Second Life: The Author’s Hand
About
June beat the book.
She was supposed to die in Chapter Forty-Seven — the wicked villainess of a trashy romance novel, marched to the scaffold while the cold Duke looked on. Instead she rewrote the ending, kept the Duke, and walked out of her own execution holding a pen that can edit the world one sentence at a time.
That, it turns out, was the easy part.
Because a story does not like being corrected. Every time June fixes a scene, smooths a fate, or saves someone the plot meant to spend, the book pushes back — quietly at first, and then not quietly at all. The happy ending she wrote for herself keeps trying to revert to the one she was assigned. And the longer she wields the pen, the clearer it becomes that something on the other side of the page has noticed her using it — and has started to write back.
She wanted to be the author of her own story. She’s about to learn she isn’t the only one holding a pen.
Season Two of Second Life is a sharper, stranger, funnier turn of the screw: a villainess-isekai romantasy about authorship, fate, and a grumpy-sunshine love story that now has to survive an editor with a grudge. For readers who like their fantasy romance with dramatic irony, a deadpan heroine, and stakes that finally bite.
She rewrote her ending. Something is writing back.