DEMON TWINK
short movie - twink tf
Xuebing Du
Peter Solarz
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

@theartofmadeline
KIROKAZE
🪼

blake kathryn
almost home
styofa doing anything

pixel skylines

Kiana Khansmith
Claire Keane

Love Begins
hello vonnie
Misplaced Lens Cap
we're not kids anymore.

shark vs the universe

No title available
Monterey Bay Aquarium
trying on a metaphor
seen from United States
seen from Indonesia
seen from United States
seen from Croatia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from France
seen from Germany
seen from Croatia
seen from Indonesia
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from Germany
@fatisthenewshape
DEMON TWINK
short movie - twink tf
Nassim
comics - tf by clothes - weight gain - arab tf
House rules 2
story inspired by the amazing @hairy-bothered
Tumblr. Pure effervescent enrichment. Old internet energy. Home of the Reblogs. All the art you never knew you needed. All the fandoms you c
The Mirage Crown glittered like a palace dropped into the middle of the Nevada desert.
Gold lights reflected endlessly across polished marble floors. Crystal chandeliers hung above crowds drowning themselves in money, alcohol, and noise. Slot machines screamed constantly somewhere in the distance while roulette wheels spun beneath clouds of perfume and cigarette smoke.
Tyler Bennett loved it immediately.
At twenty-four, Tyler had perfected the kind of beauty that made strangers stare for a second too long.
Tall. Lean. Carefully toned. Dark blond hair styled with deliberate effortlessness. White fitted shirt slightly open at the collar. Gold chain against smooth skin.
He moved through the casino with easy confidence, cocktail balanced loosely in one hand while men’s eyes followed him across the gaming floor.
Vegas was temporary.
That was the point.
Temporary drinks. Temporary hookups. Temporary names.
Nothing serious.
Exactly how Tyler liked things.
He stopped beside a blackjack table and watched the dealer shuffle cards with mechanical precision.
The Mirage Crown felt different from the other casinos he’d visited that weekend.
More private.
More controlled.
The employees barely smiled. Security guards stood unnaturally still near the walls. Even the wealthy guests seemed quieter here.
As if everyone understood rules Tyler couldn’t see yet.
A handsome older man in a silver suit slid beside him casually.
“First time at the Mirage Crown?”
Tyler smirked without looking away from the table.
“Is it that obvious?”
“A little.”
The man’s smile was calm. Measured.
His eyes lingered on Tyler for a second too long.
“You should be careful here.”
Tyler laughed softly.
“Dangerous casino?”
“Something like that.”
Before Tyler could answer, the man disappeared smoothly back into the crowd.
Tyler frowned slightly.
Weird.
But the cocktail was strong enough that he quickly forgot about it.
Hours passed in a blur of music and alcohol.
Tyler drifted through VIP lounges he probably shouldn’t have been allowed into. Somehow nobody stopped him.
Women smiled at him. Men bought him drinks. A bartender handed him expensive whiskey “courtesy of the house.”
The deeper into the casino he wandered, the quieter everything became.
Less tourists. Less noise.
Eventually Tyler noticed a velvet hallway near the high-limit rooms.
Black walls. Soft golden lights. No signs.
Two enormous security guards stood nearby.
Tyler slowed instinctively.
One of the guards looked directly at him.
Then unexpectedly stepped aside.
Tyler blinked.
“…Seriously?”
The guard said nothing.
Only gestured toward the hallway.
Tyler grinned drunkenly.
“Alright then.”
He walked forward.
The sounds of the casino faded almost immediately behind him.
The hallway stretched farther than it should have.
Dark mirrors lined the walls. The carpet beneath his shoes became softer. Warmer.
Tyler’s confidence began to weaken slightly.
“Hello?”
No response.
At the end of the corridor stood a single black door.
Before he could touch it, a voice spoke quietly behind him.
“You look lucky tonight.”
Tyler turned.
A tall man stood there wearing a perfectly tailored black suit and red gloves.
His expression was unreadable.
Tyler laughed uneasily.
“What is this? Some VIP thing?”
The man tilted his head slightly.
“You could call it that.”
Something about the answer made Tyler’s stomach tighten.
He suddenly realized how isolated the hallway felt.
“No cameras,” Tyler joked weakly. “That’s comforting.”
The suited man smiled faintly.
“Luck rarely enjoys being watched.”
Tyler opened his mouth to respond—
—and the world tilted violently sideways.
The floor vanished beneath him.
The lights blurred.
His drink shattered somewhere far away.
Tyler tried to move but his limbs felt impossibly heavy now.
“What the fu—”
Darkness swallowed everything.
The first thing he heard was the ball.
CLACK.
CLACK.
CLACK.
Metal spinning endlessly somewhere above him.
Tyler groaned painfully.
Cold air brushed across his face.
His wrists burned.
No—
Not burned.
Restrained.
His eyes snapped open.
Bright white spotlights blinded him instantly.
Tyler gasped.
“What—”
His voice echoed through an enormous underground chamber.
He tried to move again and panic exploded through him.
Leather restraints held his arms and legs spread wide against cold metal.
He was strapped vertically to something gigantic.
Breathing hard, Tyler forced himself to look upward.
And froze.
An enormous roulette wheel towered above him.
Not decorative.
Not symbolic.
Real.
Massive enough to fill the entire chamber from floor to ceiling.
The polished metal wheel turned slowly behind his restrained body while a silver ball rattled endlessly around its outer rim.
Except the wheel held no numbers.
Only words.
FAT. CHEST. MUSCLE. BODY HAIR. HEIGHT. BELLY. THIGHS. FACE.
Tyler’s heartbeat became violent.
“No…”
The darkness surrounding the wheel seemed alive somehow.
Though he couldn’t see anyone—
he heard them.
Whispers.
Soft laughter.
The clink of champagne glasses.
Hundreds of unseen spectators surrounding him in total darkness.
Watching.
Betting.
Waiting.
Tyler pulled desperately against the restraints.
“What the fuck is this?!”
The roulette continued spinning calmly.
CLACK.
CLACK.
Then a voice echoed through the chamber.
Smooth. Professional.
Ancient.
“Welcome to the House Selection.”
Tyler’s breathing quickened.
“No no no no— let me out of here!”
More unseen laughter echoed around him.
The voice continued calmly:
“Four rounds.”
A pause.
“No refunds.”
Another pause.
“No appeals.”
Suddenly the first ring of the roulette wheel illuminated in brilliant white light.
FAT. BELLY. CHEST. BODY HAIR. SHOULDERS.
Tyler stared upward in horror.
The wheel accelerated.
The invisible crowd grew louder with anticipation.
“Oh my God…”
Tyler shook violently against the restraints.
“This isn’t real.”
The voice answered immediately:
“It becomes real when the wheel chooses you.”
The wheel spun faster.
Faster.
Faster.
Tyler screamed as the wheel began to turn.
The wheel spun so fast Tyler could barely follow the words anymore.
FAT. CHEST. MUSCLE. BELLY.
The silver arrow rattled violently around the outer rim.
CLACK.
CLACK.
CLACK.
The invisible crowd grew louder with every rotation.
Tyler pulled desperately against the restraints hard enough to bruise his wrists.
“Please— please let me out!”
No answer.
Only the wheel.
Turning.
Watching.
Choosing.
Then slowly—
the roulette began to lose speed.
Tyler’s breathing became ragged.
“No…”
The silver arrow bounced violently between sections.
CHEST.
BELLY.
FAT.
MUSCLE.
FAT.
The audience murmured excitedly now.
Like gamblers watching a horse race reach the final stretch.
Tyler shook his head frantically.
“No no no no—”
CLACK.
The wheel stoped.
FAT.
The entire chamber erupted into applause.
Not wild cheering.
Worse.
Polite satisfaction.
Like wealthy clients pleased with a successful purchase.
Tyler blinked in confusion.
“That’s it?”
Nervous laughter escaped him.
“Fat? Seriously? That’s your big horror show?”
Then the heat started.
His smile vanished instantly.
A deep pressure formed inside his stomach.
Not on the surface.
Underneath.
Like something alive was expanding beneath his muscles.
Tyler gasped sharply.
“Oh God—”
His abdomen tightened violently.
Every muscle in his torso flexed painfully at once.
Then his waist pushed outward.
Hard.
His white shirt creaked immediately.
Tyler looked downward in horror as his previously flat stomach began swelling forward inch by inch beneath the fabric.
Not bloated.
Growing.
Heavy.
Dense.
“What the fuck—”
His hips widened next.
The leather restraints around his thighs groaned as his legs thickened visibly.
Muscle and fat spread together through his lower body with terrifying speed.
Tyler cried out as his pants tightened brutally around expanding thighs.
The wheel continued spinning slowly above him.
Watching.
Judging.
The pressure spread upward into his chest.
His pecs thickened massively beneath the shirt. Broader. Heavier.
His shoulders widened against the restraints.
His arms lost their slim definition, becoming thick powerful limbs built beneath layers of dense masculine weight.
The transformation didn’t feminize him.
Didn’t soften him.
It made him enormous.
A huge adult man’s body.
His stomach surged outward again.
Buttons strained violently.
POP.
One button launched across the chamber.
The invisible audience laughed softly.
Tyler stared downward in disbelief.
A massive heavy belly now rose prominently from his body, stretching the white fabric tight enough to reveal the shape underneath.
“Oh my God…”
His breathing changed.
Deeper now.
Heavier.
Even his face felt wrong.
His jaw broadened. Cheeks thickened. Neck widened visibly.
The sharp pretty beauty he’d relied on his entire life was vanishing beneath sheer masculine mass.
The heat intensified one final time.
Tyler screamed as his body lurched heavily against the restraints.
Then silence.
Only the sound of his breathing remained.
Wet.
Exhausted.
Huge.
For several long seconds Tyler couldn’t move.
Couldn’t think.
He felt…
massive.
The restraints finally unlocked with a loud metallic SNAP.
Tyler collapsed forward immediately.
The impact against the floor shook through his new weight.
“Oh fuck…”
Even his voice sounded deeper now.
Rougher.
He tried to push himself upright and nearly failed.
Not because he was weak.
Because his body was suddenly enormous.
His stomach hung heavily beneath him.
His thighs rubbed together.
His chest felt thick and oppressive.
Every movement carried weight behind it now.
The audience watched silently as Tyler crawled across the cold floor toward a brightly lit wall nearby.
Mirrors.
Dozens of them.
Tyler froze before reaching them fully.
“No…”
Slowly—
he looked up.
The man staring back at him barely resembled the person from earlier that night.
Tyler’s body had doubled in size.
Not grotesque.
Not sloppy.
Powerful.
His chest looked massive beneath the torn white shirt.
His stomach projected outward heavily, thick and undeniably masculine.
His arms were huge now. Broad forearms. Large hands. Heavy shoulders.
Even his face looked older somehow beneath the thicker jaw and fuller cheeks.
Like adulthood had hit him all at once.
Tyler touched his stomach carefully.
The flesh felt warm. Firm. Heavy.
Real.
A strange expression crossed his face.
Fear.
Confusion.
And something worse.
His hand remained there longer than it should have.
Because beneath the panic—
another feeling had appeared.
Presence.
For the first time in his life, Tyler looked physically intimidating.
Important.
Like he occupied space naturally.
The realization terrified him.
Yet somewhere deep inside—
something answered it.
The invisible audience murmured approvingly.
Above him, the roulette wheel began spinning once again.
CLACK.
CLACK.
CLACK.
The sound echoed through the underground chamber like a heartbeat.
Tyler pulled his hand away from his stomach abruptly, ashamed of how natural the touch had felt.
“No…”
His deeper voice cracked slightly now.
“This isn’t happening…”
The invisible audience murmured quietly around him.
Waiting.
Watching.
Enjoying.
Then the second ring of the wheel illuminated.
Dark red this time.
The words glowing one by one around the massive circle.
MEXICAN. ITALIAN. ARAB. CUBAN. BRAZILIAN. RUSSIAN. FRENCH. TURKISH.
Tyler froze instantly.
He understood immediately.
“No.”
His pulse spiked violently.
“No no no—”
The voice returned calmly from the darkness.
“Round Two.”
Tyler backed away from the wheel instinctively, his heavier body moving slower than before.
“You can’t do this!”
The audience grew louder immediately.
Tyler looked wildly around the chamber.
“Please! Somebody help me!”
Only laughter answered him now.
The arrow raced around the wheel.
ARAB.
BRAZILIAN.
MEXICAN.
ITALIAN.
MEXICAN.
Tyler shook his head harder with every pass.
“No…”
His breathing became shallow.
“I don’t want this…”
The wheel slowed.
The chamber seemed to hold its breath.
MEXICAN.
ARAB.
MEXICAN.
CLACK.
Silence.
