'Dash' pits the protagonist against society’s obsession with perfection. Their cybernetic upgrades make them physically flawless, but emotionally isolated. The conflict isn’t just external—it’s the gnawing doubt that they’ve lost something irreplaceable. Friends treat them differently, lovers keep a distance, and every mirror reflects a stranger. The story’s brilliance lies in how it frames enhancement as both a gift and a curse, leaving the protagonist to question whether fitting in is worth losing who they truly are.
The central conflict in 'Dash' is survival. The protagonist’s enhancements make them a target—governments want to dissect them, criminals want to exploit them, and ordinary people fear them. Every ally could be a traitor, every safe house a trap. The tension is relentless, driven by the protagonist’s desperation to stay one step ahead. It’s a raw, visceral struggle where trust is a luxury and every decision could be their last.
In 'Dash', the central conflict revolves around the protagonist's struggle to reconcile their human emotions with their robotic enhancements. After a near-fatal accident, they are rebuilt with advanced cybernetics, granting superhuman abilities but at the cost of their humanity. The story delves into their internal battle—do they embrace their new power, or fight to retain what little humanity remains?
The external conflict arises from a shadowy organization seeking to weaponize their enhancements. This forces the protagonist into a desperate race against time, torn between self-preservation and preventing their abilities from being exploited. The tension between man and machine, freedom and control, forms the heart of the narrative, making 'Dash' a gripping exploration of identity and autonomy in a technologically dominated world.
The core conflict in 'Dash' is a clash of ideologies. On one side, you have the protagonist, who believes technology should serve humanity without erasing individuality. Opposing them is a corporate giant pushing for mass cybernetic integration, arguing it’s the next step in evolution. The protagonist’s refusal to conform sparks a rebellion, but the cost is high—betrayal, loss, and the constant fear of being hunted. What makes this compelling is how personal it feels. It’s not just about saving the world; it’s about saving oneself from becoming obsolete in a world that values efficiency over emotion.
2025-07-04 18:16:03
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17 year old Skylar Cross had plans.
Once her brother Emmett and her graduated high school, they were going to run away from their pack. Their plan is to run an automotive shop they had slowing been building over the years. Their father, Alpha of the Silver Mountain pack, was a cruel leader and an even crueler father. Skylar was the youngest of the four siblings and regarded as a back-up for her sister, just as her brother was a backup for their eldest brother.
When she finds out her father is going to sell her to another Alpha, she speeds up her escape plan. Leaving her pack behind before she graduates, Skylar starts a new life, running the shop alone. However, it doesn’t quite go as planned when the Alpha of the local pack she’s living next to takes an interest in her.
Skylar, who can’t see herself in another pack, let alone near another Alpha, has to navigate this new relationship that’s been upon her. Between long lost family, an overprotective retired Alpha, his son, and dodging mate bonds, all she wants to do is focus on her dream she’s worked so hard to build. Not to mention, her father is on the hunt for her to bring her to the pack she’s been sold to.
NOTE: This book is emotionally intense with psychological stakes.
Noah Hayes was supposed to be starting over. A full scholarship and a future built on talent, not survival. As one of the university’s rising ice hockey stars, everything in his life should finally be falling into place, instead, it starts falling apart on day one when Chase Voss notices him. Beautiful. Cruel. Dangerous in a way that doesn’t need to be hidden. But Noah had bigger problems than a campus king’s grudge.
Drowning in debt and desperation, Noah takes a job he knows will cost him, but the man he stole from isn’t just powerful, he’s dangerous. Adrian Voss. Now Noah belongs to him, trapped in a world he never wanted. By day, he’s the university’s ice hockey star, by night, he moves product for a man who owns his life.
What started as hatred between Chase and Noah turns into obsession. What should be a rivalry turns into something neither of them can control. Chase falls hard and reckless, but Noah knows better than to trust something that feels like a weakness. And if Chase Voss wants him, then Noah will use him. Play him. Survive him.
But the deeper they get, the harder it becomes to tell what’s real and what’s manipulation. And in a world built on power and blood, love is the most dangerous mistake of all, because loving the wrong person could destroy everything, but walking away might be even worse.
Mia is a sassy girl and a werewolf with an honest heart and, she lives with her father and her older brother, her father is the beta of her pack, Silver Moon Pack.
One night, she went to a party.
That night she meets new friends who are from a different pack.
And at that moment she also meets the alpha of Blood Stone Pack.
Her mate.
Blaze is an alpha of his pack, the Blood Stones pack is known to be the largest and the strongest pack in America, no packs could fight them or beat them mostly it's better to not make the ruthless alpha an enemy.
