Speak It Into Existence

ABO Personality Quiz
Take a quick quiz to find out whether you‘re Alpha, Beta, or Omega.
Scent
Personality
Ideal Love Pattern
Secret Desire
Your Dark Side
Start Test
Speak To Me
Speak To Me
Chasity Dawson is the shy daughter of a housemaid and Joe Bandit is the school's "Golden boy" and the son of the family her mother works for. One-night Joe texts her, and asks her for a favor that involves a mysterious unmasked culprit, leaving photos of Joe and his family at their doorstep every week for years. This mystery leads to a growing attraction between Joe and Chasity. Along with deadly secrets that were best left alone. Secrets… that could get someone killed.
9.7
|
76 Chapters
Hot Chapters
More
Speak Of The Devil
Speak Of The Devil
Mr Tate created a huge debt for himself and the burden rests on Aurora to pay it off. She is given to every woman's fantasy, Luca Genovese as a bride until she can pay off her father's debt to him. However, she is pregnant for her boyfriend and the Don must not find out..
10
|
120 Chapters
Speak No More Of Love
Speak No More Of Love
My wife, Sophia Shelby, spent a fortune snatching a kidney donor from my mother, only to save her ex-boyfriend’s life. Meanwhile, my mother had been waiting for three years. Before my mother died, she wanted to see our child. I told her it was gone. Sophia had aborted our child for the sake of her infertile ex-boyfriend, James Carl. She had chosen to go through IVF with him. I had charged into the hospital and confronted Sophia, but James stopped me. “She’s my wife! What gives you the right to keep me from seeing her?!” “She’s pregnant with my child.” I flew into a fit of anger. Barging into the ward, I shouted at Sophia, “I want a divorce!” Inside, Sophia replied to me with irritation, “Divorce it is! Why are you yelling at James?”
|
11 Chapters
My Dead Fiancée Returned With Another Man
My Dead Fiancée Returned With Another Man
In the third year after my fiancée, Iris Ford, falls off a cliff during a sketching trip in the mountains, I accidentally walk into her personal art exhibition. The person I have longed for day and night is right there, gently adjusting the scarf of the young man beside her. The walls are covered with portraits she once promises to paint only for me, but every subject of her paintings is that young man. Violet Bardot, Iris' best friend and the one who once helps me handle her funeral affairs, grabs me anxiously. "Graham, don't do anything rash. Iris has her reasons. After Jack Glenwood saved her, she suffered from a head injury and lost her memory. She didn't mean to stay away." I smile at how ridiculous she is. "It's one thing if Iris lost her memories, but did you lose yours too? Since Iris is still alive, why do you not bring her back? You've watched me live in pain and misery for three years. I had to rely on sleeping pills just to get by. Do you find that amusing?" Violet falls silent and doesn't dare to look at me again. The young man named Jack hides behind Iris timidly. In the next moment, Iris turns to look at me with a frosty expression. "Mr. Stevens, I do not wish to go back. The person I love now is Jack. Since I've forgotten my past, just treat it as memories from a previous lifetime."
|
10 Chapters
Dirty Little Collections: Sins We Never Speak Of
Dirty Little Collections: Sins We Never Speak Of
TEASER SCENE Her back hit the wall, legs wrapped around him as he slammed into her— deep and brutal, ripping a strangled moan from her lips. She clawed at his shoulders, but he pinned her wrists with one hand, the other gripping her throat, controlling every gasp. “Look at me,” he growled, fucking her harder, her pussy walls fluttered helplessly around him. “Now come while I’m still inside you,” he ordered. Her body obeyed instantly— shaking, gushing, and screaming. “Good little whore,” he growled, still fucking her through it, never slowing. “You’ll come again.” And she knew she would— whether she could handle it or not. **** This isn’t romance. It’s raw, reckless, pulse-pounding filth. A collection of forbidden encounters, from ruined vows, to messy secrets, and bodies that should never touch— but did anyway. Men who treated desire like a weapon. Brides who forget their vows on purpose— offering their necks instead of their hearts. Powerful men who don't ask… they take. Every story drags you to the edge, pushing your thighs apart, and makes you watch as pleasure destroys sanity— ONE BRUTAL ORGASM AT A TIME! No apologies. No morals. No happily-ever-afters. Just sex— wet, dirty, desperate, addictive. Are you ready to get fucked by fiction? 18+ ONLY | Extremely explicit content, taboo themes, possession, obsession & shameless pleasure. Read with a towel… or a partner.
Not enough ratings
|
11 Chapters
Vows Lost in the Wind
Vows Lost in the Wind
Since it's already the end of the year, the music app I use produces a report on the songs I've listened to in 2025. The keyword of my report is "resonance". Over the year, I don't spend much time listening to the songs on this app. My girlfriend, Sienna Fletcher, is the one who's been using my account this whole time. There's a row beneath the keyword that's written in a tiny font. "You had listened to this song with someone at 4:00 am on December 1st. It turns out that love can go beyond a night's sleep." My breath gets hitched in my throat. December 1st is my birthday. But that night, I had gone to bed at an early hour. Meanwhile, Sienna had left hurriedly after cutting my birthday cake with me with the excuse that she needed to pull an overnight shift at the company. For some reason, I tap onto the unfamiliar-looking profile that has been interacting frequently with my account with a trembling finger. Their keyword of the year is "favor". My heart skips a beat at the sight. Then, I tap on the details. "Over the year, you've listened to songs with this user 688 times in the middle of the night. Every time you do, it's a secretive conversation meant for your souls." The next thing I know, I receive a message from Sienna. "Babe, I need to work overtime tonight again. You don't have to wait up for me. Just go to bed early." At the same time, a new post is uploaded on the unfamiliar profile. It features a photo of two hands that are intertwined together. "I love working overtime with her the most. I want to listen to songs with her forever."
|
10 Chapters

