Victims

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THE VICTIMS
THE VICTIMS
Liberty Hope has just one goal in life despite being born into a world in which vampires control most of North America: she wants to win her freedom and be taken to the final free zone. A safe haven where people don't have to worry about being dragged out of their homes while they sleep so they can get a good night's rest. Aric despises himself because of who he is and what he does; he is a vampire, a monster, and a killer. The last pet he had passed away of her own volition because she could not face her future. Even if he doesn't want another one, fate has decreed that he would get one nonetheless.
10
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94 Chapters
The Black Alder Series
The Black Alder Series
Warning. This book will contain scenes of Violence , Betrayal, and intimate scenes between a woman with more than one male at a time. With that said, Welcome to the Black Alder Series. This book will be written in three parts surrounding the lives of Elena, Kayla, and Arabella. Three women victims by their circumstances. Each of them has a destiny to face and they are all entwined with eachother in one way or another. Each possess a special ability. With that ability, they will seek to change their fates and become strong leaders for their families. Enemies lurk around every corner, wanting to claim the women for their very own, but these women are not going down without a fight. Read on to see how this all unfolds. Be prepared, it's a tunnel of emotions your about to go through. See you on the other side. Part one, Luna Rising, will center around Elena. Part two, Broken Chains, will center around Kayla. Part three, Midnight Sky, will center around Arabella.
9.3
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114 Chapters
Bullied
Bullied
A NOVEL ON STOCKHOLM SYNDROME BOOK 1 OF A THREE BOOK SERIES *TRIGGER WARNING* This book contains scenes that some readers may find disturbing… and also slightly annoying. “Miss. Iris, do you believe she has a point?” she asked and returned to her seat once again. “I don’t think so, her father and uncle deserve to go to jail.” My answer extracted a smile from her like she was proud of my response. “My name is Christine; I am a renowned medico-legal psychotherapist. Been in the business for over twenty years and that is what a case of Stockholm syndrome looks like. In my years of experience, we see situations similar to this but its our job to help the victims realize” “Wow…” I started, really amazed at what she had said and what her work entails. I was only concerned why they locked me in a room with a psychotherapist “it must be difficult at times” I added. “yeah, its difficult every time” she laughed “but today isn’t about me, I have a question for you.” There was a brief pause in between before she carried on “Does Hunter deserve to go to jail?”
8.8
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31 Chapters
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LOVED
LOVED
A NOVEL ON STOCKHOLM SYNDROME BOOK OF A THREE BOOK SERIES *TRIGGER WARNING* This book contains scenes that some readers may find disturbing… and also slightly annoying. “Miss. Iris, do you believe she has a point?” she asked and returned to her seat once again. “I don’t think so, her father and uncle deserve to go to jail.” My answer extracted a smile from her like she was proud of my response. “My name is Christine; I am a renowned medico-legal psychotherapist. Been in the business for over twenty years and that is what a case of Stockholm syndrome looks like. In my years of experience, we see situations similar to this but its our job to help the victims realize” “Wow…” I started, really amazed at what she had said and what her work entails. I was only concerned why they locked me in a room with a psychotherapist “it must be difficult at times” I added. “yeah, its difficult every time” she laughed “but today isn’t about me, I have a question for you.” There was a brief pause in between before she carried on “Does Hunter deserve to go to jail?”
10
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72 Chapters
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When the bully falls in love
When the bully falls in love
" No one wants to kiss chubby cheeks or sleep with a girl covered in rugs," Vince smiled as the corners of his mouth went up in a smirk. " Now get off your high horse and stop fantasizing about my perfect chest," he growled. My name is Perez, but the bullies call me Fatrez because I'm fat, not that I like being fat, their is nothing I can change about it, unless the angels decided to work out a miracle. But everything that has a beginning has an end, I could do the bullying, not that I can't. But the head of bullies is sinfully handsome, he leads as they follow. Always throwing the first comment before the rest come along. Even if he is sinfully handsome, I could never dream of me with him, the fact that am fat, call it obesity and dumb in class with extra front teeth. No one wants such a girl. Even if I was a boy I wouldn't date me. Why would he look at me twice without laughing so hard and crumbling down. The best I can do is disappear and never come back or kill myself to stop the bullies from finding other victims, they would probably die of guilt, that's my plan. But Vince is such an arrogant jerk, he could never crack, let alone feel guilty. I've got to stay alive to pay back, make his life miserable, perhaps I'll sleep at night satisfied that he is suffering because of me. But maybe the bully isn't strong like I thought, is his heart made of stone or it's all a mask to fool the world and make him feel better. His heart bleeds after all and I can injure it.
8
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152 Chapters
Sold To The Alpha Beasts
Sold To The Alpha Beasts
"Humans are only good for the table." That is how the immortal werewolf beasts see humans, as nothing more than food. For decades, mortals have been sold to werewolf packs, a gruesome practice that remains unbroken. In their savage beast forms, werewolves devour humans to increase their power. This horrifying ritual is one of their most feared and ancient traditions. Among the countless victims is a young nameless woman, enslaved by a wealthy and ruthless family. When she turns twenty, her bitter fate finally arrives. Her cruel master decides to sell her off to one of the most powerful werewolf packs as a sacrificial offering for their ritual. Four Alpha half-brothers await her, devastatingly handsome, wild, and irresistibly dangerous. These sexy hungry beasts are ready to devour her. ~~~~♡~~~~~ Original book owned by Sasha B. Welcome to my Dark Fantasies!
10
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404 Chapters

