Chapter 01
āWhat is that supposed to be? Look at that, look. Sheās in a mess because she picked the wrong man. What a disaster.ā
When I was little, my grandmother would often sigh like that while watching dramas, lamenting the tragic life of the female lead.
āOh dear, how pitiful.ā
Back then, I didnāt understand why she got so upset over it. The only thing that interested me was the candy sitting on the table.
As I lay next to her, unwrapping candies one by one, she would sometimes say things like this:
āJihya.ā
āHm?ā
āYou must never end up with a man like that.ā
āWhy?ā
āA man like that ruins a womanās life. So you make sure you find a decent man, okay?ā
I was five years old. There was no way I could understand what kind of man āthat kind of manā even was.
Still, for my grandmotherāwhose only joys in life were me and those dramasāthis was something she repeated over and over again.
āOkay.ā
Back then, I just nodded without understanding anything. She would pull me into a hug and stroke my head, calling me her little puppy.
Maybe⦠she saw this coming.
My fate of getting involved with the wrong manāand ending up with my head cut off on the guillotine.
āI got transmigrated. And not just anywhere, but into a villainess who gets executed for tormenting the female leadā¦!ā
I never thought Iād actually be the one saying such a clichĆ© opening line straight out of a romance fantasy.
If I was going to say anything, Iād have preferred something grand and shamelessālike:
āRich and unemployed! Reverse harem! A life of luxury and pleasure!ā
You know, the kind of dream any morally questionable adult secretly harbors at least once.
After all, being the daughter of a count should make me part of the privileged class in this world, right?
Ah, āprivileged class.ā What a round, soft, adorable word.
Back when I was an ordinary person, it was a word I spat out passionately while criticizing social injustice. But if I could hold it in my hands, Iād protect it with my life.
And I wanted to use that power to become a decadent adult.
Yesāif I had been born into a more ordinary noble family.
āSister, we were so worried you wouldnāt make it back like this.ā
My brain, thoroughly soaked in romance fantasy, accepted the situation quickly without being surprised by the unfamiliar ceiling.
The boy I had never seen beforeāwho called me āsisterāāheld my hand tightly and looked up at me with exaggerated concern.
Why did I think it was acting?
Because I had heard him muttering outside the door.
āUseless as ever. At least I thought she could be married off and serve some purposeā¦ā
With a voice colder than a winter frost, he had criticized me. And now, the moment he saw I was awake, he switched to pretending to care?
All I could think was, āIs this supposed to be a family drama?ā
āSister, the Duke himself came because he was worried about you. Hurry and get ready and come down.ā
Meeting a duke right after waking up? Starting on hard mode, I see.
I didnāt even know who I was yet, but I knew one unspoken rule of romance fantasy worlds:
Dukes hold immense power.
And someone like meāa minor noble at best (though judging by this room, even that was questionable)ācould lose her head over the smallest mistake.
It would have been nice if proper etiquette just downloaded itself into my brain.
But noāthis was a dream that didnāt offer such conveniences.
I didnāt know the etiquette. I didnāt even know who I was. And on top of that, I had a hostile younger brother tagging along.
Going out there would definitely make things worse.
So I clutched my chest and groaned weakly.
āIām still not feeling wellā¦ā
āSister, this is not the time to be saying things like that.ā
āā¦Huh?ā
Thinking my poor acting had been exposed, I looked at himābut his expression had completely changed.
āWe called a doctor and a priest to save you. It already cost dozens of gold. You understand what I mean, donāt you? Youāre smart.ā
No⦠I actually donāt understand at all.
As his expression kept shifting, I stayed silent and read the room.
When someone brings up money like that, it usually means:
āYou better be worth the cost.ā
Having survived plenty of social situations in my previous life, I forced an awkward smile and nodded.
After he left, I opened the wardrobeāfilled with old dressesāand picked the least terrible one to wear while looking around.
Who did I transmigrate into?
The tiny room, containing nothing but a bed, offered no clues whatsoever.
The only thing I could tell was that I was a woman in my early twenties, with dull beige hair and green eyes.
With no answers, I went downstairs.
In the living room sat people who appeared to be the boyās family.
Among them, one man stood out.
He looked completely out of place in this shabby environmentāoverflowing with elegance.
The boy who called me sister was handsome too, but this man felt like he belonged to a different species entirely.
He looked as if all the light in the world had been gathered onto him alone.
While I was inwardly marveling, a middle-aged woman grabbed my hand.
āOh my, Ravenne. Are you feeling better?ā
Pulled along by her rough grip, I awkwardly sat beside her.
Ravenne? Is that my name?
It sounded familiar⦠but from where?
āThe Duke came all this way because he was worried about you.ā
The man who seemed to be Ravenneās father spoke.
The Duke⦠came for me?
I glanced at the man.
Black hair, red eyes, and a face sculpted like a masterpieceāexactly the kind of male lead youād find in almost any romance fantasy novel.
āHis Grace suggested that you stay at the ducal estate until the wedding, to help you adjust.ā
Marriage?
With that man?
Thatās basically winning the lottery.
As my inner affection skyrocketed and even his cold face started to look warm, he finally spoke.
āIād like you to come to the estate within a week. If you need anything prepared, I can send people.ā
āOf course. Weāll make the preparations. Ravenne, go and learn well. Youāll soon be the lady of House Celestaineā¦ā
āYes! Of course!ā
Lost in imagining marrying him, I quickly nodded.
The gazes around me felt strangely sharp.
Celestaine⦠That nameā¦
Wait.
Isnāt that the same name as the second male lead from that dark novel I read recently?
And the appearance matches tooā
The flowers blooming in my mind abruptly withered.
The Duke was just setting down his teacup and rising.
āWell then, Iāll take my leave, Count Rishupelt.ā
Rishupelt?
Wait⦠does that mean Iām that Ravenne Rishupelt?
Come to think of it, Iāve always had terrible luck.
Gacha pulls, lotteries, random drawsāIāve never once gotten anything good.
In school, I always ended up in the front seat.
In games, I always drew the losing card.
Even with a 99% success rate, Iād fail repeatedly.
And in novels, every couple I rooted for ended up doomed.
People even jokingly called me an āintentional anti-fan.ā
Seems like people donāt change that easily.
Because once againāI pulled the worst possible outcome.
The novel I got transmigrated into, āThe Empireās Rose Blooms Twice,ā was notorious.
A true tragedy.
A story so dark it destroyed not just its characters, but the readersā sanity too.
By the later chapters, it felt like every episode was a final destination.
Readers dropped it in droves.
A captured saintess.
A tyrant emperor.
And a second male lead who would rebel for love.
A story full of people with no tomorrow.
The man in front of me was that very second male lead, Ilion.
And Iā¦
I was his fiancĆ©eāRavenneāwho would try to poison the saintess and be executed.
If his rebellion had succeeded, maybe my luck wouldnāt seem this cursed.
But it failed.
And as a resultā
Not just the Duke, but his entire family and everyone in the estate would be executed.
A death sentence.
People say āterminal illnessā is trendy these days, but this isnāt what I signed up for.
I donāt even have a disease, yet I have to worry about dying?
What did I do to deserve this?
Looking back, saying:
āI got transmigrated into a villainess who gets executed!ā
ā¦was actually optimistic.
At least that version had hope.
In a situation like thisā¦
āDamn it!ā
Back in my room, I muttered to myself and took a deep breath.
No. No need to get worked up.
This is just a dream.
Yeah. Just a terrible nightmare.
Iāll wake up once I fall asleep again.
Soā¦
Letās just sleep.






