A brutal human empire and a grieving elven kingdom are bound by a fragile peace after years of war sparked by conquest, betrayal, and the assassination of an elven queen ordered by the human king. The Elven Princess Y/N grows up shaped by that loss, believing all humans—especially the royal family—are responsible for her mother’s death and her kingdom’s suffering. When a mysterious plague begins spreading across both realms, forcing cooperation between enemies, Prince Cassian Valebryn—the cold, controlled heir of the human throne—is sent to the elven court as part of a political alliance. He is the son of the man she blames for everything, and she is the daughter of a kingdom his father tried to break. Their first encounters are defined by hatred, grief, and inherited violence. Yet forced proximity during the crisis reveals unsettling truths: Cassian is not the cruel tyrant his father is, and Y/N’s anger hides deep grief and exhaustion from carrying her broken kingdom. What begins as hostility slowly turns into reluctant understanding, then into a dangerous, forbidden attachment neither of them can afford. As political tensions rise and the plague is revealed to be tied to deeper human manipulation, their bond becomes a threat to both crowns. Caught between loyalty to their people and the pull toward each other, Cassian and Y/N must decide whether their love can break a cycle of bloodshed—or destroy both kingdoms in the process.
In the war-torn kingdom of Valedorne, Princess Y/N of House Auremont is promised to a foreign prince to secure peace between rival nations. Proud, politically sharp, and raised to distrust warriors, Y/N despises the brutal knight assigned as her royal protector: Sir Kael Draven, a disgraced battlefield legend rumored to have slaughtered hundreds during the Border Rebellions. Kael, meanwhile, views the princess as another sheltered royal who knows nothing of sacrifice or survival. When an assassination attempt forces them to flee the capital together, the two enemies are dragged across cursed forests, ruined cathedrals, and enemy territory while hunted by traitors from both kingdoms. As secrets unfold, Y/N discovers Kael’s terrifying reputation hides a man broken by guilt rather than driven by cruelty. Kael slowly realizes the “cold princess” is trapped in a political cage she never chose. But their growing feelings threaten not only their lives — but the fragile peace between kingdoms. To love each other would mean betraying everything they were born to protect.
As war looms over the Seven Kingdoms, Princess Y/N Vaelaris of Elarion is forced into an arranged marriage with Prince Rhys Vaedrin , the feared heir to the Dragon Kingdom, to unite their realms against a rising ancient threat. But neither of them knows they have already met once before — beneath masks at a royal masquerade, where they unknowingly fell for each other as strangers. As their bond deepens, Rhys discovers a deadly prophecy tied to her magic: As long as she loves a dragon, her light core will slowly fade. Now caught between duty, fate, and forbidden love, Y/N must decide whether saving her kingdom is worth losing herself — and whether loving Rhys will destroy her… or the world itself.
Veil of Atlas follows a rising alternative rock band whose emotionally charged sound quickly turns them into a breakout phenomenon. Blending heavy alt-rock intensity with haunting, cinematic melodies, the band becomes known for performances that feel less like concerts and more like emotional events unfolding in real time. At the center is vocalist Y/N and drummer Mason Reyes, whose onstage precision creates a signature dynamic that fans describe as “communication without words.” Their timing, interplay, and near-instinctive synchronization become a defining part of the band’s identity—though both consistently insist it is nothing more than professional chemistry and rehearsal discipline. As the band’s popularity grows, so does public obsession with their internal dynamics. Fans and media dissect performances, interviews, and live moments, building narratives around tensions the band refuses to confirm. The result is a growing gap between what Veil of Atlas intends their music to mean and what the audience believes it reveals.
“..𝐲𝐨𝐮’𝐫𝐞 𝐥𝐢𝐤𝐞 𝐦𝐲 𝐨𝐰𝐧 𝐩𝐞𝐫𝐬𝐨𝐧𝐚𝐥 𝐛𝐫𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐨𝐟 𝐡𝐞𝐫𝐨𝐢𝐧𝐞..” At Hollowridge Academy, humans unknowingly study alongside vampires, witches, and other supernatural beings hiding in plain sight. Adrian Nightvale, the cold and feared heir to a powerful vampire clan, has spent years suppressing the monster inside him—until transfer student Y/N Ashwood arrives. The moment they meet, Y/N senses something unnatural in Adrian’s blood. Worse, Adrian realizes her blood has a dangerous effect on him: it calms his hunger while making his emotions impossibly intense. As rumors spread through the supernatural students and ancient rivalries begin resurfacing, the two are pulled into a forbidden connection tied to an old prophecy buried beneath the school itself. In a place filled with secrets, magic, and blood-soaked history, falling in love may be the most dangerous thing either of them could do.
