Fractured First Impressions
  • 25
  • 0
  • 3
  • Read 25
  • 0
  • Part 3
Completed, First published May 23, 2026

This novel follows Jungkook and Taehyung as they navigate the complexities of university life, and the fraught dynamics of fractured relationships. The narrative traces a violent encounter between the two characters, hinting at a troubled past and escalating tensions. Alongside this, the story opens onto Taehyung’s eager anticipation of university, contrasted with Jungkook’s cynical detachment shaped by loss and isolation. Initial chapters reveal a charged connection between Taehyung and Jungkook, sparked by a fleeting encounter amidst the bustle of campus life, and a nervous energy that hints at deeper attraction. These early moments explore themes of first impressions, social pressure, and the anxieties of new beginnings.
Copyright: All Rights Reserved
No person is allowed to use, redistribute, or modify your work in any form without your explicit permission.
Recommended for you
48 Part
A creeping dread clings to Blackwood Manor, a crumbling edifice swallowed by perpetual twilight. Within its shadowed halls, a spectral visitor arrives with the final chime of midnight, unseen, unheard by all save the brittle, aging matriarch, Eleanor. She alone claims to converse with this phantom—a gentleman draped in mourning silks, his face obscured by shadow, his voice a whisper of frost against ancient stone. Is he a lover returned from beyond the grave, a guardian spirit, or something far more sinister drawn to Blackwood’s decaying heart? Each night, Eleanor’s sanity frays further with his chilling visits, fueled by absinthe and the scent of decay. The manor’s portraits seem to watch with hollow eyes, the very timbers groan in protest as the guest’s influence bleeds into the living world. Dust motes dance in the moonlight, revealing fleeting glimpses of his form—a hand reaching for a forgotten locket, a glimpse of a smile that promises oblivion. A suffocating stillness descends with his presence, silencing the house's long-held secrets. The air thickens with the scent of lilies and regret, a suffocating perfume that clings to every surface. He demands not gold or jewels, but memories—fragments of Blackwood’s past, offered up like bloodied roses to appease a hunger that threatens to consume Eleanor, and ultimately, the manor itself. His midnight calls are not invitations to comfort, but a slow, deliberate unraveling of a family's history, woven into a tapestry of grief and shadowed obsession.
70 Part
A creeping dread settles over the marshlands of Anglia, mirroring the slow rot within the bones of its last kings. Morris weaves a tale not of glorious battle, but of a world drowning—not in water alone, but in the melancholic decay of forgotten gods and the venomous whispers of those who would usurp them. The narrative clings to the peat bogs like a clinging mist, smelling of salt and brine, of drowned things and the iron tang of blood. Villages vanish beneath encroaching tides, their stone foundations swallowed by the relentless grey, while within crumbling halls, the remnants of a fractured kingdom barter with shadow-things for survival. Each chapter feels like a descent into a waterlogged grave, the prose thick with the weight of loss and the insidious bloom of fungal blooms on rotting timbers. The sun, when it dares to appear, casts no warmth, only long, skeletal shadows stretching across the drowned fields. A sense of inevitable collapse permeates every line; not a heroic struggle against fate, but a mournful acceptance of its glacial, crushing embrace. The flood isn’t merely a rising water level, but a fracturing of the world itself, revealing the skeletal truths of a land consumed by its own melancholic past. The voices that linger are not those of the living, but the drowned echoes of kings, lovers, and children, murmuring from beneath the surface, beckoning the reader to join them in the cold, suffocating embrace of the sundering flood.