Who Says 'Is It Better To Speak Or To Die' In Call Me By Your Name?

3 Answers2025-09-11 02:00:54

That line—'Is it better to speak or to die?'—has haunted me ever since I first heard it in 'Call Me By Your Name.' It's spoken by Elio, the film's protagonist, during a deeply vulnerable moment when he's grappling with his feelings for Oliver. The scene takes place during their midnight conversation, where Elio, torn between confessing his love and fearing rejection, poses this existential question. It's a moment that resonates because it captures the universal struggle of whether to risk heartbreak for the sake of truth.

The line actually originates from the French novel 'The Song of Roland,' which Elio references earlier in the story. The way it's woven into the narrative feels so organic, like a thread connecting literature, history, and raw emotion. Every time I rewatch that scene, I find myself holding my breath—it’s that powerful. The film’s ability to turn a medieval literary reference into something so intensely personal still blows me away.

Can I Speak To A Human At Ticketmaster?

3 Answers2025-11-13 03:54:24

Yes, it is possible to speak to a human at Ticketmaster, but the process is intentionally structured to divert routine inquiries to automated systems first. The most reliable method is to call their customer service line at 1-800-653-8000. Once connected, you will be guided by an automated voice system. The key to reaching a live agent is to avoid selecting options for common issues like "tracking an order" or "event information". Instead, listen carefully for prompts related to "complaint" "dispute" or "speak to a representative". Often, repeatedly saying "agent" or "representative" into the phone can bypass the menu and queue you for a live person. Be prepared for potentially long hold times, especially following a major on-sale or during business hours.

Who Dies In When Shadows Speak: A Love Bound By Blood And Betrayal?

5 Answers2026-05-07 11:54:21

Man, 'When Shadows Speak: A Love Bound by Blood and Betrayal' really hits hard with its character deaths. The most shocking one has to be Elena, the protagonist's childhood friend who gets caught in the crossfire of the vampire coven's power struggle. Her death isn't just tragic—it's the catalyst that pushes the main character into full revenge mode.

Then there's Lord Vexis, the ancient vampire overlord. His demise comes during the climactic battle, but what's wild is how it happens—sacrificed by his own lieutenant, Darian, who's been secretly working against him the whole time. Darian's betrayal stings worse than the actual killing blow. The story doesn't let anyone off easy; even side characters like the human scholar Garret meet brutal ends when their knowledge becomes too dangerous.

How Does Jon Snow Speak The Truth About His Parentage?