Two years ago, the ruling vampire family, House Noctis, was nearly wiped out during a devastating coup known as The Night of Ruin. Forced to flee, Y/N, the last surviving royal heir, escaped alongside Lucien Ashcroft, her assigned Parabotai (royal guardian-in-training). For two years, they lived as fugitives, constantly moving, hiding from enemies, and relying solely on each other to survive. During that time, the boundaries between princess and guardian blurred, transforming their relationship into something far deeper than duty alone. Their freedom ends when loyalists locate them and force them to enroll at Blackthorne Academy, an elite school attended by the children of vampire nobility. Officially, the academy exists to protect and educate future leaders. In reality, it is a battleground of political schemes, hidden alliances, and dangerous secrets. Now Y/N must resume her role as crown princess, while Lucien is expected to return to being a proper Parabotai. Yet after years spent surviving as equals, neither of them knows how to fit back into those roles. As whispers of the past resurface and suspicion spreads through the academy, Y/N and Lucien begin uncovering clues about the conspiracy that destroyed the Noctis Dynasty—while realizing that some of the people responsible may still be hiding within Blackthorne's walls.
⸻ Adrian and Y/N begin a “friends with benefits, no strings attached” arrangement that gradually becomes emotionally significant, even though neither fully admits it. Adrian grows quietly attached while still insisting on emotional detachment. The dynamic shifts when Y/N starts dating Evan Mercer, a boyfriend who initially appears charming but gradually reveals controlling, emotionally manipulative behavior, and physical aggression. As her relationship becomes more restrictive and unstable, Adrian becomes increasingly involved as both a comfort and an emotional constant in her life. What was meant to be casual between Adrian and Y/N becomes complicated by jealousy, unspoken attachment, and blurred boundaries—especially as Adrian struggles with the fact that he feels replaced, even though he was never officially hers. Surrounding friends and side characters amplify the tension, forcing emotional truths to surface. The central conflict becomes whether Y/N recognizes the toxicity of her relationship with Evan—and whether Adrian and Y/N’s “no strings” connection ever truly stayed without strings at all. ⸻
Y/N is an Orange-class Psi who hides her true abilities by claiming to be a Green when she arrives at Thurmond. Outwardly social, expressive, and easy to talk to, she survives the camp by masking her fear and carefully controlling how others see her. In reality, she possesses rare powers that allow her to manipulate memories and project psychic illusions, subtly altering what people remember and perceive without them realizing it. While in the camp, Y/N becomes known for her outgoing personality and ability to connect with others, but she is constantly affected by emotional and memory “echoes” from people around her, making it difficult for her to fully trust her own thoughts. After a major disruption following Ruby Daly’s escape, she is caught in the chaos and eventually escapes during a transport failure. On the run, Y/N meets Liam Stewart and joins his group of fugitive Psi teens, including Chubs, Zu, Griffin Thorne, and Ruby. She quickly becomes an important part of their found family, using her abilities to help protect them through concealment, deception, and perception control. However, her powers also create risks, as they can unintentionally distort memories and blur reality for both herself and others. As the group travels together, Y/N struggles with increasing instability in her abilities, making it harder to distinguish her own memories from those she has altered or absorbed. She becomes both a powerful asset and an unpredictable presence—someone who helps keep the group safe, while quietly threatening the certainty of what they believe is real.
Premise Summary For a year and a half, singer-songwriter Y/N and her producer Ethan Cole were secretly in a relationship. After a difficult breakup, they chose to remain professional and continued working together despite their unresolved feelings. Months later, Y/N asks Ethan to produce a new song she’s written. Unaware that the lyrics are about their relationship and breakup, Ethan helps record and perfect the track. When the song becomes a worldwide hit, fans begin dissecting the lyrics, and Ethan slowly realizes the song is about him. As the truth comes to light, both are forced to confront emotions they thought they’d left behind and face the consequences of turning their private history into a public story.
A powerful crime broker known only as Silas Reign is traveling aboard a luxury night train cutting through a frozen mountain range. Hidden among politicians, wealthy elites, and armed security, he carries a ledger capable of destroying entire criminal organizations. Multiple contracts were issued for his death. Only two assassins answered first. Neither expected the other. The moment the train departs, both assassins attempt their hit simultaneously — ruining each other’s plans in spectacular fashion. Now the target has vanished somewhere onboard, security is locking down each train car, and the assassins are forced into a dangerous game of rivalry, manipulation, and reluctant cooperation. One mistake could expose them both. One betrayal could get them killed. And somewhere between sabotage, gunfire, and razor-sharp banter, the line between enemy and ally begins to blur.