Follow
Chapters
Share
A Love That Never Was Novel Cover

A Love That Never Was

I was a brilliant scientist, but in my family, I was always the shadow to my perfect, manipulative sister, Jetta. On the day I was set to receive the prestigious Harrison Award, my family was only focused on her graduation party, dismissing my life's work as a mere hobby. That same day, I was brutally attacked in my own lab. The men who did it used Jetta's keycard and sneered that she sent them to "teach me a lesson" and put me in my place. Bleeding out on the cold floor, I made one last desperate call to my fiancé, Hayden. "Stop being so dramatic," he snapped before hanging up. "This is Jetta's big day. Don't you dare ruin it for attention." My mother came downstairs, saw nothing but a mess, and left a voicemail scolding me for being selfish. My soul ripped free from my body, forced to watch them celebrate. I saw the love in Hayden's eyes-not for me, but for Jetta. To them, my death was just another one of my "attention-seeking stunts." Now, as a ghost trapped in my own home, I watch them find my body and slowly piece together their neglect from my journal. But they've overlooked the one thing that will expose it all: the memory pendant around my neck, which recorded every horrifying second of the truth.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

I was a brilliant scientist, but in my family, I was always the shadow to my perfect, manipulative sister, Jetta. On the day I was set to receive the prestigious Harrison Award, my family was only focused on her graduation party, dismissing my life's work as a mere hobby.

That same day, I was brutally attacked in my own lab. The men who did it used a keycard I recognized and sneered that she sent them to "teach me a lesson" and put me in my place.

Bleeding out on the cold floor, I made one last desperate call to my fiancé, Hayden.

"Stop being so dramatic," he snapped before hanging up. "This is Jetta's big day. Don't you dare ruin it for attention."

My mother came downstairs, saw nothing but a mess, and left a voicemail scolding me for being selfish.

My soul ripped free from my body, forced to watch them celebrate. I saw the love in Hayden's eyes-not for me, but for Jetta. To them, my death was just another one of my "attention-seeking stunts."

Now, as a ghost trapped in my own home, I watch them find my body and slowly piece together their neglect from my journal. But they've overlooked the one thing that will expose it all: the memory pendant around my neck, which recorded every horrifying second of the truth.

Chapter 1

My consciousness became a shimmering, weightless thing, suddenly detached from the world I knew. It floated above the cold, unforgiving floor of my cherished laboratory, a silent scream trapped in a perception that no longer had a throat. This wasn't how it was supposed to end. Not today. My Harrison Award sat on the desk, still in its pristine box, unopened.

The heavy oak door to my basement lab creaked open, shattering the unnatural silence. Footsteps, soft but deliberate, echoed on the flagstone. It was my mother, Beverly, her floral perfume-a scent I'd always associated with distant elegance-preceding her.

"Cheslie? Are you down here? Honestly, what kind of researcher holes up in a literal dungeon on Jetta's big day?" Her voice, as sharp and precise as a surgeon's scalpel, cut through the air.

She didn't wait for an answer. She never did. Her eyes, usually so keen, swept over the room without truly seeing. She didn't notice the overturned chair, the scattered research notes, or the dark, growing stain beneath the workbench. She just saw my lab, a place she considered messy and "unbecoming" for a Crane.

"Still playing the recluse, I see," she muttered, her polished heels clicking impatiently. "Honestly, Jetta was so worried you wouldn't show up. You know how sensitive she is."

Jetta. Always Jetta. Even now, when my entire existence had just been violently extinguished, her name was the first on their lips. My spirit felt a phantom ache, a familiar sting that had nothing to do with the final, crushing impact.

Beverly pulled out her phone, her perfectly manicured thumb flying across the screen. She frowned when her call went straight to voicemail. "See? This is what I mean. Always so dramatic." She pressed a button, then held the phone to her ear. "Cheslie, darling, it's Mom. Where are you? The party starts in an hour, and Grandfather Crane is asking for Jetta. Don't you dare miss it. It's her residency graduation, a monumental day for the family. Try to make an effort, just for once. And please, don't embarrass us by showing up in those… work clothes. We need you to look presentable. For Jetta. Call me back immediately if you get this. And don't even think about trying one of your attention-seeking stunts today. We have enough on our plates."