9 Answers2025-10-27 02:53:12

I still get chills thinking about the quiet way truth sneaks up on everyone: Jon doesn’t storm a hall with a banner and a proclamation, he learns in a whisper and he speaks in a whisper. In the show 'Game of Thrones' it all unfolds through research and memory—Sam reads old records and Gilly finds the High Septon’s notes about Rhaegar’s annulment, and Bran gives the visual proof from the past. Sam takes that paper and hands Jon a life he didn’t know was his.

What I love is the human scale of it. Jon carries that revelation to Daenerys in private rather than making a dramatic public claim. That choice says so much about him: duty, uncertainty, and fear of the political ripples. Later, when the proof is put together, it’s still awkward and raw—legitimacy on parchment doesn’t erase years of being raised as Ned Stark’s bastard. For me, that private confession scene is the most honest moment: a man who’s been defined by his name trying to reconcile the truth with who he’s been, and I found it quietly heartbreaking.

Why Did The Silent Twins Refuse To Speak For Years?

2 Answers2025-08-29 01:06:26

There's something about the story of June and Jennifer Gibbons that always nags at me — it's equal parts fascination and sorrow. I first read 'The Silent Twins' on a rainy afternoon when I couldn't sleep, and the more I dug in, the more layers I found. On the surface they refused to speak to others because they simply didn't: they developed a private language and retreated into each other, finding safety and identity in that twin bubble. But that explanation is way too neat. Their silence grew out of being outsiders in a white Welsh town, of Caribbean parents who didn't quite have the tools to protect them, and of childhood loneliness that fermented into a shared inner life. When people are repeatedly othered, silence can feel like the only boundary they get to control.

Psychologically, there's a lot going on that I've thought about late at night. The twins weren't just quiet kids; they became intensely codependent, creating stories and an invented world that functioned like a fortress. That mutual reinforcement can turn into what's sometimes called folie à deux — a shared psychosis where two minds lock into the same patterns. Add trauma, possible developmental differences, and the stress of constant scrutiny, and you have a system where speaking to anyone else risks losing the self they'd built together. For them, silence was both rebellion and refuge: a way to punish a world that misunderstood them and to protect the private mythology they cherished.

Institutional responses made everything murkier. Being pathologized, separated, and incarcerated turned their silence into a form of protest — a last bit of agency in a setting that stripped them of choices. People often point at one dramatic turning point — Jennifer’s death, the vow, the eventual breaking of silence — but those moments are embedded in a web of social neglect, racial isolation, creative obsessions (they were prolific writers!), and mental illness. If you strip away the sensational headlines, what remains is a human drama about how society treats difference, how two people can co-create a life so vivid it becomes a prison, and how silence can be both a cry and a shield. After reading, I kept thinking about how we rush to label behaviors without asking what inner landscape the behavior is trying to protect, and that question has stayed with me ever since.

How Many Pages Are In 'Do You Speak English?'?

4 Answers2025-12-12 06:06:20

I actually stumbled upon 'Do You Speak English?' during a random bookstore visit last summer—it was tucked between some travel guides and language manuals. The edition I picked up had around 128 pages, but I later learned that page counts can vary depending on the publisher or if it includes illustrations. What struck me was how digestible it felt; the chapters were short but packed with quirky dialogues and cultural notes. It’s one of those books you can finish in a weekend and still feel like you’ve learned something.

If you’re looking for something similar, 'English Is Not Easy' by Luci Gutiérrez has a comparable vibe—lighthearted but surprisingly informative. Both books manage to make language learning feel less like a chore and more like flipping through a friend’s notebook.

Is Kids Speak: Children Talk About Themselves Worth Reading For Parents?

3 Answers2026-01-05 01:08:32

Ever stumbled upon a book that feels like eavesdropping on the purest, unfiltered thoughts of kids? 'Kids Speak: Children Talk About Themselves' does exactly that. It’s this charming collection where little voices spill their dreams, fears, and quirky observations—no adults twisting their words. I love how it captures the hilarious honesty of children; one moment they’re philosophizing about why clouds don’t fall, and the next they’re confessing their undying love for spaghetti. For parents, it’s like a backstage pass to understanding how kids perceive the world, which can be wildly different from adult logic.

