
Reborn as the Unwanted Mate
Indiana Sage wakes up inside her own werewolf novel-not as the loved main character but as the hated villain. Now reborn as Lady Lucindabella Pendragon, she's doomed to die painfully.
She's already ruined lives, forced an engagement, and tried to destroy the kingdom's greatest love story. Worse, she's engaged to Alpha Romanov "Rome" Windsor, the cold, dangerously powerful wolf prince who despises her and has every reason to.
Determined to survive, Indy breaks the engagement and steps off the villain's path. She helps Rome fall in love with Clara, the woman he's meant to choose. But the more she stays out of the spotlight, the more attention she draws. The kingdom starts watching. Other men start wanting her. And Rome can't stop watching the woman who now refuses to fight for him.
As desire tangles with regret, Indy realizes the story is no longer following the script she wrote. She was supposed to fade into the background. Instead, she becomes the one everyone wants.
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Chapter 1
INDY
If I ever mysteriously disappear, it won't be because of an ex-boyfriend or a serial killer. Although, the latter would be impossible. Despite living twenty-five whole years on this forsaken planet, I couldn't find the one for me just yet.
Not that I was complaining.
Humans are obnoxious. Plain and simple. We feel too much yet are somehow lacking empathy. We're a weird paradox that the Creator Himself probably finds scratching His head from time to time when looking down at us.
Exhibit A.
"Everly Rain, I hope your teeth rot for what you did to Clara," I muttered, reading as a new comment popped up on the latest chapter of my story.
"That's a new one," I chuckled. "They haven't come for my teeth before."
"Oh, here's another one."
"Are you seriously trying to make us feel bad for Lucinda? Girl, be for real. I'll find where you fucking live and make sure you-"
"Okay, that's enough," I said, shutting my laptop and closing my eyes. My temples were hurting from writing the entire day. Scratch that. I wrote some, deleted some, then wrote some, and deleted some more. It took me a groveling five hours to put out a single chapter, but the moment I uploaded it, the comments told me it was shit.
Let me explain something first.
I write werewolf books.
However, there's one teenie-weenie, minuscule, microscopic, not even slightly visible problem-I hate werewolf books.
I hate their rules and their pack dynamics. I also hate how some of the men can act like utter dogshit (pun intended) and still be forgiven in Chapter 36 because they suddenly "soften their voice" and "kiss her temple gently."
Yet, here I am. Six books in. Two under a pseudonym-Everly Rain. I wanted it to be entirely different from my real name-Indiana Sage, a name my mom gave me because I was born in Indiana. Creative, right?
The other four were under a ghost contract with some publishing house that treats me like a printer that occasionally bleeds. The current one I was writing had become my most successful one, 'The Wolf Prince and the White Rose.'
My latest crime was making Lucinda, the Wolf Prince's original mate, attack Clara, the ever-innocent protagonist. That attack was supposed to be the final blow before Lucinda's death. She had already been captured, detained, and tortured by the Alpha for all the atrocious things she had done.
However, just to keep readers on their toes, I decided to let Lucinda escape one more time before she was finally killed in the hands of the Wolf Prince himself.
The readers didn't like that, though.
I sighed once more, slumping on my worn-out seat as I removed the egg carton underneath my laptop. It was the only thing saving it from overheating. It was already late into the night, and the moon was high in the sky.
I glanced at the worn-out wall clock and saw that it was already 3 AM. I had to get up at 8 AM to go to my shift at the convenience store.
"Are you not going to sleep?"
I jolted in shock when Larissa, my roommate and best friend of seventeen years, spoke in a groggy voice.
I shook my head and smiled. "In a bit," I answered. "I'm thinking about how to appease my readers."
"Don't," she deadpanned. "All of the gods on this land know how hard you work for each chapter. Heck, you work hard in every aspect of your life, but you're never recognized for it. It's your story. As long as it isn't grammatically atrocious or absolutely unethical, I say that you should write what you want."
