LOGIN"You also feel Lumira died an unjust death? Then let's see you change it." Rina Vale died cursing an author for killing her favorite villainess. Now she's trapped in that villainess's body, with a blood contract saying: 'rewrite the sequel or be erased.' The ex who drove Lumira to suicide is hunting her. The vampire prince wants to destroy her beautifully. And the Author who sent her here? Still watching. The Blood Moon is rising. She has the spoilers. But surviving the story might be harder than rewriting it.
View MoreHauntspire High,
May, 2025. [Omniscient P.O.V] "Finally," she whimpered. "It's sealed." The rooftop smelled of ash, ozone, and copper. A dirty wind whipped Lumira Duskbane's silver hair across her face, but her amethyst eyes never left the sky. Her body was failing. Every muscle screamed from the demonic fight, her soul stretched thin, nearly snapping. At her feet, the spell circle - etched in her own life-force - guttered with faint purple light. The breach was closed. The demon horde banished from Hauntspire High. "We did it, Lumira." Silvie's voice came faint in her mind. "I am sorry. You must live well..." Their bond snapped, a final, painful severance. The spirit consumed by the magic. Boots thundered up the stairs. The steel door flew open with a deafening crash. Alpha Jaxon stormed onto the roof, the lycan prince in ceremonial gold. His amber eyes blazed with cold suspicion. Behind him, Mason and Caleb stood rigid. They looked like executioners, not saviors. Lumira turned slowly, every movement a struggle against collapse. She managed a weak smile. "You came..." The words were raw, foolish. Jaxon cut her off, his voice a blade. "What game are you playing, witch?" He ignored the sealed portal. The blood. His gaze raked the scene for the trap he was sure she'd laid. "Was this your scheme with the demons? A bid for my affection?" The accusation shattered the last of her hope. Her chest locked tight, sick with the finality of it. 'He still believes the lies.' Gamma Caleb stepped forward, face twisted with disgust. "You reek of corruption. Admit it - you bargained with them to ruin the Luna's ritual." The ritual? Of course. That was all that mattered. Not the saved school or the thousand lives she'd preserved... just his precious Saintess. Jaxon stepped closer, his disappointment a crushing weight. "I can forgive what you've done to my Saintess," he said, voice trembling with rage. "But betrayal? I cannot forgive that. You are nothing more than a curse to Hauntspire High." The words stole the remaining air from her lungs. Her knees buckled. She sank down, catching herself on the crumbling railing. The stone felt rough against her burning skin. A violent cough seized her. Dark blood spilled across her pale hands and ran down her wrists. "So, this is my reward?" Her voice was a ragged whisper. "I saved you all... and still, you hate me? Is this all I am? A monster?" Beta Mason lunged forward, a flicker of humanity breaking his composure. "Your Highness, look at the runes! Lady Duskbane saved us! She closed the portal! If not for her..." "Silence!" Jaxon's command was colder than polished steel. Mason froze, his grief collapsing into hopelessness. He looked at Lumira, then looked away. Lumira swayed, a bitter, jagged laugh escaping her lips. "You won't believe me." She met his golden eyes, desperate to be seen, just once. "I thought I mattered. If all I'll ever be is a monster in your eyes… then why live?" "Lady Lumira, don't!" She let go. Her body tipped backward, heavy and final. The world pitched. Her silver hair streamed against the dark. In that second of falling, she caught a flicker of fear in Jaxon's eyes. A crack in his perfect composure. The air shrieked past her ears. Impact. A sickening crack echoed through the night. The White Witch of the West lay broken on the stone below. Jaxon turned away. He walked toward the firelit gym, where his Luna waited, while Lumira's blood pooled across the pavement. A dark, spreading stain. --- Rina's room, New York. The blue glow of a phone was a sickening reflection in the gloom of a bedroom. "She died... for nothing?" Rina Vale choked out. Tears burned her cheeks. The unceremonious end of her favorite character felt like a personal betrayal. She hurled the phone onto the mattress, chest heaving. On the screen, the online forum blazed with venom. User23: Finally! That witch got what she deserved. SilverWolf: Good riddance. Now the real romance starts. "She's not a villain!" Rina screamed into the dark. "She was lonely! She saved them and they spit on her!" "Rina!" Her mother's voice sliced through the door. "Stop crying over those silly e-books and get to the market! We need food!" Rina flinched. She scrubbed her face, snatched the phone, and bolted. Outside, the air was damp and slick with city pollution. Rina walked quickly, head down, lost in a furious replay. She hated the author. She hated the world. She pulled out her phone and found the cryptic number she'd saved months ago, rumored to belong to the writer. Her thumbs flew. "Why did you kill her like that? She saved them all! You're a coward. She deserved a chance!" She sent the stream of grief and kept walking. Then, a single chime. It felt like a gunshot in the quiet night. Verity Lux: You think Lumira's death was unjust, too? Then let's see how you change the story. Rina stopped dead under a fractured street lamp. Change the story? "Who is this?" she typed, fingers shaking. Verity Lux: The one who regrets it. The publisher wanted the cliché. They wanted the villain dead. Rina's breath hitched. Verity Lux: If you care so much, take the pen. Save her. An attachment popped up: Chapter_2_Rewrite.p*f "I can save her...?" Rina whispered. It felt like a mission. "I will. I'll change it." She hit send. The world blurred. She was so consumed by the screen that she stepped off the curb without looking. HONK! A deafening blast. Rina looked up to see a green truck barreling down the slick street. But she wasn't the target. A child, no older than six, stood frozen in the twin glare of the headlights. "NO!" Rina surged forward. She collided