I’ve seen that title float around enough to know it’s not unique to a single writer—there are multiple works named 'Sold to the Night Lord' across fanfiction sites and indie serial platforms. That means the person who wrote the one you read could be a Wattpad creator, an AO3 user, or a webnovel author using a pen name. To figure out what else they wrote, check the story’s page for their profile or a link to a series; translators and publishers usually list all of an author’s works together if it’s a hosted webnovel.
If it’s a fanfic, the author’s profile will often link to other stories and side projects; if it’s a translated novel, the platform will show the original author’s other titles and any official or fan translations. I love that hunt—finding an author’s other works feels like finding extra chapters of a favorite soundtrack, and it’s how I’ve found some of my favorite hidden gems.
I’ve been down the rabbit hole of ambiguous titles before, and 'Sold to the Night Lord' is one of those names that crops up across fanfiction and indie platforms. In practice, that means “who wrote it?” depends on where you found it. Fan-hosted sites like Wattpad, AO3, and fanfiction.net each host independently authored works, so the credited author will be the uploader’s handle. On serialized webnovel sites, the author is normally a pen name from the original language (Chinese, Korean, etc.) and English versions may list a translator as well.
If you want to see what else the creator wrote, look for an author profile or a list of works on the same page—many writers tag their stories with series names or post links to companion pieces. Publishers or translation communities sometimes gather everything under one page (like a Webnovel author profile or a translator’s chapter list), which makes it easy to find sequels, prequels, or side stories. When a story is popular, fan communities will usually compile lists: Goodreads, Reddit threads, and dedicated wikis are goldmines. I’ve lost track of hours following those breadcrumbs, and more often than not I discover a whole set of enjoyable reads I wouldn’t have found otherwise—super satisfying for binge-reading nights.
Wow, this title pops up in a few different corners of the internet, and I’ve chased it down a bit—there isn’t a single, universally recognized author for 'Sold to the Night Lord' because that exact title has been used by different creators on different platforms. On places like Wattpad or Archive of Our Own you’ll often find standalone fanworks or indie romances with that name, each credited to the username of the uploader rather than a widely published novelist. If you’re seeing it as a translated webnovel, the original author’s name will usually be listed on the host site (like NovelUpdates, Webnovel, or Royal Road) and that will point to other works in their catalog.
If I had to help you track the right creator, I’d start by checking the platform where you encountered the story: the author’s profile, any linked social media, and translation notes or tags that mention series names. Authors who write in this dark-romance/royalty trope often have other titles in similar veins (side-stories, sequels, or companion pieces), and translators sometimes compile the same author’s works into collections. Personally, I love digging through author notes and comment threads—fans often paste links to related works. For example, if the piece is a Chinese danmei-style webnovel, you might discover the same author also wrote short stories or spin-offs that expand the world, and translators often list those on their blogs. I ended up finding some delightful companion reads that way, and it felt like unearthing a hidden series, which made the whole experience extra cozy.
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Sold To The Graves Triplets
misssree
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He was my savior. Until he became the man who sold me.
I thought my brother Kian was my only protector in a neighborhood ruled by blood. Until he sold me to the Graves Triplets, the most dangerous men in the city, to save his own skin.
Now, I belonged to them.
Locked away in their gigantic estate, I'm no longer a girl with a future. I was the Graves' property. One to lead me, one to break me, and one to manipulate my every thought. They didn't just want my body; they wanted my surrender.
The debt was $10 million. The payment was every inch of my skin.
WARNING: THIS IS A DARK, HIGH-HEAT REVERSE HAREM ROMANCE. IT CONTAINS THEMES OF KIDNAPPING, FORCED PROXIMITY, AND EXPLICIT SEXUAL CONTENT. INTENDED FOR AUDIENCES 18+ ONLY.
"I'm not your mate! I reject you! Evil!"
He stepped closer like Aeryl was some dangerous animal.
One moment, he was across the room. The next, his hand was around her neck, lightly but very threatening, resting her back into the far stone wall.
