Cherreads

Claxton

CroodsGirl
|SEASON 1 OF CLAXTON| |WATTPAD CREATORS PROGRAM · WEEKLY TO BI-WEEKLY UPDATES| As the Octopus Man returns from the Bermuda Triangle, Makenna Angelia Delling teams up with Merlin the Great's ninja-like fairy apprentice, Tracey, to defeat him. However, what will happen when Tracey learns he is the K.T. Magic Murderer? *** Fourteen-year-old Makenna Delling is a Metamorphic Fairy, a rare fairy from a family in which one person must have been a fairy. Except, who is that one person? To help find answers regarding her past, Makenna teams up with seventeen-year-old Tracey, a mysterious fairy who hails from Merlin's Island. Together, they are dragged into the flight of their lives after they learn that the Octopus Man has returned from the Bermuda Triangle, and he is eager to kill Tracey. Mustering up all her courage, Makenna must find a way to stop Tracey from becoming who he truly is. She has to help him defeat the Octopus Man himself if he is to change his fate. Both teens have high stakes, especially since Tracey could be one of the greatest threats in the entire Magic World. Who is Makenna? Who is Tracey? Most importantly, why must Makenna find her long-lost family member? It's so she can call herself a True Metamorphic Fairy. *** Note: My writing style resembles screenwriting, so please judge it accordingly. Thank you! Also in this story... Makenna wins the Perfect Ass Award, Tracey the Most Unfortunate One Award-LOL! Current Word Count: 100,000-150,000 Main Achievements: - 2022 Red Carpet Awards Shortlist! - Most Original Fantasy in the Strawberry Cupcake Awards!
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The Campus Detective: The Case of the Professor's Experiment

Narey was a seasoned female detective with years of experience in the National Intelligence Agency. She had been entrusted with some of the most complex cases involving national and international crimes. Everyone in the agency knew she was their pride—a brilliant operative who had cracked several high-profile cases through collaborations with foreign intelligence agencies. Her reputation had grown to legendary status in global intelligence circles. But after more than a decade of service, Narey stepped away from the agency. She became a private investigator. It wasn’t by choice—her personal life was falling apart. At 28, just two years ago, her elderly mother passed away, and her father’s health began to decline rapidly. They came from humble beginnings. Narey hadn’t earned her position through connections or privilege—it was her intelligence that set her apart. After her mother’s death, she became the sole caregiver for her ailing father. Her only sibling, a younger sister, had married and had a daughter. Tragically, her sister died—allegedly by suicide—after nine years of marriage. Her daughter, just seven years old at the time, was left behind. But Narey suspected it wasn’t suicide. Her brother-in-law remarried exactly one week after the funeral and handed the child over to Narey—who was still an active intelligence officer at the time. The timing, the behavior, everything felt wrong. Narey was furious and wanted to investigate, but she was overwhelmed—juggling her father’s care, raising her niece, and earning a living as a private detective. Then, a national crisis erupted. Students started disappearing—many of them activists, leaders of mass protests against the new regime and the sweeping legislative changes that came with it. Prestigious universities across the country were affected, but Grovement University stood out. It had the highest number of missing students and had been one of the loudest voices against the government. That’s where the investigation had to begin. The National Intelligence Agency couldn’t sit still. This was their jurisdiction. But no one in the agency had the experience—or the instincts—needed to crack a case like this. Everyone agreed: Narey was the one person who could do it. No other agent could even come close. The Director of the Agency called her in personally. The mission: go undercover as a student. At first, Narey refused. A long-term undercover mission wasn’t something she could commit to. Not with a child depending on her. But the agency pressed on. To the Director, she was their only hope—and she would be allowed to choose her own team. Her cover? A university freshman. It was a new kind of challenge—blending in with students nearly a decade younger. But for Narey, challenges had always been her element.
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