Then thunderous applause exploded from the darkness.
Tyler flinched violently.
“No—!”
The heat arrived instantly.
But unlike before, this transformation spread across every inch of him at once.
Tyler staggered backward as warmth flooded through his skin.
His pale complexion deepened visibly beneath the harsh lights.
Golden brown tones spread slowly across his chest, neck, arms, and face.
His entire body looked warmer. Sunnier. Older somehow.
Tyler grabbed at his cheeks in panic.
“What’s happening to me?!”
Then his facial structure shifted.
Not dramatically.
Subtly.
Powerfully.
His jaw became broader and heavier. His nose slightly wider. His cheekbones stronger.
The transformation aged him further too.
Not weakly.
Masculinely.
Like hard living and confidence had carved themselves directly into his face.
Tyler stumbled toward the mirrors again.
And froze.
The man staring back already looked unfamiliar.
Then his hair thickened.
Tyler gasped as the dark blond color deepened rapidly into rich black.
The texture changed too.
Denser. Heavier. Slightly wavy.
His hairline lowered subtly as volume spread across his scalp.
“Oh God…”
The audience sounded delighted now.
Tyler touched his head frantically—
and stopped when something scratched against his palm.
Facial hair.
Tiny dark stubble erupted visibly across his jaw.
Then spread.
Fast.
Tyler cried out as the beard exploded outward almost unnaturally.
Dark curls spread along his cheeks and throat within seconds, thickening into a full heavy beard that transformed his face completely.
The sensation was overwhelming.
It itched. Burned. Pressed against his skin.
Tyler grabbed at it desperately.
“No no no—”
But the beard only grew denser beneath his fingers.
The crowd applauded louder.
His chest suddenly tingled violently next.
Tyler looked downward just in time to see dark hair spreading across his massive pecs beneath the open shirt.
It crawled downward slowly over his stomach.
A thick trail disappearing beneath his ruined pants.
His arms darkened with coarse black hair. His shoulders followed.
Even his scent changed.
Warm skin. Leather. Smoke. Tequila. Masculine musk.
The transformation wasn’t turning him into a caricature.
It was building a fully believable man.
A history. A culture. A life.
Tyler stared into the mirrors in complete silence now.
The young polished American tourist was gone.
Standing before him instead was a massive middle-aged Mexican man with heavy shoulders, thick body hair, dark eyes, and a powerful beard framing a broad masculine face.
An intimidating man.
But not ugly.
Far from it.
The reflection radiated confidence.
Presence.
Authority.
Tyler touched the beard slowly.
The coarse curls scratched against his thick fingers.
And to his horror—
part of him loved it instantly.
The beard felt right.
The body felt right.
The invisible audience murmured approvingly at his expression.
One voice whispered from somewhere in the darkness:
“Much better.”
Tyler’s breathing slowed.
Not because he was calming down.
Because something inside him was beginning to adapt.
To settle.
To recognize the man in the mirror.
Above him, the roulette wheel continued turning.
The mirrors no longer comforted Tyler.
They trapped him.
Every reflection showed the same man now:
Huge shoulders. Dark curls. Massive hairy chest. Heavy stomach. Powerful beard.
And those eyes.
Older eyes.
Tyler stepped backward slowly, breathing hard.
“I’m still me…”
The statement sounded uncertain even to him.
Above him, the roulette wheel continued spinning endlessly through the darkness.
CLACK.
CLACK.
CLACK.
Then the third ring illuminated.
Cold white light this time.
NAME. AGE. MEMORY. PAST. FAMILY. PRIDE. DESIRE. HISTORY.
Tyler’s blood ran cold.
“No…”
The invisible audience became silent now.
Interested.
Focused.
This round mattered more.
The voice echoed calmly through the chamber.
“Round Three.”
Tyler shook his head immediately.
“No. No, you already did enough!”
The silver ball dropped.
And began spinning.
Fast.
Tyler backed away from the wheel until his shoulders hit the mirrors behind him.
“You can’t change that.”
CLACK.
CLACK.
CLACK.
The arrow raced past glowing words.
AGE.
NAME.
MEMORY.
PAST.
Tyler’s breathing became panicked again.
“No no no no…”
The wheel slowed.
MEMORY.
PAST.
NAME.
MEMORY.
The audience leaned closer somehow. He could feel them.
Waiting.
Hoping.
CLACK.
MEMORY.
The chamber fell completely silent.
Then Tyler screamed.
Not from pain.
From invasion.
His mind split open instantly.
Memories crashed into him with unbearable force.
A burning Mexican sun overhead.
The smell of grilled meat and cigarette smoke.
Spanish words spoken too quickly around a crowded family table.
A woman’s voice yelling his name—
Not Tyler.
Rafael.
“¡Rafael!”
Tyler collapsed to his knees violently.
His hands grabbed his head.
“No—!”
More memories flooded in.
A small apartment in Guadalajara.
Catholic candles glowing beside old photographs.
His mother crossing herself before dinner.
His father teaching him cards at twelve years old.
The first fistfight behind a neighborhood bar.
The taste of tequila at sixteen.
A teenage kiss with another boy hidden behind a church festival.
Fear.
Desire.
Shame.
Excitement.
All of it real.
Tyler gasped desperately.
“They’re not mine!”
But even as he said it—
part of him knew exactly where the memories belonged.
Because he remembered living them.
He remembered becoming a man inside them.
“No no no no—”
But Tyler’s own memories were becoming harder to hold now.
College parties blurred. Old hookups faded. Even his parents’ faces weakened at the edges.
In their place came new details.
Cooking carnitas late at night after work.
Sunday calls to family back in Mexico.
Years of hidden relationships with younger men.
Loneliness.
Pride.
Routine.
An entire adult life settling into place naturally.
The transformation wasn’t inserting random thoughts.
It was building continuity.
History.
A complete human being.
Tyler looked upward weakly toward the mirrors.
And froze again.
The face staring back no longer reacted like Tyler Bennett.
The expression had changed.
Calmer.
Harder.
More masculine.
More experienced.
He whispered softly:
“…Rafael…”
The name felt horrifyingly natural on his tongue.
The audience murmured approvingly.
One voice laughed softly.
“There he is.”
Tyler tried desperately to remember himself.
His apartment. His phone password. His mother’s voice.
But another memory interrupted immediately—
Rafael shaving carefully before a date.
Rafael standing shirtless in a cramped Vegas apartment kitchen while music played in Spanish nearby.
Too coherent.
Too alive.
Tyler slammed a fist against the mirror.
“My name is Tyler!”
But the words sounded wrong now.
Foreign.
The voice answered gently from the darkness:
“Not for much longer.”
Tyler’s breathing slowed again.
Not because he wanted it to.
Because Rafael’s instincts were settling into his body naturally now.
His posture widened.
His expression hardened subtly.
Even the way he stood carried confidence Tyler never possessed.
The man in the reflection looked like someone who understood exactly who he was.
And for one terrible moment—
Tyler envied him.
The chamber remained silent for a long moment.
Tyler — or whatever remained of Tyler — stood breathing heavily before the mirrors.
Sweat rolled slowly through the dense black hair covering his chest and stomach beneath the hanging white shirt.
The reflections surrounding him no longer looked wrong.
They looked inevitable.
Above him, the roulette wheel slowed again.
CLACK.
CLACK.
CLACK.
The fourth and final ring illuminated.
Bright white.
Professional.
Cold.
DEALER. SECURITY. BARTENDER. HOST. ACCOUNTANT. OWNER. JANITOR.
Rafael stared upward silently.
No panic this time.
Only dread.
Because somewhere deep inside him—
he already understood the casino was finishing him.
The voice returned one final time.
“Round Four.”
The roulette strat again.
And began spinning.
Smooth.
Controlled.
The audience sounded calmer now. Satisfied already.
Rafael’s large hands opened and closed slowly at his sides.
The thick fingers no longer looked like Tyler’s hands.
These were working hands.
Heavy hands.
A grown man’s hands.
Words circled the wheel.
SECURITY.
HOST.
DEALER.
BARTENDER.
DEALER.
Rafael swallowed hard.
“No…”
But even the protest sounded weak.
Because another part of him already knew exactly how to stand behind a blackjack table.
The ball slowed.
HOST.
DEALER.
DEALER.
CLACK.
The chamber erupted into applause.
Louder than before.
Celebratory.
Complete.
Rafael gasped sharply.
The transformation hit instantly.
Not physical this time.
Procedural.
Professional.
His spine straightened automatically.
His shoulders rolled backward.
Years of practiced discipline settled into his body all at once.
His breathing steadied.
His expression relaxed into controlled neutrality.
Then knowledge flooded him.
How to shuffle six decks perfectly. How to count chips by touch. How to watch drunk tourists without appearing to stare. How to spot cheating. How to keep games moving smoothly. How to smile without ever revealing too much.
Thousands of nights inside the Mirage Crown poured into his mind.
The sounds became familiar.
Cards flicking across felt.
Ice in whiskey glasses.
Slot machines in distant rooms.
The low controlled voice dealers used with difficult customers.
Rafael staggered slightly as memory after memory locked itself into place.
He remembered coworkers now.
Regular clients.
Late-night breaks behind the casino with cigarettes and tequila hidden in metal cups.
He remembered flirting with younger tourists at the bar after shifts ended.
Remembered protecting nervous new employees from aggressive gamblers.
Remembered the casino becoming his entire life.
Tyler tried to fight upward one last time.
A final desperate instinct.
This isn’t me—
But the thought collapsed beneath the weight of fifteen years of Rafael Ortega’s reality.
A metallic click echoed nearby.
Rafael looked up.
An outfit hung suspended beneath a spotlight.
Dark red dress shirt. Black vest. Black slacks.
Large sizes.
A golden name tag already attached.
RAFAEL ORTEGA.
His chest tightened painfully.
The audience watched silently.
Waiting.
Rafael approached slowly.
His heavier body moved naturally now.
Confident. Grounded. Masculine.
He touched the vest carefully.
The fabric felt familiar against his thick fingers.
Like something worn hundreds of times before.
Without thinking, he removed the ruined white shirt.
His massive hairy body reflected endlessly across the mirrors.
Broad shoulders. Heavy stomach. Dark beard. Working-man strength softened by age and indulgence.
Rafael dressed automatically.
Every motion smooth.
Routine.
The vest pulled tightly across his enormous torso, hugging the curve of his stomach firmly.
Perfect fit.
He adjusted the collar instinctively.
Then fixed the cuffs.
Then smoothed the front of the vest over his belly.
Professional.
Complete.
The mirrors no longer showed transformation.
They showed identity.
The voice spoke once more from the darkness.
“The House thanks you for your service.”
The roulette wheel finally stopped spinning.
For the first time since arriving beneath the casino—
silence filled the chamber.
Rafael stared at himself one last time.
Tyler Bennett still existed somewhere deep inside him.
Small now.
Distant.
Like a forgotten dream after waking.
He tried to remember his old face.
And couldn’t fully do it anymore.
Instead he remembered another image clearly:
Rafael Ortega laughing behind a blackjack table while tourists drank around him.
That memory felt stronger.
Realer.
The chamber doors opened slowly behind him.
Warm casino light spilled inward.
Rafael adjusted his vest again instinctively.
Straightened his posture.
And walked toward the casino floor like a man returning to work after a long break.
Warm casino noise swallowed Rafael the second he stepped through the doors.
The transition felt seamless.
One moment: darkness, mirrors, roulette.
The next: lights. Music. Chips clicking across green felt.
The Mirage Crown breathed around him like a living thing.
And horrifyingly—
Rafael knew it perfectly.
He walked calmly through the employee corridor beneath the casino floor.
Nobody questioned him.
Nobody stared.
A cocktail waitress passed him carrying champagne flutes.
“Evening, Rafa.”
Rafael answered automatically.
“Evening, cariño.”
The voice came naturally. Deep. Warm. Worn by years of late nights and cigarettes.
The waitress smiled casually and kept walking.
As if he had worked there forever.
Because he had.
Rafael slowed slightly.
His heartbeat quickened.
No.
Not he.
Tyler.
Tyler Bennett.
Twenty-four. From San Diego.
Vegas vacation.
The memories surfaced weakly now. Like fragments underwater.
He tried to hold onto them desperately.
But another memory pushed forward immediately:
Rafael teaching a rookie dealer how to handle aggressive gamblers.
The newer memory felt stronger.
Sharper.
Real.
Rafael entered the staff locker room.
Inside, several employees prepared for late-night shifts beneath cold fluorescent lights.
A bald security guard glanced upward.
“Jesus Christ, Rafa, rough night?”
Rafael rubbed his beard instinctively.
“Long one.”
The guard laughed.
“You look like hell.”
Rafael smirked automatically.
“Feel worse.”
The interaction felt effortless.
Practiced.
Old.
