Wait, La Sheira? I just did a quick mental scroll through every tavern wench, Dothraki bloodrider, and background noble at the Purple Wedding, and nada. Could it be a nickname for someone? Like how 'The Hound' is Sandor Clegane? Or maybe a fan-created character? The fandom loves weaving original characters into the fabric of Westeros—I’ve seen some amazing OC art on Tumblr.
If you meant someone like Missandei or Ellaria Sand, their stories are worth revisiting. Missandei’s journey from translator to Daenerys’ confidant was subtle but powerful, and Ellaria’s vengeance arc in Dorne was... divisive, but memorable. Or maybe it’s a mix-up with 'Shiera Seastar,' a legendary Targaryen bastard from the books? Her story’s wild—magic, love triangles, and rumors she bathed in blood to stay young. Now that would’ve been a great subplot!
Hmm, La Sheira doesn’t match any character from the show or the 'A Song of Ice and Fire' books. The closest I can think of is Serra, a minor figure from the Dunk & Egg novellas, who was a Lysene pillow house worker tied to Illyrio’s backstory. Or perhaps Syrio Forel, Arya’s 'dancing master'? Names get jumbled, especially with the show’s accents—I spent seasons mishearing 'Yara' as 'Asha.'
If it’s an obscure reference, hit me with context! I live for deep lore debates, like whether 'Lady Stoneheart' should’ve appeared in the show or how Hot Pie’s direwolf bread foreshadowed Nymeria’s pack. Even if La Sheira’s a mystery, it’s fun to unravel.
Zero recall on La Sheira, but now I’m imagining a secret Targaryen cousin hiding in Lys. Wouldn’t that be a twist? The show skipped so much book lore—like Aegon VI or the real Arianne Martell—so who knows? Maybe she’s a sailor from the 'Silence' crew we never got to meet. Or a Dothraki matriarch cut for pacing?
Funny how one name can send you down a rabbit hole. I’m off to re-read Fire & Blood for clues—or maybe just to revisit Daemon’s chaos era. That man was a vibe.
La Sheira isn't a character I recall from 'Game of Thrones,' and I've rewatched the series more times than I'd care to admit! The name doesn't ring any bells with major houses, side characters, or even in the books. Maybe it's a minor figure from the books I glossed over, or perhaps a misspelling? Like, were you thinking of Shae, Tyrion's lover, or Melisandre, the Red Priestess? The show's packed with names, so it's easy to mix them up.
If it's a deep-cut reference, I'd love to know more—maybe from a deleted scene or fan theory? The world of Westeros is so vast that even after all these years, there are still nuggets I haven't uncovered. Or maybe it's from one of those elaborate roleplay forums where fans invent their own noble houses! Either way, now I'm curious enough to dive back into the lore.
I’m racking my brain, and 'La Sheira' isn’t clicking with anyone from Westeros or Essos. Maybe it’s a typo for 'Laena' Velaryon, Daemon Targaryen’s first wife? Or 'Shae,' whose betrayal gutted Tyrion? The show’s name pronunciations can trip you up—I still argue with friends over whether it’s 'Petyr' or 'Peter' Baelish.
If this is about a fanfic character, though, I’m all ears! The 'Game of Thrones' fandom spins gold from alternate endings and what-ifs. Like, what if Lyanna Stark survived? Or if Robb married Margaery? Tumblr’s full of 'House Sheira' crests and backstories. Honestly, half my headcanons are fanon at this point.
2026-05-21 18:53:37
24
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
The Last Dragon’s Enslaved Lycan Mate
My Fantasy Stories
9.5
153.6K
"If you can't satisfy me with your mouth, then you'll have to satisfy me some other way."
In one swift motion, he tore off her flimsy top and skirt, tossing the shredded fabric aside. The implications of his actions became quite clear to Visenya. "Please, let me try again... with my mouth. I believe I can..."
"Quiet!" Lucian's voice reverberated off the walls of his bedchamber, instantly silencing her.
