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written into you

Celine_Amenayo
14
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
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Synopsis
On a remote island where stories bleed into reality, a writer’s words become more than fiction they become fate. Celine, haunted by a past she can't rewrite, retreats to the island to finish a novel that won't let her go. But when she pens a scene of forbidden desire, she wakes to find her best friend Milo soaked from the rain, furious, and seductively real mirroring every steamy word she wrote. And his goddess-like fiancée, Lena, is suddenly nowhere to be found. As the island tightens its grip, Celine discovers she's not the only writer here. Others have come. Others have vanished. Each word written exacts a price and hers may already be too high. What begins as an escape turns into an erotic descent into mystery, obsession, and power. Celine must choose between love and guilt, fiction and truth, before the island rewrites her... permanently. Written Into You is an immersive romantic fantasy laced with sensuality, sacrifice, and dark magic. 18+ only. Contains explicit content and themes not suitable for younger readers.
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Chapter 1 - The Island Calls

Arrival on the Forgotten Island

The boat ride wasn't supposed to feel this long.

The island sat ahead like a whispered secret, hidden from the world wild, untouched, and so goddamn beautiful it almost made me feel like an intruder. I caught myself inhaling the salty air too deeply, wanting it to burn away the doubts I'd carried here. I was supposed to be writing. I was supposed to be inspired. Instead, all I could think about was how little I knew of what I wanted, even here, on the edge of the world.

"Almost there," Milo said, glancing at me over the boat's edge. His eyes gleamed with the kind of excitement only a man about to be far away from everything could have. "You sure you're gonna be okay out here?"

I shrugged, the weight of my own hesitation pressing down.

"Yeah," I muttered, staring at the shore, where the jungle met the beach like a silent invitation. "It's fine. I need this. Just… quiet."

Milo was my best friend. He was the one person who'd always been there, even when I was too wrapped up in myself to see him. And sure, he was cute—too cute sometimes—but that wasn't the point. He was the one person who didn't expect me to be perfect. He knew I wasn't. But I couldn't shake the feeling that coming to this island would force me to face something I wasn't ready for.

Then there was Lena, sitting across from us, her gaze distant as she checked her phone for the thousandth time. She was the reason I'd agreed to this whole thing—she'd practically dragged me onto this trip. "Come on, Celine," she had said. "You need to unplug, take a break, and just write for yourself."

I wasn't sure if she meant "write for myself" or if she meant "write for everyone else." Lena was always the one who knew exactly how to wrap people around her finger, with that flawless smile and "nothing's a problem" aura she wore like a second skin.

I dragged my duffel bag off the boat, the heat of the sun making my skin burn, but it wasn't the warmth that had me on edge. It was the island. The way it called to me, like it had known I was coming. I glanced at the thick trees, their leaves moving in the wind, like they were whispering to each other.

"This place is so…" I started, but the words didn't quite make it out.

"Perfect for a book," Milo finished for me, his eyes teasing but tired, like he had heard that line a thousand times.

"Yeah," I muttered. "Perfect for everything."

I didn't know why I said it. Maybe because it felt true. Maybe because something about this place felt realer than the life I had left behind.

We unloaded our things, the beach stretching in both directions wide, empty, as if the island was waiting for something. Or someone.

And then there was that the tiny, tucked-away shack we'd be staying in. Old, creaky, and almost hidden by the overgrown vines. But when I saw the notebook on the shelf, tucked in a corner with dust coating its cover, something in me stilled.

Milo and Lena hadn't noticed. But I had. It was the kind of thing you shouldn't touch, but I couldn't stop myself. There was something in the air, some kind of magnetic pull that said, "Open me."

But I didn't. Not yet.

I glanced back at them, Milo cracking open a bottle of water and Lena already sprawled on the porch chair with her headphones in.

Just me and the island. Just like I wanted. Or so I thought.