He reached his locker without needing to think where it was.
Number 28.
Inside hung extra dress shirts, cologne, casino paperwork, painkillers, and a small photograph tucked into the corner mirror.
Rafael froze.
The photo showed him years earlier beside another heavyset Mexican man at a bar somewhere downtown.
Both smiling drunkenly.
Both very real.
Tyler felt himself slipping further away.
Rafael stared at the photograph too long.
Then quietly closed the locker.
Minutes later he stepped onto the casino floor.
The Mirage Crown glowed beneath gold chandeliers and soft jazz music.
Tourists crowded around roulette tables and blackjack pits.
Nobody noticed anything strange about him.
Because nothing was strange.
Rafael Ortega belonged here.
Completely.
He approached Blackjack Table 12.
A young dealer immediately sighed with relief upon seeing him.
“Thank God. Table’s yours.”
Rafael nodded calmly.
“What happened?”
“Bachelor party from Texas.”
“Ah.”
That single sound carried exhausted understanding.
The dealer laughed nervously and escaped immediately.
Rafael took position behind the table.
And instantly his body settled.
Like an animal returning to familiar territory.
His thick hands moved automatically.
Straightening chips. Checking decks. Adjusting cards.
Perfect precision.
The players barely looked up initially.
Then they noticed him.
Because Rafael possessed the kind of masculine presence impossible to ignore.
Huge chest beneath the dark vest. Massive stomach pressing firmly against the fabric. Heavy beard perfectly lined. Dark calm eyes.
Comforting.
Intimidating.
Experienced.
One drunk tourist grinned.
“Damn, man, you look like you’ve seen some shit.”
Rafael gave a tired half-smile.
“You have no idea.”
The table laughed.
Rafael began dealing.
Smooth movements.
Elegant movements.
Years of repetition flowing naturally through his enormous hands.
Cards snapped cleanly across the felt.
“Sixteen.”
“Dealer has nineteen.”
“Blackjack.”
The rhythm soothed him instantly.
For a while—
he almost forgot Tyler completely.
Hours passed.
The casino deepened into late-night exhaustion.
Liquor. Perfume. Sweat. Money.
Rafael remained steady through all of it.
A mountain at the center of chaos.
Then sometime near two in the morning—
he saw him.
A young blond man near the VIP corridor.
Tall. Slim. Pretty.
Nervous smile.
Too much confidence hiding uncertainty.
Exactly Tyler’s type.
Exactly Tyler.
The young man laughed awkwardly while two security guards spoke calmly beside him.
One of the guards gestured toward the private hallway.
The same hallway.
Rafael froze mid-deal.
Something sharp tore through his chest suddenly.
Memory.
Fear.
Leather restraints.
The wheel.
Tyler surfaced violently inside him for the first time in hours.
No.
Not surfaced.
Screamed.
Rafael’s hand trembled slightly over the cards.
The young tourist looked across the casino floor accidentally—
and locked eyes with him.
Confusion crossed the boy’s face instantly.
Like some primal instinct recognized danger.
Rafael’s throat tightened.
He remembered everything for one horrible second.
The hallway. The spinning wheel. His old face. His old name.
Tyler Bennett.
The words nearly escaped his mouth.
“Run.”
Just one word.
He could still say it.
Could still save him.
But the casino pulsed around him.
Alive.
Hungry.
The lights flickered softly overhead.
The invisible audience watched again from somewhere beneath the building.
Waiting.
Rafael’s body straightened automatically.
Professional.
Controlled.
The instinct passed.
The memory dulled.
The young tourist disappeared down the hallway beside security.
Gone.
Rafael looked downward slowly.
His large hand still rested on the deck of cards.
Steady again.
Calm again.
The players waited for him.
Rafael adjusted the cuff of his sleeve.
Then resumed dealing smoothly beneath the golden lights of the Mirage Crown while, deep below the casino floor—
the roulette wheel began spinning once more.
THE HARMONIZER: SANDS OF UNITY - part 2
comics - Arab tf - islamisation
THE HARMONIZER: SANDS OF UNITY - part 1
comics - Arab tf - Islamisation
MORPHO WAVE : Forced Empathy
comics
Bald, Bold & Beautiful
Comics - bald - moustache - leather - muscles
The Initiation
Comics - black tf
The night of the werebear
bear tf - bearded - hairy tf - weight gain
Reborn in the Souk
comics - Arab tf - islamisation - weight gain
The Shaman’s Gift
comics - magic tf - black tf
The Last Servant
submission - racial tf
Egypt, 1923.
The desert wind howled across the Valley of Kings like the whisper of forgotten ghosts. Fine sand drifted across the excavation site, coating crates, ropes, and exhausted workers beneath a burning copper sky.
Edward Harrow wiped sweat from his brow as he stared down into the newly uncovered stairway.
“Another dead end?” asked Professor Whitmore from above, shielding his eyes beneath a wide linen hat.
Edward shook his head slowly.
“No…” he murmured. “This is different.”
The stone steps descending beneath the sand were untouched. Untouched.
That alone made his pulse quicken.
Most tombs had been looted centuries ago. Broken seals, shattered doors, empty chambers — that was the usual fate of Egypt’s dead kings. But this…
This stairway had remained hidden. Protected. Waiting. Edward grabbed his lantern.
“I’m going down.”
Whitmore frowned immediately. “Alone?”
“I’ll only take a quick look.”
“You said that last time.”
Edward smirked faintly. “And we found a priest’s treasury.”
The older man sighed in defeat. “Ten minutes, Harrow. If you don’t come back up, I’m sending the men after you.”
Edward nodded before beginning his descent. The deeper he went, the cooler the air became. Dust danced in the lantern light. Ancient silence pressed against him from every direction.
Then he saw it. A massive stone door. Still sealed. His breath caught in his throat. Across the black stone, golden hieroglyphs gleamed faintly beneath centuries of dust.
Edward carefully brushed sand aside with trembling fingers. His eyes widened as he translated the symbols aloud.
“Sacred is the resting place of…” He swallowed. “…Neb-Kha-Rê.”
Even speaking the name felt wrong somehow. Beneath it was another inscription that he traduced :
LET THE SLEEPING KING REMAIN UNDISTURBED.
Edward exhaled sharply.
“Good God…”
Behind him, one of the Egyptian workers who had quietly followed him suddenly stepped backward in fear.
“No,” the man whispered in Arabic. “No, effendi… cursed place…”
Edward turned.
“It’s superstition.”
The worker shook his head violently.
“The Black Pharaoh sleeps there.”
Edward almost laughed. Almost. But something about the air inside the corridor unsettled him deeply. The silence felt too heavy. Too aware. Still… discovery outweighed fear. It always had.
“Help me open it.”
Reluctantly, the worker obeyed. With enormous effort, they pushed against the stone seal. Ancient mechanisms groaned somewhere deep inside the walls. Dust exploded into the corridor.
Then— The door shifted. A freezing gust of air burst from the darkness beyond. Edward lifted his lantern. The chamber inside was enormous. Statues of jackal-headed gods lined the walls. Golden treasures glittered beneath centuries of dust. Tall black pillars disappeared into darkness overhead.
And at the center of the room stood a colossal sarcophagus of obsidian and gold. Perfectly untouched. Edward stepped forward slowly, awe replacing all fear.
“My God…” he whispered. “We found him.”
The worker behind him suddenly dropped to his knees.
“Please…” the man begged. “We leave now.”
Edward barely heard him. His eyes were fixed on the sarcophagus. On the carved face of the king resting upon the lid. Even in stone, Neb-Kha-Rê looked powerful.
Proud. Almost alive. Edward approached carefully, raising the lantern closer. The pharaoh’s face was strangely youthful. Strong jaw. Sharp cheekbones. A calm expression frozen in eternal sleep.
Then Edward noticed something else. The eyes. Golden gemstones embedded in the sculpture. And somehow… In the flickering lantern light… They seemed to shine back at him.
The worker fled.
Edward heard his footsteps echo frantically up the corridor.
But Edward remained.
Drawn forward by fascination stronger than reason. He placed one hand against the sarcophagus.
The stone was warm. Warm. His breath stopped. Then a deep rumble shook the chamber. Edward stumbled backward as dust rained from the ceiling. Far behind him, the stone door slammed shut with a deafening crash.
“No—!”
He ran toward it immediately, pushing desperately against the sealed entrance. It would not move. The grinding echo of ancient mechanisms filled the tomb.
Then silence returned. A terrible silence. Edward turned slowly. The chamber had changed. The torches along the walls were burning now. One by one.
Without flame-bearers. Without explanation. Golden light spread across the tomb. And at the center of the chamber… The lid of the sarcophagus began to move. Slowly. Heavier than thunder. Edward backed away in horror.
“No…” he whispered.
The lid slid aside completely.
Darkness filled the open coffin. Then— A hand emerged. Wrapped in ancient blackened bandages. Another followed. The figure inside slowly sat upright with the sound of cracking linen and ancient bones.
Edward could not breathe. The mummy turned its head toward him. Two glowing golden eyes opened in the shadows. Alive. The dead king rose from his tomb.
Edward could not move.
The dead king stood before him in the flickering torchlight, tall and impossibly thin beneath layers of blackened linen. Ancient jewelry hung from his neck and wrists, dull with age yet still magnificent.
And those eyes— Burning gold in the darkness. The mummy stepped out of the sarcophagus slowly.
Each movement sounded wrong. Dry. Stiff. The cracking of ancient bones wrapped in centuries-old bandages echoed through the chamber. Edward stumbled backward until his shoulders struck a pillar.
“No… no, this can’t be real…”
The creature tilted its head slightly, studying him. Not like an animal. Like a ruler examining a servant. Then the pharaoh spoke. His voice was deep and rough, as though dragged from the grave itself.
“Sekhem… ir neb… kha em set…”
Edward stared blankly.
“I—I don’t understand you.”
The king’s glowing eyes narrowed. He took another step closer. Edward’s pulse hammered violently in his chest. Every instinct screamed at him to run. But there was nowhere to go. The sealed stone door behind him remained immovable.
The pharaoh raised one wrapped hand and pointed toward a stone table covered in dusty ceremonial objects.
Bowls. Oils. Folded linens. Edward swallowed hard.
“You want… what?”
Again the pharaoh spoke, slower this time.
“Akh-men… satep.”
Then he pointed at himself. At the hanging strips of filthy linen wrapped around his chest. Edward blinked.
“You… want help?”
Silence. But the king continued staring at him with cold authority. Edward hesitated before slowly approaching the table. His hands trembled as he picked up a bronze bowl filled with hardened perfumed oil.
The smell of myrrh and incense still lingered beneath the dust of centuries. He looked back toward the mummy. The pharaoh had not moved. Waiting. Watching. Edward carefully stepped closer.
Every nerve in his body screamed in terror as he stood directly before the ancient king. Up close, the mummy was horrifying.
The skin beneath the torn wrappings was dark and leathery, stretched tightly across sharp bones. Ancient resin glistened in the torchlight. The scent of old death clung to him beneath the incense.
Yet strangely…
There was something regal beneath the decay. Something beautiful.
Edward quickly pushed the thought away.
“This is madness,” he whispered.
The pharaoh slowly extended one arm.
An order. Edward obeyed before even realizing he had chosen to. He dipped a cloth into warm oil and gently cleaned centuries of dust from the king’s bandages. The mummy closed his glowing eyes.
A low sound escaped him. Not pain. Relief. Edward froze.
“You… feel this?”
The golden eyes opened again immediately. Sharp. Intelligent. Alive. The king spoke once more.
“Sha em.”
Edward did not understand the words… but somehow their meaning pressed into his mind. Continue. His breathing unsteady, Edward resumed cleaning the wrappings. As he worked, grains of black dust fell from the ancient linen onto the stone floor.
Slowly, carefully, Edward unwound one loosened strip from the king’s forearm. The skin beneath was no longer completely dead. He stared in disbelief. Beneath the withered surface, faint bronze flesh remained. Impossible flesh. Living flesh.
The pharaoh watched his reaction closely. Then, very slowly, the corners of the dead king’s mouth lifted. A smile. Edward’s stomach tightened.
“You were waiting,” he whispered.
The torches crackled softly around them. Outside the tomb, the world no longer existed. Only the king. Only the silence. Only Edward.
The pharaoh suddenly lifted one hand toward Edward’s face. Edward flinched instinctively, but the king merely brushed rough bandaged fingers across his cheek. A strange warmth spread through Edward’s body at the touch. His fear faltered for a moment.
The pharaoh spoke again, quieter this time.
“Ankhesu…”
Edward did not know the word. But somehow it sounded possessive. Affectionate. The king lowered his hand and gestured once more toward the oils and linens.
Another command. Edward looked toward the sealed tomb entrance one last time. Then back at the ancient ruler standing before him. The glowing eyes never left his. Slowly… reluctantly… Edward bowed his head.
