
The Savage Chief's Coveted Modern Bride
The darkness of the Yale archaeological dig site swallowed Eleanor whole, dropping her straight into a lethal, prehistoric jungle.
Before she could even process the bizarre time jump, a massive prehistoric wolf attacked her, only for her to be saved—and immediately claimed—by Jace, a towering, blood-soaked savage chief who marked her as his mate.
Dragged back to his primitive camp, her nightmare only escalated.
When she used her modern first-aid kit to save a dying hunter whose stomach had been ripped open, the tribe didn't thank her.
Instead, a jealous tribeswoman named Greta and a ruthless Shaman incited a violent, torch-wielding mob.
"Burn the witch before we all die!"
They marched on the Chief's cave, demanding Eleanor be burned alive, claiming her life-saving stitches and antibiotics were dark magic that would curse them all.
Eleanor was terrified and furious. She had just pulled a man back from the brink of death using basic medical science, yet she was about to be slaughtered by a mindless mob simply because they couldn't understand her language. Was she really going to be burned at the stake for an act of pure salvation?
But when the hunter's fever broke and he walked out alive, the angry mob dropped to their knees in absolute reverence.
Looking at her dying lighter and finite supplies, Eleanor realized that fear wouldn't keep her alive in this brutal world.
She pulled out her tactical pen, deciding to drag this savage tribe out of the dark ages herself.
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Chapter 1
Gravity vanished.
The darkness of the Yale archaeological dig site swallowed Eleanor Strong whole. She had been trailing her professor into a newly discovered burial chamber, her backpack heavy with his tools, when the ancient floor gave way beneath her feet. One moment she was a diligent graduate student—the next, she was falling into the unknown. Air rushed past her ears in a deafening roar, tearing the scream from her throat. Her stomach violently shoved its way into her chest. She flailed her arms, her fingertips scraping against the slick, damp rock of the cavern wall. Sending sharp spikes of pain up her forearms, but she found no purchase.
Below her, the pitch-black void split open.
A jagged tear of blinding blue-purple lightning ripped through the darkness. The air pressure shifted so violently her eardrums popped. A massive, invisible force latched onto her body, yanking her straight into the center of the electrical storm.
The light vanished.
Eleanor slammed into the ground. Her heavy tactical backpack took the brunt of the impact, but the kinetic force still rattled her skull. Her teeth clamped down on her tongue. The metallic taste of copper flooded her mouth. She coughed, a wet, hacking sound, and spat blood into the dirt.
She curled into a tight ball. Every breath felt like a knife dragging across her ribs. She forced her eyes open.
The dry, dusty air of the Nevada desert was gone. Instead, thick, humid heat pressed down on her skin, heavy with the stench of rotting vegetation and animal musk. She pushed herself up on trembling hands. Through the tangled mess of her blonde hair, she saw massive tree trunks, thick as concrete pillars, stretching up into a dense canopy that blotted out the sky.
A sharp, rhythmic beeping cut through the silence.
Eleanor looked at her left wrist. The battery warning on her smartwatch flashed. The GPS signal icon in the corner was a stark, solid red X. Dead.
Panic, cold and sharp, flooded her veins. Her hands shook violently as she reached for the zipper of the tactical pouch on her waist. She needed her flashlight. Her fingers fumbled, slipping off the nylon fabric. The zipper was stuck.
A low, vibrating growl vibrated through the soles of her boots.
Eleanor froze. The breath trapped itself in her lungs.
Ten yards away, the dense ferns parted. Two eyes, the color of sickly yellow-green bile, locked onto her. A head emerged. It was a wolf, but the proportions were entirely wrong. The skull was massive, the dark gray fur matted with dried blood. It was the size of a grizzly bear.
The prehistoric beast opened its jaws. Thick, viscous saliva dripped from teeth the size of hunting knives, hitting the dead leaves with a faint, acidic hiss. Its front shoulders dropped. The muscles in its hind legs coiled.
Eleanor's brain screamed at her to run. Her legs refused to obey. They felt like lead. She scrambled backward on her hands and heels, her boots slipping in the wet mud.
The giant wolf launched itself.
It blotted out the sparse light, a mountain of muscle and fur flying straight for her throat. The stench of rotting meat washed over her.
Eleanor squeezed her eyes shut. She let out a piercing scream and threw her arms over her face, bracing for the agony of teeth tearing into her flesh.
