She can see the future. She can hear what you're thinking, feel your emotions as though they were her own ... It is clear she is a powerful Seer, but even then, how had she not seen what was stalking her way?
When she is accepted to work as a personal assistant for the owner of her favourite café, she thought she was a step closer to independence. Her employer, though mysterious, is kind and accommodating to her needs, and Bridge immediately likes her. That is where she and the annoying young man, Percival Waterford, disagree. He makes abundantly clear that he thinks Leilo Castelanos has too many secrets. Why does she wear a turban and glasses she refuses to take off? Why is no-one allowed to ask about it? It is shady, he says, that Leilo would look nobody in the eyes.
Although Brigid is curious, she leaves it alone. After all, as a blind person, she herself had to deal with prodding questions and weird stares from the general public. She had no way of knowing, however, that her beloved, mysterious and sometimes moody employer had to deal with things worse than blindness, things that eventually lead to Brigid's life taking on many dark turns. All the signs were there: a chilling conversation between Waterford and his father, a dark, bloody cycle, a secretive society known only as the OSES and a prophecy laid out by the god, Apollo himself in which Brigid has no choice but to get involved, speaking of the awakening of an evil deity who threatens to drown the world and make it his domain ...
As the events progress, Brigid discovers her unknown herritage, and is confronted with a roller-coaster of circumstances which come together in a horrible truth, the reason for her blindness, and a difficult task. She would risk everything, including her life, to lift Leilo's curse ... or fail, leaving everything and everyone to succumb to the ocean's power.
TRIGGER WARNING: This story contains themes which include implications and mentions of sexual assault.All Rights Reserved