Running my fingers through my hair, I leaned back against the chair. "What I like to write doesn't sell at all, though. I need to write the way they want if I want to pay my bills on time."
"You can rely on me," she presented.
"I absolutely cannot."
She groaned in frustration. In truth, we have had this conversation plenty of times before. Although Larissa wasn't exactly well-off, she had a better job than mine. She worked as a receptionist at a hotel nearby, and her parents sometimes sent her an allowance when her funds were short.
Meanwhile, I had to drop out of college during my first year due to financial constraints. I worked a day shift in a convenience store, took up some photography gigs on the sidelines, and wrote my chapters in the evening.
"You have enough money, though," Larissa suddenly said, snapping me out of my thoughts.
I turned to her, and she was already staring at me with a knowing look in her eyes.
I pursed my lips before sighing.
"It's because your mother always asks for your money," she deadpanned.
"You know how it is," I muttered. "It'll be a pain in the ass if I refuse her requests. At least, she still calls me twice a month to see how I'm doing."
"Yeah-to ask for money."
The silence that followed right after wasn't suffocating. It was just the plain truth.
"You've always placed others first. You give your mom money even if you don't have anything to eat. You let your first crush go because our other friend liked her. He clearly liked you at that time!"
"Larissa," I smiled. "That was back in first grade."
"Still," she sighed. "Point proven. You're the type of person who lights up the entire room, but your world itself is dim. I hope you can start living for yourself. At this point, you're going to die without getting to experience the world in liberation."
I couldn't speak after she said all of those words.
I knew that her words held some truth. However, it was easier said than done. My life wasn't meant to be simple the moment I was born.
My dad was an alcoholic and died of liver cirrhosis when I was 19. Suddenly, the role of the breadwinner was thrust into my hands, so I had to give up everything and work my ass off to pay the debts that my father left behind. I managed to pay it all off when I turned 23, but it seemed the world was unsatisfied because my mother incurred another debt.
The sound of my ringtone snapped me out of my thoughts, also breaking the suffocating silence that Larissa's statement left.
I looked at the caller ID and sighed right away.
"It's your mom again, right?" Larissa muttered. Then she shook her head. "Don't answer it. You've already downed way too many cups of coffee and energy drinks for her to ask for more money at this time of the month."
"Hey, Mom," I said, answering the phone, making Larissa sigh in disappointment.
She usually only called me twice a month, and she had already done so. Somehow, there was a small hope inside my chest that she would be calling to actually check up on me.
"Send me more money."
That hope was instantly shattered.
I pursed my lips and heard Larissa sigh from her side of the room.
"Mom, I already sent you some. I even sent you some extra because you said you got into an accident."
"Well, it's not nearly enough," she scoffed. Her background was a familiar pop song paired with numerous voices shouting in excitement, so I reckoned she was out in a club.
"You have that writing shit, right? You've always been good at that, so send me some money. I know you're not broke because you have three jobs."
I heard someone calling her over, and her voice changed into a sweet one-a tone she never used for me. Massaging the bridge of my nose, I grabbed my sixth bottle of coffee for the day and downed it in one go.
Then...
"No."
There was a slight pause on her end. It felt like even Larissa had stopped breathing for a moment.
"No?" she repeated.
"I don't have any money left to give you," I said, my hands trembling-whether from anxiety or the coffee, I didn't know. I felt lightheaded yet liberated at the same time. It was my first time saying no to her after all these years.
Again, my mom didn't respond for a couple of seconds before her laughter filled the small room.
"So, this is what I get for raising you my entire life. You know what? My future would have been bright if I hadn't gotten pregnant by your deadbeat father! You're my biggest mistake and yet you couldn't even spare some money for your mother."
"What a selfish daughter you are."
"You should have never existed."
At that moment, my vision became dotted with black circles, and I found my heart beating erratically inside my chest. I had been feeling like this for the last couple of days, but I hadn't gotten around to visiting the hospital.
Usually, it would halt when I didn't drink coffee, but recently, it attacked me at the most random parts of my day.