A sickening, wet crunch echoed through the trees.
The impact never came. Instead, a spray of hot, foul-smelling liquid splattered across Eleanor's pale cheek.
She flinched, her eyes snapping open.
The giant wolf was gone from the air. It was pinned against the trunk of a massive tree five yards away. A man stood over it.
He had dropped from the canopy above. His landing had left deep craters in the mud. He was a towering wall of muscle, his skin deeply tanned and crisscrossed with thick, jagged white scars. He wore nothing but a rough animal hide wrapped around his waist.
The wolf thrashed, snapping its jaws at the man.
The man didn't flinch. A low, guttural war cry ripped from his throat. He twisted his torso, the muscles in his back bunching like coiled steel cables. His right arm snapped forward.
A thick spear, tipped with a jagged piece of black stone, tore through the air. It entered the wolf's open mouth and punched straight through the back of its skull, pinning the beast to the dirt.
The wolf convulsed violently. Its massive paws tore at the mud, then went entirely limp. Blood pooled rapidly around its head.
The man stepped forward. He planted a massive, bare foot on the wolf's snout, gripped the wooden shaft of the spear, and yanked it free. A geyser of dark blood followed the stone tip.
He flicked the gore off the weapon. Slowly, he turned his head.
His eyes locked onto Eleanor.
In that burning stare, the alien whisper in her mind grew sharper: This male is on the brink of frenzy. His beast craves a female's touch to ground him. Without it, he will either die or turn into a mindless killer. And you—you are his only chance.
Jace stared at the strange female. Her skin was blindingly white, covered in odd, unnatural leaves. His nostrils flared. Beneath the scent of wolf blood and mud, he caught it. A sweet, clean scent. Nothing like the females in his tribe. His pupils dilated until his eyes were almost entirely black.
He took a step toward her. The dead leaves crunched under his heavy weight. He blocked out the light, casting a long, dark shadow over her trembling body.
As he closed the distance, Eleanor's survival instinct kicked in. She threw her weight sideways, her hand frantically clawing at the zipper of her pouch. She ripped it open and yanked out the canister of bear mace, pulling the safety pin with her teeth. She aimed the nozzle directly at his chest.
"Stay back!" she screamed, her voice cracking.
Jace didn't even blink at the metal cylinder. He didn't understand the sounds coming from her mouth. They were sharp, like a frightened bird. It only made the blood pound harder in his veins.
He moved.
He was a blur of motion. Just as her thumb moved to press down on the trigger, a massive, calloused hand clamped around her wrist like a vice.
Pain shot up her arm. She gasped, her fingers springing open. The bear mace dropped into the mud.
Jace didn't stop. He used his grip on her wrist to yank her forward. Eleanor's feet left the ground. She crashed hard against his chest. His skin was burning hot, slick with sweat and wolf blood, as solid as a brick wall.
And in that crushing embrace, Eleanor felt the faintest pulse of something impossible—her own dormant psychic energy stirring awake, reaching toward him like a key finding its lock. The world had turned upside down. She was no longer a graduate student. She was a female in a realm where her kind ruled, where men knelt and killed for a single touch. And the beastman who held her had just claimed his first lesson in that new order—whether he knew it yet or not.
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7.3
I found out my husband of three years had cheated on me and his mistress is the one who told me-because he didn't have the balls to do it himself.
I move out and get a new apartment, a job as a bartender, and try to move on with a broken heart. I wonder where it all went wrong, if I hadn't been enough for him, if I'd been stupid for marrying him in the first place.
I'm at work one night when he walks inside-the most beautiful man I've ever seen. He sits at the bar and a forest fire burns between us. I was depressed the moment before he entered, but the second I look at his blue eyes, I forget the dumpster fire that my life has become. I invite him back to my place and it's the most passionate night of my life. I expect to never see him again.
I just want him as an anti-depressant-but he wants me all to himself. I just got my heart ripped out of my chest so I want something easy and no-strings-attached, but he wants all the strings because he's hooked.
I don't get much of a say in the matter, and that's not surprising when I learn why-because he's the Butcher. The crime lord of all crime lords, the boss that overshadows all of Paris, that makes everyone abide by his rules-or pay.
And now I'm his.

