I donβt play the role of the kidnapped princess very well.
And I really hate the fated mates trope.
Hello again, Iβm Eve Wakefield, and I refuse to accept that Iβm in love with an intergalactic moth prince.
No.
I donβt care how handsome he is, I donβt want to marry him.
I donβt care if his parents have a sentient spaceship capable of eating entire planets.
Love is earned, not swindled by pheromones.
Iβm now trapped on a ship with an adorable cyborg bodyguard, a golden toilet, and relationship issues. Thereβs the prince Iβm supposed to marry, the forest beast I fell in love with, and the never-wears-clothes police officer with tentacles. Iβve also got a mother-in-law who looks like a giant millipede, more macarons than I can eat, and plenty of red lace lingerie made from alien moth blood.
Iβm living in luxury, but I will do anything to see Abraxas again.
Even if that means giving in and becoming a princess in a gilded cage.
Thereβs so much more to all of this than I first thought, and I shouldβve known better than to judge a man whose gaze is enough to knock me to my knees.
Damn.
I might be wrong. I might be in love with more than one alien. I might also be dying.
And thereβs only one person who can fix this: I need to be with Abraxas.
After that, Iβll worry about the possibility of becoming the next queen of the universe.
But letβs be honest here: I donβt miss being a caterer; being an alien queen is way more interesting.
seminal – adjective
an extremely important, often creative and unique, early stage influence that has a profound effect on the things that follow after
SEMINAL – book 2 of 3 in the For the Love of Aliens trilogy. This is a why choose/reverse harem alien romance. In this volume, weβll continue to follow Eve as she finds herself falling in love anew, reaffirming her original love, and testing the waters (pun intended) of a third relationship.

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