"But It's Golden" is a teenage love story of opposites, longing, and the unspoken connection between two girls who could not be more different yet seem destined to be drawn together.
Wednesday Addams, with her sharp intellect and darker-than-night demeanor, has always avoided unnecessary entanglements-emotions are a weakness, after all. But then there's Enid Sinclair, a vibrant, relentlessly cheerful werewolf who has a way of brightening the shadows of Wednesday's world, whether she wants it or not.
Returning to Nevermore Academy after a summer apart, the two are forced to confront the undeniable tension that's been simmering between them. What begins as familiar teasing and reluctant companionship evolves into stolen glances, unexpected moments of vulnerability, and feelings neither of them are quite ready to admit.
As the mysterious reappearance of a golden pendant tied to an ancient Nevermore legend begins to unravel their worlds, Wednesday and Enid find themselves caught in a web of secrets, danger, and revelations that force them to rely on one another in ways they never imagined.
"But It's Golden" is a story of contrasts-light and dark, softness and strength-and a love that grows in the spaces where they meet. In a world where nothing is black and white, sometimes the most surprising connection is the one that shines the brightest.
I am insufficient. Well, that's not my name obviously, but that's what my family has decided I am.
I'm Julie. I'm 14, about to be 15 years old. I have a twin sister, Jamie. Jamie is an angel. Perfect at everything, and can do no wrong. At least in my family's eyes. And I? I am not perfect. I am a disappointment. Though they've never said that to me outright, I know that's what they truly think.
The apparent "last straw" was when Jamie fucked up and I took the fall for it. Now, I'm on my way to live with some of my more distant relatives back in Italy. They're supposed to "put me back in my place."
So now I get to go live with 3 Italian Capo's.
Sounds like fun right?
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What happens when Julie gets sent away? And what happens when her relatives receives a girl they had been brought to believe was a troublesome, borderline delinquent teenager, but is actually just a confused, dissociative little girl with a messed up idea of what family really means.
And what happens when Julie comes to realise that the people she was living with, weren't all who they said they were?