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Post by jessica. on Dec 27, 2014 18:56:12 GMT
In the winter of 1994, the residents of Salem Massachusetts started going missing.
It was a place already known for its brutal past, tucked away quiet and peacefully ever since, until those missing started to come back with more than just a story to tell.
When Sawyer Meade transfers from a large university back to her hometown college of Salem State, she finds herself in the middle of a modern day witch hunt. After the disappearance and reappearance of local sweetheart Lori Hemmings, Sawyer’s one and only enemy, fingers are pointed in her direction when she’s accused of kidnapping and torturing Lori in what she explains only as a cult-like experience. It only gets worse when other girls in town accuse her of exactly the same. But with increasing speculation, along with other strange accounts happening to not only the community but Sawyer herself, she realizes she’s going to need help to keep the eyes of Salem off of her.
With the unlikely help of Lori’s brother Luke, along with Ashton, the brute son of the town’s brand new sheriff, they set off to find out whether or not the town’s disappearances, arsons, and murders have anything to do with the town’s dark past, or are something entirely new and sinister set to take over.
a long tale of “who done it”, copious amounts of salt, superstitions, and teenage serial killers.
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Post by flummoxed on Dec 28, 2014 0:02:02 GMT
(lovely banner by seeingred)
Love, to most people, is a word associated with reds and pinks and a day overwhelmed by giant hearts and candy galore. Love, to Luke, looks like a strange but not altogether unpleasant orange-speckled lilac which reminds him of a night that bloomed into mustard yellow and a certain ginger-haired girl with a sea green name. Synesthesia does that a lot; it jumbles up senses and smears messy colors in his eyes and buzzing sounds in his ears until he's dizzied and confused, but with Imogen Scott's help, Luke might learn to embrace both his condition and his newfound affection toward her: if he can only let go of the secrets he's been clutching to his chest for so long. In which two kids find color in a black and white town.chapter: one updated: 12/27/14 link: here
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Post by seeingred on Dec 28, 2014 15:54:13 GMT
Simple was not what Luke's life was. He had multiple college essays due in, a shit job as a waiter, an ever rising rent to pay and his parents constantly breathing down his neck in hope of pushing him in what they believed was the right direction; law school.
His friends were all moving on with their lives, going on dates and getting good grades whilst Luke spent his free time watching TV, sleeping and lighting up a few joints whenever life started getting a little bit too much for him to handle.
Then, when he's finally accepted the fact that not paying the rent on time for three months in a row will most likely get him kicked out, a miracle arrives on his doorstep with nothing but vodka, a suitcase, a puppy called Wilson and a lot of memories that Luke originally thought he had suppressed.
A story featuring Chinese takeaways, a dramatic wedding, earning money for the bills, a lot of singing, stoners and showering together (to save water of course). Updated: 28/12/14 Chapter: Three
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Post by natasha on Dec 30, 2014 8:17:20 GMT
Addie Clifford’s life is going nowhere. a year out of uni, she’s jobless, homeless, and pretty much friendless. when her brother, Michael, asks her to come on tour with his band to be a full-time nanny to his little girl, she’s hesitant to accept, because there’s nobody she hates more than Michael’s bandmate, Calum Hood. They’ve got, you could say, a complicated history. But let’s be honest: Addie’s nothing if not a little desperate. (An extremely bastardized adaptation of Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing in which things rarely go as planned.) updated: 12/30/14 chapter: 12 + link
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nic
New Member
Posts: 21
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Post by nic on Jan 10, 2015 9:25:31 GMT
Stella Kale got six months to sort her life out. Calum Hood got six months to write a few number one hits.
It's almost faith when Stella decides to not look back, stop depending on her parents so much, for well, everything and gets stuck in a constant repetition of it's not you, it's me (and other similar interpretations) in the city of narrow streets and a never-ending rain supply.
It's probably faith when Calum finds a girl to write all those pop/indie/rock songs about, falls in love with the right girl at the wrong time and gets pulled into a repetition of how did we get here? (and other similar questions) in the city of tea lovers and flats – not apartments.