She ended the call with a huff and tossed her phone onto a stack of my research papers, not bothering to check if it landed safely. Then, with a sigh, she began to poke through my things. She picked up a framed photo of me with my research team, scoffed, and set it down face-first. Her gaze landed on my leather-bound journal, lying open on my desk next to the Harrison Award. Without a second thought, she picked it up.

Her eyes skimmed the page, pausing at a stark number scrawled at the top: "99."

"What is this, some kind of code?" she murmured, her brow furrowed in mild annoyance. "Cheslie, honestly, you and your little secrets." She didn't dwell on it. How could she? She had no way of knowing that "99" wasn't a code, but a tally. Ninety-nine times I had felt their neglect. Ninety-nine moments of being dismissed, overlooked, unloved. Each instance meticulously recorded, a silent testament to a lifetime of yearning for their approval. It was my private ledger of emotional starvation.

Beverly flipped through a few more pages, then, with a dismissive shrug, she tossed the journal onto a pile with other discarded papers. It landed with a soft thump, almost lost amidst the clutter. My heart, or what was left of it, constricted. Even in death, my pain was invisible.

Just then, my phone buzzed with an incoming message. It was a voice note from Hayden, my fiancé. His voice, usually so smooth and reassuring, was laced with an unfamiliar irritation.

"Cheslie, where are you? Jetta's graduation party is about to start. Her parents are asking where you are. You know how important this day is for her, for the family. Don't make a scene. Just come, okay? For her. We'll talk later about whatever this is." His tone was dismissive, almost a command. It wasn't a question, but an expectation of obedience.

A familiar pang of disappointment pierced my spectral form. Hayden, the man I had promised to spend my life with, was echoing my family's sentiments. Always Jetta. Always her day.

Beverly, having found nothing of interest, made her way back upstairs, muttering about my "unpredictability." She didn't even bother to close the lab door. The house grew quieter, but not truly silent. I could still hear the distant sounds of laughter and music from upstairs. The party had begun. Jetta's party.

Meanwhile, in the elegant living room, Kyle Crane, my father, was already holding court. He adjusted his perfectly tailored suit, a picture of patriarchical authority.

"Cheslie still not here?" he asked, his voice booming slightly over the soft jazz music. "Typical. Always trying to steal the spotlight." He turned to Camden, my older brother. "Go check on her, Camden. Tell her to stop this nonsense and come up. She needs to understand that today is about Jetta, not her."

Camden, ever the dutiful son, nodded. "She's probably just being dramatic, Dad. You know Cheslie. Always needs attention." He rolled his eyes, a gesture that used to make me flinch. Now, it just felt like a dull throb.

"Exactly," Kyle said, taking a sip of his expensive whiskey. "She'll come around. She always does." He had a way of speaking, a certainty in his pronouncements, that made it nearly impossible to argue. He believed his will was law, and for us, it always had been.

Jetta, radiant in a cream-colored dress, her blonde hair shimmering under the chandelier, approached them. Her eyes, wide and seemingly innocent, darted between Camden and Kyle. "Is everything alright?" she asked, her voice a delicate whisper, barely audible over the music. "Is Cheslie still upset? Oh, I hope she's not. I told her I didn't mind if she missed my party to accept her award. Really, I did." She wrung her hands, a picture of concern.

My spirit watched, a bitter taste in my non-existent mouth. Jetta, the master manipulator. She knew exactly what to say, how to play the part. She always did. Her words were a soft veneer over something sharp and cold.

Jetta pulled out her phone. Her fingers paused over the screen for a moment, her expression hardening almost imperceptibly before softening again. Instead, she typed something else, her lips curving into a practiced frown. "Cheslie, please, I hope you're okay. I understand if you're upset about… things. But please, don't let it ruin your day. My day wouldn't be complete without you." She sent it, then forced a small, sad smile onto her face.

Beverly, who had just returned to the living room, hurried to Jetta's side, embracing her tightly. "Oh, my sweet girl! Don't you worry about Cheslie. She'll be fine. She's just being difficult, as usual. You always have such a big heart, worrying about her when it's your special day." Beverly stroked Jetta's hair, her eyes narrowing as she glanced towards the basement door. "Honestly, Cheslie needs to grow up. Always needing to be the center of attention."

