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Summary
Eventually, his gaze settled on a small crevice break through the ground, hidden out of direct view by a bush.
**Come**
A weak tugging sensation began to pull at his chest, pulling down towards the crack in the earth.
Now 4c liked to think he was somewhat smart. And if a smart person heard a mysterious voice calling them who knows where they would turn away in a heartbeat. Maybe he wasn't feeling smart in this moment. Maybe his judgement was impaired from metal crushing through his head. Maybe he was a fool.
4c took a step forwards, silently letting the pull guide him.
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"You don't have to leave."
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4c struggles to get out of hell. The Rogue Gods content torment dosent help. It also doesn't help that 4c thinks they might be right.Did Blue Kingdom really care...?
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Did anyone...?
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I Could Always Make-Believe, But I Know You'll Never Love Me by Autumnintheinbetween
Fandoms: Bannerfall SMP
22 Apr 2026
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Summary
‘Dear Cherri,’
No.
‘Dear Princess Cherri,’
Not good enough. The title isn’t enough to project Cherri’s importance.
‘Dear Princess Cherri, daughter of Soluna, Kingdom of the Sun.’
Good. The name almost lived up to the real thing.
Or,
Apo writes a love letter and then does something even gayer than that if you can believe it -
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Summary
What would you do if you were stuck in a time loop?
Because 4C is clearly not doing well mentally.
He died multiple times and then came back, only to repeat it again and see all the attempts he made in previous time loops back to square one.
He suffers alone with memories of the future and the deaths of his friends in the future that never happened to them. He alone bears those memories.
And now he just wanted to take a break from the loop. He just wanted to stop looping and watch his friends die in front of him.
He will tried to rest but still keeping his friends safe in the shadows this time.
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Summary
Detective ApoKuna doesn’t expect the Valentine Killer case to feel familiar.
The crimes are always the same: carefully staged scenes, red ink messages, and a signature split-heart symbol left like a calling card. But as Apo begins investigating, something feels wrong in a way she can’t explain. She predicts the killer’s patterns too easily. She understands the messages too quickly. And worst of all—she starts recognizing the style behind them.
The Valentine Killer, Cherrifire, doesn’t leave ordinary clues. The notes feel personal, almost conversational, as if they were meant for only one person to read. While everyone else sees a dangerous criminal leaving taunts behind, Apo sees something else: a pattern that feels like it’s been waiting for her to catch up.
The deeper she goes, the more the case stops feeling like a hunt—and starts feeling like a continuation of something she’s forgotten.
And Cherri is still writing to her.
Bookmarked by cherrifires
20 Apr 2026
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Bookmarker's Notes
im on chapter 3 and reading in school WHATEVER

