
The Serpent King's Unwilling Human Mate
Fallon only wanted a relaxing nature retreat, but instead found herself lost in a dense forest, her limited-edition Balenciaga sneakers ruined by mud and her phone showing zero signal.
Before she could even curse her tour guide, a massive boar-monster the size of a truck burst from the bushes to eat her.
She thought she was dead, until a giant silver-and-black snake dropped from the canopy and crushed the beast. When Fallon woke up, she was trapped in a primitive cliff cave with a towering, muscular man who had the exact same cold, mismatched slit eyes as the snake.
A mechanical system voice echoed in her skull, telling her an anomaly had dragged her to the brutal Beast World. Returning to Earth was impossible.
Here, females were incredibly weak commodities, and the deadly "wind season" was fast approaching.
"Eat, or you will die. The wind season comes."
The snake-man, Justice, shoved a charred, dripping slab of raw bloody meat into her face.
Fallon sobbed in despair. She was trapped in a savage dimension with no modern comforts, abandoned by a glitchy system that only gave her a tiny, empty pocket space in her mind. Worse, she realized this terrifying apex predator had absolutely zero food stored for the freezing winter.
But when she instinctively clutched her grandmother's silver necklace, her tiny pocket space suddenly upgraded into a massive, room-sized storage dimension.
Looking at the awkward but fiercely protective snake-man who promised to hunt for her, Fallon wiped her tears.
She had the ultimate storage cheat, and he had the muscle. It was time to conquer the Beast World.
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Chapter 4
Fallon stared at the shadow, her knuckles white around the stone. Sweat dripped down her temple.
The figure stepped into the light.
It was a man. A very tall, very muscular man. He had to be at least six foot two, with broad shoulders and arms that looked like they were carved from stone. He wore nothing on his upper body, showing off tanned skin marked with faint scars. Around his waist was a rough black animal skin.
But what made Fallon's brain completely stall out were his eyes.
One was silver. One was red. Vertical slits.
Just like the snake.
The stone slipped from her numb fingers, landing on the animal skin with a soft thud.
The man glanced at the stone, then at her. His face was completely blank. He didn't look angry or surprised. He just looked.
He walked past her toward the center of the cave. There was a circle of stones surrounding a pile of ash and dry grass. He picked up two dark rocks and struck them together.
Sparks flew. The dry grass caught fire. Within seconds, a warm blaze was crackling, illuminating the man's sharp jawline and long, silver-gray hair that fell past his shoulders.
He reached for a slab of meat sitting on a flat stone nearby. It was huge, raw, and freshly killed. He skewered it on a thick wooden stick and propped it over the fire.
The smell of roasting meat filled the cave. It smelled like... just meat. No salt. No pepper. No garlic. Just burning hair and raw flesh.
The man turned the spit. Then, without looking at her, he spoke. His voice was deep and rough, like gravel scraping against wood. He had a strange accent she couldn't place.
"You have no mate's scent."
Fallon blinked. Her jaw dropped. "You speak English?"
The man frowned slightly, his brow creasing. "It is the common tongue of the continent."
The words didn't compute. Continent? Common tongue? Was this some kind of elaborate prank? A hidden camera show? No, the monster in the forest was too real. The beast. The impossibly huge snake. Her mind reeled with the insane implications, a cold sweat breaking out on her forehead as she tried to rationalize the sheer absurdity of the situation.
She swallowed hard, trying to find her voice. "That... that big snake. Where is it? What did you do to it?"
The man's hand paused on the spit. For a split second, something flickered in those mismatched eyes. Guilt? Fear? It was gone too fast to tell.
"This is my territory," he said, his voice turning cold. "There is no snake here."
Fallon stared at him. He was lying. She knew he was lying. Those eyes were a dead giveaway. But why?
He pulled the meat from the fire. It was barely cooked. The outside was charred black, but the inside was still red and bloody. Juices dripped from it, hissing when they hit the hot stones.
He held the dripping slab out to her. The smell hit her first—a nauseating mix of burnt hair, charred flesh, and raw, coppery blood that stung her nostrils. "Eat."