“All right,” he whispered shakily. “I’ll help you.”
The pharaoh straightened proudly. As if obedience was the most natural thing in the world. Then he turned and sat upon the edge of the sarcophagus like a king reclaiming his throne. And Edward began tending to the dead.
The tomb no longer felt entirely cold.
Days passed beneath the earth — or perhaps weeks. Edward had long since lost count. Time dissolved inside the endless darkness of Neb-Kha-Rê’s burial chamber, measured only by dying torch flames and the rituals of service the pharaoh demanded each day.
Every morning began the same way. Edward would wake upon the stone floor beside the sarcophagus to the sound of the king’s voice.
“Ankhesu.”
The word no longer frightened him. It summoned him. Edward rose immediately, almost instinctively now, and crossed the chamber barefoot. The air smelled of incense, warm oils, and ancient dust.
Neb-Kha-Rê sat upright upon the edge of the sarcophagus like a patient god awaiting devotion.
And with every passing day… He looked less dead. The leathery decay beneath the wrappings had begun to fade. Bronze skin slowly emerged beneath strips of ancient linen. The king’s chest no longer looked hollow and corpse-like, but strong. Defined. Alive. Edward tried not to stare. Tried and failed.
This morning, the pharaoh extended one arm toward him in silent command. Edward bowed his head automatically before taking the bronze basin of heated oils.
“My king,” he murmured softly without thinking.
The words slipped out naturally. Neb-Kha-Rê’s glowing eyes narrowed with satisfaction.
“Good,” the pharaoh said slowly in accented English.
Edward froze.
“You… you speak English?”
“No.”
The voice was no longer dry and monstrous. It remained deep and ancient, but smoother now. Richer.
The king watched Edward carefully.
“You learn quickly.”
Edward lowered his gaze at once beneath that piercing stare.
“I do not understand what is happening.”
Neb-Kha-Rê tilted his head slightly.
“You serve.”
The simple answer sent an odd warmth through Edward’s chest. The pharaoh motioned toward the wrappings around his torso. Edward obeyed immediately, kneeling beside him.
His fingers carefully unwound another long strip of ancient linen. Dust drifted through the torchlight. Layer after layer fell away, beneath them… Muscle. Edward’s breath caught.
The pharaoh’s body was transforming before his eyes. Strong shoulders emerged beneath the wrappings. A broad chest. Smooth bronze skin marked with faint traces of ancient scars and ceremonial tattoos. The king was becoming young again.
Not merely alive. Beautiful. Edward quickly looked away. Neb-Kha-Rê noticed.
“You fear me less now.”
Edward hesitated.
“Yes…”
“Why?”
He struggled for an answer. Because you no longer look like a corpse. Because your voice no longer sounds dead. Because when you look at me, I cannot think clearly. Instead he whispered:
“I do not know.”
The pharaoh leaned closer.
“You will.”
His voice seemed to vibrate inside Edward’s chest. Edward resumed unwrapping the linen in silence. As more bandages fell away, he noticed another change. The king’s body radiated warmth now.
Real warmth.
His skin glowed softly in the torchlight like polished bronze. And his scent— No longer death. Now it was incense, cedar oil, myrrh, and something masculine beneath it all. Ancient. Royal. Dangerously intoxicating.
Edward swallowed hard. Neb-Kha-Rê suddenly reached forward and tilted Edward’s chin upward.
“Look at me.”
Edward obeyed instantly. The king studied his face closely.
“You change also.”
Edward frowned slightly.
“I… what?”
The pharaoh’s fingers brushed slowly through Edward’s hair. Dark brown strands slipped between ancient fingers.
“Different.”
Edward pulled back slightly and hurried toward a polished bronze mirror resting among the burial treasures. He stared.
For a moment, he did not recognize himself. His skin was darker than before, touched by a bronze warmth that had not been there days ago. The harsh paleness of an Englishman beneath the desert sun had vanished. Even his features seemed subtly altered. Sharper. Softer. His eyes looked darker beneath the torchlight.
“No…” Edward whispered.
Behind him, Neb-Kha-Rê rose from the sarcophagus completely. The sound of linen dragging against stone echoed through the chamber. Edward turned slowly. The sight stole his breath.
Much of the pharaoh’s body was now uncovered. Powerful legs wrapped only partially in ancient bandages. Gold jewelry resting against smooth bronze skin. His physique looked impossibly athletic, like the statues painted upon temple walls.
Only portions of decay still clung to him. But even those were fading. Neb-Kha-Rê approached him slowly. Not stiffly anymore. Gracefully. Like a predator.
“You belong to this place now,” the king said quietly.
Edward’s pulse quickened.
“That’s impossible.”
“Is it?”
The pharaoh stepped closer until only inches separated them. Edward should have retreated. He did not. The king’s glowing eyes held his completely.
“You hear my words more easily now.”
Edward realized with sudden horror that it was true. The ancient language no longer sounded incomprehensible. Pieces of meaning reached him naturally.
As if the tomb itself were teaching him. As if his mind were changing alongside his body. Neb-Kha-Rê lifted one hand and pressed it gently against Edward’s chest. A strange heat spread through him instantly. His heart pounded harder. The king smiled faintly.
“My servant awakens too.”
Edward should have resisted those words. Should have denied them. Instead… His knees weakened slightly beneath the pharaoh’s touch. And somewhere deep inside himself, beneath the fear and confusion… A terrible part of him wanted to kneel.
Edward no longer dreamed of England.
At first, he had clung desperately to memories of rain-soaked streets, crowded London clubs, warm electric lights, and civilized voices. Now those memories felt faded. Distant. Unimportant. The tomb had become his entire world.
Every corridor of black stone felt familiar beneath his bare feet. He knew where the incense jars were stored. Which braziers burned longest. Which oils Neb-Kha-Rê preferred upon his skin.
And every morning… He woke before the king. Edward rose quietly from the cushions laid beside the sarcophagus and crossed the chamber to relight the golden lamps. Shadows danced across painted walls while warm amber light slowly revealed the sleeping pharaoh.
Neb-Kha-Rê no longer resembled death in any way. He looked divine.
His powerful body rested against black silk and ancient linen like a living god carved from bronze. Gold jewelry adorned his wrists, throat, and waist. The last ceremonial wrappings remained only around portions of his legs and forearms.
The rest of him was magnificently alive. Edward stood silently for a moment, watching him. Admiring him. The realization disturbed him less each day. Golden eyes opened slowly. Immediately finding him.
“You watch me again,” Neb-Kha-Rê murmured.
Edward lowered his gaze at once.
“Forgive me, my king.”
The pharaoh sat upright slowly, studying him. Edward noticed the transformation in himself even more clearly now beneath that stare. His skin had deepened into warm bronze completely. The sharp paleness of an English explorer had vanished. His dark hair had grown longer, softer, nearly brushing his shoulders now.
Even his body felt different. Lean. Elegant. Less harsh. The king extended one hand lazily toward him.
Edward moved instantly. Without thought. He knelt beside the sarcophagus and pressed his forehead lightly against the pharaoh’s hand before taking it carefully.
The gesture shocked him only faintly now. Neb-Kha-Rê smiled.
“You learn devotion beautifully.”
Edward’s pulse warmed strangely.
“I only serve.”
“Yes.”
The king’s thumb brushed slowly across Edward’s cheek.
“And you enjoy it.”
Edward looked away immediately. But silence itself became an answer. Neb-Kha-Rê chuckled softly. The sound was warm now. Human. Dangerous.
“Prepare the oils.”
Edward obeyed at once. The morning ritual had become sacred. He heated perfumed oil over small golden flames while the tomb filled with the scent of cedarwood, lotus, and myrrh. Then he returned to the pharaoh carrying the bronze basin carefully in both hands.
Neb-Kha-Rê reclined against the sarcophagus while Edward knelt beside him. Slowly, reverently, Edward spread warm oil across the king’s chest. His fingers trembled slightly at first contact. The pharaoh’s skin was warm. Perfectly warm.
Firm muscle shifted beneath Edward’s touch as he massaged the oil carefully into bronze flesh marked by faint tattoos and old scars.
Neb-Kha-Rê watched him silently.
“Your hands no longer shake.”
Edward swallowed.
“No, my king.”
“Why?”
Edward hesitated before answering honestly.
“I am no longer afraid of you.”
The pharaoh’s glowing eyes narrowed slightly with pleasure.
“And what do you feel instead?”
Edward’s breath caught.
He focused desperately on the oil across the king’s shoulders. But Neb-Kha-Rê’s gaze remained fixed on him. Demanding truth. Finally, Edward whispered:
“I… do not know.”
The king leaned forward slightly.
“You do.”
Edward could feel heat rising beneath his skin. Neb-Kha-Rê lifted one hand and slid his fingers beneath Edward’s chin, forcing him to look upward.
“You hunger for purpose,” the pharaoh said softly.
Edward’s chest tightened.
“You hunger to belong.”
The words struck painfully deep because they were true.
The outside world had stripped Edward down to ambition and loneliness long ago. Endless expeditions. Endless searching. Always chasing discovery without ever truly belonging anywhere.
But here… Inside the tomb… Every moment had purpose. Every breath served the king. And some terrible hidden part of him craved that certainty. Neb-Kha-Rê slowly released him.
“Continue.”
Edward resumed his work quietly. He massaged oil into the pharaoh’s arms, shoulders, and powerful back while torchlight flickered across bronze skin and gold jewelry. And all the while, the king spoke. Stories. Ancient histories.
Names of forgotten cities swallowed by sand.
Wars. Temples. Priests. Lovers.
Servants buried alive beside their rulers so they might continue serving in eternity. Edward understood every word now. Perfectly. The realization no longer shocked him.
The ancient language lived naturally inside his mind. Sometimes more naturally than English. Neb-Kha-Rê noticed it too.
“You no longer translate in your thoughts.”
Edward froze slightly.
“No…”
“You hear as one born here.”
Edward stared downward silently. The king leaned closer behind him.
“And soon,” Neb-Kha-Rê whispered near his ear, “you will think as one born here.”
A shiver ran violently through Edward’s body. Not entirely from fear.
Later that evening, Edward stood alone before a polished obsidian mirror. He barely recognized the man staring back. Dark eyes. Bronzed skin. Long black hair framing elegant features no Englishman should possess. Even his posture had changed. Softer. More graceful.
He looked… Egyptian. A quiet sound behind him made him turn.
Neb-Kha-Rê stood in the doorway of the burial chamber. Bare-chested beneath layers of gold. Beautiful and terrible in the torchlight. The king approached slowly until he stood behind Edward’s reflection.
“You resist less now.”
Edward stared into the mirror.
“I try to resist.”
“But you fail.”
The pharaoh’s hands settled slowly upon Edward’s shoulders. Warm. Possessive. Edward closed his eyes briefly.
“Yes.”
Neb-Kha-Rê lowered his head slightly beside Edward’s ear.
“And does that truly upset you?”
The silence that followed answered everything.
The tomb was silent except for the sound of breathing. Warm breathing. Living breathing.
Edward sat upon the stone floor beside the sarcophagus while golden torchlight flickered across the chamber walls. The air smelled richly of incense and perfumed oil, thick enough now that he barely remembered the scent of fresh air.
Neb-Kha-Rê stood before him. Magnificent. The last remnants of death had vanished completely. No trace of decay remained upon the pharaoh’s body now. Bronze skin gleamed beneath gold jewelry and layers of white ceremonial linen draped low across his waist. His tattoos curled elegantly across powerful shoulders and arms like living symbols beneath the firelight.
Only the glowing gold of his eyes still hinted at something supernatural. Something eternal. Edward looked up at him with parted lips. Not with fear anymore. With devotion. The realization no longer horrified him as deeply as it should have.
Neb-Kha-Rê studied him quietly for a long moment before speaking.
“Come here.”
Edward obeyed immediately. Bare feet crossed cold stone as he approached the king and knelt automatically before him. The movement required no thought now. No hesitation. Neb-Kha-Rê rested one hand against Edward’s dark hair.
Long black strands now spilled well past his shoulders, soft and glossy beneath the torchlight. Nothing remained of the neatly groomed English explorer who had first entered the tomb.
The pharaoh slowly threaded his fingers through the transformed hair.
“You wear this form beautifully.”
Edward lowered his eyes.
“My king…”
Neb-Kha-Rê tilted his chin upward gently.
“Do you still dream of your old life?”
The question lingered painfully.
Edward tried to summon the image of London. Rain. Books. Voices. His colleagues. His own face.
But the memories felt weak now. Pale and distant, like fragments from another man’s life.
Slowly, Edward shook his head.
“No.”
The pharaoh smiled faintly.
“Good.”