7.1
I was the Architect who built the digital fortress for the most feared Don in New York.
To the world, I was Brendan Wiggins’s silent, elegant Queen.
But then my burner phone buzzed under the dinner table.
It was a photo from his mistress: a positive pregnancy test.
"Your husband is celebrating right now," the caption read. "You are just the furniture."
I looked across the table at Brendan. He smiled and held my hand, lying to my face without blinking.
He thought he owned me because he saved my life ten years ago.
He told her I was just "functional." That I was a barren asset he kept around to look respectable, while she carried his legacy.
He thought I would accept the disrespect because I had nowhere else to go.
He was wrong.
I didn't want to divorce him—you don't divorce a Don.
And I didn't want to kill him. That was too easy.
I wanted to erase him.
I liquidated fifty million dollars from the offshore accounts only I could access. I destroyed the servers I had built.
Then, I contacted a black-market chemist for a procedure called "Tabula Rasa."
It doesn't kill the body. It wipes the mind clean. A total hard reset of the soul.
On his birthday, while he was out celebrating his bastard son, I drank the vial.
When he finally came home to find the empty house and the melted wedding ring, he realized the truth.
He could burn the world down looking for me, but he would never find his wife.
Because the woman who loved him no longer existed.

9.1
When is the worst time to tell someone he's going to be a father?
Probably the day of the wedding...
When he is getting married to someone else.
Well, that is exactly what I did.
But my hands were tied.
Literally.
Matvey Groza is a dangerous man.
And nine months ago, he strolled into my shop looking for a custom suit.
But when I accidentally walked in on him in the changing room,
*I* was the one that ended up needing a new set of clothes.
It was a one-time mistake.
After that... good riddance.
But the pregnancy test I took a month later had other plans.
I kept it a secret from everyone.
Or so I thought.
But when Matvey's enemies learned that I was pregnant with his child,
they kidnapped me and held me hostage.
Until I broke free and ran as fast as I could.
And I had no one else to turn to but the devil himself.
What better time for me to enter the church...
... than as the pastor says, "Speak now or forever hold your peace"?

8.6
I was the untouchable Mafia Queen, but my reign ended in the blood-soaked depths of a damp dungeon.
My half-sister, Kelsey, drove a rusted, sharpened spoon into my chest, screaming about the unfairness of fate.
In my past life, my father sold me to the ruthless Don Dante Blackwell as collateral to pay off his debts.
To survive, I took a black-market fertility drug, birthed his heir, and clawed my way to the throne through sheer ruthlessness.
But in the mafia world, a pregnant woman isn't a queen; she's a walking target.
I survived countless bombings and poisonings, only to be betrayed and slaughtered by my own family.
Until my last breath, I couldn't understand. I had sacrificed everything to secure our survival in the empire. Why did my blood and tears only earn me a rusted spoon to the heart?
Opening my eyes again, I am seventeen, sitting in my father's drawing room.
Two black velvet boxes sit on the mahogany table.
Kelsey greedily snatches the box containing the fertility drug, her eyes gleaming with feverish triumph.
"I'll take this one, Papa."
She thinks she is stealing my golden ticket to the crown, completely unaware that she just chose a death sentence.
I lower my gaze, letting my eyelashes mask the cold, lethal amusement pooling in my eyes as I take the remaining box.
Inside is the detailed psychological profile of the Don's dead fiancée.
This time, I won't be a breeding mare fighting off assassins. I will dissect the devil himself.

8.7
I was the spare daughter of the Vitiello crime family, born solely to provide organs for my golden sister, Isabella.
Four years ago, under the codename "Seven," I nursed Dante Moretti, the Don of Chicago, back to health in a safe house. I was the one who held him in the dark.
But Isabella stole my name, my credit, and the man I loved.
Now, Dante looked at me with nothing but cold disgust, believing her lies.
When a neon sign crashed down on the street, Dante used his body to shield Isabella, leaving me to be crushed under twisted steel.
While Isabella sat in a VIP suite crying over a scratch, I lay broken, listening to my parents discuss if my kidneys were still viable for harvest.
The final straw came at their engagement gala. When Dante saw me wearing the lava stone bracelet I had worn in the safe house, he accused me of stealing it from Isabella.
He ordered my father to punish me.
I took fifty lashes to my back while Dante covered Isabella's eyes, protecting her from the ugly truth.
That night, the love in my heart finally died.
On the morning of their wedding, I handed Dante a gift box containing a cassette tape-the only proof that I was Seven.
Then, I signed the papers disowning my family, threw my phone out the car window, and boarded a one-way flight to Sydney.
By the time Dante listens to that tape and realizes he married a monster, I will be thousands of miles away, never to return.

9.4
I spent the night with a stranger...
Who got me pregnant...
And turned out to be my boss...
Whoops, sorry, did I say "boss"? I meant a MOB boss.
To be fair, I didn't know he was my boss when I slept with him.
I thought he was just the kind stranger offering me a place to stay.
But one night in Misha Orlov's hotel room got me way more than I bargained for.
It got me champagne that tasted like starlight.
Satin sheets as soft as a dream.
And a man with silver eyes who showed me how it felt to come undone.
And then, in the morning...
He was gone.
That's I needed to get my life together anyway.
After all, my ex-not-quite-husband (it's a long story) just emptied all our bank accounts and disappeared, taking my home and my money and my job with him.
So I'm starting from a blank slate.
I find myself a new apartment.
A new job.
And I put both Misha and my husband behind me.
At least, I thought I did.
Until Day 1 of orientation.
When I learn that Misha Orlov is my new boss.
That's bad enough.
What's worse is what came next.
A car crash.
A doctor's appointment.
And two pieces of unsettling news.
Congratulations, the doctor says. You're pregnant.
Congratulations, Misha says. You and I are getting married.