"Indy?" Larissa's voice broke through the haze; however, even then, I found myself slowly losing grip on the world as I knew it.
"Indy! What's happening?"
Her voice grew more frantic, but on my end, it felt like everything was turning more serene. The beating of my heart continued in short, rapid bursts, but I didn't find myself gasping for air anymore.
The black dots turned to white, and the ringing in my ears changed to the sound of nothingness.
With everything becoming more detached by the second, there was only one thought running through my mind.
Maybe I did drink too many cups of coffee.
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8.0
Everyone in the Shadowfang Pack knew that Alpha Kael was fiercely devoted to his Luna.
To save me, he had sacrificed his own soul to shadow magic.
He had endured the agony of being flayed alive, just to keep me breathing.
He had torn open his own heart, feeding me his blood, just so we could be together.
For three hundred years, I firmly believed I was his Luna, his other half.
But now, I was looking right at him. Kael, my Kael, thrusting his hips forward in a violent, primal rhythm, pinning a woman against the mattress.
A bell hung around her ankle, chiming with his every movement.
It was Lyra. My handmaiden.
Her magic-laced voice slithered into my mind via the mind-link. "Does it hurt, Luna? The Bell of Severance only rings when I feel... pleasure. And with every chime, your soul shatters a little more."
Kael kissed her passionately. "Make it ring louder. I want to hear it."

9.3
One moment I was human, sixteen years old and in love, believing my life would follow a simple, ordinary path. The next, I was taken from everything I knew and thrown into Silverwood Academy, a hidden world where wolf shifters rule, magic breathes, and survival is never guaranteed.
They see me as an anomaly. A girl who should not exist.
My mark is rare, dangerous, and tied to an ancient bloodline that was meant to stay buried. It binds me to a goddess who gives power without mercy and a destiny no one walks away from unchanged.
At Silverwood, strength decides your worth. Alphas test me. Rivals hunt me. Teachers watch, waiting for me to fail. Every full moon pushes me closer to a power I do not fully understand and a future I never asked for.
And then there is love, complicated and cruel in the way only fate can be.
I am torn between the boy I loved as a human, a bond so strong it refuses to break even after death, and a dangerous pull toward a wolf who challenges me, pushes me, and makes me question who I am becoming.
Each choice costs something. Every secret carries blood. The more power I gain, the more I risk losing myself.
They want me to be a weapon. A leader. A legend written in moonlight and war.
But I do not want a throne or a prophecy.
I just want to survive the fate that marked my soul.
Because in this world, destiny is not a gift. It is a debt, and it always demands payment

7.4
Cadence, a modern botanist, woke up to a glaring sun and massive, alien purple leaves blocking the sky. She was stranded in a terrifying, primal world.
Before she could process the metallic smell of blood in the air, a white tiger the size of an SUV crushed a giant boar's neck right in front of her. The beast locked its piercing blue eyes on her hiding spot. But instead of tearing her throat out, a blinding flash of silver light erupted, and the monster transformed into a towering, heavily scarred naked man.
He was Harlan, a shifter who immediately claimed her as his mate under tribal law. Dragged back to his primitive village, Cadence faced a brutal reality. Unbonded females were targets, and she was expected to take multiple mates just to survive. The tribal women mocked her fragile frame, calling her useless. To make matters worse, her foreign scent attracted a rogue serpent-shifter who violently ambushed her in the river.
The icy shock of the serpent's attack plunged Cadence into a deadly, burning fever. The tribe's Shaman tried his healing magic, only to shake his head and abandon her.
"She lacks primal fortitude. She will rely entirely on her own weak vitality. I can do nothing."
As Harlan held her shivering body in despair, Cadence felt a deep sense of desperate injustice. Was she really going to die in a filthy stone hut in an unknown universe, killed by a simple cold?
No. She remembered her grandfather's strict survival lessons. Forcing her heavy eyes open, she grabbed her terrified tiger mate's hand. She didn't need their failing magic; she had science.
"I need specific plants to live. I need white willow bark. And a spicy, ginger-like root."