with the girl, shoving her toward the sidewalk with every ounce of strength. Then the truck struck. Impact. A savage, bright explosion of pain followed, as the world spun into a kaleidoscope of red and black. Her body crumpled against the curb. The pain vanished instantly, replaced by a cold numbness climbing toward her heart. She sought the child. The girl sat upright on the sidewalk, unhurt. She wasn't crying. She was staring at Rina's broken body with unsettling intensity. "It was worth it," Rina rasped, blood bubbling past her lips. Suddenly, the child smiled... too wide, too sharp. In the depths of her eyes, darkness swirled, ancient and hungry. She rose, crossed the bloody asphalt, and crouched beside Rina. "Hello, Rina Vale." The voice was melodic and terribly old. "Rejoice. You have passed the test." Rina's heart lurched. This wasn't a child. This was something that had been waiting. "The story is yours now." The darkness closed in. Rina's heart stuttered once, then ceased its futile beating.Moments later,[Omniscient P.O.V]The dormitory room was empty.Lumira's belongings had been packed, her bags carried to the waiting chariot, her farewells spoken and received. The Another Intelligence had already begun repurposing the space, its crystal walls dimming to standby mode, frequencies shifting from personal to neutral.But something pulled her back.Some instinct honed through months of survival, some whisper that said *check, verify, ensure*, some deep unease that had nothing to do with logic and everything to do with the part of her that had died once and refused to die again.She pushed open the door one final time and stepped into the space that had been her sanctuary.The metallic scent hit her immediately.Not blood. Not quite. But something related, something that carried the same iron undertone, the same copper weight, the same visceral recognition that the body responded to before the mind could name it.Lumira moved through the room slowly, her hand finding the m
Days later,[Omniscient P.O.V]The farewells stretched across three days, each one a small death that contributed to the larger ending of the first year.Lumira stood at the Academy's eastern gate as Zephina prepared to depart. The shadow-walker wore traveling clothes the color of dried blood, her knives hidden in folds of fabric that moved wrong, that caught light at angles that shouldn't exist. She had not said goodbye to the others. She never did. She simply appeared at moments of departure, offered something—a touch, a word, a fragment of presence—and disappeared again."I am going to the noble houses," Zephina said, her voice barely above a whisper, as if speaking loudly might shatter some delicate balance. "The ones that rejected me. The ones that whispered about the shadow-walker's bastard daughter and her improper magic."Lumira studied her friend's face, the sharp angles that had softened slightly over the months of alliance, the eyes that had learned to trust even as they co
Moments later,[Omniscient P.O.V]Jaxon's arrest sent ripples through every power structure that the Academy had maintained.The Fenrir Pack, already destabilized by his departure, now faced the additional humiliation of their former Alpha's heir being taken into custody by the very kingdom he had hunted. Within forty-eight hours, the Wastelands were in uproar - pack elders demanding retribution, younger warriors whispering about weakness, merchants who relied on Fenrir trade routes calculating whether loyalty or pragmatism served them better.Lumira received the reports in the Dominion's war room, a chamber she had never intended to need but had built anyway, because hope for peace was not the same as preparation for war. The crystal table displayed holographic maps of the Wastelands, each territory marked with the color of its current allegiance. Red for Fenrir loyalists. Yellow for undecided. Green for those who had already sent tentative envoys to the Dominion, testing the waters
Days later,[Omniscient P.O.V]The closing ball was mandatory, a tradition that the Academy clung to with the desperation of an institution that had lost everything else.Lumira stood at the ballroom's edge with her hands wrapped around a crystal goblet that contained nothing but air, watching the students swirl across the floor in patterns that spoke of relief and celebration and the desperate need to forget what they had survived. The chandeliers blazed with captured starlight, casting prismatic rainbows across faces that had known only darkness for too long.She wore Duskbane colors - deep violet silk that shifted to black at the hem, the fabric woven with crystal threads that caught the light and threw it back in shards. The dress had been a gift from the Dominion's weavers, crafted in gratitude, delivered with reverence. Lumira had accepted it because refusal would have been cruelty, but she wore it like armor, like a uniform, like a reminder that she was not truly one of them no
The Great Hall,8:00 PM,Omniscient POV The Great Hall of Aetherion had been scrubbed of its academic austerity and replaced by a cavern of celestial opulence. Enchanted clouds drifted beneath the vaulted ceiling, raining down silent, shimmering sparks of starligh
Meanwhile,Administrative Manor,Registration Hall,Rina's POVThe administrative hall served as a jarring blend of opulence and inefficiency. Everything functioned as a whirlwind of controlled chaos where nervous students and frantic faculty navigated the low,
Moments later,Rina's POV I expected the bone-shattering crunch of marble. I expected the cold, pixelated reset of a world that refused to let me breathe. As Ivy’s shove sent me hurtling into the void of the grand staircase, time slowed to a sickening crawl. I saw Jaxon’s hand outstretched but to
Seconds later,Rina's POV "Your humility is as striking as your intellect, Lady Lumira," Alaric said, his voice a smooth silk that seemed to coat the tension in the room. He was still holding my hand, his thumb grazing the back of my knuckles in a way that made Jaxon’s growl audible from three ro
Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.
reviews