What makes it special is its lack of preachiness. It doesn’t tell you how to parent but shows you how kids think, which is way more valuable. I’d recommend it to anyone who wants to reconnect with that childlike perspective or needs a reminder that parenting isn’t about having all the answers—it’s about listening to the questions. Plus, it’s a great conversation starter with your own kids! You might even start noticing those little 'aha' moments in daily chats.

Where Can I Read Marcus Vega Doesn'T Speak Spanish Online?

5 Answers2025-12-08 02:04:13

I totally get wanting to dive into 'Marcus Vega Doesn't Speak Spanish'—it’s such a heartfelt story! While I don’t know of any legal free online sources, your best bets are paid platforms like Amazon Kindle, Google Play Books, or Apple Books. Libraries also often have digital copies through apps like Libby or OverDrive, so check if your local branch offers it. Supporting authors by purchasing or borrowing officially helps keep amazing stories like this coming!

If you’re tight on cash, maybe try a used bookstore or swap sites like PaperbackSwap. The book’s worth it—Marcus’s journey is so relatable, especially if you’ve ever felt caught between cultures. Plus, Pablo Cartaya’s writing just sparkles with humor and warmth.

Can Children Learn How To Speak Whale In One Week?

2 Answers2025-11-12 14:16:12

Impossible? Not quite — the idea sits somewhere between a delightful kids' movie gag and actual animal biology, and I love poking at both sides. If you mean replicating the way real whales communicate — the infrasonic, long-range moans of blue whales or the complex, patterned songs of humpbacks — then no, a week isn't enough. Those sounds rely on anatomy, body size, and frequencies humans simply can't produce: whales use huge vocal folds, fat-filled tissues, and enormous lungs to generate tones that travel for miles underwater. But if you mean teaching kids to playfully mimic whale rhythms, pattern-based calls, and the emotional cadence of whale songs, a week is plenty to spark wonder and practice neat tricks.

I’ve spent weekends leading silly science-art sessions where kids learn to 'speak whale' by listening closely, imitating pitch slides, and experimenting with their bodies. In that setting, the focus is on rhythm, melody, and imagination rather than biological accuracy. Practical activities that work fast: slow down recordings of humpback songs so the children can hear the phrase structure; practice sliding vocalizations (start high and glide low slowly); explore chest and mouth resonance by humming deeply and feeling the vibration; and borrow techniques from throat-singing exercises to get closer to the drone-like quality. Devices that shift pitch or slow audio are magic here — they make a human attempt sound eerily whale-like and help kids internalize timing and timbre.

I also like to mix in science: show spectrograms so kids can 'see' the songs, compare dolphins' clicks versus baleen whales' moans, and talk about why whales evolved such sounds. And there's room for creativity: invent a simple gesture-based 'whale language', write tiny song-phrases in musical notation, or make a storytelling game where each child adds a whale-phrase to a chorus. After a week of focused, playful practice, kids won't be producing real whale infrasonics, but they'll be able to imitate patterns convincingly, understand the basics of whale communication, and come away buzzing with curiosity — which, to me, is the whole point. It always feels a little magical to hear a group of kids humming huge, slow whale phrases together.

How Does The Speak Anderson Novel Handle Sensitive Topics?

5 Answers2025-04-18 15:09:07

In 'The Speak Anderson' novel, sensitive topics are handled with a raw, unfiltered honesty that feels both jarring and necessary. The author doesn’t shy away from the messiness of human emotions, diving headfirst into issues like mental health, identity, and societal expectations. What struck me most was how the narrative doesn’t offer easy solutions or sugarcoat the struggles. Instead, it forces you to sit with the discomfort, to feel the weight of the characters’ experiences.

The dialogue is particularly powerful, with conversations that feel ripped from real life—awkward pauses, half-truths, and moments of vulnerability. The characters don’t always say the right thing, and that’s the point. It’s in their imperfections that the story finds its strength. The novel also uses symbolism subtly, like recurring motifs of broken mirrors and unfinished paintings, to reflect the fractured yet evolving nature of the characters’ lives. It’s a book that doesn’t just tell you about pain; it makes you feel it, and in doing so, it opens up a space for empathy and understanding.

Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status