The crown’s significance? It’s the ultimate troll. In a world where fae mock humans as weak, Jude wanting it is a middle finger to tradition. It’s not about looking regal—it’s about burning the whole system down. Every jewel probably has a curse, but Jude’s like, ‘Challenge accepted.’ The crown’s real power? Making enemies sweat when a mortal dares to reach for it.
The crown in 'the cruel prince' isn’t just a symbol of power—it’s a trap woven from ambition and deceit. Jude, a mortal in the treacherous High Court of Faerie, sees it as her ultimate goal, a way to prove she belongs despite her human fragility. But the crown’s weight is more than gold; it’s the crushing expectation of survival in a world where every ally could be a knife in the dark. The Faerie rulers wear it like a shackle, their authority forever contested. For Jude, seizing it means rewriting the rules of a game rigged against her, turning her into both predator and prey.
The crown also mirrors the toxic allure of control. It dangles the promise of safety in a realm where vulnerability is fatal, yet wearing it demands sacrifices—trust, morality, even love. Jude’s obsession with it blurs her humanity, echoing the very cruelty she despises in the fae. The crown’s significance isn’t just political; it’s a psychological battleground where power and identity collide.
In 'The Cruel Prince', the crown represents the brutal hierarchy of Faerie, where strength is the only law. It’s a prize Jude covets not for glory but to dismantle the system that mocks her mortality. The fae treat it as a divine right, but Jude’s defiance turns it into a weapon—proof that even the powerless can rewrite destiny. Its gleam hides centuries of bloodshed, each gem a story of betrayal. When Jude touches it, she isn’t just claiming a throne; she’s declaring war on fate itself.
Think of the crown as a character itself—silent, gleaming, and ruthless. It dictates every move in 'The Cruel Prince'. For Cardan, it’s a burden he never wanted; for Jude, it’s the ultimate defiance. Its presence looms over courtly dances and assassination plots alike, a constant reminder that power in Faerie is never stable. The crown doesn’t just symbolize authority—it exposes the rot beneath the glamour, turning wearers into both rulers and targets.
2025-07-04 11:42:07
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Bound To The Crown Prince
Sophie Starr
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Some chains are made of iron, others are forged by fate.
Edrian Lorne has never dreamed of freedom. Born a slave, trained to obey, and scarred by a master’s cruelty, he has learned one truth: hope is dangerous, but when war tears his world apart, he finds himself standing before the Crown Prince of DarkMoonCrest… and the impossible happened when their eyes met, and the mate bond roared to life.
Prince Xander Veyrion has spent his life pursuing one thing, the throne. The bond to a slave is a threat to everything he has built, to every alliance he needs. Yet denying the pull between them proves harder than ruling a kingdom cursed to rot without a noble-born mate.
In the shadows of court intrigue, deadly magic, and whispers of rebellion, the bond between Edrian and Xander burns hotter with each stolen glance and forbidden touch. But when betrayal strikes and a killing curse forces their hands, they must decide, cling to ambition and lose each other, or defy the kingdom and claim a love that could bring an empire to its knees.
A slave with no hope.
A prince with everything to lose.
And a bond that could change the fate of a kingdom.
"Look at me properly and try to remember." He implored her, his silvery eyes boring into hers. Maya raised her nervous eyes to meet his. Searching her head, she tried to remember where she may have met this man before.
As she stared at him, a sense of familiarity began to settle. Those eyes... she'd seen them before. Where has she seen them? One by one, the images came. The pictures from a time she had forgotten. She had helped someone with eyes just like this.
Still in his embrace, a daunting realisation began to set in. She'd met this man before. Long before he even dreamed of being a king...
****************
A tyrant king conquers a kingdom so he can get married to her forgotten princess. People expect a marriage filled with strife and everything but none of that happens. Instead he treats her right, worships her and kisses the very ground she walks on. Why is that? People wonder. The reason is quite simple.
Years ago, the same princess had saved his life from the bitter hands of death when he was betrayed by his half brother, the crown prince of Madonia.
The crown is a story of a princess who has been raised differently from others like her. She was taught to hold a weapon in her hand and wield it against any threat that comes in her way. Soon, she is crowned to be queen, and instead of finding a king to lead the kingdom, she independently breaks tradition and leads her way. Until one day, she finds herself falling for someone that could shatter every bit of power she has. Will she let love conquer and lose her reign? Or will she let power continue to grow within her veins of the kingdom?
(Note: this is still in progress and I may have a busy schedule but I am looking forward to what you all have to say about this story. Let me know and feel free to speak your mind out! They mean a lot to me!)
Katara has been a trained assassin since she was a kid, but when she is betrayed by her so-called partner she ends up dying. But to her surprise, she wakes up in the other world. She didn't know if God heard her prayers, but this time she had everything she wanted.
A loving family, a simple life, and she is an ordinary person. She's working as a maid of the duke, together with her mother. But when the daughter of Duke eloped with her lover, the duke didn't have any other choice but to make Katara a replacement for her daughter. And in exchange, he'll give her parents a good work and good life and help her mother with her treatment.