I scoffed, a soundless, bitter laugh. Center of attention? All I had ever wanted was a quiet corner, a moment of their genuine regard. A single fleeting glance that said, "We see you, Cheslie. We value you." But that was a wish that would never be granted. Not in life, and certainly not in death.

I remembered the countless dinners where my scientific breakthroughs were met with polite nods, quickly overshadowed by Jetta's latest surgical anecdote, however minor. My published papers, my grants, my groundbreaking research-they were all "academic pursuits," "less practical" than a surgeon's immediate impact. Kyle would praise Jetta for following in his footsteps, for carrying on the "true Crane legacy." Beverly would beam, seeing Jetta as a reflection of her own social success. Camden would nod in agreement, his loyalty firmly with the golden child.

Never once, not in my entire life, had I sought to eclipse Jetta. I had always admired her charisma, her ability to effortlessly command a room. I had learned early on that the easiest way to survive in this family was to make myself small, to retreat into my work, where my worth was determined by data and discovery, not by the fickle affections of my bloodline. I had even, on several occasions, deliberately downplayed my achievements, just so Jetta could have her moment without feeling threatened. I had never competed for their love. I had merely existed, hoping, foolishly, that existence alone would be enough.

Now, my final, irreversible silence was, in their eyes, the ultimate dramatic performance. And they still couldn't see me.

