!!!! [SPOILERS] [SPOILERS] [SPOILERS] [SPOILERS] [SPOILERS] !!!!
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STORY Board/PANEL/LINE/WHATEVER! |
COPY & PASTE ONTO WORD OR SIMILAR PROGRAM TO READ WITHOUT HURTING YOUR POOR BEAUTIFUL EYES!
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Alice Liddell was a legacy of Dionysus that was so powerful, she could bring beings of her insane mindscape to life in reality. And then have a child with that imaginary being, that's not really imaginary now that it's alive and others can see and talk to it. The child of that union is Mary Liddell, later Mary Riddle, mother of Tom Riddle and grandmother of Tom Marvolo Riddle, otherwise known as Voldemort. But you see, Tommy has The Sex with a light witch who got pregnant with his spawn and left him to live a life away from his dark influence. She succeeds because though he gave a shit, Tommy convinced himself that he didn't as a way to cope with the fact that the one person he [loved] gave a shit about left him. So no, he doesn't know about the two boys who are his sons who grew up to adulthood without him. Anyway, this story is about the grandchild of the youngest of those two boys, James Jackson. Jimmy married Laura Estelle Carter and they have a daughter named Sally before dying in a plane crash when she's only four. By the way, that girl who shagged Tommy, her name is Fallon. She's the mother of Richard and James Jackson, Tommy's bastard sons. So she performed a ritual she found in her family's archives that rids a wizard/witch of their magical power, so she does that to her two sons in the hopes that they couldn't be tracked by their magical signature. She kept her own long enough to erase her tracks before changing her features and name, planning to live the rest of her life out in the muggle world. So yeah, back to that grandchild. Sally grows up, does The Sex with the Greek God Poseidon, has a daughter named Persephone, and the PJO/HOO books happen with some changes [like the main character being genderbended]. So the actual story that I will be writing will take place towards the end of "Blood of Olympus". Why? It makes the most sense. So Percy [fem!Percy] gets more affected by the trip to Tartartus than anyone thought. Her powers that lay dormant in her [from being a legacy of Dionysus] are finally activated/awakened during her trip in Tartarus, probably by the rogue spirit of her ancestor Alice Liddell. Not that it's important right now, but after Alice helps activate her powers, she then tries for reincarnation [I would like to think she got into Elysium for killing Dr. Bumby and saving countless children from being sold out as sex toys, late as she was to act]. So in all the hype from the war, Percy's mind is too busy to "regenerate" in order for her powers to work. So it decided to truly awaken once the hype is down, meaning the first night after the war is over. Queue the mind shattering, nightmares, and insanity. So Percy spends a whole year going through treatment at the hands of Dionysus [as a token of his gratitude for keeping Pollux alive and because she's his mortal descendant] and coming to grips with her frenzied mind and new mindscape. During that year, the fourth installment in the HP franchise [mix of book and movie] takes place. Now that Tommy is semi-resurrected[?], he gets the sense that he needs to find his ex-lover, Fallon Jackson. Reason: Percy's awakening of her powers opened up a connection to any others of the bloodline capable of awakening the power of Alice Liddell. Tommy is the prime target and the connection leads him to Fallon, mother of his sons, and eventually to the discovery of Sally and Percy. So along with his plans to get his body back, Tommy also sends out Death Eaters to locate Fallon Jackson in hopes of finding out why he feels the need to get in touch with her. Because Tommy doesn't get his body until around June, his Death Eaters are the ones doing all the work, his orders or not. So they decide to do the questioning for their Lord, despite Tommy himself not knowing why he needs to find Fallon. After not answering to any of their routine questions, the Death Eaters search her mind for any useful information before killing her. They report to Tommy with news that he fathered two sons with Fallon and that she dared to hide their existence from him. Before he can even be furious, they tell him that they also killed her. Tommy is human for once as he feels a pang of sorrow at the news that the only person he ever thought of as important to him is gone forever. To Be Continued
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The concept of Magic-Bearers and Energy Harnessing Abilities
For this story, I have this concept of there being two components to being able to wield magic. A concept that will also explain why Percy wasn't enrolled into Hogwarts or Ilvermorny.
The Two Components:
1 - Magic of any origin
2 - Ability to harness and apply magic/energy
Wizard Magic Wielders (wizards and witches) are magicals that possess magic of wizarding origin and the ability to harness and apply that magic to perform spells. Squibs are magicals that possess magic of wizarding origin but do not have the ability to harness and apply that magic. Muggles are the opposite of both Magic Wielders and Squibs (and the squib equivalent for other origins of magic/energy). There are two types of Muggles/Non-Magicals.
Types of Non-Magicals:
1 - Not possessing magic of any origin, or the ability to harness and apply magic/energy
2 - Not possessing magic of any origin but do have the ability to harness and apply magic/energy
The second type, those who have that special ability, are usually those who identify as clairvoyants/clairaudients, psychokinetics, telepaths, pyrokinetics, psychometrists, postcognitive/precognitive psychics, or bilocators/astral projectors (x). They are able to perform their amazing feats because they harness the energy around them and apply it to their specialty. Specialties depend on the type of energy the Non-Magical harnesses. Because the magic/energy is not their own, but simply energy harnessed from their surroundings, they are considered Non-Magical and their specialties are not as powerful as those who wield their own magic to perform the same feats (ex: a pyrokinetic does not have as much control over fire as, let's say, Leo Valdez has being a son of Hephaestus, Greek God of several things, one of which is Fire).