Before the crown prince's coronation, the empire of Feronia held a Selection. Every noble's daughter is selected to marry the crown prince, the only thing Katara's mission is to be kept chosen by the prince until the duke's daughter returns. She needs to keep her profile low, and she needs to make the Prince fall in love with her so that the Duke Daughter will be sure to be the next Queen chosen.
At first, she thought making the Prince fall in love with her is just a simple thing, it was one of her expertise in her previous life. But when she discovered that the Prince is in love with someone else, everything became complicated. Not to mention, she discovered one thing from the duke that turned her world outside down.
Lies, betrayals, and wickedness.
Will she be able to live a normal life? or her being an assassin will always be in her blood?
Wicked Crown
The Crown’s Bargain
Emilia Valoria has spent her life in the shadows of her royal lineage, content to be overlooked as the second princess of the Kingdom of Avariel. But when her elder sister defies tradition and elopes, Emilia is thrust into the spotlight, forced to fulfill the royal obligation her sister abandoned: an arranged marriage to the stoic and enigmatic Prince Kael of Arindale.
Determined to protect her kingdom from the fragile alliance's collapse, Emilia reluctantly agrees to the union. However, her first encounter with Kael proves more tumultuous than she expected—his cold demeanor hides a kingdom scarred by betrayal, and his heart, she suspects, is locked away behind impenetrable walls.
As Emilia navigates the intrigue of a foreign court, political machinations threaten to tear the kingdoms apart. Bound by duty but drawn together by fleeting moments of vulnerability, Emilia and Kael must decide whether their marriage will remain a mere contract or evolve into something neither of them dared to hope for: love.
Caught between loyalty to her kingdom and the desires of her heart, Emilia must find her voice in a world that demands silence, proving that even in an arranged marriage, she has the power to rewrite her own destiny.
Executed for treason by the man she once loved, Lady Evelyne thought death would be the end of her story.
Instead, she wakes up five years in the past....before the betrayal, before the bloodshed, before becoming the doomed fiancée of the ruthless Crown Prince.
This time, she knows exactly how the kingdom will fall.
Determined to survive, Evelyne hides her memories behind a perfect smile while secretly changing the future one move at a time. But the more she tries to avoid the cold and dangerous prince destined to destroy her, the more his attention begins to follow her.
Because this version of Evelyne is smarter, colder and untouchable.
As political conspiracies tighten around the throne and enemies emerge from the shadows, Evelyne realizes her past life may have been built on lies. And the man she swore to hate might not be the real villain after all.
The ending of 'The Cruel Prince' is a rollercoaster of political intrigue and personal vengeance. Jude, the human protagonist, outsmarts the fae at their own game by manipulating Prince Cardan into declaring her the rightful ruler of Elfhame. She becomes the power behind the throne, forcing Cardan to obey her while maintaining the illusion of his authority. The book closes with Jude embracing her ruthless side, proving humans can dominate even in a world of immortal tricksters. It’s a satisfying twist that flips the usual fae-human dynamic on its head, setting up intense conflicts for the sequel. If you enjoy morally gray characters and unexpected power shifts, this ending will stick with you long after the last page.
In 'The Cruel Prince', the main antagonist is a slippery figure—it’s not just one person but a toxic system. The High King Eldred represents the brutal hierarchy of Faerie, his indifference as deadly as any blade. Yet the real thorn in Jude’s side is Cardan, the youngest prince, whose cruelty masks deep insecurity. He starts as a bully, mocking her mortal frailty, but power twists him into something worse—a ruler who toys with lives for amusement. Their dynamic is a dance of hatred and fascination, where every smirk hides a dagger.
The book cleverly blurs the line between villain and victim. Even Madoc, Jude’s stepfather, fits here—his war-mongering and betrayal cloak paternal care in ruthless ambition. Faerie itself is an antagonist, its glamour and lies corroding trust. The story thrives on moral grayness, making you question who’s truly wicked. Is it the ones who wield power cruelly or the system that molds them? Jude’s own ruthlessness mirrors her enemies, adding delicious complexity.
I dug through the last chapters of 'The Cruel Prince' and what stays with me is how morally messy Jude’s victory is. The climax is Balekin’s brutal coup attempt at the coronation: family slaughter, chaos in the court, and Madoc aligning with Balekin for power. In the confusion Jude finds Cardan, drags him into the Court of Shadows, and sets a plot in motion rather than simply fleeing. That chaotic bloodletting is the trigger for everything that follows. What Jude ultimately pulls off is cold and brilliant: she engineers a situation where Cardan ends up on the throne as king, bound to obey an oath to her for a year and a day. Practically, she uses her role in the Court of Shadows and the chaos of the banquet to manipulate events so Madoc’s plans collapse and Balekin is neutralized. Cardan becomes the visible monarch, but Jude is the one who will actually run things from behind the scenes as his seneschal. That shift in power is satisfying and awful at once because Jude achieves safety and influence only by betraying trust and embracing deception. The epilogue underlines the cost: Jude sends Oak to the mortal world for safety, and she walks back into the palace alone to handle the political aftermath. Cardan’s obedience has a built-in expiration, and his smirk at the end promises future friction rather than gratitude. So the ending is less a neat triumph than the opening move in a longer, darker game about who rules and what you lose to do it. I sort of love that sting of victory — it tastes like defeat in a different costume.