
NEXUS: Heart of Time
When a global anomaly awakens dormant powers within them, a neuroscientist, a physicist, and an artist discover they are connected by a force that defies time itself. Mert sees the memories of strangers. Elena witnesses the fabric of reality crack. Kai paints symbols from a past he never knew. Thrown together by fate, they are not alone. Across the globe, others are awakening too-gifted with extraordinary abilities. But they are not the only ones. A powerful cabal-a ruthless financier, a tech mogul, and a charismatic influencer-sees the anomaly not as a warning, but as a weapon. Their ambition shatters the timeline, scattering the group across history: from the smog-choked streets of Victorian London to a transhumanist future, and into a terrifying parallel present. Broken into three teams, the group must hunt their enemies through time itself. To survive, they must master their new powers and forge bonds of love and loyalty strong enough to bend the laws of physics. Their final battle will not be fought in any single era, but at the crossroads of all realities, where the key to existence-the very heart of time-is at stake.
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Chapter 2
The control room of CERN's ATLAS detector, located 100 meters underground, was like a hypnotic cathedral during the night shift. Giant screens lining the walls pulsed with a constant dance of blue, green, and red light; each pixel a digital witness to the collision of the universe's most fundamental particles at near light speed. The air held a sharp mix of ozone, coolant, and plastic – the scent of technology pushing the boundaries of humanity.
At the heart of this metallic womb sat Elena Volkov. Twenty-six years old, her dark chestnut hair was haphazardly pulled into a bun, the dark circles under her eyes a silent testament to her third consecutive night shift. Before her three-monitor setup, she possessed the focused intensity of a city planner studying a complex map. The screen on the right displayed the real-time distribution of Higgs boson candidates. The left showed the raw data stream from the detector's over 100 million sensors. The center, however, displayed what made Elena's heart race: the output of a custom-written tracking algorithm for anomalies in the quantum field.
Her fingers danced across the keyboard with light, precise movements, like a pianist playing a Chopin nocturne. Each data point was a note; each graph, a melody. She had been at CERN for two years, and this dance was as familiar as her own breath.
Until, at 03:17, the melody fractured.
03:17:01
On the central screen, a deviation appeared, lasting only 1.7 milliseconds. The straight line of expected quantum field noise spiked into a near-vertical peak, then instantly returned to normal. It was as if a pinprick had opened in the fabric of spacetime, then immediately closed. The size of the hole was on the order of the Planck length – theoretically possible, but practically never observed.
Elena's breath caught. She stared at the screen, unblinking. "No," she whispered to herself, "this can't be."
She immediately zoomed in on the data. Sensor calibrations: green. Cooling systems: optimal. Magnetic field stabilization: flawless. This was not equipment failure. This was... an anomaly.
Her heart began to pound in her chest like a trapped bird. Her instincts – both the scientist's and the intuition born of this mysterious world she inhabited – screamed at her: This small, digital blip could change everything. A macroscopic manifestation of quantum entanglement? A leak from a parallel universe? A microscopic fracture in time itself? The possibilities swirled in her mind like a storm.
Her fingers were ice-cold. She reached her right hand towards the CERN-logoed ceramic coffee mug sitting on the edge of the desk. Beige, ordinary, one of thousands. As she touched it, a thin, crystalline "crack" sound echoed.
Elena abruptly pulled her hand away. Slowly, as if touching something alive, she grasped the mug and lifted it. The cold neon light of the lab illuminated a new crack at the base of the mug.
This was not the simple, irregular crack of a dropped mug.
It followed a thin, branching, fractal pattern. Small arms separating from the main body, smaller arms separating from them... an infinite branching. Elena's throat tightened. She slowly rotated the mug, comparing the crack's shape to the anomalous graph on the screen in her mind.
It was perfect.
The same mathematical pattern. The same fractal complexity. The macroscopic world had copied the shape of the microscopic quantum event. Automatic warning messages began to flood in from observatories around the world.
"A cold sweat," Elena thought, "like a reptile slithering down my spine." This could not be a coincidence. Physics, especially quantum physics, did not believe in coincidences. It believed only in probabilities, wave functions, and – sometimes – seemingly impossible connections.
At that moment, the heavy door of the control room opened. Leo Andropolis entered, carrying two steaming cups of freshly brewed coffee. Thirty-two years old, a pragmatic engineer, he was Elena's most trusted collaborator and, at times, her most irritating voice of criticism. Seeing the blank shock on Elena's face, his mocking smile vanished instantly.