Neb-Kha-Rê turned toward a low table beside the sarcophagus. Upon it rested a golden blade. Thin. Curved. Sharp enough to reflect the firelight. Edward stared at it uncertainly. The pharaoh picked it up carefully before returning to him. Then he spoke a single command.
“Kneel lower.”
Edward obeyed instantly.
His heart began pounding harder as he bowed his head. Neb-Kha-Rê gathered a handful of Edward’s long dark hair gently in one hand.
“You no longer need this.”
Edward’s breath caught. For one brief moment, some tiny remnant of his old self stirred uneasily. But then the pharaoh’s warm fingers brushed slowly across his scalp. And the fear faded. The blade touched his head. Softly. The sound was almost hypnotic.
Shhhk.
Long strands of black hair slid down Edward’s shoulders onto the stone floor. Another slow stroke. More hair fell. Edward closed his eyes. Something deep inside him loosened with every passing motion of the blade. Not pain. Release. Neb-Kha-Rê shaved him slowly, reverently, like a sacred ritual.
Locks of dark hair gathered around Edward’s knees while the pharaoh’s fingers guided his head with possessive tenderness.
“You served me faithfully,” Neb-Kha-Rê murmured quietly above him.
Another stroke.
“You abandoned fear.”
Another.
“You accepted your place beside me.”
Edward trembled softly. Not from humiliation. From warmth. From belonging. More hair fell away until cool air brushed against newly exposed skin. The pharaoh’s hand glided across the smooth portions of Edward’s scalp as if admiring his work. Edward shivered at the touch. A low pleased sound escaped Neb-Kha-Rê.
“Yes…”
The blade continued carefully. Slowly. Until finally the last remaining strands slipped silently onto the black stone floor.
Neb-Kha-Rê stepped behind him. Edward remained perfectly still. Breathing unevenly. The pharaoh spread warm oil across both hands before smoothing it slowly over Edward’s freshly shaved scalp.
The sensation sent a deep tremor through Edward’s body. Gentle hands polished his bare skin lovingly, possessively. Edward leaned unconsciously into the touch. Neb-Kha-Rê bent close beside his ear.
“Who are you?”
Edward opened his mouth. And froze. The answer should have been simple.
Edward Harrow. Explorer. Englishman. But the name felt wrong. Empty. Distant.
Neb-Kha-Rê’s fingers caressed his smooth scalp again.
“Who are you?” the king repeated softly.
Edward’s breathing deepened.
“I…”
Nothing came. Panic flickered briefly inside him. Then the pharaoh knelt before him and lifted his chin.
Golden eyes held him completely.
“You are mine.”
The words sank deep into him like warm honey. Edward’s resistance finally broke. Not violently. Not suddenly. Quietly. Like the final crumbling of ancient stone. Neb-Kha-Rê smiled gently.
“Let me remind you your name”
Edward stared upward silently, his chest rising and falling harder.
The pharaoh rested one hand over his heart.
“Khepri.”
The ancient name echoed through the chamber. And instantly… It felt right. Not new. Remembered. Khepri lowered his gaze immediately.
“Yes, my king.”
Neb-Kha-Rê’s expression softened with unmistakable satisfaction.
“There is no Edward now.”
The name sounded foreign. Meaningless. Khepri barely understood why hearing it once would have mattered.
Neb-Kha-Rê stood and crossed toward a carved chest near the sarcophagus. From within, he withdrew folded linen garments. Simple white cloth. Soft. Elegant. The clothing of a royal servant.
The pharaoh returned and held the garments before him.
“Remove these.”
Khepri looked down at the dusty explorer’s clothes he still wore. Suspenders. Sweat-stained shirt. Foreign fabric from another world. For the first time, they felt deeply wrong against his skin. Obediently, he removed them piece by piece and laid them aside.
Neb-Kha-Rê dressed him slowly himself. The white linen wrapped lightly around Khepri’s hips and chest. Gold cuffs closed gently around his wrists. A thin collar rested against his throat. The pharaoh adjusted the fabric carefully before stepping back to admire him. Khepri looked down at himself. No trace of the explorer remained. Only the servant. Only the devoted companion kneeling before his king.
Neb-Kha-Rê approached once more and placed one hand lovingly atop Khepri’s smooth shaved head. Khepri closed his eyes instantly. The touch filled him with indescribable peace.
“My beautiful servant,” the pharaoh whispered.
Khepri smiled softly. And deep within himself… He knew he had never wanted anything more than this.
The tomb had become timeless.
No sunrise reached its halls. No wind stirred its corridors. Beyond the sealed stone entrance, the world of men continued somewhere far above the desert sands, but down here, deep beneath the earth, only eternity remained.
And Khepri no longer cared. He moved silently through the burial chambers carrying warm oils and fresh incense, his bare feet whispering across black stone floors polished by centuries.
The tomb belonged to Neb-Kha-Rê. And Khepri belonged to the tomb. The young servant paused beside one of the great painted walls, staring at the ancient figures illuminated by torchlight.
Now he understood them completely. The kneeling servants. The bowed heads. The expressions of serene devotion painted onto their faces.
Once, those murals had frightened him. Now they felt comforting. Familiar. Because he finally understood the truth:
Neb-Kha-Rê had never been meant to awaken alone. A king required a servant beside him in death just as he had in life.
And now… Khepri had taken that sacred place. Forever. A warm voice echoed softly behind him.
“Khepri.”
Instantly, the servant turned and bowed his head.
“My king.”
Neb-Kha-Rê approached slowly through the golden shadows of the chamber. He looked magnificent beneath the torchlight — powerful bronze skin adorned with gold, white linen draped elegantly across his body, glowing eyes fixed entirely upon his servant.
Khepri’s chest warmed immediately beneath that gaze.
The pharaoh stopped before him.
“You were thinking.”
Khepri lowered his eyes modestly.
“Yes, my king.”
“What thoughts?”
Khepri hesitated only briefly.
“That I am where I belong.”
A quiet smile touched Neb-Kha-Rê’s lips.
“Yes.”
The pharaoh lifted one hand and rested it atop Khepri’s smooth shaved head. The servant closed his eyes instantly. The touch still overwhelmed him every time. Warm fingers slowly caressed his bare scalp with deep possessive tenderness. Khepri leaned unconsciously into the contact, breathing softly. Neb-Kha-Rê admired the reaction openly.
“You love this.”
Khepri smiled faintly without opening his eyes.
“Yes, my king.”
“And why?”
Khepri answered honestly.
“Because I am yours.”
The words came naturally now.
Without shame.
Without fear.
Neb-Kha-Rê’s fingers glided slowly across the back of Khepri’s head before tilting his chin upward gently. Golden eyes met dark ones. The pharaoh studied him for a long moment. No trace of the English explorer remained anymore. No Edward. Only Khepri.
Bronzed skin glowed warmly beneath the torchlight. His shaved head and elegant linen garments made him look exactly like the servants painted upon the ancient walls around them.
Beautiful.
Devoted.
Perfectly obedient.
Neb-Kha-Rê’s expression softened with unmistakable affection.
“My faithful servant.”
Warmth spread deeply through Khepri’s chest at the praise. The pharaoh leaned closer, pressing a slow kiss against his forehead. Khepri exhaled shakily.
Even now, such tenderness from the king made his entire body tremble with happiness.
“You please me greatly,” Neb-Kha-Rê murmured.
Khepri lowered himself immediately to his knees before the pharaoh. The movement was effortless now. Natural as breathing.
“I live only to serve you, my king.”
Neb-Kha-Rê looked down at him proudly.
“And you serve beautifully.”
The king guided Khepri gently upward again before leading him deeper into the burial chamber toward the great black sarcophagus resting at its center. The ancient coffin no longer resembled a place of death. Now it resembled a throne. A sanctuary.
Golden fabrics and soft linen surrounded it. Warm incense smoke curled lazily through the chamber while torchlight reflected against polished obsidian walls.
Neb-Kha-Rê reclined against the edge of the sarcophagus and opened one arm toward him. Khepri immediately settled beside the pharaoh, resting close against his warm body. The king’s arm wrapped possessively around his waist. For a long moment, neither spoke. There was no need.
The silence between them no longer felt oppressive. It felt intimate. Eternal. Neb-Kha-Rê slowly stroked Khepri’s smooth scalp again while the servant rested peacefully against his chest.
“You no longer fear eternity,” the pharaoh said softly.
Khepri smiled faintly.
“No, my king.”
“Why?”
Khepri lifted his eyes toward him.
“Because eternity with you is a gift.”
The golden eyes of the pharaoh softened. Neb-Kha-Rê touched his cheek gently.
“My beautiful Khepri.”
The servant’s heart swelled painfully with devotion. Some distant fragment of memory stirred faintly for only an instant — another life, another name, another man beneath the desert sun.
But it faded immediately beneath the warmth of the king’s touch. Unimportant. Forgotten. Neb-Kha-Rê drew him closer and kissed him slowly, tenderly, while torchlight flickered across gold and black stone. Khepri melted against him willingly. Completely.
The pharaoh’s hands rested possessively upon his servant’s body as the silence of the tomb embraced them both.
Above them, kingdoms would rise and collapse into dust. Languages would vanish. Empires would die. But deep beneath the sands of Egypt… The pharaoh and his faithful servant remained together.
And Khepri knew with absolute certainty that he desired nothing else for all eternity.
tured fat and bald with a beard by a doctor (surgeries)
Your treatment start here
The organ
Weight gain - hairy - balding - bear tf
I never believed in love stories.
Not the slow ones. Not the intense ones. Not even the tragic ones people pretend to admire.
What I believed in was rhythm.
A clean, controlled sequence of moments that never overlapped, never lingered longer than necessary.
Morning started the same way every day.
The gym.
Weights. Precision. Repetition.
I liked the mirrors there. Not out of vanity—at least that’s what I told myself—but because they confirmed something simple: I was in control.
Of my body. Of my image. Of how I was seen.
“Man, you’re gonna scare people off at this rate.”
Lucas leaned against the rack, watching me finish a set.
I smirked, wiping sweat from my forehead. “That’s kind of the point.”
He laughed. “No, seriously. Do you ever keep anyone?”
I racked the bar, grabbed my towel, and shrugged.
“Why would I?”
He raised an eyebrow. “Because that’s… normal?”
I shook my head, already turning away. “Normal’s overrated.”
And honestly, I meant it.
Keeping people meant dealing with expectations. Messages. Attachments.
I preferred clean exits.
That carried into the rest of my day.
Work was just something to get through—efficient, detached. I did what I had to do, nothing more.
Evenings, though—that was where things started.
Bars. Clubs. Low lighting and loud music.
A glance across a room. A shared smile. A drink.
Sometimes I didn’t even need the apps.
But most nights, I still used them.
Back home, my apartment reflected that same philosophy.
Minimalist.
Neutral tones. Clean lines.
A couch no one ever really sat on. A kitchen barely used.
And the bedroom—
That was the only space that mattered.
Large bed. Soft lighting. Nothing personal.
No photos. No traces.
No history.
Just a place where people arrived… and disappeared.
I dropped my keys on the counter, loosened my shirt collar, and grabbed my phone.
Notifications. Messages. Profiles. The usual. Swipe. Swipe. Pause. Swipe.
It was almost mechanical at this point. Faces blurred into each other. Same angles. Same bios. Same attempts at standing out.
“Gym rat.” “Adventurous.” “No drama.”
I almost laughed.
Then— I stopped.
His profile appeared without warning, like it had been waiting.
No flashy pose. No exaggerated lighting. Just him. Looking straight at the camera. Calm. Grounded. Perfect.
Not in the obvious, sculpted way I saw every day—but in something quieter.
Something… complete.
I leaned back slightly, studying the photo longer than I intended.
“Okay…” I muttered under my breath.
I tapped into his profile. Minimal text. No clichés. And a single line:
“I prefer real connections.”
I huffed a quiet laugh. “Yeah, sure you do.”
Still—
I didn’t swipe right immediately. That alone should have told me something was different. But curiosity won. I swiped.
Match.
Instant. I blinked.
“That was fast.”
A message popped up almost immediately.
Him: “I was hoping you’d show up.”
I frowned slightly, typing back.
Me: “You say that to everyone?”
Three dots appeared.
Disappeared.
Then—
Him: “No. Just the ones who think they’re in control.”
I paused. Something about that… lingered. I smirked anyway.
Me: “Sounds like you’ve already figured me out.”
Him: “Not yet. But I’d like to.”
I leaned against the counter, reading that again. There was no hesitation in his tone. No need to impress. Just certainty. And that— That was new.
Me: “Drink tonight?”
A few seconds.
Then:
Him: “No.”
I raised an eyebrow.
“No?”
Another message followed immediately.
Him: “Your place.”
I let out a short laugh.
“Confident.”
I typed:
Me: “You always this direct?”
Him: “Only when I know what I want.”