Faith, though, she's got a weird habit of pushing people until she finds a weak spot and well, maybe a slight appreciation for schadenfreude.
An AU on how to make rash decisions, unrequited love, proving everyone right without actually meaning too and the art of getting by.
chapter: introduction posted on 10/01/2015
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Post by jessica. on Jan 10, 2015 19:49:06 GMT
Portia Douglas was something of a professional student. At twenty-three, and rounding out her second college degree, she decides to study a semester abroad in Sydney, Australia. When she meets Luke Hemmings, a freshly legal eighteen year old who cares more about his quiff and garage band then what he's actually going to do with his life, obivous chaos ensues.
But she finds something in him that brings out the youth she never really had the chance to experience. Is age really just a number? Or do five small years really make all the difference?
A story of an (almost) illegal relationship, warm beer, mommy issues and a lot of sex education.
updated: 01/10/15
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ambedo
Junior Member
Posts: 61
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Post by ambedo on Jan 11, 2015 1:06:13 GMT
Molly Robinson and Ashton Irwin were one hundred percent done But it was quite clear that the forces of the universe had no intention of giving them a clean breakup In fact, it seemed quite like the forces of the universe wanted them stuck together forever A tale of negative tests, seedless watermelon, and unlimited foot rubs +chapter one updated: january 10, 2014
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Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Jan 12, 2015 0:22:56 GMT
Rumors-they spread fast like a virus, mutating and growing strong with each person they touch. The difference between a rumor and a virus, though, is that no one wants a virus. We do all we can to protect ourselves and to eradicate the spreading germ. On the other hand, the moment we get a taste of a rumor, we want more-taking pride in being source of delivery. Fortunately, we can kill a virus with medicine. The only way to kill an infectious rumor, though, is to tell the truth-but if the truth hurts more than the rumor, perhaps it’s better to let the rumor run rampant.
~
Seventeen-year-old Allie Collins would rather hide behind rumors than face the truth—her life will never be the same as it was before the accident. As a star athlete grieving in the shadows, she hopes to find normalcy in boys and basketball. When her best friend sets her up with the popular Calum Hood, Allie drags her feet, reluctant for added complications. Then she decides that dating Calum would be the perfect shield from last summer’s tragedy. However, what starts as a mere distraction proves much more complex. As Calum leads Allie into questionable situations, gossip continues to swirl.
Updated: 9/01/15 Chapter: Chapter 7
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Post by Kat Snow on Jan 16, 2015 22:40:39 GMT
Running into a “boybander” was never what she planned - nor was to get too drunk to trust her own instincts. Unfortunately Gia managed to end up in the wrong club, with the wrong boy chasing after her, or rather killing her mood. Now she had to pick up the pieces. The rumours, journalists and angry fans did not help her at all. In the end, one single night can change your life…something as small as 24h can shift everything into a different perspective. Now she had to do what she never wanted - go looking for this stupid australian boy, who made her fly. Because he left her a present…
Rated MA for language and explicit sexual content.
Beautiful banner by the amazing seeingred. Last Update: 16.01.2015 Click here to read chapter four.
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nic
New Member
Posts: 21
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Post by nic on Jan 17, 2015 14:05:15 GMT
Stella Kale got six months to sort her life out. Calum Hood got six months to write a few number one hits.
It's almost faith when Stella decides to not look back, stop depending on her parents so much, for well, everything and gets stuck in a constant repetition of it's not you, it's me (and other similar interpretations) in the city of narrow streets and a never-ending rain supply.
It's probably faith when Calum finds a girl to write all those pop/indie/rock songs about, falls in love with the right girl at the wrong time and gets pulled into a repetition of how did we get here? (and other similar questions) in the city of tea lovers and flats – not apartments.
Faith, though, she's got a weird habit of pushing people until she finds a weak spot and well, maybe a slight appreciation for schadenfreude.