Fallon's stomach turned. The overwhelming stench made her gag. She waved her hands frantically, shaking her head. "No. No, thank you. I'm not hungry."
The man's eyes narrowed. The coldness in them intensified. He thought she was rejecting his offering. His food.
"Eat," he repeated, his voice harder. "Or you will die. The wind season comes."
"I don't care about the wind season!" Fallon snapped, her fear turning into frustrated anger. "I lost my phone! I can't call an Uber! I can't call the cops! And you want me to eat that? It's bleeding!"
The man looked confused. He didn't understand 'Uber' or 'cops'. But he understood her tone. He heard the break in her voice.
He pulled the meat back, staring at her. She was crying. Fat tears rolled down her cheeks, cutting tracks through the dirt and dried blood on her face.
He sat there, frozen. He looked like a statue, unsure of what to do. He reached out a hand toward her face, his fingers rough and stained with soot. But he stopped an inch away, staring at his own hand like it was a dangerous weapon, and slowly pulled it back.
Fallon buried her face in her knees and sobbed. She was stuck in a cave with a snake-eyed man who wanted to feed her raw meat, in a world where English was the 'common tongue' but cell phones didn't exist.
The man sat silently by the fire, watching her cry. He looked like a guardian angel carved from stone, if that angel had the eyes of a demon and absolutely no idea how to comfort a crying woman.
As her sobs finally began to quiet into shuddering breaths, Fallon lifted her head just enough to peer over her knees. The fire had burned lower, casting long shadows across the cave walls. The man hadn't moved.
She wiped her nose with the back of her hand, a fresh wave of exhaustion rolling over her. But beneath the exhaustion, a tiny spark of something else flickered—survival instinct, maybe. Or just stubbornness.
"What's your name?" she asked, her voice hoarse and cracked.
The man's head tilted slightly, as if the question surprised him.
"You speak. You feed me. You have a name, don't you?" Fallon pressed, her tone edging toward the demanding register she'd perfected on difficult baristas back in LA.
He was quiet for a long moment. Then: "My kind name is long. Hard for warm-bloods to say." He paused, the firelight dancing in his mismatched eyes. "I chose another. For trade. For when I must speak to others."
"And?"
"Justice." The word came out heavy, deliberate, as if he'd carried it alone for a very long time. "I am called Justice."
Fallon let the name settle in her mind. It was strange—old-fashioned, almost Biblical. But somehow it fit the grave, watchful man sitting across from her.
"Justice," she repeated quietly. "Okay."
She didn't offer her own name. Not yet. Some instinct told her to hold onto that small piece of herself a little longer.
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9.1
Waking up with a cold, scaly hand wrapped around my throat wasn't the worst part.
The worst part was realizing I'd transmigrated into the body of Terra Mason—the most despised woman in the entire Enclave. She drugged high-level beast-men and forced them into life-binding bio-contracts. She locked an aquatic warrior in a dry basement until his organs failed. She treated the most lethal males in the city like broken toys.
Zev, the Level 6 serpent who's currently choking me, would rather blow up his own heart than spend another day as my slave. His affection metric? Negative ninety. His trust? Zero.
Then my system activates: the Kore AI. It gives me exactly 500 credits, a medical nano-gel, and a recipe for neutralizing the radioactive poison in mutant meat. Real food. In this world, that's worth more than gold.
I save Rhys, the dying aquatic male everyone left for dead. I season a slab of purple mutant steak until Sam, a battle-scarred grizzly shifter, groans at the taste—and his trust points finally tick above zero. When my backstabbing ex-best friend tries to steal my males and destroy me, I don't scream or throw a tantrum like the old Terra. I dismantle her with the truth.
But earning their trust means more than grilling meat. A scorpion swarm ambushes us at midnight. Sam throws himself between me and a stinger the size of my arm. As he stands over the corpse, fur receding from his claws, he stares at me and whispers, "You were testing me."
Yes. I was. Because in this world, the weak don't survive. And I refuse to be weak again.
Four beast-men. Four contracts. One system. And a whole lot of steak. Let this dystopian wasteland know—I'm not the monster they remember. I'm worse. I'm the one who's going to feed them until they'd kill for me.

