– Not as a villain, but as a sacrifice. Imagine a version where Luke’s redemption fails, and Percy realizes only a child of the Big Three can hold the sky and anchor the Olympian flame. He ascends not to godhood, but to a sentinel’s curse—forever holding the weight of Olympus while his friends grow old below. Annabeth visits him every year. He doesn’t age. She does. (Bring tissues.)
– Fifteen years later. Percy has a mortal son who doesn’t inherit powers—just the ADHD and the dyslexia. The boy asks, “Dad, why does Grandma Sally look at the ocean like she’s saying goodbye?” Percy has to explain that his mother outlived his father, and that he himself might outlive his own child. A meditation on legacy, mortality, and the terrible gift of being half-immortal. percy jackson x
– Dunwich, Massachusetts, 1920s. Percy is an ex-sailor with shell shock, now working at a decrepit lighthouse. Strange things come from the fog—not monsters, but echoes : his own voice whispering from the tide, a woman in a gray dress who leaves wet footprints on his floor. He learns that the old gods didn’t retire to Olympus; they drowned . And something down there wants Percy to join them. This is Percy as Lovecraft protagonist—fighting not with a sword, but with his own slipping sanity. X = Character Study: The Unspoken Percy Finally, the “X” can represent the unknown interior—the Percy we don’t always see. – Not as a villain, but as a sacrifice