An AU on how to make rash decisions, unrequited love, proving everyone right without actually meaning too and the art of getting by.
click for chapter oneupdated - 16/01/2015
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Post by lennon on Jan 18, 2015 9:43:52 GMT
His Two Thousand Deaths
In the span of being fourteen to eighteen years of age, Luke Hemmings managed to relate his entire existence to Ernest Hemingway’s, become a published author of a best-seller, and develop a strong hatred towards everything anyone else loves.
It included Aspyn Winslow, his literary agent’s niece, simply because she can’t understand his philosophy on how many deaths a brave man dies.
Luke, the self-proclaimed activist, wanted absolutely nothing to do with a bubbly hipster just as Aspyn didn’t want any association with a pretentious writer but they somehow prove the difficulty of avoiding someone you live with.
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ambedo
Junior Member
Posts: 61
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Post by ambedo on Jan 18, 2015 21:30:27 GMT
Molly Robinson and Ashton Irwin were one hundred percent done But it was quite clear that the forces of the universe had no intention of giving them a clean breakup In fact, it seemed quite like the forces of the universe wanted them stuck together forever A tale of negative tests, seedless watermelon, and unlimited foot rubs +chapter twoupdated: january 18, 2014
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Post by heather on Jan 19, 2015 0:42:00 GMT
Never underestimate your enemies.
That’s what Peter Pan learned when he thought the war between Neverland and Wonderland had ended. He wanted to blame the long war for many things — the fact that he’d needed to grow up a bit to fight in the war, that he’d had to send his Lost Boys away for safety, for being alone, and most of all, for aging — but he could only blame himself for the deaths of some of his most faithful Lost Boys after deeming it safe for them to return home. That one was all on him.
He was, however, going to blame Wendy Darling for allowing most of his Lost Boys to forget about not only Neverland, but him while he was fighting for the safety of their home. Even if it hadn’t been her who had said she’d watch over the Lost Boys, she had convinced him to send them to earth in the first place. And it wasn’t as if she’d put up a fight to stop Tinkerbell from tampering with other kinds of magic and becoming human, either.
Unfortunately, he had even bigger problems than his fairy friend giving into darkness and his human friend wanting him to stay on earth for good.
Neverland was locked, officially taken over by Wonderland. He started aging even more than before and had to take up the alias Ashton Irwin to avoid the Wonderlanders who were out for his head. His remaining Lost Boys wanted nothing to do with him because they’d either forgotten or were happy with how their lives on earth had turned out. Then there was Wendy herself, who was one big complication that he didn’t know how to deal with or how to feel about.
But he wasn’t going to allow any of that to stop him from finding a way home.
A story of tall tales, a few too many curses, one boy who never wanted to grow up but might just need to anyway, the ways of warring worlds, and adventure, of course.
Updated: January 18th Chapter Six.
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korra
Full Member
I'm being productive praise Jesus!
Posts: 119
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Post by korra on Jan 21, 2015 17:53:10 GMT
(c) seeingred If there was one thing that Ida Lovelace absolutely hated, it was the fact that her birthday came around the time of Christmas because everyone completely forgot about her. And so when her piano class decides to do Secret Santa, she doesn't bother pointing out that her birthday is coming up, because no cares and no one remembers. Well, almost no one. updated: 1/21 chapter: 2
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Post by Kat Snow on Jan 22, 2015 0:45:40 GMT
Lucy had learned the hard way that a single action could change the rest of your life. She had to grow up fast - too fast - and her youth was spent playing mum with her younger brother. As if things couldn't get more difficult, a reckless one-night stand altered everything around her. Life isn't easy when you're in a new city, work at a shitty job, have a younger brother who's obsessed with football, and a toddler who looks more like her Dad with each passing day. She thought she was managing well given the circumstances, but facing her daughter's father after two years was something she never expected and didn't know how to handle. Especially when he was not only a famous football player and her brother's idol, but was now also his mentor. The Offside rule applies to more than just football.
Rated M for language and sexual content.
Beautiful banner by the amazing seeingred. Last Update: 22.01.2015 Click here to read chapter seven.
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