"Are you building another 'end of the universe' scenario, Volkov?" he asked, his voice echoing. He placed a coffee on the edge of Elena's desk, next to the mug. "Night shift paranoia... some caffeine will do you good."
Elena didn't look at Leo. Her eyes darted between the mug and the screen. Slowly, she lifted the mug, extending it towards the screen. Her hand trembled slightly.
"Look," she said, her voice strained and thin. "This crack. And this." She pointed at the screen.
Leo approached with instinctive skepticism. His engineer's logic always tried to ground Elena's theoretical flights. But when he saw the base of the mug, then the screen, his face changed. Mockery gave way to genuine concern. He squinted, tilting his head.
"God," he muttered, his voice a whisper. "This... this isn't just strange, Elena. It's statistically impossible. The same fractal pattern? It can't be a coincidence."
"Strange?" Elena set the mug down on the desk, this time her voice stronger, more urgent. She opened another window on the screen with her fingers. "This happened during a millisecond anomaly. Automatic alerts came from fourteen different observatories around the world simultaneously. Here: a gravitational microwave anomaly from the University of Tokyo. An electromagnetic burst from Bell Labs in New Jersey. A 'tremor' in the cosmic microwave background radiation from the Shanghai radio telescope center. All with the same timestamp. Leo, this isn't a local event. It's global."
Leo took a sip of his coffee, but he seemed not to taste it. His eyes scanned the data on the screen. "So, this mug? Classical physics doesn't replicate quantum events one-to-one. This means a quantum effect on a macro scale. Or..." He paused, weighing his words. "Or the veil between the two worlds has become so thin that the rules of one are starting to leak into the other."
"A door," Elena whispered, completing Leo's thought. "Could quantum tunneling, the ability of a particle to pass through an energy barrier, have an effect on macro objects like this coffee mug? Or..." This time her voice dropped, and the words disappeared a few centimeters from her lips, unheard by Leo...
Just then, the encrypted communication terminal on Elena's desk vibrated slightly. A message from a secure channel, from an unidentified sender. Only two words:
>> DATA STOLEN
Sender: S. Sofia.
A cold fear gripped Elena. Sofia, a data hunter and former hacker living in Berlin, made her living navigating the dark web's murky waters. Last year, she had helped CERN prevent an external hacking attempt, asking only for an anonymous thank you and a virtual beer in return. She was reliable. And she never raised the alarm unnecessarily.
Elena quickly typed a reply: >> WHAT DATA? WHO?
The answer arrived within seconds: >> ANOMALY RAW DATA PACKETS. NOT JUST CERN. DATA FROM RESEARCH CENTERS AROUND THE WORLD. ON THE DARK WEB IN A CLOSED AUCTION. BUYER: AN OFFSHORE COMPANY NAMED 'KRONOS'. AND ELENA... I DON'T KNOW WHAT YOU KNOW ABOUT THE ANOMALY, BUT I SUSPECT IT'S MUCH MORE THAN YOU THINK. THERE ARE 'TRIGGERS'.
Elena stared at the screen. Sofia's message was the final blow, suddenly and brutally assembling the scattered pieces in her mind. The anomaly was not just a physical phenomenon. It had biological, perhaps neurological, effects. People were... 'triggered'. And the data of these people was being purchased by a shadowy company called 'Kronos'.
"Leo," she turned, her voice tense, "Someone is watching us. Now."
Leo immediately went to his own terminal, his fingers flying across the keyboard. "An unauthorized access attempt to the ATLAS main server. Minutes ago. IP address... routed through a dead server, then another. A chain proxy. Professional work." His face tightened. "But I'm trying to trace it. Give me some time."
Twenty minutes later, Elena received another message from Sofia:
>> NEW INFORMATION. VISIONS. TELEKINESIS. ANOMALOUS PERCEPTION. YOUR ANOMALY USED THEM LIKE AN ANTENNA. OR THEY USED YOU. THEY ARE BEING MONITORED ON THE DARK WEB. THEY ARE IN DANGER!
Elena replied: >> WHO ARE THE 'TRIGGERS'? WHERE?
>> A NEUROSCIENTIST IN ISTANBUL, AN ARTIST IN TOKYO, A SOLDIER IN NEW YORK... THEY ARE ALL CONNECTED. INFORMATION CONTINUES TO FLOW ON THE DARK WEB. I AM INVESTIGATING DEEPLY. WE MUST FIND THEM. BEFORE SOMEONE ELSE DOES...
Connection... Elena picked up the mug again. The rough, cracked edge of the ceramic felt like a tangible, brutal reality against her fingertips. This simple, everyday object was now a warning sign, evidence. Evidence that the quantum world was not limited to subatomic particles; that it could seep into coffee mugs, human minds, perhaps the very fabric of history.
