Dead Mate, Living Nightmare

Married the Dead; Broke the Living
Married the Dead; Broke the Living
As Jastrelle's golden girl, I draw lots to pick my groom, and fate finally hands me Felix Ledger, the childhood sweetheart I've wanted forever. During the impromptu wedding, a funeral convoy belonging to a scion of a rich family in Jastrelle passes right outside. I hate the omen. Felix laughs, pulls me into his arms, and places the veil over my head himself. "I'll take it as a good omen. With you, I'm covered from first breath to last," he says. His adoptive sister, Winnie Ledger, hears him, bursts into tears, and bolts outside. The funeral convoy runs her down, and she dies. Felix barely reacts. Three years later, Dad is framed, driven into bankruptcy, and falls gravely ill. He dies, and I lose everything. At the funeral, Felix sends everyone off, shoves me into the open grave, and buries me alive. He spits, "You rigged everything to get me. You left Winnie ruined. She bolted outside, and that funeral convoy ran her down. For three years, remorse has eaten me alive. I want you torn apart! "With your last protector gone, I can finally make you suffer a hundredfold the pain Winnie felt and ease my hatred!" When I open my eyes, I'm back at the groom-selection ceremony. Dad smiles as he hands me the lots. I shake my head, look out the window, and point at the funeral convoy passing outside. "I'm not choosing anyone. I'll marry that dead man!"
8 Chapters
Nightmare
Nightmare
When love turns Pain, Destiny determines what happens next. When the Past clashes with the Present, Mysteries are revealed. What hate turns Love, Faith in Fate is restored.
Not enough ratings
10 Chapters
Nightmare
Nightmare
It’s ironic, you think you have a basic boring life: go to school, go on summer vacation, work, eat, sleep and repeat, and still people will find things to complain about saying they want more adventure, or something exciting to happen to them. Then suddenly, that exact thing happens to you. And you get dragged in to a war that’s been raging for hundreds of years. I’m only 17, I should be worrying about other things! Finishing school, what I want to do with my life, boys! But the day I meet Ash everything changed and I am yet to decided if they changed for the better. And it all started because of a nightmare. Who would have thought nightmares could be real. DEFINITELY NOT ME!…
Not enough ratings
100 Chapters
Broken Nightmare
Broken Nightmare
Have you ever had a nightmare you can't wake up from? Elana Suthard has an interesting ability to dream the future. When she dreams of her best friend, Claire, setting fire to the school, she can't believe herself. Having no idea what is going on, she stubbornly tries to find out what she can do to prevent it. Only when it does happen, the event unravels more mysteries than she thought was possible. Elana follows her best friend into the world of supernatural creatures, only to find out she is one of them. And although she now has Nathan Night who is surprisingly over-protective of her, there are a lot more people willing to hurt rather than help her.
9.6
46 Chapters
My Mate Is a Dead Man
My Mate Is a Dead Man
The day we were meant to be mated, my Alpha, Ford, was ambushed. Silver bullets shredded his car, sending it plunging off a bridge and into the river below. He was pronounced dead. Drowned. I was left pregnant with his heir, shattered by the raw agony of our severed mate bond. Then Ford's twin, Aiden, returned from abroad with his mate, Kyra. His identical face and a scent so similar to my mate's nearly drove me mad. A desperate part of me swore Ford was still alive. I told myself it was just grief. A widow's delusion. Until I overheard a hushed conversation and the horrifying truth slammed into me: the man pretending to be Aiden was Ford. He had faked his death. He'd let his own brother die in his place, all for Kyra—the other woman carrying his child. The grief that had crippled me instantly morphed into a cold, sharp rage. Ford didn't just break our bond; he shattered it. And I would make him pay. I wiped my tears and sent a single message to my brother, Billy, the Alpha of the Winterstone Pack. "Brother, I need a plane crash. He loves faking his death? Fine. Let him feel what it's like to truly lose a mate." Only when the news of my "death" spread did Ford reclaim his name. He knelt for seven days and nights in the ashes of the home we once shared, consumed by a grief of his own making.
10 Chapters
The Nightmare
The Nightmare
"I do trust you. I don't trust anyone else though. I can't even trust my own brother with you! Let alone my friends, pack or Alpha." he growled. 'I knew this was a bad idea. I should just go back to the forest!" I yelled back. Craig suddenly had me pinned against the seat. He straddled me and had me caged in his arms. 'You aren't leaving me ever! You are mine and I am yours. We are meant to be by each other's side. I will not allow you to leave!" Kitty was 15 when the world changed. Now her life is a living nightmare as she tries to survive in the woods without being discovered by one of the roving packs of supernatural beings. A secret about her and some lost friends may change everything but with it be for the better? Will her old friend become her new love? Can she trust the alpha to keep her safe? Kitty is thrust in a world of werewolves and vampires. Where no one is who she once thought they were.
10
82 Chapters

Who Wrote Bonding With My Lycan Prince Mate And Why?