This was not the way she had envisioned her first time. She had imagined passionate kisses and tender caresses from a man who loved and cherished her. But Lucian was not capable of love, and he certainly didn't cherish her. Instead, she was cursed with a mate consumed by vengeance, and wanted nothing more than to watch her suffer.
———
Ten years had passed since dragons ruled over the world, and Visenya had taken her rightful place as the Lycan Queen. Vampires were forced into the shadows, as hunting and enslaving humans became punishable by death. Finally, the world found peace. However, everything changed when Dragon Lord Lucian emerged from his induced slumber, only to discover the annihilation of his entire race at the hands of Visenya's father. Stripped of her kingdom, Visenya was condemned to a life of servitude as Lucian's slave. The cruelest twist of fate awaited her when she learned that her long-awaited mate was none other than the vengeful Dragon Lord himself.
Consumed by their mutual hatred, will they be able to resist the powerful bond between mates? Or will Lucian push Visenya to her limits, only to regret it in the end?
WARNING: This story may contain content that some may find disturbing.
They abused her. Used her for their dirty work. Humiliated her publicly. Treated her like filth on their shoes. They called her an omega. A servant. A mistake. But the Moon never forgot her name.
Daeira (Day-rah) *Dee* to her friends, doesn't remember the night her family was slaughtered. She doesn't know she's the last living heir of the Seralyn Pack, sacred white wolves descended from the Moon Goddess Selene. Blessed with lunar & healing magic, divine power, and moon fire in their blood.
All she knows is cruelty, hunger, and survival in the most ruthless pack in existence.
Raised by the wolves who killed her bloodline, Daeira has spent her life in the shadows, beaten, starved, silenced. She hides her strength. Hides her power. Hides the truth of what her wolf really is.
Until the night she turns eighteen... and the Moon wakes her.
Her wolf rises in a blaze of silver flame, and for the first time, Daeira sees what she really is, chosen, divine, and deadly. But when her fated mate, the Alpha's son, rejects her in front of the entire pack, everything shatters.
She doesn't beg.
She doesn't break.
She runs.
Because Daeira isn't the broken little thing they raised in a cage. She's the prophecy made flesh. And the world has no idea what's coming.
An ancient evil is spreading through the wolf realm. The rift to the hell realm has cracked wide open. Demons walk the earth. Angels are falling from the skies to stop them. And Daeira?
She's the only one who can close the breach.
The wolves who cast her out are about to learn:
The Moon doesn't bless without purpose. She sure as hell doesn't forgive.
✅ Reverse Harem/Dark Romance
✅ Rejected mate
✅ Dark Magic/Demons
✅ Hidden goddess bloodline
When Arya ran away from her Alpha and husband with their child she had no idea what was going to happen. No one would help her. Not even the Alpha Josh, Alpha of the largest and most powerful pack, other than the King and Emperor of all wolves and lycans. If only they knew who she truly was and not just a rogue she just declared herself as, maybe someone would help. No one could have expected the king to recognize her when he came to visit. Would he kill her? Enslave her? Keep her? Send her back to her husband? Save her?
Elena had her fate decided from the moment she was born as the young lady of a decadent family. In order to escape that fate, she accepts the offer of the young Duke, Ivar de Alba. As the Lady of House Alba, she finds herself entering a world she never imagined, filled with magic and secrets that the humans had long forgotten. In one of the highest positions of the empire, and with feelings blossoming for her new husband, Elena's life couldn't get any better, but Ivar still keeps a secret from her: he is the last son of a race that has been gone for centuries, and he will use everything he can to bring his people back, even it that means using her.