How Many Victims Did The Hillside Stranglers Have?

4 Answers2025-12-12 13:27:30

The Hillside Stranglers case still sends chills down my spine whenever I come across true crime discussions. Kenneth Bianchi and Angelo Buono Jr., the duo behind these horrific murders, targeted young women in Los Angeles during the late 1970s. Their crimes were brutal, and the way they lured their victims makes it even more unsettling. From what I've read, they were responsible for at least 10 deaths, though some sources suggest the number could be higher due to unresolved cases from that period.

What makes this case stand out in true crime history is the sheer audacity of the killers. They often posed as law enforcement to gain trust, and their methods were methodical. The media frenzy at the time was intense, and it’s one of those cases that reshaped how people viewed safety in their own communities. Even decades later, it’s a reminder of how darkness can hide in plain sight.

Why Does The Surgeon Target Victims In The Thriller Novel?

4 Answers2025-10-17 21:58:42

Picture the surgeon in a thriller as someone who thinks they're solving a problem nobody else can see. In the first paragraph of these books they're often introduced with steady hands and a cool bedside manner, but the undercurrent is guilt, loss, or an unshakeable belief that the medical profession gives them the right to 'fix' moral or physical imperfections. I've seen this trope used as revenge: a spouse died on their table, a child wasn't saved, and the surgeon flips grief into a warped mission. Sometimes it's hubris — the character believes that because they can cut and rebuild bodies, they can also cut away what they call society's rot. Think of how 'The Surgeon' or 'Silence of the Lambs' toys with authority figures who hide monstrous ethics behind expertise.

Beyond personal vendetta, authors use surgeons to explore themes of control, identity, and bodily autonomy. The operating room is intimate and secretive, which makes it a brilliant stage for terror: the killer knows anatomy, can leave signatures you don't expect, and turns healing instruments into tools of harm. For me, that mix of clinical cool and human frailty is why these characters stay with you — they're terrifying because they blur the line between care and cruelty, and that tension is almost tragic in a dark way.

Why Does Israel Keyes Target Victims In Devil In The Darkness?

3 Answers2026-01-02 22:31:32

I’ve always been fascinated by true crime narratives, and 'Devil in the Darkness' really dives deep into the twisted psychology of Israel Keyes. What struck me most was how methodical he was—his victims weren’t chosen at random, but rather as part of a calculated game. He thrived on the control, the fear, and the sheer unpredictability of his actions. The book highlights how he often traveled far from home to commit his crimes, making it harder for law enforcement to connect the dots. It’s chilling how he blended into ordinary life while harboring such darkness.

What’s even more unsettling is how he seemed to enjoy the hunt as much as the act itself. The author paints a picture of someone who saw people as mere objects in his macabre fantasy. It’s not just about the violence; it’s about the power trip. The way 'Devil in the Darkness' unravels his mindset makes you realize how terrifyingly ordinary monsters can appear. I couldn’t put the book down, but it left me with this lingering unease about how easily evil can hide in plain sight.

