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Summary
The little coastal town of Awa'atlu, Neteyam's dearly loathsome residence since the early age of five, smells of acacia's honey, fish and the scarlet red dried ristras of peppers hanging off of the walls of the shacks in rich bouquets, their bitter, often throat prickling smell mingling with the slightly damp saltiness of the ocean breeze that drifted over the massive formations of the limestones, emerging out of the coast, protecting the little cribs from the tyrannic waves of the sea.
Spreadtalk circulated from tongue to tongue, legends of the village and its folks whispered, where a few, strange kind of phenomenon occurs —stolen bundles of fishes, plundered huts, the whisper-like shuffle of the leaves of the acacia trees, and a lonely, tender mewl of a voice in the midnight, the cries of the moon, as some might decieve, however the one people tend to notice last, and the most —a villager, abruptly, inexplicably going missing.
Sirens.
Superstitions.
Bookmarked by Fara_W
24 May 2026
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Aonung used to be an active child. So lively to the point people suspected him of ADHD. But everything changes at the age of 15 when he is diagnosed with a terminal heart disease.
Years pass, long years of carrying on his back sleepless nights, chest pain and suffocation. His only escape is at night, where he can roam the hospital halls in peace, but what happens when a tall boy appears in his life, standing right there on his usual spot, looking outside the window, and then golden eyes looking at him.Bookmarked by Fara_W
24 May 2026
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“Are you ready?”
“No. I’m not ready at all.”
Ao’nung was Awa’altu’s pride. As if he were a tiny dancer in a music box, he danced with beauty and grace, enough to make even the stars swoon over him.
Neteyam wrote beautiful songs on broken keys. It meant they were honest. But even beauty wasn’t eternal.
The vast sky of stars knew Ao’nung couldn’t be perfect forever, and after years of partnership, Neteyam’s time was running out.
Ao’nung wasn’t ready.
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A collection of (smutty) one shots for Jake Sully and Neytiri te Tskaha Mo’at’ite, because there aren’t enough.
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Aonung was a problem child in his family, always skipping class, failing tests, and getting into fights at school. He wouldn't listen to anyone— not even his parents. So, to fix this, Aonung's parents sent him away for the summer to the Sullys strawberry farm without his precious phone and the familiar confines of the big city in hopes of whipping him back into shape. But focusing on his hard labor would be a little trickier than he thought when a certain boy with pretty, dark skin watched his every move.

