822 Results with the "Fiction" genre


    • Chapter V — Frivolous Cupid Cover
      by LovelyMay Chapter V opens amid the ever-bubbling atmosphere of Poltons Park, where guests trade not only pleasantries but pointed glances and subtle moves in a game of social chess. The narrator, a quietly attentive observer, first paints Jack Ives as bold and straightforward—one of the few men at ease in courting Trix Queenborough despite her wealth and status. Rather than being intimidated, he thrives on the challenge she presents, while others circle cautiously, weighed down by propriety or calculation. Trix,…
    • Chapter VI — Frivolous Cupid Cover
      by LovelyMay Chapter VI begins with the quiet rustle of leaves and the hum of bees in an English orchard, where a philosopher sits reading, lost in his abstract thoughts. He is deeply immersed in a dense treatise on ontology, absorbed in reasoning that floats high above the tangible world around him. His detachment from nature’s softness and life's emotional tides is deliberate, shielding himself behind intellectual walls. It is in this meditative state that Miss May finds him. She arrives, seemingly playful, yet…
    • Chapter VII — Frivolous Cupid Cover
      by LovelyMay Chapter VII unfolds with a storm of unintended consequences stirred by Duke Deodonato’s well-meaning but overzealous decree. Believing in the virtues of matrimony as a stabilizing force, the Duke orders all unmarried men over twenty-one to wed within three weeks. What begins as a social reform soon spirals into chaos. Women, interpreting the Duke’s public declarations as a sign that he will marry one of them himself, begin to refuse all proposals. This unintended collective standoff delays the entire…
    • Chapter VIII ‑Frivolous Cupid Cover
      by LovelyMay Chapter VIII opens with Ashimullah once again caught in the tightening grip of court expectations, his personal beliefs increasingly at odds with the roles imposed on him by his royal duties. Although once a Christian, his conversion to Islam was more a matter of necessity than conviction, and the Sultan’s recent insistence on his maintaining a traditional Muslim household—with multiple wives—tests his integrity. Ashimullah has no desire to take more wives, not from fear or disdain, but out of deep…
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