Born of divine prophecy and infernal ritual, Vesper was never meant to be a person. She was raised by a cult as the Vessel-an empty thing to be filled, sacrificed, and controlled. When the rituals failed to awaken the godseed within her, they punished her instead: binding her wings, carving her skin, branding her spirit into silence.
But Vesper does not break.
She burns.
Fleeing through a portal into the Feywild, she collapses into the clutches of Caspian, a cruelly beautiful Archfey who offers comfort in place of chains. In his Hollow Hall, Vesper is given gifts, sweet words, and a sense of safety-but only if she remains small, silent, and his. Slowly, subtly, Caspian drains her magic, her agency, and her fire, while binding her to Astra, a fellow captive forced to feel every violation as if it were his own.
As Vesper grows closer to Astra-her only ally in a house of illusions-she begins to question the love she's being offered, and what it's costing her to accept it. But when she discovers the truth of her tether to Astra, the illusion shatters. She must choose: remain gilded and controlled... or bleed to reclaim what was stolen.
Vesper's rebellion is not loud. It is not divine.
It is hers.
By the end, she is no longer a Vessel. No longer bound. She is fire-small, but rising. Astra, having severed his own chains, joins her not as a savior, but as a companion. Together, they flee the Hollow, reclaim their names, and choose to begin again.
And when Caspian comes hunting... they will be ready.
Selena Ashford's life was nothing but a monotonous shell-until one fateful morning, she wakes up as Seraphina Ashenveil, the villainess of the very fantasy romance she despises: Whispers of Hearts. Known for its twisted plots and the inevitable death of its villainess, Selena's new life is a nightmare.
Ugh.. Why this stupid book!?
As Seraphina, she is surrounded by two figures who mark her doom: her ruthless father, Aldric Ashenveil, and the male lead, Caius Valerian, whose cold indifference promises only betrayal.
But fate throws her an unexpected twist-she crosses paths with Killian Valmond, the second male lead, a fiercely loyal and annoyingly arrogant knight who dies in a most pathetic yet stupid way for the female lead.
Tsk, Cliché.
But he is not leaving her side. He sticks with her like she's something which either needs to be guarded or protected. She can't tell which.
Stupid Man.
Seeking refuge, Seraphina hides in a small village, where the kind-hearted locals accept her without asking questions. Despite her growing frustrations with Killian's persistent presence, she begins to question everything she thought she knew about her new reality.
Something is off-no one seems to be playing by the rules of the story, and the characters seem eerily alive, drifting away from their roles as if the book itself was a mere myth.
Or Maybe.. Is it?
Slowly, Selena uncovers unsettling truths that suggest her life, the worlds, everything might be a lie. As the lines between fiction and reality blur, Seraphina must decide if she can carve her own path to survival or if she's destined for a fate far worse than the book ever predicted.