She rasped, preparing to show this savage world the true power of a modern survivor.

7.6
A jagged spike of agony woke Kiana up in a filthy stone room.
She had transmigrated into the body of a notorious, exiled matriarch in a brutal wasteland.
Before she could even process her new reality, she saw a massive, bloodied man huddled in the corner, trembling in absolute terror.
Foreign memories detonated in her brain: the original Kiana swinging a spiked whip, laughing as she tore his flesh open.
He was her husband, and she was a monster who tortured her own consorts.
The situation was a complete death trap.
Another husband stormed in, throwing down a marriage contract and demanding to sever their ties, which would leave her to be eaten by mutated beasts.
Outside, her third husband lay dying from a toxic wound while the rest of the tribe mocked her, eagerly waiting for her downfall.
Scanning her own body, Kiana discovered her face was covered in ugly purple bruises.
The original host hadn't just been naturally insane; she had been secretly fed a chronic poison by political enemies, destroying her beauty and driving her mad until she was exiled.
As a survivor from a modern apocalypse, the sight of broken, enslaved men made her skin crawl.
She refused to die in this savage wasteland as a pawn in someone else's twisted game.
Kiana tossed the contract back to the furious man.
"Give me three months. I will save him, and I swear I won't touch you."
With her apocalyptic healing powers and a newly awakened Spatial System, she was going to rewrite the rules of this primitive world.

9.5
I woke up gasping from a nightmare of flames devouring Chandler Finch's estate, my body wrapped in burning curtains as I died alone.
But my eyes opened to silk sheets in his penthouse master bedroom. He was alive beside me, his cedarwood scent real. This was my second chance—I'd been reborn.
His phone buzzed: Eugenia Stewart's "emergency." Her security detail reported her refusing meals, unstable. Chandler bolted without a glance, rushing to her side.
I signed the brutal cohabitation contract binding me to him, but Temperance had planted birth control pills in the trash—a trap to frame me. Chandler found them, exploded in jealous rage, crushing the pills to dust. "No child unless it's mine," he growled, possessive fire in his eyes.
Brett, Eugenia's lapdog, stormed in later, accusing me of manipulation. I fired back: Chandler demanded my womb for his heir. Brett paled, fled to tattle.
Then the storm hit—power outage, locked on the terrace in pouring rain, freezing as Eugenia faked an asthma attack on Chandler's line, stealing his focus again. I hung up, huddled with a stray puppy, nearly dying from hypothermia.
He'd never believed me before—Eugenia's lies always won, dooming me to isolation and fire. Why did her every whimper trump my screams? How could he be so blind?
This time, reborn weeks before the inferno, I wouldn't beg. I'd play his game, shatter Eugenia's web, and make Chandler mine—before the flames returned.

7.0
I was the fated mate of Ryker Blackwood, the future Alpha, but my lack of an awakened wolf made me a pathetic joke to his pack.
Instead of protecting me, he publicly rejected me, chose the manipulative Lilith Vane as his Luna, and locked me in a freezing dungeon.
While the entire pack cheered for their final mating ceremony above, I rotted in heavy chains below.
When a rogue attack killed our unborn pups, I reached out to him in agony, but his voice through our fading bond was like splintered ice.
"Our pups are dead. Don't bother me again."
He didn't care at all. The casual dismissal shattered my inner wolf, and I died in that filthy cell, suffocating on my own despair and a hatred so potent it burned through my last breath.
Until my last moment, I couldn't understand why my absolute devotion was met with such cruel betrayal, and why my fated mate let our children die without a second thought.
Opening my eyes again, I wasn't in the dungeon.
I was back in my seventeenth year, choking on the icy water of the lake Lilith had just pushed me into.
Seeing Ryker's arrogant sneer and Lilith's fake concern on the shore, I didn't cry or beg for his attention like I did in my past life.
This time, I would publicly sever our sacred bond, awaken my true Alpha bloodline, and make them pay for every drop of my blood.