I stared at the screen for a moment longer.Then— Without overthinking it— I sent my address.
I knew something was different the moment I opened the door. He didn’t hesitate when I stepped aside. Didn’t scan the room like most people did. Didn’t ask questions. He just walked in. Like he belonged there. I closed the door behind him, watching carefully.
“You’re quiet,” I said.
He turned slightly, his gaze settling on me.
“I listen first.”
There was no tension in his posture. No nervous energy. Just stillness. Measured. I stepped closer, testing the space between us.
“See anything you like?”
A faint smile touched his lips.
“I see exactly what I expected.”
I tilted my head. “And what’s that?”
His eyes didn’t leave mine.
“Someone who never gets chosen first.”
That hit harder than it should have.
I scoffed lightly. “That’s a bold assumption.”
“Is it?”
A beat.
Silence stretched—but it didn’t feel empty.
It felt… deliberate. Then he stepped closer. And just like that— The rhythm I knew so well… shifted.
There’s always a moment. A precise, almost invisible threshold where a night becomes predictable. I know it by heart.
The distance closes. The tone softens. The bodies align.
Routine.
But this time— Something was off. Not wrong. Just… different. I stepped even closer, expecting him to meet me halfway. He didn’t move. Not back. Not forward.Just… waited.
That faint smile still there. Observing. Me. It unsettled me more than I wanted to admit.
“Careful,” I said lightly, trying to regain control of the rhythm. “You’re starting to sound like you’ve got me figured out.”
“Not figured out,” he replied calmly. “Positioned.”
I frowned. “Positioned?”
His gaze didn’t break.
“You always stand here.”
He gestured subtly—barely a movement—between us.
“Close enough to invite. Far enough to stay in control.”
A pause.
“You don’t step in until they do.”
That—
That was true.
And I hated that he saw it.
I let out a small chuckle, masking the tension. “You’ve done your homework.”
“No,” he said softly. “You’re just consistent.”
Silence stretched again.
But now it pressed.
I didn’t like that.
So I broke it.
My hand reached his arm—firm, confident, practiced. Warm. Solid. Real.
“Then maybe it’s time I break the pattern.”
That, at least, felt right. Familiar.I leaned in. This time, he let me. His hand slid to my waist—not grabbing, not pulling. Guiding. Subtle. Measured. Too measured. Our bodies aligned. Breath mixed.
Close enough now that I could feel the steadiness of him. No hesitation.No anticipation. Just… certainty.
“You’re tense,” he murmured.
I scoffed quietly. “I’m not.”
His fingers pressed lightly against my side. Not enough to restrain. Just enough to notice.
“Yes,” he said. “You are.”
I exhaled through my nose.
“Maybe I just don’t like being analyzed.”
“Everyone likes being seen.”
“Not like that.”
A beat. His hand moved—slowly—up along my side, deliberate. Not searching. Mapping. I should have pulled away. I didn’t. Because underneath the discomfort— There was something else. Curiosity. And something dangerously close to… wanting to know where this went.
“You don’t have to think so much,” he said quietly.
“I’m not thinking.”
“That’s new.”
I smirked despite myself. “You talk a lot.”
“And yet,” he leaned in slightly, voice lower now, “you’re still here.”
That was the problem. He was right.Again. I closed the remaining distance. This time fully. Our foreheads almost touching. My hand moved to his jaw. Rougher than his had been. Reclaiming something.
“Let’s stop talking.”
He held my gaze for one more second. Then—
“Alright.”
Simple. Too simple. But I didn’t question it. Not yet. The kiss wasn’t rushed. It wasn’t hesitant either. It was— Heavy. Grounded. Like everything else about him. No urgency. No need to prove anything. And somehow— That made me lean in more. My hands moved, pulling him closer now.Reasserting control. At least— That’s what I told myself.
Because beneath that— There was a growing awareness.Something was slipping.Not dramatically. Not obviously. But enough. Enough that I noticed. Enough that I ignored it. His hand left my side. I barely registered it. Too focused on the moment. On regaining the rhythm. On not losing ground.
Then— A shift. Subtle. His body angled slightly away. Just enough to create space. I frowned, pulling back a fraction.
“What?”
He didn’t answer immediately. Instead, his hand disappeared briefly behind him. Out of sight. Out of frame. A small movement. Insignificant. I almost didn’t question it. Almost.
“Hey—”
A prick. Sharp. Quick. Barely there. I blinked.
“What was—”
The words didn’t land. My vision flickered. The room tilted—just slightly. My grip loosened.
“What did you—”
He was still there. Right in front of me. Perfectly steady. Watching. Always watching.
“Relax,” he said.
My legs felt… wrong. Too heavy. Too distant. My body didn’t respond the way it should.
“You’re—”
I tried to step back.Failed. His hand caught me. Effortless. Like I weighed nothing.
“That’s it,” he murmured.
The edges of the room blurred. Sound dulled.My thoughts slowed. No— Not slowed.Thickened. Like moving through something dense.
“You’ll understand later.”
His voice felt far away now. Even though he was right there.
“I—”
Nothing. My knees gave in.Darkness rushed up—Or I fell into it. I’m not sure which.The last thing I saw—Was his expression.Unchanged.Calm.Certain. Like everything had gone exactly as expected.
Then— Nothing.
I woke up gasping.
Air slammed back into my lungs like I’d been underwater too long.
For a second— I didn’t move. Didn’t think.Didn’t exist, really. Just… breath.In.Out. In—
Too fast. Too sharp. Something was wrong. I knew it before I even opened my eyes. There was a weight in my body that hadn’t been there before. Not external. Not like pressure.
Internal. Anchored. Deep. I forced my eyes open. My apartment. My ceiling. My bed. Everything looked exactly the same. Too normal. That’s what made it worse.
I pushed myself up— And pain exploded through my abdomen. I sucked in a breath, clutching my stomach instantly.
“What the—”
My voice cracked. Dry. Unfamiliar. My hand pressed against something thick. Fabric. Bandages. My heart started pounding. No.
No, no—
I tore the blanket off. My shirt was gone. Replaced with gauze wrapped tightly around my midsection. Clean. Precise. Deliberate. My hands started shaking as I pulled at it.
“Okay… okay…”
Like saying it would make it make sense. The tape came loose. The fabric peeled away—And underneath—A line. A fresh, clean incision.Running just below my ribs. Still slightly swollen. Still… real. My stomach dropped.
“Someone—”
No. Not someone. Him. I stumbled out of bed, legs unsteady. The room tilted slightly, like my balance hadn’t caught up yet.
Bathroom. Mirror.
I braced myself against the sink and looked. Same face.Same body. At least— At first glance. But I couldn’t stop looking at the cut. At the way the skin around it felt… tight. Wrong. Like something inside didn’t belong.
“Hospital,” I muttered.
“Yeah. Yeah, okay.”
That made sense. Doctors. Answers. Reality. I grabbed the first clothes I could find and left. The waiting room felt unreal. Too bright. Too slow. Too disconnected from what was happening inside me. I kept pressing my hand against my stomach. Feeling. Testing. There was something there.
I couldn’t explain it. But I could feel it.Not pain. Not exactly.Presence.
“Sir?”
I looked up. A nurse.
“Come with me.”
Tests. Questions. More tests. I told them everything. Or tried to.
The app. The meeting. The apartment. The blackout.
I watched their expressions shift. From concern— To confusion— To something else. Something quieter.
“Let’s get imaging done,” one of them said.
The scan room was cold. Mechanical. I lay still as the machine hummed around me. Counting my breaths. Trying not to think. Trying not to feel that… thing inside me. When it was over, they told me to wait again. So I did. Sitting there. Alone. Time stretching too thin. When the doctor came back, he wasn’t alone. That was the first bad sign.
The second— Was the way he looked at me. Not scared. Not alarmed. But… fascinated.
“Can you sit up for me?” he asked.
I did. Slowly.Carefully. He held a tablet in his hand. Turned it toward me.
“Do you see this?”
I looked. My body. Rendered in shades of grey and white. Bones. Organs. Familiar shapes. Except—
There.
Something new. Something that didn’t match anything else. A structure. Dense. Compact. Nestled deep inside my abdomen. Connected. Integrated. Wrong.
“What is that?” I asked.
My voice sounded distant. He hesitated. That was worse than anything.
“We’re not entirely sure.”
I let out a hollow laugh. “Not sure?”
He didn’t react.
“It’s… not a transplant.”
“What?”
“There are no signs of removal. No damage to surrounding tissue consistent with extraction.”
I stared at him.
“Then what are you saying?”
He met my gaze.
“It appears to have been… added.”
Silence. Heavy. Impossible.
“That’s not—”
“It’s fully integrated into your system,” he continued. “Blood supply, neural connections… it’s functioning.”
“Functioning how?”
Another pause. Then—
“That’s what we don’t understand.”
My stomach twisted. Or maybe— It moved. I froze.
“You feel that?” I whispered.
The doctor frowned. “Feel what?”
I pressed my hand harder against my abdomen.
“There’s something—”
And then it hit. Sharp. Sudden. A pull. Deep inside. Not pain. Hunger. Raw. Immediate. Violent. I sucked in a breath.
“What is that?”
The doctor stepped closer. “What are you experiencing?” I looked at him. Then at the scan. Then back at my own body.
“I’m hungry.”
A beat.
“That’s normal after—”
“No.”
I shook my head. Too fast. Too hard.
“You don’t understand.”
Because this wasn’t normal. This wasn’t “I skipped a meal” hunger.
This was— Demanding. Expanding. Consuming. Like something inside me had just— woken up. And it wanted more. A lot more.
At first, I told myself it was manageable. That word—manageable—became a shield. A lie I repeated often enough to almost believe it. The hunger didn’t fade. It didn’t stabilize. It grew. Not in waves. Not in cycles. Constant. Present. Like a second pulse inside me. I started eating more.
At first, it felt almost… justified. My body needed energy, right? Recovery. Healing. That’s what they said.That’s what I told myself. But it didn’t feel like recovery. It felt like feeding something else.
I went back to the gym. Of course I did. That was the first thing I tried to hold onto. Control. Routine. Identity. I stood in front of the mirror again.
Same place. Same lights. Same movements. But it wasn’t the same. The weights felt heavier. Not dramatically. Just enough. Enough that I noticed. Enough that I couldn’t ignore it.
And my body— My body didn’t respond the same way. The pump wasn’t clean anymore. There was… resistance. A softness creeping in where there used to be precision.
I pressed my fingers against my abdomen in the locker room. Testing. It gave. Just slightly. I froze.
“No,” I muttered.
I adjusted my posture, straightened up, flexed harder. There it was again— The version I recognized. Almost. The hunger followed me everywhere. Work. Gym. Bed. It didn’t matter.
It was always there. A low, insistent pressure. Then louder. Then unavoidable. I started carrying food with me. Protein bars. Sandwiches. Anything. It helped— For minutes. Maybe an hour. Then it came back. Stronger. More demanding.And slowly—I stopped waiting. I just ate. Whenever it came. Wherever I was.
The changes accelerated. Not dramatically. Not in a way anyone else would immediately notice. But I did. Every morning. Every mirror. Every reflection in a dark window.
I tried to stop. That’s the part that matters. I tried. Diet. Strict. Precise. Measured. Back to discipline. Back to control.For a day— Maybe two.
Then— It hit. Harder than before The hunger wasn’t just physical anymore. It was… intrusive. It occupied my thoughts. My focus. My patience. I snapped at people. I lost track of conversations.
Everything blurred into one thing: Eat. I remember sitting at my desk, staring at my screen— And realizing I hadn’t heard a single word my colleague had said. Because all I could think about— Was food.
The gym became harder. Then frustrating. Then pointless. I was lifting less. Looking worse. Feeling heavier. Each movement slower than the last. And the mirrors— I started avoiding them. Because when I looked— I didn’t see progress anymore. I saw drift.
My clothes changed before I admitted it. Tighter across the waist. Pulling at the seams. Shirts clinging differently. Pants pressing when I sat down. I told myself it was temporary. Water weight. Recovery. Anything. But then— One night—
I caught my reflection without expecting it. No posture correction. No flexing. No control. Just— Me. And I didn’t recognize it immediately.
I stood there. Frozen. My hand moved— Almost without thinking. To my stomach. I pressed. Firmer this time. It didn’t resist. It shifted. Heavy. Real.
“Stop,” I whispered.
But I didn’t move my hand. I pressed again. Slower. Testing the limits. Feeling the weight. The presence. That same presence from before— But now it wasn’t hidden. It was visible. Growing. Becoming me.
I stumbled back slightly. My breath uneven. My reflection staring right back at me. Not panicked. Not shocked.Just— Watching. Adapting. Accepting faster than I was. And underneath the fear— Something worse began to form.
