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The Tyrant Gave Me Three Husbands

****WARNING MATURE CONTENT**** King Viktor is a tyrant ruler who wants absolute and total control over his Kingdom. He gets rid of all who are a threat to his power and all around him fear him. He forces the three most powerful nobles in the kingdom he feels most threatened by to marry his stepsister Princess Kara to keep an eye on them and to take over their possessions. To traumatize and humiliate them, so they are more submissive to his power, he instructs the idiot sex-crazed princess on what to do with them. However, things take a turn for Viktor when Kara suddenly starts to act differently. Courtney is an ordinary salary-woman who suddenly finds herself in a book she’s recently read as a character destined to die, Princess Kara. She’s mortified as she’s forced to find a way to prevent Kara’s death which entails evading the suspicious watchful eyes of King Viktor and the anger of Kara’s three husbands who hate her for all the things she’s done to them. (THIS STORY IS A PSYCHOLOGICAL THRILLER SO EXPECT SOME MESSED-UP STUFF) ***Cover art is not mine***

AMerci · Fantasy
Not enough ratings
151 Chs

Discussion of plans

KARA'S POV 

Viktor informed me of what I was to do at Duke Avon's estate. I only had two things I was to do. The first was to spend time with Eleanor who had planned activities for us to do in the region and the second was to sleep in the same room as Aldric at the estate and do as I pleased with him for the duration of my stay.

Once I was done having lunch with Viktor I left the dining room and began to make my way to my room. I was walking down the hallway when I saw a painting of the first King of Manar, Edgar. I typically walked past it when I came to Viktor's wing for meals.

Ever since Eleanor pointed it out that day, when I gave her a tour of the main castle building, I've been curious about it. In this painting in the hallway, King Edgar wasn't holding the triangular infinity symbol, just a royal staff. Whereas in the other painting, he held the symbol and the staff. Eleanor said she had never seen it in any other paintings of Edgar before.