4 Answers2025-10-20 10:05:19

Sliding into 'Bonding With My Lycan Prince Mate' felt like discovering a mixtape of werewolf romance tropes stitched together with sincere emotion. The book was written by Elara Night, who, from everything she shares in her author notes and interviews, wanted to marry old-school pack mythology with modern consent-forward romance. She writes with a wink at tropes—dominant princes, arranged bonds, the slow burn of mate recognition—yet she flips many expectations to emphasize respect, healing, and chosen family.

Elara clearly grew up on stories where the supernatural was shorthand for emotional extremes, and she said she was tired of seeing characters defined only by their bite or social rank. So she wrote this novel to explore how trust can be rebuilt in a power-imbalanced setting, and to give readers the warm, escapist comfort of wolves-and-royalty with an ethical backbone. I loved how she blends worldbuilding with tender moments; it’s cozy and a little wild, just my kind of guilty pleasure.

Where Can Fans Buy Fake It Till You Mate It Audiobook Versions?

4 Answers2025-10-20 08:04:34

Hunting for ways to listen to 'Fake it Till You Mate it'? I’ve dug around a bunch of places and here’s where I’d start — and what I’d watch out for. First, the big audiobook storefronts: Audible (via Amazon) usually has the largest catalog and often exclusive narrations, so check there for purchase or with a credit if you subscribe. Apple Books and Google Play Books also sell single audiobooks without a subscription model, which is handy if you just want to own the file in your ecosystem. Kobo has audiobooks too, and if you prefer supporting indie stores, Libro.fm lets you buy audiobooks while directing your payment to an independent bookstore.

If you want library access, try OverDrive/Libby or Hoopla — they don’t cost anything if your local library carries the title, though there can be waitlists. For bargains, Chirp and Audiobooks.com sometimes run sales, and Scribd offers unlimited listening for a subscription. Always sample the narration before buying because a great narrator makes or breaks my enjoyment. I usually check the publisher’s site or the book’s ISBN if the storefront search isn’t turning it up. Bottom line: start with Audible/Apple/Google for convenience, then check Libro.fm or libraries if you want to support smaller outlets — I personally love discovering a narrator who brings the book to life, so I often splurge on the edition with the best sample.

What Fan Theories Explain The Vampire Kings Servant Mate Ending?

4 Answers2025-10-20 06:49:35

Can't stop thinking about how the ending of 'The Vampire King's Servant Mate' splits the fandom — it feels like three different stories stitched together on purpose. I gravitated toward the translation-missing-pages theory first: there are odd jumps in pacing and a line or two that reads like it belongs earlier. People point to the blood sigil on page X and a throwaway line from the minor noble that never gets resolved; those gaps scream editorial cuts. If you read the raw web novel threads and compare, you can see where arcs were telescoped, which makes the closure feel rushed.

Another theory I cling to is the time-loop/broken-memory angle. The protagonist's confusion about names and repeated imagery — the moon, the same street lamp, the moth — reads like someone trapped in cyclical reincarnation. That would explain the bittersweet, half-happy end: the curse is lifted for a moment, or the vampire dies, but the soul bond persists and resets. Finally, there's the meta-sequel idea: the author intentionally left scaffolding so a side route or sequel can retcon parts. I like this because it keeps room for redemption, and I honestly hope they expand on the servant's POV in a follow-up — it feels necessary and oddly comforting to imagine more pages. I still get a little soft for the king's final glance, though.

Where Can I Buy Fake It Till You Mate It Audiobook?

5 Answers2025-10-20 03:02:46

If you're hunting for the audiobook of 'Fake it Till You Mate it', there are several reliable spots I always check first. Audible is the usual go-to — they often have the biggest audiobook catalogue and sometimes exclusive editions or narrator notes. If you already have an Audible subscription you can use a credit or buy it outright; otherwise watch for sales and Audible’s daily deals. Apple Books and Google Play Books are great alternatives if you prefer buying directly through your phone’s ecosystem — both let you download the file tied to your account and usually provide a free sample so you can check the narrator and production quality before committing. Kobo is another solid option, especially if you like collecting across different platforms, and Kobo often runs discounts that make purchases cheaper than full-price Audible buys.