9.3
I woke up in a freezing, desolate wasteland, my body weak and covered in sores. A mechanical voice in my head informed me that I was a defective rabbit-mutant, and if I didn't conceive within twenty-four hours, I would die permanently.
The terror was suffocating, but the system left me no choice. To survive the brutal cold and the decay of my own heartbeat, I had to force a pregnancy with a stranger.
I stumbled through the snow, my fingers turning blue, until I found a massive, wounded Arctic Fox-mutant in a dark cave. He was a Tier-9 predator, dying and radiating the exact heat I needed to stay alive. I threw away my dignity, crawling into his fur to merge our energies, desperate to trigger the life-reset protocol before my time ran out.
I felt like a monster, forcing myself onto a man who didn't even know I existed, just to keep my own heart beating. How could I ever face him if he woke up? Why did I have to be the one to pay the price for this twisted, mechanical ultimatum?
The fusion was a success, but when I woke up the next morning, the apex predator had me pinned under his massive claws, his fangs inches from my throat. I didn't beg for mercy. I stared into his feral, ice-blue eyes and made a deal that would change everything: I would be his anchor, and he would be my protector. But then I dropped the final, terrifying truth: I was pregnant, and he was the only one who could save us.

9.3
Halie woke up to a sharp pain and a terrifying reality. She was in a new body, her face covered in a hideous web of scars, and her spiritual power reduced to a pathetic D-Class.
Before she could even process the memories of being framed, her bedroom doors were violently kicked open.
Her sister Seraphina sauntered in with a venomous sneer, followed closely by Halie's S-Class fiancé, Jett.
"Look at the disgrace of the Avila family. What a waste," Seraphina mocked, throwing a mirror at her bed.
"I can't be tied to a cripple. As an S-Class, I have to break our engagement," Jett added, his gaze full of disgust.
The nightmare didn't stop there. Her father called, screaming about how she had shamed the family name. He officially stripped her of her inheritance, froze all her accounts, and exiled her to the decaying Southern District to rot.
To make matters worse, a cold, mechanical voice suddenly echoed in her skull, warning her of an impending genetic collapse. Without an immediate energy infusion, she would face total organ failure in thirty days.
A ruined face, a treacherous family, a world that wanted her dead, and a literal death clock ticking in her brain. The original owner had died in absolute despair, a tragic victim of sheer cruelty.
But if they thought she would just sit there and die, they were severely mistaken.
Armed with a mysterious system and her brilliant scientist mind from her past life, Halie packed her bags. She chose the craziest survival quest: head to the slums, find the exiled, sterile S-Class "madman" Coleman, and cure him to harvest his life energy. It was time to start her counterattack.

9.0
Isolde woke up in a freezing, ruined stone house with a splitting headache and only five percent of her life signs remaining.
Before she could even process the mechanical system voice in her head, a flood of violent memories slammed into her.
She had transmigrated into the body of a cruel noblewoman who mercilessly tortured her beastmen husbands with a barbed whip.
And right now, she was lying in a pool of her own blood, having been shoved against the stone floor by one of them.
Outside the rickety door, her husbands were coldly discussing her death.
"Just go in and finish her. One stab, and we're free."
"If she hit her head and died on her own, then it's an accident. We walk out of here as free males."
To test if she was faking her sudden amnesia, the snake beastman Dangelo even ground his heavy military boot into her injured hand, waiting for her to snap so he could legally end her.
She was poisoned, freezing, and entirely at the mercy of the men who deeply despised her.
She was bearing the deadly consequences of a monster she never was, with a red system warning of imminent death flashing in her mind.
But they didn't know the new Isolde had awakened a survival system and Life Magic.
She swore a blood oath to the Beast God to buy herself three months of time.
Then, she turned her sights to the dying wolf beastman chained in the shed, deciding to pull him back from hell to become her very first shield.

9.7
Agent Alivia Sanford opened her eyes to the suffocating stench of wild animal musk and raw sex.
She hadn't just transmigrated into a savage beastman world; she had woken up in the body of a 300-pound, diseased, and universally despised woman. Worse, the original owner had just drugged the tribe's strongest warrior, trying to force a mating.
Now, the warrior pinned her to the cave floor with murderous fury.
"You think you can trap me, you disgusting pig?" he snarled, ready to rip her throat out.
After kneeing him and escaping, a "Super Charm AI" bound to her mind demanded she conquer her five designated mates to survive. But these men treated her like a walking plague. They mocked her bloated face, threw bloody raw meat into the mud for her to eat, and publicly announced they would starve her to death. Even her own family looked at her with utter disgust.
In her past life, she was a legendary survivor who could have crushed these arrogant men with her bare hands. Now, she was trapped in a weak shell, threatened with soul erasure by a system if she didn't grovel for their affection. Why should she beg for love from beasts who wanted her dead?
Looking at the five "-100" hostility scores on her system panel, Alivia coldly drew a mental cross over each of their faces. Enduring agonizing pain, she forced her bio-manipulation ability to violently purge the toxins from her fat body. She wasn't going to play their twisted game; she was going to find her own resources and make them pay.

9.7
Charity woke up in a hellish, acid-rain-soaked slum, trapped inside a bloated body covered in festering, toxic sores. She was the exiled Grand Princess of the Empire.
But the real nightmare wasn't her ruined body. It was the fact that the original owner had used her royal authority to force genetic marriage contracts onto four top-tier, powerful men.
Now, she was bound to them, and they absolutely loathed her.
Hjalmar, chained to a bed in her filthy room, smiled like a feral beast and promised to rip her head off the second his chains snapped.
Braden, a ruthless military officer, saved her from a mutated rat only to look at her with pure disgust.
"If you want to die, go die somewhere else. Don't dirty my patrol sector."
Even the locals mocked her fallen status, and a wealthy heiress publicly framed her for stealing a hundred-thousand-coin energy core just to see her rot in a dark cell.
She was universally despised, physically repulsive, and a lethal biological toxin gave her exactly 59 days left to live. How was she supposed to survive this absolute hell when her starting affection with her partners was at negative 100?
Then, a mechanical voice echoed in her skull, activating a survival system. To purge the poison, she had to harvest emotional energy by making these four men fall for her. Charity accepted the mandate, unlocked a top-tier culinary skill, and grabbed a rusted meat cleaver to start her counterattack.