Not acceptance. But— Recognition. Because the hunger… wasn’t fighting me anymore. It was winning.
There’s a point where denial stops being possible. Not because you accept. But because your body refuses to let you ignore it anymore. I crossed that point without realizing when. Or maybe—
I realized it, and just didn’t want to name it. The hunger didn’t just stay. It evolved.It sharpened. It became… specific. Not just eat.
But more. Always more. I stopped planning meals. I reacted. Constantly. Kitchen. Delivery. Snacks. Anything within reach. And still— It wasn’t enough.
The mirror became unavoidable. Because now— It wasn’t subtle anymore.
I noticed the beard first. Not because it appeared. But because it wouldn’t stop. I shaved. Clean. Sharp. Controlled. The next morning— Stubble. Thick. By evening— It was already back. Dense. Darker. Stronger than before.
“What the hell…”
I ran my hand over my jaw.
It felt… wrong. Not unfamiliar. But accelerated. Like my body had stopped following normal rules. Then the hair. Chest. Arms. Shoulders. Even my back. It spread. Filled in. Darkened.
What used to be light, barely there— Now stood out. Thick. Coarse. Present. Everywhere.
And my body— There was no hiding it anymore. My shirts stretched. Pulled tight across my stomach. Clung to my chest in ways they never had before. I tried going up a size. Then another. Still— The shape underneath didn’t change. Just… expanded.
The first tear happened at home. I bent down to pick something up— And—
rrrip
I froze. Slowly straightened. Looked down. The seam of my pants had split. Clean. Irreversible. I stared at it. Then at myself in the mirror. And for a moment— I didn’t feel panic. I felt something else. A hollow, quiet realization.
“This isn’t stopping.”
I stopped going out. It wasn’t a decision. It just… happened. Clothes didn’t fit. Nothing felt right. Nothing looked right. And people— People looked. Even when they tried not to. I saw it. Every time. I opened the apps again. Out of habit. Out of… hope. I didn’t upload new pictures.
Of course I didn’t. I used the old ones. The ones that still looked like me. Matches came. Messages too. Same as before. Same rhythm. For a second— It almost felt normal. Then came the meeting. And the look. That split second when they saw me— And something shifted. Politeness. Excuse. Exit. Every time.
Back home— I sat on the edge of my bed. Breathing heavier than I should have been. My stomach resting against my thighs. Solid. Present. Unavoidable. I placed both hands on it. Held it. Not testing. Not denying. Just… holding.
My hair started falling a week later. At first— Just strands. On the pillow. In the shower. On my hands. Then more. Noticeable. The front thinned. The crown showed. I stared at it in the mirror.
Beard thicker than ever. Body bigger than ever. Hair— Leaving. The contrast was almost cruel.
The hunger was still there. Always. But it didn’t feel like an attack anymore. It felt like… baseline. Like breathing. Like something I had stopped questioning. I stood in front of the mirror again. Longer this time. No adjusting. No correcting posture. No trying to find angles. Just— Looking.
My hand rose. Slow. Heavy. Rested on my stomach. It filled my palm. Warm. Alive. Mine. And for the first time— I didn’t immediately pull away. Not because I accepted it. Not yet.
But because— I didn’t know what I was supposed to fight anymore.
I couldn’t keep wearing the same clothes. That became obvious the moment I tried to leave the apartment again. Nothing fit. Not really. Everything either clung too tight… or gave up entirely. So I did something I hadn’t done in weeks. I went shopping.
The store felt too bright. Too open. Too… exposed. I stayed near the back at first. Larger sizes. Clothes I used to ignore completely. I picked up a shirt. Held it in front of me. Hesitated. Then another. And another. A pile formed in my arms. I didn’t look at anyone. Didn’t want to see if they were looking at me.
The fitting room mirror was worse. Always is. I tried the first shirt It fit. Not “almost.” Not “if I adjusted it.” It actually fit. Loose where it needed to be. Wide enough across my stomach. Long enough to fall over it. I stood there for a long time. Looking. Not judging. Not correcting. Just… seeing.
“This is it now,” I muttered.
No anger. No panic. Just a quiet statement. I bought everything. Didn’t think about it. Didn’t hesitate. I needed clothes for this body. So I got them. That night— I went out. Not to hunt. Not to impress. Just to… be somewhere else.
The bar was familiar. Same lights. Same noise. Same rhythm. But I wasn’t part of it anymore. Not in the same way. I felt it immediately. The space I took. The way I moved. The way people looked— Then looked away. Or didn’t look at all.
I went to the counter. Ordered a drink. Sat. Alone.
“You adapted faster than most.”
The voice hit before the recognition. Calm. Measured. Controlled. I turned. And there he was. Exactly the same. Perfect. Untouched. Unchanged. For a second— I didn’t recognize him. Then it clicked.
My stomach tightened. Not from hunger. From something else.
“You,” I said.
My voice was lower now. He smiled.
“Me.”
He looked me over. Slowly. Deliberately. Taking everything in. My size. My posture. My beard. My hairline. That same faint smile returned.
“Stable,” he said.
I frowned. “What?”
“You’re stable now.”
He stepped closer. Like nothing about this was strange.
“Your body’s done adjusting.”
I stared at him.
“You did this.”
It wasn’t a question. He tilted his head slightly.
“Technically… yes.”
Something inside me snapped— But it didn’t come out as anger. Just a heavy, tired breath.
“Why?”
He studied me for a moment.
“For the same reason you did what you did.”
I frowned. “What are you talking about?”
“Before,” he said. “Your routine.”
A small gesture.
“Meet. Use. Leave.”
I didn’t respond. Didn’t need to. He already knew.
“I used to be like you,” he continued.
I almost laughed.
“You?”
He nodded.
“Not like this.”
A pause.
“Like you are now.”
Silence. I searched his face. Looking for something— A crack. A lie. But there was nothing. Just calm. Just certainty.
“No one wanted me,” he said simply.
“Not like that.”
His eyes didn’t leave mine.
“I was ignored. Rejected. Dismissed.”
A faint tension in his jaw.
“Over and over.”
Then— It disappeared. Replaced by that same control.
“So I changed it.”
I swallowed. “How?”
He smiled slightly.
“I developed something.”
A small tap of his own abdomen.
“An organ. Or… something close enough.”
“It regulates fat. Converts it. Enhances muscle growth.”
I stared.
“You’re lying.”
“Am I?”
He stepped closer again. Lowered his voice.
“I perfected it.”
A beat.
“On myself.”
My chest felt tight.
“And me?”
His smile sharpened.
“You got a beta version.”
I let out a hollow breath.
“A beta version?”
“Yes.”
“Unstable. Incomplete.”
He glanced down at my body. Then back up.
“And very… expressive.”
I clenched my jaw.
“This is a joke to you?”
“No,” he said calmly.
“This is balance.”
Silence stretched.
Heavy.
“You picked men like me,” he continued.
“Men you thought were… beneath you.”
His gaze hardened slightly.
“So I gave you perspective.”
My hands curled into fists.
“And all the others?”
“Same.”
“Some handled it better.”
A small shrug.
“Most didn’t.”
I shook my head.
“This is insane.”
“And yet,” he said softly, “here you are.”
He reached out— Not touching. Just gesturing toward me.
“You feel it, don’t you?”
I didn’t answer. Because I did. That constant presence. That weight. That… change.
His eyes moved again. This time slower. More deliberate. They lingered. On my beard. Thick. Unavoidable. Then my chest. My stomach. Lower. My hips. My ass.
I shifted slightly. Instinct. He noticed. Of course he did. A quiet chuckle escaped him.
“Honestly…”
He leaned in just enough for me to hear clearly—
“…the beard suits you.”
My jaw tightened.
“And the hair,” he added, glancing briefly at my thinning scalp, “or what’s left of it.”
I didn’t react. Didn’t give him that. But he kept going. Unbothered.
“Though I have to say…”
His eyes dropped again. Lingering longer this time.
“…you’ve really filled out.”
A pause. Then, almost amused:
“Especially back there.”
My stomach twisted. Different this time. Not hunger. Something heavier.
“You’re enjoying this,” I muttered.
“I’m observing,” he corrected.
“Big difference.”
I looked at him. Really looked. Perfect posture. Perfect control. Everything I used to be. Everything I wasn’t anymore.
“Can it be reversed?” I asked.
He hesitated.Just slightly.
“No.”
Simple. Clean. Final. Silence settled between us.
The noise of the bar faded into the background. People moved. Laughed. Lived. Like nothing had changed. Except everything had. He straightened slightly.
“Well,” he said, almost casually, “you’re stable now.”
Another look. One last assessment.
“You’ll adjust.”
Then— A faint smile.
“You don’t really have a choice.”
And just like that— He stepped back. Blended into the crowd. And disappeared. I stayed there. Sitting. Heavy. Still. My drink untouched.
My reflection faint in the mirror behind the bar. Distorted. Wider. Different. My hand moved slowly. Rested on my stomach. Pressed. Firm. Grounded. Real. And for the first time— I didn’t ask why anymore.
Just— “What now?”
The Hypnotist’s Design
weight gain - hairy tf - bearded - bear tf
The building didn’t look like a place where anything remarkable could happen.
A narrow, pale façade wedged between a dental clinic and a closed travel agency, its frosted glass door bore a simple inscription in understated lettering: “Dr. H. Varenne — Hypnotherapy.” Nothing flashy. Nothing alarming.
And yet—
Ethan hesitated on the sidewalk, hands buried deep in the pockets of his gray jogging pants.
He felt ridiculous.
“Jogging pants,” he muttered under his breath, glancing down at himself. “For a therapy session…”
The email had been very clear:
For optimal relaxation and receptivity, patients are required to wear loose, comfortable clothing. Preferably jogging attire.
He almost hadn’t come because of that.
But the nights had been getting worse. The tightness in his chest. The constant buzzing under his skin. The feeling that something terrible was always about to happen—even when nothing was.
So here he was.
He pushed the door open.
A soft chime rang above him.
Inside, the air felt… different.
Warmer than expected. Still. Thick with a faint scent of something woody, almost sweet—like sandalwood mixed with something he couldn’t quite place.
“Hello?”
His voice sounded too loud.
A moment passed.
Then—
“Come in.”
The voice came from deeper inside the office. Calm. Measured. Smooth in a way that immediately drew attention to it.
Ethan stepped forward.
The waiting room was small but meticulously arranged. A low table stacked with neatly aligned magazines. A single plant in the corner—perfectly trimmed, almost unnaturally so. The walls were painted in muted beige tones, absorbing sound rather than reflecting it.
Too quiet.
No ticking clock.
No distant street noise.
Just that silence.
A door at the end of the room opened.
The hypnotherapist stepped out.
Dr. Varenne was taller than Ethan expected. Slim, composed, dressed in a dark shirt with the sleeves rolled just enough to appear relaxed without being informal. His hair was neatly combed back, not a strand out of place.
His eyes, though—
They lingered.
Not rudely. Not obviously.
But precisely.
Taking in details.
“Mr. Carter,” he said, offering a small, controlled smile. “Right on time.”
Ethan nodded. “Yeah. Uh—Ethan is fine.”
“Of course. Ethan.” The doctor’s gaze dropped briefly—just for a second—toward his clothes. “Good. You followed the instructions.”
There was something in the way he said it.
Not approval.
Not exactly.
Recognition.
Ethan shifted slightly. “Yeah, I… wasn’t sure how strict that was.”
“It matters more than most patients realize,” Dr. Varenne replied smoothly. “Comfort is not just physical. It’s… permissive.”
Ethan frowned faintly. “Permissive?”
The doctor’s smile deepened, just a fraction.
“It allows the body to let go before the mind catches up.”
A strange answer.
Ethan wasn’t sure what to say to that, so he just nodded again.
“Come,” the doctor gestured toward the inner room. “Let’s begin.”
Ethan followed.
The consultation room was dimmer than the waiting area. The curtains were partially drawn, filtering the daylight into a soft, diffused glow. The same warm scent lingered here, stronger now.
And in the center of the room—
The chair.
It wasn’t what Ethan expected.
Not a clinical seat. Not a recliner, exactly.
Something in between.
Wide. Deep. Upholstered in dark fabric that looked almost too soft. The cushion dipped slightly in the middle, as if it had already molded itself to countless bodies before his.
Ethan stopped just short of it.
“It’s… comfortable,” Dr. Varenne said, noticing his hesitation. “Please. Sit.”
Ethan lowered himself into the chair carefully.
Immediately, he felt it.
The seat gave way under his weight more than expected, pulling him slightly downward. Instinctively, his back straightened, his core tightening to compensate.
He adjusted his position, planting his feet firmly on the ground.
Upright.
Controlled.
Dr. Varenne watched him with quiet interest.
“Most people try to resist it at first,” he said casually, moving to a chair opposite him. “The body doesn’t like surrendering structure.”