For folks who want to borrow rather than buy, Libby/OverDrive and Hoopla are lifesavers through your local library. I check my library app first because you can sometimes borrow the exact audiobook copy for a two- or three-week loan with no cost, and Hoopla even lets you stream instantly if your library supports it. Scribd and Audiobooks.com are subscription services that let you stream many audiobooks as part of a monthly fee — worth it if you listen a lot. Also, don’t forget Libro.fm if supporting indie bookstores matters to you; they sell audiobooks and split revenue with local shops, and I love that community angle. If the audiobook is out of print or hard to find, secondhand marketplaces like eBay or Discogs can pop up with physical CDs or rare editions.

A few practical tips I’ve learned: check the narrator name and sample, because a great narrator can make a huge difference with a title like 'Fake it Till You Mate it'. Use price trackers and comparison sites, and check Chirp for limited-time discounted deals without needing a subscription. If you buy from Audible and also want the ebook, look for Whispersync bundles that give you a cheaper ebook + audiobook combo. Be mindful of regional availability — some services geo-restrict titles, so a VPN sometimes helps with previews, though buying legally within your region is safest. Finally, check the publisher or author’s official site; occasionally they sell audio directly or link to promotions, signed editions, or exclusive extras. I usually sample the first 10–15 minutes wherever possible, decide on the narrator vibe, and pick the platform that gives me the best price or the added benefit (credits, library loan, indie support) that I care about most. Happy listening — hope 'Fake it Till You Mate it' lands with a narrator you love and brightens your commute or evening walks.

Who Hides The Truth In The Rejected Ex-Mate Secret Identity?

5 Answers2025-10-20 03:10:11

the clearer one face becomes: Mara, the supposedly heartbroken ex, is the person who hides the truth. She plays the grief-act so convincingly in 'The Rejected Ex-mate' that everyone lowers their guard; I think that performance is her main camouflage. Small things betray her — a pattern of late-night notes that vanish, a habit of steering conversations away from timelines, and that glove she keeps in her pocket which appears in odd places. Those are the breadcrumbs that point to deliberate concealment rather than innocent confusion.

The second layer I love is the motive. Mara isn't hiding for malice so much as calculation: she protects someone else, edits memories to control the fallout, and uses the role of the wronged lover to control who asks uncomfortable questions. It's messy, human, and tragic. When I re-read the chapter where she returns the locket, I saw how the author seeded her guilt across small, mundane gestures — that subtlety sold me on her secrecy. I walked away feeling strangely sympathetic to her duplicity.

Does My Royal Mate Have A Sequel Or Spin-Off Announced?

5 Answers2025-10-20 02:52:15

so here’s the straight scoop: as of June 2024, there hasn’t been an official sequel or spin-off announced for 'My Royal Mate'. I keep an eye on the creator’s posts and the publisher’s news feed, and what pops up most are extra illustrations, occasional short bonus chapters, and fan translation chatter rather than a formal follow-up series. That said, many creators will test the waters with side stories or collaborations before committing to a full sequel, so those small releases are worth watching if you want any hint of future plans.

If you’re hoping for more content, I suggest bookmarking the official publication page and following the creator on their social channels — a lot of announcements drop there first. Also, don’t underestimate the power of supporting official releases: buying volumes, promoting legally, and politely voicing interest can nudge publishers. There’s a healthy stream of fanworks keeping the world alive, and sometimes those community vibes actually help convince rights-holders to greenlight new projects. Personally, I’m always half-expecting a surprise side story focused on a popular supporting character; it’d scratch the itch until anything official lands.

What Is The Chose Mate Of The Beastmen Empire Plot Summary?

4 Answers2025-10-20 19:59:00

I dove into 'Chose Mate Of The Beastmen Empire' expecting a straightforward romance and came away way more invested than I thought I would be. The core plot hooks on a ritual: a human (often an outsider or someone from a conquered border village) is identified by prophecy or bloodline as the 'chosen mate' for the ruling beast-king. That bond isn't just romantic; it's political. When the protagonist is brought to the capital, they discover the choice forces them into a position where their emotions literally affect the balance of power—calming warlike tribes, stabilizing volatile magic, or angering rival houses who wanted a different alliance.

From there the story branches into political intrigue, clan politics, and slow-burn character work. There's usually a ceremony where the mate and the sovereign share a bond (sometimes magical, sometimes symbolic) that lets the mate communicate with beastmen or act as a bridge between species. Assassination attempts, jealous nobles, and cultural clashes create tension, while the lead pair learn to navigate consent, agency, and what it means to lead together.

I loved how the series blends intimate relationship scenes with broader world-building: rituals, hunting customs, even the empire's legal code for mixed unions. It never feels like pure fluff; the relationship has consequences that reshape the empire, and watching both characters grow felt surprisingly satisfying to me.

Where Can I Read Alpha'S Hated Mate Legally Online?