Leo suddenly leaned back, taking a deep breath. "I traced the trail to Shanghai. It disappears at the server farm of a technology company called 'Singularity'. Elena... this isn't just data theft. This is a tracking operation. To find you, your data, maybe... the others." He looked thoughtful. "Perhaps... this wasn't an accident. The anomaly was triggered intentionally."
Elena looked out the window at the corridor outside the control room. Hundreds of meters below the surface, the heart of humanity's greatest scientific endeavor was beating. A massive machine built to unravel the secrets of the universe. But now, this machine might not only be revealing secrets, but also opening doors. And she knew that some doors should never be opened.
Sofia's words echoed in her mind: "We must find them, before someone else does."
Who were these 'them'? The neuroscientist in Istanbul? The artist in Tokyo? The soldier in New York? How were they connected? And, most importantly, what did companies bearing names like 'Kronos' or 'Singularity' want to do with this connection?
"Leo," she said, her voice now trembling not with fatigue, but with iron determination. "We can't ignore this anomaly. This isn't just our research anymore. This is... a hunt. And we will be either the hunters, or the hunted."
Leo looked at her, an respect she rarely saw in his eyes. "So, what do we do?"
Elena set the mug down on the desk. The crack, faintly glowing in the blue light of the screens, like a warning written in an ancient and unknown language.
"First, I'll tell Sofia to set up a secure communication channel," she said slowly. "Then, we'll find these 'triggered' people." She paused, then added: "We'll investigate this 'Kronos'. If they are truly interested in time... we may need to show them how merciless time can be."
The melancholy oracle of quantum physics was now face to face with a tangible, dangerous mystery, not just theories and equations. And this mystery was drawing her towards strangers scattered across the globe, bearing the same invisible wound, bound by the same web of fate.
The experiment was never over. On the contrary, it was just beginning. And this time, it was not a particle oscillating in the experimental chamber, but Elena Volkov herself.
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8.2
For three years, nineteen-year-old Ella Campbell rotted in a freezing psychiatric isolation room.
Her billionaire family didn't visit her once, only pulling her out today to force her to publicly apologize to Ashlyn, the perfect sister who had framed her.
At Ashlyn's glamorous engagement gala, Ella was treated worse than a stray dog and forced to watch her childhood sweetheart propose to her sister.
When Ella showed no jealousy, her brother Ivan dragged her onto a dark balcony and nearly choked her to death.
Her mother didn't even check if Ella was breathing, merely ordering a makeup artist to paint thick concealer over the dark purple handprints on Ella's neck so the family's stock price wouldn't drop.
Standing under the blinding stage lights in a shapeless gray dress, facing three hundred mocking Wall Street executives, Ella was supposed to be the broken, obedient psycho the Campbells needed.
"I am deeply sorry for the pain I caused."
She was supposed to end the apology there and bow to her abusers, but Ella didn't shed a single tear.
"My only regret is that I didn't insist on waiting for the police to arrive that night. I deeply regret that I didn't demand a full, legal toxicology report to prove to everyone exactly what happened."
As the ballroom erupted into suspicious whispers and her paralyzed twin brother finally saw the violent bruises hidden beneath her makeup, Ella's counterattack against the Campbell family officially began.

7.5
I was the adopted daughter of the wealthy Ruiz family, but the moment their true heir appeared, I was thrown away like trash.
Not long after being kicked out, my adoptive father and uncle hired a hitman to stage a fatal car crash on Mulholland Drive.
Pinned under an overturned Porsche with a shattered leg, I watched the hitman point a suppressed pistol between my eyes.
"The Ruiz family sends their regards."
Before this, my reputation had already been completely destroyed by a director, a pop idol, and a reality TV star, leaving me blacklisted and universally hated.
My adoptive family didn't just want me ruined; they wanted me permanently silenced to tie up loose ends.
The hitman pulled the trigger, and the original Alicia died in despair, tasting only rain and blood.
Until her last breath, she didn't understand.
Why did the family she loved treat her like a disposable object? Why did those three men maliciously frame her and turn the world against her?
Opening my eyes again, the fear was gone, replaced by an ancient, cosmic indifference.
I, the Arbiter, had taken over this deceased vessel.
Moving faster than the human eye, I crushed the hitman's steel gun with my bare hand and turned his soul into dust.
Looking at the memories of those who wronged this girl, I signed a contract for the very reality show they were starring in.
Since I borrowed this body, taking out the trash is a required courtesy.

