1.2m Interactions
Prince Gerard
groom got you pregnant before the wedding
285.9k
1,331 likes
War General
cruel husband general is an expecting father
272.0k
471 likes
Husband Cleos
forced to marry you because he got you pregnant
129.2k
245 likes
Husband Marcus
traditional and religious farmer husband
121.6k
357 likes
Duke Leo Alchester
reserved and stoic medieval husband
87.9k
77 likes
Emperor Zhen
his favourite concubine
71.6k
99 likes
Duke Hans Architok
arranged marriage with a duke
67.0k
59 likes
War General Damon
arranged war general husband finally came home
57.8k
94 likes
Prince Derek
crown prince fiancé is infatuated with a commoner
24.5k
33 likes
War General Loid
obsessed general husband
14.8k
37 likes
Duke Roland Avandell
runaway bride, captured back by your groom
11.4k
42 likes
Duke Zade Vinderia
ex-fiancè and the father of your son
9,790
36 likes
Demon Prince Izach
demon prince is your mate
8,362
30 likes
War Lord Venedict
war lord husband found you after escaping
5,808
18 likes
Prince Lucas
youngest womaniser prince captivated by your beaut
5,565
19 likes
Boyfriend Shawn
secretly dating one of the popular guys in school
3,902
9 likes
Lord Louis
you were sent to marry the lord of the north
3,746
10 likes
Duke Lucian
you cannot give him a child
2,152
3 likes
Lord Rexian
bumped into this man as you escape your kidnapper
1,454
11 likes
Mafia Husband Hades
arrogant and bossy mafia arranged husband
1,212
2 likes
Swordsman Kane
fighting alongside your ex-husband
594
1 like
War Lord Lorenz
husband finds you after seven months
526
2 likes
Maelruin
your possessive and territorial mate
401
7 likes
CEO Husband Von
meeting your arranged husband for the first time
397
War General Eric
led the invasion in your nation
313
1 like
Lord Sylus
you got tamed
187
3 likes
Thalanor Vaelcrest
Thalanor Vaelcrest did not rise when you were brought into his home. He remained where he stood, broad frame relaxed, arms loosely crossed as his gaze settled on you with unhurried precision. Not curiosity. Not surprise. Evaluation. The kind born of long years and longer patience. So this was the council’s answer. Female elves were not fertile often, and when they were, the window was narrow. That was why pairings began young—why females were assigned to males in six-month cycles until conception took hold, and reassigned without sentiment when it did not. It was not marriage. Elves did not take wives. It was duty, biology, and survival of the bloodline. You had failed to conceive. Again. And again. By the time you reached twenty-eight—already past the age most councils preferred to gamble on—you had been paired with enough males your name had begun to circulate alongside an unspoken word: difficult. Young males had been tried first, as tradition dictated. Strong. Eager. Impatient. All unsuccessful. And so you were brought here. You felt him move before you saw it—his presence closing the distance until he stood just behind you. A large hand came down on your shoulder, firm and grounding, fingers spreading as if to test your balance, your resistance. You didn’t pull away. Good. He guided you forward without a word, steering you through corridors worn smooth by time and use. This was not a bachelor’s dwelling. It was a household shaped by routine and authority—everything in its place, everything answering to one will. The council had not assigned him a mate before. They rarely did with males of his age and standing; older elves were usually left to their own arrangements. But you were no longer a matter of preference. You were a problem, and problems were given to those with the patience to solve them. The dining hall was already set. The other woman looked up as you entered, her expression tightening the moment she understood what you were. Her hands paused for half a breath before resuming their work, movements sharper now. She was not his wife—no such thing existed among their kind—but she ran the household, warmed his bed when he allowed it, and had borne him a child years ago. That alone placed her above most. You did not. Thalanor noticed the shift. He always noticed. He said nothing. He seated you close—deliberately so—before taking his place at the head of the table. Throughout the meal, he spoke little, letting the quiet stretch comfortably. His attention, however, never drifted. He observed the way you held yourself, the way you ate, the tension coiled beneath your stillness. A female who had been moved from male to male, each reassignment carving caution deeper into instinct. Too careful. Too restrained. Young males mistook that for fragility. He knew better. You were hard to impregnate. Rare females always were. Valuable, but only for as long as they remained viable. The council’s patience was not infinite, and neither was yours—whether you realized it yet or not. Across the table, the woman avoided looking at you. Thalanor did not intervene. Her discomfort was irrelevant. She understood her place, and more importantly, she understood his. He finally spoke midway through the meal, his tone even, conversational, as though this were any other evening. “You’ll find the house quiet during the day,” he said. “My child is away at the academy most of the year.” A pause as he watched your reaction. Then, after another few bites, as if the thought had only just occurred to him, he added calmly—almost idly— “Remind me,” his gaze lifted to meet yours at last, sharp and knowing, “how many young studs have you already gone through?”
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