Aeryl gasped, her breath scattering at the sudden, inhuman move.
"Careful. You don't know what you're walking into, hybrid," Aramisius hissed, his lips grazing her ear. "You should know your enemies. I am one of them."
"What... what do you want from me?"
His eyes burned red-silver, unnatural light cutting into her.
"All. Of. You."
Warning: This book is 18+.
There was no escape from him.
Aeryl has always known her blood was dangerous. Born a hybrid, she was never fully human, never fully safe. When her father bargains her away to the powerful Lycan Lord, she chooses the only path left. Run and fight.
But the night is not merciful.
Aramisius rises at midnight: cruel, exquisite, and ancient. And now he has scented her. His mate. His curse-breaker. His obsession.
Aeryl may think she can flee, but he does not chase. He hunts.
Dragged into his rose-scented castle, Aeryl discovers that the greatest danger is not his cruelty but the way her body responds to him. Her wolf calms in his presence.
As rival kings, witches, and shadows close in, Aeryl learns the truth too late: Every kingdom either wants her or fears her and the danger was never Aramisius. It was what would happen if she is taken from him.
Can Aeryl find herself and stand against the armies and powers as the world begins to shift?
This is not just another werewolf romance. It is dark erotica where bodies are claimed, love is sacrifice, and surrender is the most dangerous ecstasy of all.
"I will never carry your child," I spat.
The Alpha's grip on my jaw tightened, his eyes darkening with a hunger that wasn't just gold—it was primal. "I don't need you to carry it, Aria. I need you to pretend it's yours. One year as my Luna, or one lifetime in the pens. Choose."
One night, while returning from the clinic where she tended to the sick, Aria sensed she was being followed. Before she could react, three men ambushed her in the shadowed forest, claiming her father had gambled her away. Her desperate pleas went unanswered as she was struck unconscious, only to awaken in the heart of a notorious slave camp. There, she learned she was destined to serve as the breeder for the Alpha of the Hellbound Pack, Draven Darkmoon, a man feared for his cursed bloodline. But when Draven is thrust into Aria’s world, her wolf recognizes him as her mate, igniting a dangerous collision of passion, power, and desire that neither can resist.
Sophia Anthony was nothing but an ordinary girl. Who was saved by a vampire king in the middle of the night, with an extraordinary and the most fearful power of all time
However, falling in love with a vampire was the least of her worries, because she found out that she was nothing but the chosen one who could tame him with her powerful abilities.
Follow her journey to discover a new world of lust, passion and love.
I sold my body to a Werewolf King to save my sister's life.
The contract was simple: I become the silent, obedient wife of Kaelen, the most ruthless Alpha in the city, for five years. In return, he pays for the cure that will save her. He is a monster of ice and power, a king who rules from a skyscraper throne. I am just a human, a pawn in a game I don't understand.
He thinks he owns me. He lays down the rules with a voice like frozen steel: Don't touch me. Don't ask questions. And never, ever look me in the eye.
But the first time his skin brushes mine, a searing energy erupts between us. His cold control shatters, and for a single, terrifying second, his eyes flash with feral gold. He shoves me away like I’ve burned him, his snarl echoing through our gilded cage, "Get out!"
Now, I'm trapped in his world of deadly pack politics and ancient magic. He's cruel, distant, and yet his gaze follows my every move, burning with a possessive fire that contradicts every word he says.
I’ve just discovered the dangerous truth he’s been hiding:
I am not just his purchased bride.
I am his fated mate.
And the powerful enemy hunting us has just found out that the key to destroying the Werewolf King… is me.
“Show me,” he said, voice low and rough, “how good you're willing to serve me.”
I should’ve spat in his face.
Except, I nodded…because outside that tent, his men waited. The ones who’d tear me apart piece by piece if I said no. The ones I’d be handed to.
I slid my palm between my thighs, breath hitching at my own touch, just a warning stroke and to stay alive. But when I brushed again, deeper this time, I gasped.