You may also like

Betrayed By My Alpha: The Ghost Luna's Revenge Novel Cover
9.0
I died alone in the medical wing giving birth to our son. "Tell her to calm down and stop the theatrics." Those were the last words my mate, the Alpha, said about me while I bled out. Instead of passing on, my soul was tethered to the packhouse. I was forced to watch my best friend Seraphina seamlessly step into my life, taking my baby and my husband before my body was even cold. To secure her place, she planted my blood-soaked birthing blanket in the woods to frame me for faking my own kidnapping. Ryker swallowed her lies completely. He refused to send a search party, telling the entire pack my disappearance was just a pathetic plea for attention and money. As a helpless ghost, I watched Seraphina brainwash my one-year-old son into calling her his mother and teach him to joyfully trample my beloved garden. "Bad mommy ran away. Don't love Kaelen." Hearing my own child parrot those venomous words was a dagger to my soul. Whenever anyone questioned my absence, Ryker fiercely defended her, dismissing the desperate warnings of my loyal friends and his own elders. The man I loved and died for treated my memory like a malicious joke, grateful for an excuse to replace me while living with my murderer. But when Seraphina's mask finally slipped, and the horrifying truth of my death crashed down on him, it was far too late. Seeing him crumble in agonizing regret brought me no comfort. I no longer wanted his love or his desperate apologies. Now, I only wanted his absolute ruin.
Project Chimera  Novel Cover
8.1
The monsters they created have come home. George Alvarez, a Miami police officer, thought it would be just another patrol. Instead, he's forced into chaos, fighting to protect civilians in a mall overrun by predators not born of nature, while struggling to keep his life long secret. Survival is the only priority. Former Dr. Bridget Carter never intended to unleash hell. Once a rising star in genetic science, she walked away from the illegal experiments that twisted DNA into something unnatural, something alive. Now a quiet mother trying to forget, she finds herself trapped in Miami's crowded Bayside Mall... just as the creatures she once helped design break loose. As bodies fall and exits vanish, Bridget, George, and a small group of strangers, including a fading boxer, a disciplined fighter, and a scientist with dangerous knowledge, must navigate a maze of terror, uncover what went wrong, and stop the creatures before they reach the city beyond. But these aren't mindless beasts. They evolve. They hunt with intent. And they remember the people who made them. "The past never dies, it mutates."
Six Years A Ghost, Now Real Novel Cover
7.2
My world shattered when I found the text on my husband's phone, revealing his year-long affair. But the deepest cut came from my eight-year-old son. He defended the other woman, Kallie, telling me, "Kallie says you're being selfish and you don't understand Dad." When I confronted them, my husband called me a liar about the baby I was secretly carrying. He had me beaten and publicly shamed at a party while our son watched, screaming that I was ugly and that Kallie should be his new mom. They took everything from me-my home, my dignity, and the love of my child. I was nothing to them but an obstacle. So, with the secret help of my mother-in-law, I faked my death. For six years, I was a ghost. I built a new life, a new family, and found a peace I never thought possible. Until the day my ex-husband and the son who betrayed me walked into my bakery, determined to reclaim a family they had already destroyed.
Sweet Revenge Of The Stolen Heiress Novel Cover
9.6
I was only three and a half years old, living in a damp basement and beaten daily by Enoch Pruitt with a heavy leather whip. "Get up, you useless waste of space!" He always told me I was a stray he had picked out of the garbage. But during one brutal beating that nearly stopped my heart, time froze, and a glowing figure called The Chronicler appeared. "You are not an abandoned orphan, Clare. You carry the blood of the highest gods." He revealed that I was the stolen daughter of the ultra-wealthy Barrett family. Then, he showed me the horrific ending of my previous life. I had died right here on this bloody dirt floor. My real parents and three brothers went completely insane with grief, turning into ruthless monsters who destroyed themselves and the entire world to avenge me. Meanwhile, the Pruitt family kept torturing me, locking me in a woodshed and feeding me moldy bread. The memory of my bones breaking and my real mother's agonizing screams crushed my chest. Why did I have to suffer like an animal while my true family tore the world apart looking for me? This time, I refused to die in the mud. I accepted my divine blood, my eyes glowing gold as I summoned a bolt of purple lightning to strike my abuser. I just needed to survive the night. Because my real father's heavily armed convoy was already tearing up the mountain, ready to burn this hell to the ground.
The Curse Of Black Hollow Pack  Novel Cover
8.8
In the mist-shrouded town of Black Hollow, the line between man and beast has long been cursed. When a series of brutal murders shakes the town, Detective Aiden Cross-a fearless but haunted police officer is sent to uncover the truth. But what he finds is more than a killer; it's a pack of ruthless werewolves bound by blood, betrayal, and a dark magic that refuses to die. Rejected by his peers, burdened by his past mistakes, and standing on the edge of madness, Aiden must face the terrifying truth: the curse runs in his veins. As the full moon rises, he must choose between regret and rebirth-between being the hunter or becoming the monster the Black Hollow Pack has been waiting for. A story of redemption, vengeance, and the beast within, The Curse of Black Hollow Pack will pull you into a world where every howl hides a secret and every heartbeat could be your last.
The Fallen Heiress's Debt to the Billionaire Novel Cover
9.4
I was once the princess of the Upper East Side, but now I’m just "debt wrapped in pretty skin." To keep my father alive in a federal penitentiary, I signed a contract I didn't fully understand. I thought it was about restoring my family's name, but producer Barnett Orr treated it like a bill of sale for my soul. Inside his limousine, the air smelled like gasoline and fear. Barnett didn't want a star; he wanted a victim. He bruised my jaw and ripped my vintage silk gown to shreds, laughing because he knew I couldn't fight back without signing my father's death warrant. "Don't forget who owns you, Felicity," he whispered. When he dragged me into Dewitt Knight’s penthouse party, I was a walking disaster. I huddled in Barnett’s oversized jacket, my lip bleeding and my spirit shattered. The elite crowd didn't see a victim; they saw a fallen girl selling herself for a role. A former rival poured red wine over me, and the room erupted in cruel laughter while Barnett told everyone he was just "testing my commitment." I looked up at the balcony, locking eyes with Dewitt Knight. He was a god in a bespoke suit, looking down at me with cold, lethal disgust. He didn't see the bruises or the desperation. He only saw a transaction he found beneath him. "So the rumors are true," he said, his voice cutting through the music. "The Aguilars really will do anything for money now. Even this." I was trapped between a monster who wanted to break me and a man who thought I was trash. No one cared that my father's life depended on my silence. When Barnett cornered me in a guest room later that night, his belt jingling like a death knell, I realized no one was coming to save a girl like me. I fought back with a crystal vase, shattering it against his shoulder, but I was drowning in my own terror. Just as Barnett lunged for my throat, the door was kicked off its hinges. Dewitt stood there, finally seeing the blood on the carpet and the map of purple bruises on my bare back. He chased the monster away, but I didn't feel safe. I locked the guest room door, wedged a chair under the handle, and slept with a silver letter opener pressed against my skin. When I crept into the kitchen at midnight and found him waiting in the shadows, I aimed the blade at his heart. "In this house, no one hurts you," he promised, his voice a low velvet rumble. But in a world where I had already been sold once, I knew that even protection came with a price I couldn't afford to pay.