Stories

My stories, or at least those that I am planning to write eventually:

--Hence, My Domain, Percy Jackson and the Olympians: (taken from The Quintuple Game, with title/initial summary taken from Juliet and Musa)
       --Ice might as well just be water. It takes a secret-wartime meeting in the midst of WWII and a frigid arctic summer to make Zeus and Poseidon discover that.

--Hero of War, Percy Jackson and the Olympians: (Yes, based off my obsession with the Rise Against song of that name.)
        --Because you carry the wounds of the battle with you forever, and scars can't just be forgotten. Every one of them has a story behind it. Theirs starts with enlistment in the army of the Titan lord.

--Against, Percy Jackson and the Olympians:
       --Demigod siblings share more than blood, he thinks, watching that of his brother paint the grass crimson. If only the kid had listened. If only.

--Untitled, The 39 Clues: (As of now)
      --He loved her. She loved him. But when he tells her that, she just can't find it in herself to believe him. Ten words never said so much.

--Never Say Goodbye, Percy Jackson and the Olympians:
     --It was forbidden. Above all else, she knows she should never have gotten tangled up in that mess. She was a Hunter; he was a servant of her enemy. But they never need to know that.

--And Their Name Was Treason, Percy Jackson and the Olympians: (title stolen from an A Day to Remember album and story full of lyrics from All I Want by that same band)
       --Luke knew he wasn't supposed to think those thoughts. He knew that no one understood what he meant. He knew that they brushed his rambles aside. Most importantly, he knew that thinking them was likely to get him killed. That didn't stop him from believing the gods should rot in Tartarus for the rest of eternity.

--Shattered Entirety, Percy Jackson and the Olympians
     --The colors of the rainbow paint the story of her life, from the moment her mother gave him away to the second her father turns her into a pine tree. She is Thalia, and she may be jaded, but never, ever broken.

--Of Titanic Proportions, Percy Jackson and the Olympians:
      --Every "national tragedy" has a hidden story behind it, one where the characters are the gods and the cause is something much more real than the one manufactured for mortals. And the Titanic . . . that was the first time a demigod attempted to resurrect Kronos.