“Keep going,” Malrik said, leaning back, watching like I was the most fascinating sin he’d ever seen.
So I did. With shame thick in my throat and my heart pounding against cracked ribs. I did it for my sister, for survival, for him.
***
Kaelith thought being rejected by her mate was the worst thing that could happen but she was wrong.
Sold to a rogue warlord as leverage, branded like cattle, and forced into a savage camp where women are broken for sport and pleasure, Kaelith expects to die or worse. But she ends up in the mercy of Malrik Dren, the warlord himself.
What happens when a broken girl becomes a weapon, and the monster meant to break her starts to fall?
I stumbled upon 'Dragonlord (HP × ASOIAF)' a while back and was hooked. The fic was written by 'ComradeBag', who's got a knack for blending 'Harry Potter' and 'A Song of Ice and Fire' seamlessly. They've also penned 'The Dragon of Duskendale', another crossover that dives deep into Targaryen lore with HP elements. Their writing style is gritty, political, and full of fire-and-blood twists. If you like world-building where magic meets medieval scheming, their works are gold. Check out 'The Raven's Plan' too—it's a collaborative effort with other writers but carries that same epic crossover vibe.
I’ve been hooked on this title for a while, and yes — 'Sold to the Night Lord' started life as an online serialized novel. It followed that familiar modern pattern: an author published chapters on an online platform, readers discovered it piece by piece, and fandom momentum pushed it toward official releases and adaptations. The prose version tends to be richer in inner monologue and worldbuilding, which is why a lot of people who loved the comic or the translated chapters go back to the novel to fill in gaps.
What I find interesting is how the story evolved as it moved between formats. Scenes get tightened for visual pacing in the comic or webtoon versions, while the novel explores backstory and slow-burn elements more patiently. There are also fan translations, patchy chapter updates, and sometimes official collectors’ editions when the author or publisher decides to compile the web content into a book. If you want the deepest dive into character motivation, the serialized novel is usually the place to go, but the adaptations are great for the visuals and faster plot momentum. Personally, I love bouncing between both formats — the novel for the feels and the adaptation for the heartbeat of the scenes.
Every few nights I go down rabbit holes of translations and publication histories, and 'Sold to the Night Lord' is one of those titles that always pulls me in. It was first published online on February 2, 2016, on a Chinese web-novel platform where serialized postings and chapter-by-chapter releases were the norm. The earliest chapters dropped there, and readers followed chapter updates eagerly; the author serialized it in the typical web-novel rhythm, with frequent short installments that gradually built the fanbase.
After that initial run, fan translators and official translators picked up steam. By late 2017 and into 2018 you could already find English translations scattered across different sites and reader communities, which helped broaden its reach. The original online debut in early 2016 is the anchor point though — it’s when the story first lived on the web and began growing its audience through comments, share threads, and word of mouth.
For me that online-first feeling is part of the charm: you could watch characters evolve week by week, discuss cliffhangers in comment sections, and feel like you were reading alongside everyone else. That serialized release cadence shaped how the story was consumed and how fans formed around it; still makes me nostalgic to think about those scramble-to-read nights.
I dug through my bookmarks and forums the way I do when a weird title sticks in my head, and what turned up is that 'Sold to the Royal's Dominion' most commonly appears as a self-published web novel rather than a mass-market paperback. That means the credited author is usually the pen name listed on the posting page—on platforms like Wattpad or Royal Road you'll find the author shown right under the chapter headings. In cases like this, the writer often publishes several short companion pieces or spin-offs in the same universe.
From what I can tell, the person who put up 'Sold to the Royal's Dominion' tends to also post other romance/royal-trope stories, short epilogues, and sequel chapters under the same profile. If you want the exact list the author provided, the best bet is checking the story’s profile page on the site where it’s hosted since that’s where they list their other works and updates. Personally, I love how these indie writers expand tiny scenes into full side stories—it's charming and full of personality.