Bronze and Regret
  • 53
  • 0
  • 16
  • Read 53
  • 0
  • Part 16
Ongoing, First published May 09, 2026

The narrative traces two distinct, yet interwoven paths. In a Greek village, Annabeth Chase navigates societal expectations and unwanted attention while seeking independence through learning and building. Simultaneously, Percy grapples with profound loss and a devastating curse transforming his friends into objects by sunrise. These chapters reveal a world steeped in regret and the weight of past cruelty. Driven by grief and a desire to shoulder the burden of others’ suffering, Percy’s story unfolds with melancholy and despair. The initial chapters hint at journeys of escape and the search for lasting meaning amidst hardship.
Copyright: All Rights Reserved
No person is allowed to use, redistribute, or modify your work in any form without your explicit permission.
More like this
21 Part
The salt-crusted stones of Sardinia bear witness to a grief older than the granite they’re carved from. Here, where the wind tastes of brine and regret, a woman named Agata is not merely unbound from her marriage, but *unmade* by it. The aftermath isn’t freedom, but a slow, creeping dissolution into the landscape’s own desolate heart. Her house, once a haven, becomes a hollow echo of her former life, each room breathing with the ghost of a husband lost to the sea and a daughter consumed by a feverish, silent grief. Days bleed into nights under a bruised, plum-colored sky, mirroring Agata’s descent into a melancholic trance. The scent of myrtle and decay clings to everything, a suffocating sweetness that masks the bitterness of her solitude. The villagers whisper of curses and ill-omens, claiming the house itself mourns alongside Agata, absorbing her sorrow into its very foundations. But there’s a deeper current beneath the surface - a haunting awareness of the sea's cold embrace, a primal fear that her husband’s fate isn’t merely watery oblivion, but a claiming by something ancient and hungry. It’s a world where the lines between the living and the dead blur with the rising mist, and Agata’s unraveling is less a story of heartbreak than a surrender to the island's shadowed dominion. Every creak of the floorboards, every cry of the seabirds, feels like a warning – a chilling promise that even in letting go, she is irrevocably bound to the ghosts of her past.
7 Part
A suffocating stillness clings to the Gabler estate, a mausoleum of inherited wealth and decaying ambition. Within its shadowed parlors, Hedda, a bride newly returned, breathes a discontent that curdles the air. Not a tale of spectral hauntings, but of a hollowness that consumes from within. The scent of withered blooms and unsent letters permeates every room, mirroring the slow rot of Hedda’s spirit. A suffocating marriage, a stifled legacy—these become the bars of her gilded cage. The narrative unfolds as a slow bleed of frustration, a poisonous flowering of cruelty masked by polite society’s veneer. Each conversation, a brittle exchange of veiled threats and unspoken desires. A creeping dread settles with the dusk, fueled by whispered secrets and the echoes of past tragedies. The estate itself becomes a character, its oppressive architecture mirroring Hedda’s constriction, the scent of decay clinging to her every action. The air thickens with the weight of unfulfilled longing, a perverse obsession with control blooming in the shadows of her discontent. A sense of inevitable collapse permeates the story, not through grand catastrophe, but through the quiet, agonizing unraveling of a woman suffocated by expectation, driven to desperate measures within the suffocating confines of her own making. The ending lingers not as a resolution, but as a chilling residue—a cold, elegant despair that seeps into the very foundations of the house and the reader’s soul.