The Girl Who Never Was
  • Reads 18,205
  • Votes 325
  • Parts 36
  • Time 4h 59m
  • Reads 18,205
  • Votes 325
  • Parts 36
  • Time 4h 59m
Complete, First published Oct 03, 2011
She wakes up, completely without an idea of who she is or what is going on. In a world unlike our own, where everything is monitored in a digital system called 'the network', and she was never part of it, there are no records of her being born, living or ever existing. Who is she and why is she here? It's up for her to find out before she runs out of time.
Note: There are too many genres in this story for me to list them in two. Inside there are contained science fiction, paranormal, mystery, thought evoking, god-related and romance.
All Rights Reserved
Sign up to add The Girl Who Never Was to your library and receive updates
or
#96belief
Content Guidelines
You may also like
You may also like
Slide 1 of 9
The Guardian cover
Town of the doomed souls cover
the nightmares cover
Blind Love cover
The Hunter Chronicles - The Beginning cover
Bloody Mary // J. Hale cover
Fear cover
Let The Fire Start (Editing) cover
Hearts Made Of Roses |✔ cover

The Guardian

36 parts Complete

When Julianna was four, she witnessed her mother murdered in a mugging gone wrong, a murder that her guardian angel wasn't able to stop. However, during that encounter, her guardian angel created a connection with her, a connection that meant that he could walk in her dreams, monitor her emotions, and talk to her telepathically. The catch? She couldn't know of Seth's identity outside her mind until she was twenty-one. Fourteen years later, she was a recovering alcoholic who self-harmed as a method of controlling her emotions. She hates herself, both for the fact that she's an alcoholic as well as because she can't remember anything at all about her mother. Everything comes to a head when Julianna is drugged against her will at a party, and with Seth's support she learns to protect herself and to act in a self-supportive manner. I will try to publish a chapter a day to give people a good chance to comment on the book.