When Rowena Silverveil faints during her nuptial rite, Lord Darius Varian deems her weak and sells her to pay her father's debts. Shattered by betrayal and severed mate bond, she finds herself in the rugged fortress of the Western Clan, under the icy command of Thane Darkmoor. But as Rowena's touch begins to heal the wounded, and her dreams become evermore vivid, she soon discovers that she is the lost heir of an ancient clan in Eldoria. But certain powers do not want this truth to get out. With each step toward her true power, Rowena must decide either to hide in the shadows forever, or reclaim her birthright and mete vengeance upon those who wronged her, even if it costs her life and the lives of those she loves. The Red Luna rises. Her reckoning begins.
*She was banished to die. He saved her to possess her. Now three kings want to claim her… and the secret she carries could shatter kingdoms.*
Elysia Belrose has spent her entire life as nothing—scentless, powerless, invisible. The night her mother dies, she drowns her grief in the arms of a brutal stranger who makes her feel wanted for one perfect moment… before shattering her: *“Don’t get the wrong idea. This didn’t mean anything.”*
Two years later, she finally finds hope when Killian, the Alpha’s son, claims her as his mate. She tells herself she can earn his love. She’s wrong.
When she discovers him in bed with the Alpha King’s daughter, her rejection provokes his rage. Beaten bloody and accused of seduction, Elysia is banished to the Wildlands for 100 days—a death sentence wrapped in mercy.
But the man who saves her is the same stranger from that night. The one who broke her.
Rhaegar Draven. The Alpha King.
He doesn’t want her. He doesn’t believe in second chances. But when she begs for 99 days of protection, he agrees to one condition: she stays silent, obedient, and out of his way.
Except Elysia is hiding something that pulses beneath her skin, growing stronger with each passing moon. A forbidden bloodline. A secret pregnancy. And a truth that makes her the most dangerous woman alive.
Three men are hunting her—one who wants to reclaim her, one who wants to breed her, and one who’s trying to convince himself he doesn’t want to burn the world down to keep her.
But Rhaegar’s wolf knows what he refuses to admit: she’s his. His mate. His queen. His salvation and his ruin.
In 99 moons, everything will change.
I was absolutely gutted by Laena Velaryon's fate in 'House of the Dragon'—what a way to go! She was such a fierce, compelling character, and her death scene was one of the most visually striking moments of the season. Choosing to end her life with dragonfire rather than succumb to childbirth complications? Brutal, but so in character for someone with Targaryen blood. The way she stood there, facing Vhagar, her own dragon, as the flames engulfed her… chills. It’s wild how her death rippled through the story too, destabilizing Daemon’s emotional state and indirectly fueling Rhaenyra’s paranoia. The show really nailed the tragedy of her arc—a woman torn between duty and desire, only to be cheated by fate. I still think about that scene sometimes; it’s etched into my brain.
On a side note, I love how the show handled her relationship with Daemon. It wasn’t just some throwaway marriage—there was genuine complexity there. She understood his darkness, matched his intensity, and yet her death left him utterly unmoored. Makes you wonder how things might’ve gone if she’d lived longer. Would Daemon have stayed loyal to her? Would Rhaenyra’s reign have been less chaotic? So many what-ifs!
Oh, Shasa! If you mean Shae from 'Game of Thrones,' I can talk about her for hours. She’s one of those characters who starts off seeming like a minor player but ends up leaving a huge mark. Initially introduced as a camp follower and later Tyrion Lannister’s lover, Shae’s arc is heartbreaking. Her sharp wit and defiance made her stand out, especially in a world where women often had little agency. But her loyalty—or lack thereof—becomes a pivotal point in Tyrion’s story. The way she betrays him during his trial is gut-wrenching, and it leads to one of the show’s most explosive moments. I still get chills thinking about Peter Dinklage’s performance in that scene. Shae’s complexity makes her unforgettable, even if her name isn’t as iconic as Daenerys or Cersei.
On a deeper level, Shae represents the fragility of trust in Westeros. Her relationship with Tyrion starts as transactional but grows into something more genuine—or so we think. The tragedy is that neither of them could escape the roles society forced on them. Shae’s final moments are a brutal reminder of how the game consumes everyone, even those who try to play it smart.