The jealous, possessive Italian man meet his mate in a party, as soon as he took a glimpse of her face, he swore to himself to never let her go and to never give her up to another man.
WARNING: THERE WILL BE CURSING WORDS AND MATURE CONTENT.
The day before the race, I burned my car and announced my withdrawal.
Overnight, my fanbase collapsed. Supporters unfollowed in droves, and casual fans turned on me just as viciously.
Jasper, the man who had always treated me as his only real rival, put on a show of false concern.
“Without him, the race feels too lonely. No matter what, I still hope he’ll return to the track and face me properly.”
I sneered.
In my previous life, the racecar I had painstakingly modified ended up identical to his.
No matter how many videos I released of full recordings of every step I personally took, all Jasper had to do was tearfully tell his fans, “Then let Finn use it. He needs it more than I do. I’ll win on my own strength.”
And just like that, I became the shameless thief in everyone’s eyes.
Later, the moment I started my car, the components inside exploded, and I was left in a vegetative state.
His fans called it karma.
Even on the day my fiancée pulled out my oxygen tube and watched me die, I still couldn’t understand.
Why had everything that belonged to me—my career, my girlfriend—all become Jasper’s?
When I opened my eyes again, I was back on the day the race schedule was first announced.
They thought he was just another runaway.
They never knew she was a storm waiting to rise.
After the tragic death of her parents, Alex a girl mistaken for a boy all her life was one step away from being dumped into a foster home. But instead of surrendering to the system, she ran.
That night on the streets, she didn’t find safety. She found the mafia.
Dragged into the brutal underground world of Vegas, Alex was forced to train like a soldier, live like a ghost, and survive like a killer. No one ever questioned her identity not when she could fight better, bleed harder, and keep her mouth shut longer than anyone else. They called her a boy. She didn’t correct them. Not when being seen as male was the only thing keeping her alive.
Sent to Base Two, the deadliest tier of training, Alex learned to fight, spy, kill and to hide her real self behind layers of silence, steel, and scars.
Years later, she walks the streets of New York, not as the scared runaway girl from the past, but as The Rival.
A faceless vigilante by night.
A silent infiltrator by day.
And a weapon forged for one purpose: revenge.
Alex isn’t just hunting criminals. She’s chasing the truth behind her father’s deathand every masked figure connected to it. But the deeper she digs, the more twisted the game becomes. Hidden enemies, familiar faces, and a web of betrayal that leads right back to the organization that made her.
How long can she keep the mask on... before her real identity shatters everything?
Elara Duval lives two lives.
By day, she’s the invisible stepdaughter in a family that dismisses her. By night, she’s ShadowByte, the most elusive hacker in the digital underworld. Anonymous. Untouchable. Safe. Or so she thinks.
Damon Cross rules his empire with an iron fist. The billionaire CEO of CrossTech is brilliant, arrogant, and mercilessly calculated. His empire thrives on power, but when a cyberattack threatens everything he’s built, he sets his sights on the one ghost who could save him: ShadowByte.
When their paths collide, sparks turn to fire. Their battle of wills is as dangerous as it is magnetic. He sees her as a puzzle he must control. She sees him as the kind of man she swore to never bow to. But when a public scandal forces them into a contract marriage, the thin line between hate and desire begins to blur.
What happens when the man who never loses falls for the woman who refuses to be owned?
And when Elara’s secret identity risks exposure, will the truth destroy them, or set them free?
Crossed Lines is a contemporary romance full of drama, badgirl energy, hidden identity tension, and hate-to-love chemistry, where girl power collides with the arrogance of a billionaire CEO, and the stakes are nothing less than love, loyalty, and freedom.
In 'Dash', the protagonist is Leo, a former thief with a heart of contradictions. His defining trait isn’t just his razor-sharp reflexes—honed from years of evading capture—but his relentless moral ambiguity. He steals to survive, yet can’t walk past a starving child without emptying his pockets. The story thrives on this duality: Leo’s hands are stained, but his soul flickers with hope. His past haunts him like a shadow, especially the heist that went wrong, leaving his partner dead. Now, he’s dragged into one last job, and his survival instincts clash with his guilt.
What sets Leo apart is his vulnerability. He’s not invincible; a chronic lung injury from that fateful night slows him down, forcing him to outthink enemies instead of overpowering them. His humor is dry, his trust scarce, but when he does bond—like with the street-smart kid who reminds him of his younger self—he’s fiercely protective. The narrative peels back his layers, revealing a man who’s equal parts jaded and yearning for redemption. It’s this complexity that makes him unforgettable.