4 Answers2025-10-20 15:57:07

If you're hunting for a legal place to read 'Alpha's Hated Mate', I've got a little checklist I always use when tracking down niche titles online — and it usually turns up the official options or at least points me to the right publisher. My approach is simple: find the original publisher or the author's official page first, then work outward to major storefronts and library services. That way you're supporting the creators and getting a reliable, high-quality translation (if one exists).

Start by searching for the book title alongside words like 'official', 'publisher', or the author's name. Many web novels, light novels, and comics have an official page on the publisher’s site or the author posts links to authorized translations on social media. If the title has an official English release, it will often be sold on big stores like the Amazon Kindle Store, Apple Books, Google Play Books, Kobo, or BookWalker. For comics and manhwa specifically, check platforms that license Korean and indie works such as Webtoon, Tapas, Lezhin Comics, Tappytoon, or Comikey. I also always check the major ebook stores because sometimes small-press English translations show up there even if they’re not widely advertised.

If you want free (but legal) ways to read, don’t forget library apps. OverDrive/Libby and Hoopla sometimes carry licensed digital novels and comics, and they’re an amazing way to support creators through library purchases. Some publishers also run subscription sites or parts of their catalog on a chapter-by-chapter basis; if 'Alpha's Hated Mate' has an ongoing release schedule, an official serial platform might be where it lives. Another solid move is to visit reader communities and look for links that point to the publisher or official store pages rather than fan-uploaded scans or PDFs — these communities often keep lists of licensed titles and where to buy them.

If a search turns up only fan translations or scanlations, that often means there’s no official English release yet. In that case, two things I do: either I follow the author/publisher on social media and sign up for newsletters to catch any future licensing news, or I support other works by the author through any official channels they list (sometimes that nudges publishers to license more of their catalog). Buying or subscribing to a legitimate release when it becomes available is the best way to show demand.

Personally, I get a kick out of the hunt — finding the official release feels like discovering a secret treasure chest, and supporting the creators makes the story that much sweeter to read. If you’re patient and thorough with those publisher and storefront checks, you’ll usually find a legal option or a clear path to one, and that’s always worth the wait.

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.

Who Wrote Betrayed By My Mate - Hybrids Sorrow And Why?

4 Answers2025-10-20 06:12:02

I stumbled across 'Betrayed by My Mate - Hybrids Sorrow' while hunting through a pile of supernatural romance reads, and the byline credited a fan-writer using the pen name 'NyxLunaWrites' (you'll often find them across Wattpad and Archive of Our Own). They tend to publish long, emotionally driven wolf/shifter stories, and this one reads like their signature: visceral, wounded, and full of messy feelings. The title itself gives the tone away — it’s a hurt/comfort romance with betrayal at its core, and the author’s style leans into slow burns where characters are forced to face the fallout of broken trust rather than gloss over it with tropey forgiveness.

From everything I gathered, the ‘why’ behind the story is twofold. Creatively, 'NyxLunaWrites' seems to be fascinated by hybrid identities — characters who are caught between species, cultures, or roles — and the inherent conflict that brings. Writing about a hybrid who’s betrayed by their supposed mate lets the author explore isolation, belonging, and the harsher side of pack politics in a way that pure fantasy or straightforward romance rarely allows. On a more personal level, you can feel the catharsis: the scenes where the protagonist processes grief and anger suggest the author was working through themes of trust and boundaries, probably inspired by real emotional experiences or by the community of readers who crave honest portrayals of recovery. The author’s notes and comment replies often reveal that they write to connect with readers who’ve been through messy relationships and want to see a character rebuild themselves instead of just getting babied back into love.

Stylistically, the piece uses betrayal as a plot engine — not just a dramatic twist — to interrogate loyalty, identity, and what it means to belong. There's a lot of worldbuilding devoted to hybrid social stigma and the politics of mate bonds, which tells me the writer enjoys using genre trappings to reflect real emotional stakes. They also lean heavily on sensory writing and intimate POVs to make the hurt feel immediate. That’s why it resonates: it's not just two lovers breaking up, it’s a character literally torn between worlds, and the author is less interested in neat closure and more invested in showing the messy, realistic path toward self-respect.

If you like stories that prioritize emotional realism within a supernatural setting, this one hits that sweet spot. I appreciated how the author balanced rage with healing, and how they let the betrayed character reclaim agency instead of simply finding a new love interest as a Band-Aid. The ending won’t be everyone’s cup of tea because it's more about repair than fairytale redemption, but that’s exactly why I kept thinking about it days after finishing. All in all, 'Betrayed by My Mate - Hybrids Sorrow' feels like a labor of love from a writer who wanted to explore pain honestly and give readers a protagonist who learns to stand on their own two feet — a satisfying, bittersweet read that stuck with me in the best way.

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