Who Were The Victims In The Dancing Plague Story?

3 Answers2025-12-16 21:04:02

The so-called 'Dancing Plague' of 1518 in Strasbourg is one of history's weirdest mysteries. Hundreds of people—mostly impoverished laborers, women, and even children—were suddenly gripped by an uncontrollable urge to dance for days without rest. Many collapsed from exhaustion, dehydration, or even heart failure. The victims weren't just random individuals; they were often marginalized folks already struggling in a time of famine and disease. Some accounts mention a woman named Frau Troffea, who started dancing alone in the street before others joined. It's heartbreaking to think about their suffering, framed then as divine punishment or demonic possession.

What fascinates me is how modern theories try to explain it—mass hysteria, ergot poisoning from spoiled rye bread, or collective stress from societal collapse. But no explanation fully captures the horror of watching your neighbors dance themselves to death. The tragedy feels almost mythological, like a dark fairy tale where the 'curse' was just being human in a brutal era.

Is Jai Bhim Real Story Accurate To The Real Victims?

3 Answers2025-11-24 05:47:14

Watching 'Jai Bhim' hit me like a punch that makes you look closer at the bruise — it’s clearly drawn from real life, but it’s a film first, so some scenes are sharpened for drama. The movie takes its core from documented instances of custodial violence and a particular legal battle that a committed lawyer took up; several public interviews and reports confirm that the filmmakers worked off real events and were inspired by the work of a lawyer who later became a judge. That foundation gives the film its moral spine: the injustice, the grief, and the perseverance of marginalized communities are presented with a rawness that feels truthful.

Still, I’m picky about accuracy because these are real people's lives. The film compresses timelines, simplifies courtroom procedure, and reshapes minor characters to keep the narrative tight. That’s normal — movies need focus and emotional beats — but it means a few procedural details and the sequence of events differ from court records or longer investigative reports. Some individual moments are dramatized to convey the emotional truth rather than the literal sequence of every legal motion. I think the creators balanced respect for victims with the demands of storytelling, but if you’re looking for a documentary-level record, it’s not that.

What mattered to me most was the care given to the victims’ voices and the attempt to center their humanity. The film sparked renewed public conversation, led people to read judgments and NGO reports, and put pressure on institutions — tangible outcomes that honor the underlying reality. Watching it, I felt angry and moved, and I also felt compelled to learn more about the real case histories and the communities affected. Overall, 'Jai Bhim' is faithful to the spirit and injustice of the real incidents, even if it takes creative liberties for clarity and impact — and that honest anger stuck with me long after the credits rolled.

What Happened To The Victims Of Japan'S Infamous Unit 731?

1 Answers2026-02-25 02:01:34

Unit 731 remains one of the darkest chapters in history, and its victims endured unimaginable horrors. The unit, operating under the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II, conducted brutal experiments on thousands of civilians and prisoners of war—primarily Chinese, Koreans, Russians, and even some Allied captives. Many were subjected to vivisection without anesthesia, frostbite testing, biological weapon exposure, and other inhumane procedures. Survivors were rare, as the unit systematically eliminated evidence by killing most subjects after experiments. The sheer scale of suffering is hard to fathom, with estimates suggesting over 3,000 people died there, though some historians believe the number could be far higher.

What’s even more chilling is how Unit 731’s leaders escaped justice. After Japan’s surrender, the U.S. secretly granted immunity to key members in exchange for their research data, which was later used in Cold War bioweapon programs. This deal buried much of the truth for decades, leaving victims’ families without closure. While some documents have surfaced over time, Japan’s official acknowledgment of these crimes remains frustratingly vague. The legacy of Unit 731 isn’t just a historical atrocity—it’s a stark reminder of how easily humanity’s darkest impulses can be sanitized by politics. Every time I read about it, I’m left with a mix of anger and sorrow for those whose stories were erased.

What Symptoms Defined Victims Of The Dancing Plague?

5 Answers2025-08-29 15:23:05

When I dug into those old chronicles, the images stuck with me: people seized by a compulsion to move, sometimes for days on end, unable to stop even when exhausted. Contemporary reports from places like 1518 Strasbourg describe continuous dancing, rhythmic stamping, and chants or shrieks; fingers and feet rubbed raw until they bled; severe sweating, trembling, and muscle cramps. Witnesses also noted trance-like expressions—some danced with blank or ecstatic faces, others in obvious pain, and many collapsed from sheer exhaustion.

