,' which features a somewhat similar vibe, plus the added twist of a goblin's contract to find his bride! Hehe, what a unique way to weave fantasy with love!

Then there's 'It’s Okay to Not Be Okay,' which, while not a strict contract romance, has key contractual elements guiding the bond between the lead characters. Every episode dives deeper, showcasing how love can grow from the most unexpected places. The writing is so rich and emotional. Finally, I can't forget 'My Contracted Wife,' which gives a classic twist to the genre. If you enjoy romantic tension with comedic elements, this one is a delightful watch! So many feels, trust me!

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