Cherreads

This Princess is an Extra

MoonLight_97
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
EXCERPT: Elinessa’s breath came sharp and furious as she was running, soaked gown clinging to her frame, golden hair plastered to her cheeks. She turned around the corner, heart racing but she slammed right into him. A hand shot out. Fingers curled tight as steel wrapped around her wrist. Her wrist was pinned held high against the wall in Drayce’s iron grip and yet, her glare didn’t waver. She looked every bit a furious storm in silk and bruises. He looked...cold and quietly, unmistakably furious too. Drayce tilted his head, water dripping from his dark hair strands, a cruel smile tugging at his lips. “Running?” he said softly. Too softly. Elinessa yanked her wrist. But he didn’t let go, even tightening his hold on her. “Let me go,” she hissed, her voice trembling perhaps due to cold or anger. He stepped closer. Bringing his face too close to hers. “Feisty for a dove.” he murmured, breath ghosting against her rain-slick skin. “I decide who flies in my territory.” His golden eyes dragged over her face, slow and unbothered like he had all the time in the world. “You keep fighting like you're not already caged.” Elinessa’s eyes narrowed, voice steady even as her pulse pounded: “Careful, Your Majesty. Even caged birds bite. You were never meant to be part of my story,” she snapped, shaking with fury. His smile was bitter. Bladed he replied “And yet, here we are. The story is ours now” Elinessa (whispering): “Then I’ll rewrite the ending… before it rewrites me.” Drayce’s smile deepened not warm, but cold. Like a hunter who hadn’t caught a bird... but clipped its wings himself.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: Just a side Character

People always say stories were humanity's greatest invention. Nah. I'd argue stories were humanity's first obsession.

Back when we were still poking mammoths with sticks, some guy was already scratching little thunder gods into cave walls and dramatically narrating it to his confused tribe. scrolls and books, and we devoured them. Within those pages gods fell, kingdoms rose, lovers bled. Every fantasy of humankind lived and breathed between ink and parchment.

And somehow, we followed every step, with nothing but the turn of a page. Later books became screens. Screens became portals..… and finally? Well, finally the line between watching a story and living inside one blurred into nothing at all.

We grew hungry for more. We wanted more. So we made it possible.

DreamSync Limited

The most advanced narrative immersion tech on the market today.

Yeah, in my time, you don't just read stories. You step into them. You pay the obscene premium, pass the psyche test, sign a two-hundred-page waiver that basically says "if you get emotionally wrecked inside your favorite fairytale, that's on you" and voilà. You're inserted into the narrative, living and breathing as one of its characters.

And of course, most people, what do they do? They make a beeline for the leads. They go straight for the Main Characters. Of course they do. The tall, brooding hero with the tragic backstory. Or the flirty one with too many buttons undone. The emotionally unavailable bastard everyone swears they'll "fix." The sweet, golden protagonist who radiates sunlight and conveniently has abs. Or, in the female lead category: the goddess-tier beauty with endless knowledge and the wardrobe budget of a small kingdom. Everyone wants their dream romance.

But me? I couldn't choose between them.

I loved both the male lead and the heroine; not in a weird love triangle way, but in a "please, you two idiots, be happy forever, adopt cats, and dance in flower fields until you're eighty" kind of way.

So instead of opting for the predictable romantic route, I went for something else. Something better.

I chose to become a witness. A side character in my absolute favorite novel. A quiet presence in the backdrop of the love story I'd adored since I was sixteen. And so, I became Princess Elinessa Aurel; the soft-spoken royal little sister of our male lead. A presence barely relevant in the story. A gentle extra in the story I'd adored since I read the novel:

"Petals of the Crown."

I knew that story like my own heartbeat. A fluffy, heartwarming romance full of slow-burn ache and ballgown sparkle. Every chapter etched into my skull. Every dumb little misunderstanding. Every awkward flirt, accidental touch, jealous glare, dramatic run through the rain; I had cried over it, laughed over it, highlighted passages like they were scripture. Basically, I ate that stuff up. 

It was my comfort novel. My obsession and my first literary love.

I had just graduated university, still high off coffee, thesis madness, and the looming dread of entering the real world as an adult. Before entering into the busy world again I rewarded myself with this experience for which I worked part time desperately, saving each and every penny and poured it all into this.

One last madness before...… whatever nine-to-five grind life is.

Here I was, fully immersed. Months of living inside the world of Petals of the Crown.

Well, technically, only a day had passed in the real world. Time flows differently when you're jacked into a narrative core; don't ask me how, I signed the waiver and skimmed the science.

But here's the important part; We were finally at the end. The drama was done. Our protagonists the prince and the heroine had chosen each other.

Crown Prince Callisto Aurel is emotionally attuned, storm-eyed, and the human embodiment of a sigh .... finally stopped brooding long enough to confess. And Lady Mirabel Ravel, sweet and sunshiny with flower braids and eyes like honey tea, had said yes like she'd been waiting her whole damn life for it right there, under the lit lanterns at the Moonlit Bloom Festival.

Gods know how many chapters of longing glances and tragic misunderstandings it had taken. But one night of lanterns and trembling hands sealed it. Canon achieved.

And me?

I was standing ten feet away in a pastel gown, completely third-wheeling like a deranged court jester at the climax of my favorite slow-burn romance.

"Oh my god, they're doing it," I squealed.

"They're actually—he's—oh, oh my god."

And then, like the mature, emotionally stable adult that I am: I giggled, hysterically. Like a royal idiot. Like a fan watching her fanfic leads get together in full cinematic HD.

"Princess, compose yourself," someone hissed behind me. But no. I was too far gone. My soul had departed my body and ascended to fiction heaven.

I was witnessing the literal climax of my favorite romance. And Callisto was reaching for Mirabel's hand like it was made of starlight and Mirabel was looking at him like her world had finally clicked into place.

I straight up had to turn around and scream silently into my sleeve. I may or may not have muttered, "this is better than any fanfic roleplay," out loud. Which, in this world, makes no sense. But you know what? It was worth it.

And then there was Commander Luke Dreva. The tragic silver-haired war god who had spent an entire novel being heartbreak on legs. The second Main Lead, rival knight had stepped down with honor, just two chapters earlier, bless his sad, sharp-edged soul. I remember that scene. Gods, I remember every part of it.

He hadn't begged. He hadn't cried. He simply handed his feelings over like a farewell sword. "May your heart rest where it's always belonged," he'd said, giving her that tiny, devastating smile. The kind that meant he was dying inside but would let her go, for her happiness.

And I?

I dissolved into a useless puddle behind a curtain and choked on a grape. Literally, a maid had to pat my back while I gasped "he deserves better!" And this story is almost over. Their wedding robes were already in the embroidery phase.

Only one scene remained: The First Kiss. The final emotional climax before the epilogue.