The ability to harness and apply magic/energy is one shared among all who have it, the type of magic or energy one can harness being the only difference. This is important, as different types of magic or energy can be applied in different ways and cannot mix. This is an important aspect to the story. A being who has any human component in their genetic make-up cannot harness multiple types of magic/energy. This at times can result in a misunderstanding, most notably in the Wizarding World. In which so-called muggleborns are inexplicably not automatically put into the books as being accepted into a wizarding school and yet are discovered after the age of 11, performing feats of magic. Or a "wizard" is identified as a squib because their magic turns out to be not of wizarding origin, so applying it to wizarding incantations and wandwork is met with difficulty, confused as an inability to perform magic.
If someone who has the ability to harness and apply magic/energy has conflicting powers within them (ex: the child of a god and someone of wizarding heritage), the power that is the most dominant overpowers any other powers existing in the individual, resulting in the extinguishing of all other powers aside from the dominant (ex: wizard magic is recessive compared to divine essence). This does not rid of their ability to harness and apply whatever magic/energy is left over (ex: a wizarding demigod will have divine essence/powers which they can perform as usual, but their ability to harness and apply that power allows for their divine essence to be applied in different ways).
Some muggleborns that happen to be of divine descent can be discovered before the age of 11 and their absence from wizarding books is considered a fluke, one that is rare but not seen as suspicious for although rare, there have been a handful of "flukes" throughout the centuries of wizarding history. Rarely do those of one parent of pure wizarding descent and one parent of divine descent learn to master the applying of wizard techniques to their dominant divine power. Most are classified as squibs, with those learning to apply it being a 1 in 1,000 chance which result in instead being considered very powerful wizards/witches.
The Two Components:
1 - Magic of any origin
2 - Ability to harness and apply magic/energy
Wizard Magic Wielders (wizards and witches) are magicals that possess magic of wizarding origin and the ability to harness and apply that magic to perform spells. Squibs are magicals that possess magic of wizarding origin but do not have the ability to harness and apply that magic. Muggles are the opposite of both Magic Wielders and Squibs (and the squib equivalent for other origins of magic/energy). There are two types of Muggles/Non-Magicals.
Types of Non-Magicals:
1 - Not possessing magic of any origin, or the ability to harness and apply magic/energy
2 - Not possessing magic of any origin but do have the ability to harness and apply magic/energy
The second type, those who have that special ability, are usually those who identify as clairvoyants/clairaudients, psychokinetics, telepaths, pyrokinetics, psychometrists, postcognitive/precognitive psychics, or bilocators/astral projectors (x). They are able to perform their amazing feats because they harness the energy around them and apply it to their specialty. Specialties depend on the type of energy the Non-Magical harnesses. Because the magic/energy is not their own, but simply energy harnessed from their surroundings, they are considered Non-Magical and their specialties are not as powerful as those who wield their own magic to perform the same feats (ex: a pyrokinetic does not have as much control over fire as, let's say, Leo Valdez has being a son of Hephaestus, Greek God of several things, one of which is Fire).
The ability to harness and apply magic/energy is one shared among all who have it, the type of magic or energy one can harness being the only difference. This is important, as different types of magic or energy can be applied in different ways and cannot mix. This is an important aspect to the story. A being who has any human component in their genetic make-up cannot harness multiple types of magic/energy. This at times can result in a misunderstanding, most notably in the Wizarding World. In which so-called muggleborns are inexplicably not automatically put into the books as being accepted into a wizarding school and yet are discovered after the age of 11, performing feats of magic. Or a "wizard" is identified as a squib because their magic turns out to be not of wizarding origin, so applying it to wizarding incantations and wandwork is met with difficulty, confused as an inability to perform magic.
If someone who has the ability to harness and apply magic/energy has conflicting powers within them (ex: the child of a god and someone of wizarding heritage), the power that is the most dominant overpowers any other powers existing in the individual, resulting in the extinguishing of all other powers aside from the dominant (ex: wizard magic is recessive compared to divine essence). This does not rid of their ability to harness and apply whatever magic/energy is left over (ex: a wizarding demigod will have divine essence/powers which they can perform as usual, but their ability to harness and apply that power allows for their divine essence to be applied in different ways).
Some muggleborns that happen to be of divine descent can be discovered before the age of 11 and their absence from wizarding books is considered a fluke, one that is rare but not seen as suspicious for although rare, there have been a handful of "flukes" throughout the centuries of wizarding history. Rarely do those of one parent of pure wizarding descent and one parent of divine descent learn to master the applying of wizard techniques to their dominant divine power. Most are classified as squibs, with those learning to apply it being a 1 in 1,000 chance which result in instead being considered very powerful wizards/witches.
Covers I make for fun for different ideas that come to mind when playing games, watching videos, and reading books/fanfiction.
Percy Covers:
Tom Riddle Covers: |
My version of Tom Riddle; still insane but not power hungry insane
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