Beyond the dancing itself, sufferers were recorded as suffering fainting spells, delirium, and vomiting. A few accounts even mention hallucinations, feverishness, and ultimately death from stroke or heart failure in the worst cases. I always think about how visceral that must have been: feet blistered, limbs aching, bodies pushed beyond normal limits.

Modern historians and clinicians read these symptoms and debate causes—mass psychogenic illness, cultural rituals, or even ergot poisoning—but regardless of the trigger, the defining signs were the uncontrollable movement, physical breakdown from continuous exertion, and the psychological intensity that accompanied it. It’s haunting stuff that still makes me pause whenever I see a crowd acting strangely.

Why Does The Protagonist In Innocent Victims Seek Revenge?

4 Answers2026-03-19 09:43:04

The protagonist in 'Innocent Victims' is driven by a deeply personal tragedy that shatters their world. It's not just about revenge; it's about justice for something irreplaceable that was taken from them. The story slowly peels back layers of their pain, revealing how systemic corruption or personal betrayal made their loss inevitable—and unpunished. That simmering anger transforms into purpose, but what fascinates me is how the narrative questions whether revenge truly fills the void or just creates new cycles of violence.

What really hooks me is the moral ambiguity. The protagonist isn't some flawless avenger—they make brutal choices that blur the line between victim and perpetrator. The manga (or novel? I forget which medium!) lingers on moments where they hesitate, suggesting they might regret their path. But then the memory of their loss resurfaces, and you get it. That raw humanity makes their quest compelling, not heroic.

Can Victims Sue When My Boyfriend Auctioned Off My Private Photos?

5 Answers2025-10-16 04:33:53

This is a brutal violation and, yes, in many places you can sue — but the best path depends on where you live and what exactly happened. If your boyfriend auctioned off private photos without your consent, that's often treated as a civil wrong: claims like public disclosure of private facts, invasion of privacy, or intentional infliction of emotional distress are commonly used. Some states and countries also have specific laws that criminalize the non-consensual distribution of intimate images, sometimes called 'revenge porn' statutes, and those statutes frequently create a civil cause of action too, allowing victims to seek damages and injunctions.

Collect everything: screenshots, URLs, auction listings, messages, bank or crypto transactions, and witnesses. Preserve metadata where possible and don’t delete original messages; copies should be saved in multiple places. Request takedowns from the platforms hosting the content and file a police report — criminal charges can run alongside civil suits. A lawyer can seek an injunction so the images stop circulating and try for monetary damages, punitive damages, and attorney fees if the law allows.

Emotionally it’s wrenching — reach out to someone you trust or a local support group while you sort the legal side. I’ve seen people regain control by acting fast and getting both legal and emotional support, and that helped me feel less powerless.

Are There Books Like Victims Of Circumstance For Young Men?

3 Answers2026-01-26 10:46:01

Ever since I stumbled upon 'Victims of Circumstance,' I've been on the lookout for similar reads that capture that raw, coming-of-age energy—especially for young men navigating life's messy transitions. Something about the way it blends gritty realism with emotional vulnerability really stuck with me. If you're after that vibe, I'd recommend 'The Catcher in the Rye'—Holden Caulfield’s existential griping feels oddly relatable even decades later. For a darker twist, 'Less Than Zero' by Bret Easton Ellis dives into disillusionment with a razor-sharp edge. And if you want contemporary grit, 'The Nickel Boys' by Colson Whitehead tackles systemic injustice with a protagonist whose resilience mirrors that 'Victims' spirit.

What I love about these books is how they don’t sugarcoat the confusion of growing up. They’re not just about 'finding yourself' in some cliché way—they’re about scraping through the chaos and coming out bruised but wiser. 'A Little Life' might be too heavy for some, but its exploration of male friendship and trauma is unforgettable. For lighter but equally poignant fare, 'The Perks of Being a Wallflower' nails that adolescent ache. Honestly, half the fun is arguing which one hits harder—I’m still torn between Salinger’s cynicism and Ellis’s nihilism.

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