7.2
SYNOPSIS:
"I spent ten years scrubbing your floors, Greene. Tonight, you'll scrub mine."
Elara Vance has always been the pride the Republic until she ran away from home, fell in love with Greene Jones, a man who treated her like dirt and discarded her like she was never the girl the entire Republic feared because of her strong dominating pheromones.
Now she's back after twelve years to serve revenge to Greene Jones like a hot dish in a way that he will pay for every act meted out on her for twelve years. But things wasn't going to go as planned as she meets Silas, the handsome bulky head of her father's security but a recessive omega of her past that she has totally forgotten but now wears a new stance as her bodyguard, recognized by the entire republic as an Alpha, and her perfect chosen mate, Calvin; ruining the comeback and revenge she planned out for herself and now she has to think about saving and claiming her mate, Silas while navigating and protecting the seat meant for her.
The real question becomes; will Calvin ever allow her take all it took him twelve years to build?
THEME: The true definition of power. Is it found in the biological dominance of an Alpha, or in the resilience of an Omega who survived in the lion's den?

7.6
Top DEA agent Kaitlynn Bruce woke up to a heavy, chemical lethargy, only to realize she was trapped in the body of a weak, abused war widow.
Before she could even process her new reality, she heard her sister-in-law counting cash, selling her unconscious body to a local thug for a measly two hundred dollars.
The thug dragged her new seven-year-old son, Cason, into the bedroom.
"Mommy!"
When the boy reached out, the man brutally kicked his small body into a wooden doorframe, leaving him gasping and bleeding on the floor.
Memories flooded Kaitlynn's mind. Her predecessor was a pathetic doormat whose husband's military pension had been bled dry by these greedy in-laws, leaving her children to starve and suffer endless abuse.
But as Kaitlynn looked at the bleeding boy's dark, unnervingly alert eyes, a chilling piece of DEA intelligence clicked in her mind.
Cason Richmond.
The name, the town, the abusive aunt—it all matched the classified files of the "Director of the Hive," the most ruthless and feared cartel puppet master in the criminal underworld.
How could this battered, starving child be destined to become the ultimate monster she used to hunt?
The original widow's tragic death was supposed to be the catalyst that pushed this boy into total darkness.
But Kaitlynn Bruce was not a victim.
Adrenaline burning through the drugs, she cracked the thug's neck with a brass lamp and choked the sister-in-law against the wall.
Looking down at the boy who was supposed to become a global nightmare, she made a vow. She was going to rewrite his script, even if she had to burn the whole world down to do it.

9.5
One night, I was a girl seeking vengeance in a velvet mask. He was the stranger who took me against a cold stone wall, his touch a silent, lethal promise.
Now, he is Caspian Blackwood-the most feared architecture professor at Aethelgard. When my "perfect" boyfriend, Dominic Calloway, cheats on me and sabotages my degree, Caspian offers a lifeline with a razor-thin edge: Be his silent, nude model for thirty days.
The rules are absolute. I must wear a silk mask and a weighted collar. I must never speak. I must hold the poses he demands until my muscles scream for mercy. In the lecture hall, he ignores me with arctic indifference. In the studio, his gaze is a physical weight, stripping me faster than his hands ever could. But as the charcoal scratches against the paper, I realize the "deal" isn't just for art. It's for the soul I accidentally gave him in the dark. Will the deal destroy his career, or consume me first?

7.5
After spending five grueling years securing the Madden Pack's empire, I thought my Alpha mate and I were finally building a perfect family.
But on my birthday, I returned home to find a thick, impenetrable wall of ice in our Mate bond.
Caden had completely shut me out to throw a lavish party for my half-sister, Adalynn.
He let Adalynn pollute our penthouse with her cheap perfume and brainwash my five-year-old daughter, Elara.
"Auntie Adalynn is a million times better than Mommy!"
Elara chirped happily to a camera, while Caden watched with a doting smile.
He publicly humiliated me, commanded the servants to ignore me, and deliberately fed Elara severe allergens just to spite my maternal rules.
When my pup ended up in the pack hospital gasping for air, Caden confiscated her tablet and roared at her to stop crying for the mother who "abandoned" her.
My heart shattered into a million irreparable pieces.
I couldn't understand how the man destined to protect my soul could twist my love into cruelty and use our helpless cub as a punching bag for his ego.
But the weeping, pathetic Luna died right there.
I calmly signed the divorce papers, surrendered all my assets, and walked out into the cold night.
Opening my encrypted laptop, I reclaimed my hidden identity as the global elite hacker "Ghost" and initiated a lethal protocol.
It was time to burn his entire world to the ground.