Bayangan Wayne
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Ongoing, First published May 23, 2026

The narrative traces Persephone ‘Percy’ Jackson’s arrival at Wayne Estate following her search for her mother. Introduced to Bruce Wayne and his wards – Dick Grayson, Jason Todd, Tim Drake, and Damian – Percy finds herself amidst a household simmering with tension. These chapters reveal a young woman grappling with past losses while navigating a world of shadows and veiled threats. As she encounters Bruce Wayne and the volatile Damian, Persephone’s own hidden skills emerge, sparking suspicion among the brothers about her origins and abilities. The story unfolds with a sharp edge, hinting at a complex past and a dangerous future.
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26 Part
A creeping fog clings to the shattered remnants of empires, mirroring the ruinous calculations etched into every treaty line. This is not a history of battles won, but of debts accrued, of futures bartered away in gilded salons and shadowed counting houses. The air hangs thick with the scent of ash and regret, a chill seeping from the very stone of Versailles. Each paragraph feels like a slow excavation of a buried grief, uncovering the rot beneath the veneer of restoration. The narrative doesn't explode with violence, but unravels in the quiet decay of promises broken. It’s a story told in ledger books and whispered anxieties, a creeping dread that settles not in grand catacombs, but in the hollowed-out eyes of merchants and the tightening grip of creditors. A suffocating weight presses down, not of armies, but of unrealized loans and the spectral hunger of nations left to starve on the bones of their pride. The prose itself is a labyrinth of clauses and caveats, mirroring the intricate, suffocating web of obligations woven after the war. It's a world lit by the flickering gaslight of statistical tables, where every decimal point feels like a nail hammered into the coffin of stability. A subtle, pervasive despair permeates the text, the sense that even in the meticulous charting of consequence, the abyss stares back, indifferent to the logic of man. The true horror isn't found in the carnage of the guns, but in the cold, elegant precision with which hope is systematically dismantled, and the silence that follows.