Ethan let out a small, nervous laugh. “Yeah… I guess that sounds about right.”
The doctor sat, crossing one leg over the other with effortless precision.
“So,” he began, voice softening again, settling into a slower rhythm, “tell me what brings you here.”
Ethan exhaled.
This part, at least, was familiar.
“It’s… stress, mostly,” he said. “But not just normal stress. It’s constant. Like—I wake up tense. I go to bed tense. My chest feels tight all the time, and I keep thinking something’s wrong even when I know there isn’t.”
Dr. Varenne nodded gently. “Anticipatory anxiety.”
“Yeah. Exactly.”
“How long?”
“Months. Maybe longer.” Ethan rubbed his hands together unconsciously. “It’s like I can’t switch off.”
A pause.
Then, quietly—
“And you would like that to stop.”
Ethan looked up.
“Yes,” he said, more firmly than anything else he’d said since arriving. “I really would.”
For a brief moment, something flickered behind Dr. Varenne’s eyes.
Interest.
Satisfaction.
“Good,” he said.
And this time, the word lingered in the air just a little too long.
“Then we will help you let go.”
Ethan shifted slightly in the chair again, still holding himself upright, still resisting the subtle pull of the softened seat beneath him.
He didn’t notice how naturally the room seemed to close in around that single phrase.
Let go.
And somewhere, deep beneath the calm surface of the session—
Something had already begun.
“Let your hands rest.”
Dr. Varenne’s voice had changed.
Not in tone—still calm, still measured—but in weight. Each word seemed to settle into the room, as if the air itself carried it directly to Ethan.
Ethan hesitated for a fraction of a second.
Then his fingers loosened.
They slipped from the armrests and came to rest more naturally along the curve of the chair. The tension didn’t vanish—but it shifted. Less sharp. More diffuse.
“Good,” the doctor murmured.
He leaned back slightly in his own chair, observing—not passively, but with a quiet, deliberate attention.
“Focus on your breathing.”
Ethan inhaled.
Too quickly.
He corrected himself, exhaling slower this time.
“In… and out,” Dr. Varenne continued. “There’s no need to control it. Just notice it.”
Ethan tried.
At first, it felt forced. Artificial.
His chest still tight. His shoulders still raised.
But the rhythm of the doctor’s voice… it gave him something to follow.
“In…”
A pause.
“…and out.”
Gradually, something began to loosen.
Not dramatically. Not all at once.
But enough.
Ethan’s shoulders dropped a fraction.
The muscles along his neck softened.
And beneath him, the chair seemed to respond.
He sank—just slightly deeper into it.
His brow furrowed faintly.
It felt… strange.
Comfortable.
Too comfortable.
“Your body knows how to relax,” Dr. Varenne said, as if answering the unspoken thought. “It’s simply forgotten how to do it without permission.”
Ethan let out a small breath—almost a laugh, but without humor.
“Yeah… that sounds right.”
“Then let’s give it that permission.”
The words landed differently.
He didn’t decide to relax further.
It just… happened.
His back, which had been held rigid against the chair, eased. Not fully—but enough that the cushion took more of his weight. His hips settled deeper into the dip of the seat.
The fabric of his jogging pants creased as his posture shifted.
Less upright.
Less controlled.
“Notice the weight of your body,” the doctor continued softly. “The way it’s supported. Held.”
Ethan swallowed.
He did notice.
The heaviness.
At first, it had felt like something to resist.
Now—
It felt… grounding.
His legs spread slightly, no longer held tightly together. His feet relaxed outward. His arms rested more fully, no longer hovering with that subtle readiness to move.
“Good,” Dr. Varenne said again, almost to himself.
He leaned forward just a touch, elbows resting lightly on his knees, gaze fixed.
“Every breath you take… allows you to let go a little more.”
Ethan’s eyes flickered.
Not closing yet.
But softer.
Less focused on the room.
More inward.
“With every exhale… the tension leaves your body.”
Ethan exhaled.
Slow.
Longer than before.
And this time—
Something shifted.
Not just relaxation.
Something deeper.
His chest expanded on the next inhale… fuller. Heavier. The fabric of his shirt stretched slightly as his breathing changed—not faster, but deeper, as if his body was drawing in more than just air.
A warmth spread through him.
Low at first.
Then rising.
His stomach tightened briefly—
Then released.
And as it did, it felt… different.
Softer.
He frowned faintly.
“Don’t analyze it,” Dr. Varenne said immediately, his voice slipping in before the thought could form. “Just experience it.”
Ethan’s brow smoothed again.
The thought dissolved.
Gone before it could take shape.
“Your body is safe,” the doctor continued. “There’s nothing to hold. Nothing to brace against.”
Ethan’s head tilted back slightly against the chair.
His spine curved more naturally now, no longer resisting the shape of the seat. The cushion seemed to cradle him, guiding him downward, deeper into its center.
His breathing had changed again.
Slower.
Heavier.
Each inhale lifting his chest and belly together.
Each exhale sinking him further.
Dr. Varenne’s eyes moved slowly over him.
Taking in every detail.
The shift in posture.
The spreading weight.
The subtle expansion through his midsection as his body surrendered its tension.
A flicker of satisfaction crossed his face.
Barely visible.
“Very good,” he whispered.
Ethan didn’t respond.
He couldn’t.
Not because he was asleep—
But because responding no longer felt necessary.
The room had grown quieter.
Or perhaps—
He was simply no longer noticing its edges.
“Now,” Dr. Varenne said, voice softer still, “we’re going to go deeper.”
A pause.
Measured.
Controlled.
“And with every word I speak… you allow yourself to let go further than you ever have before.”
Ethan’s fingers twitched once against the armrest.
Then stilled.
His body sank another fraction deeper into the chair.
And this time—
He didn’t resist it at all.
“Deeper now.”
Dr. Varenne’s voice was barely above a whisper.
And yet—
It filled everything.
Ethan didn’t respond.
Not consciously.
But his body did.
A slow exhale left him, longer than the ones before, and with it—whatever tension remained seemed to drain away. His head rested fully against the back of the chair now, jaw slackening slightly, lips parted just enough for his breath to pass freely.
“In this state,” the doctor continued, “your body no longer needs to hold onto anything.”
A pause.
Measured.
Precise.
“No effort. No control.”
Ethan’s chest rose again.
Full.
Heavy.
And this time, it didn’t settle the same way.
It spread.
Subtly at first—the fabric of his shirt tightening just a little more across his torso, not from movement, but from a quiet expansion beneath it. His breathing remained slow, rhythmic… but each inhale seemed to draw something deeper into him.
Weight.
Warmth.
Presence.
His stomach followed.
Where it had once tightened reflexively, now it simply… gave in. Softened. Rounded slightly as his core released completely. The waistband of his jogging pants shifted against him, pressing more firmly into his skin.
Ethan’s brow twitched.
A flicker of confusion.
But it didn’t last.
“Let go of that too,” Dr. Varenne murmured instantly, catching it before it formed into awareness.
And just like that—
It was gone.
Replaced by something else.
A spreading, sinking comfort.
The chair seemed to welcome it.
To adjust.
Ethan’s body settled deeper into its center, his hips pressing down, his back curving more naturally, more heavily. His arms rested fully now, no resistance left in them, fingers slightly curled, inert.
Dr. Varenne watched closely.
Very closely.
His gaze traced the changes with clinical precision… but there was something else beneath it now.
Something warmer.
Something intent.
“Your body remembers what it means to be at ease,” he said softly. “To stop holding itself together so tightly.”
Ethan’s breathing deepened again.
His chest rose—and didn’t quite fall back to where it had been before.
His torso had changed.
Not dramatically.
Not yet.
But undeniably.
The lines were softer now. Less defined. His shirt clung differently, no longer draping but resting against him.
Another breath.
His abdomen lifted more this time.
And stayed.
A faint crease formed at his side where there had been none before.
Dr. Varenne’s lips curved—just slightly.
“Years of tension,” he continued, voice almost thoughtful now. “Years of restraint… they leave their mark.”
He leaned forward a fraction.
“And when they disappear…”
Ethan exhaled.
Slow.
Heavy.
“…the body corrects itself.”
That word lingered.
Corrects.
As if responding to it, Ethan’s frame seemed to shift again—not in movement, but in substance. His midsection softened further, spreading subtly outward, no longer held in by unconscious tension. His chest settled lower, fuller, less structured.
His breathing was now unmistakably different.
Each inhale lifted not just his chest, but his belly—rounder now, rising in unison.
Each exhale let it sink… but not completely.
Always leaving a little more behind.
Dr. Varenne’s eyes flicked upward.
Ethan’s face.
Changes there too.
Slight.
But present.
The angles of his jaw seemed less sharp. His cheeks carried a faint, growing fullness, barely perceptible unless one had been watching from the beginning.
Which he had.
Always.
“Good,” the doctor whispered.
Very quietly.
As if savoring it.
“And as you go deeper… your body continues to adapt. To settle into its natural state.”
Ethan didn’t react.
Couldn’t.
His awareness had drifted too far inward.
The room no longer existed to him.
Only the voice.
And the sensations it allowed.
A warmth spread further now—up his chest, across his shoulders, down through his arms. His muscles, once taut, now rested in a softened heaviness. Even the way his clothing touched him had changed—less like a boundary, more like something conforming to him.
Dr. Varenne tilted his head slightly.
Observing.
Calculating.
Enjoying.
“Nothing to hold,” he repeated.
“And nothing to resist.”
Ethan’s body responded again.
Another slow shift.
Subtle.
But cumulative.
His torso pressed more firmly into the chair now, as if gravity itself had deepened around him. The cushion dipped further beneath his weight.
Or perhaps—
It wasn’t just the chair.
A silence settled.
Long.
Unbroken.
Only the sound of breathing remained.
Slow.
Heavy.
Steady.
And in that silence—
The transformation continued.
Quietly.
Inevitably.
Exactly as intended.
“Stay there,” Dr. Varenne murmured, his voice now almost fused with the rhythm of Ethan’s breathing. “Right there… where nothing needs to be held anymore.”
Ethan’s chest rose again.
Heavy.
Unresisted.
And this time, when it fell—
It didn’t return to what it had been.
His shirt stretched more clearly now across his torso, the fabric no longer loose but beginning to cling. Subtle at first, but undeniable. The line of his abdomen pushed outward just enough to distort the smooth fall of the cotton.
Another breath.
His belly lifted.
Rounder.
Slower to fall.
Dr. Varenne’s gaze sharpened.
“Yes…” he whispered, almost to himself.
Ethan’s body continued to respond—not with movement, but with a gradual, accumulating shift. The softness spreading through his midsection deepened, settling into him as if it had always belonged there.
The waistband of his jogging pants pressed more firmly now, slightly indented into his skin.
His chest… broader, heavier—not muscular, but dense. Relaxed in a way that allowed it to drop, to lose its previous structure.
And then—
Something new.
At first, it was barely noticeable.
A faint shadow along his jaw.
Dr. Varenne leaned forward slightly.
Watching.
The shadow darkened.
Not instantly—but steadily, as if time itself had begun to compress. Fine stubble emerged along Ethan’s chin, then his jawline, creeping upward toward his cheeks. It thickened with each passing breath, darkening, filling in.
Ethan didn’t react.
Couldn’t.
His lips parted slightly more as his breathing deepened again.
The stubble became a short beard.
Then fuller.
Denser.
It spread along his jaw, under his chin, connecting slowly toward his sideburns. His once clean, smooth face now carried weight—not just in flesh, but in texture.
Masculine.
Unkempt, yet natural.
Dr. Varenne’s eyes flickered with quiet satisfaction.
“Your body follows its own path,” he said softly. “Free from restraint… it becomes what it was always meant to be.”
Ethan’s brow shifted faintly—
But the thought didn’t form.
His chest rose again.
His shirt pulled tighter.
This time, there was no mistaking it.
The fabric stretched across him, no longer resting but holding. The outline of his torso had changed enough that the seams at his shoulders and sides drew slightly, as if resisting.
Another breath.
His stomach pushed outward further, rounding more fully now, the soft curve pressing against the fabric.
And still—
He sank deeper into the chair.
The cushion compressed more beneath him, responding to the slow increase in his weight. His hips settled heavier, his posture fully surrendered, his body spreading naturally into the space.
Then—
His arms.
The fine hairs along them darkened.
Thickened.
What had been light, barely visible hair became more pronounced, spreading along his forearms, denser, more textured. It crept upward, toward his biceps, subtle but continuous.
His chest followed.
Beneath the fabric, a faint shadow suggested the same change—hair beginning to fill in, hidden but present, altering the way the shirt lay against him.
Dr. Varenne exhaled slowly.
Watching every detail.
“Nothing held back,” he whispered.
“And nothing lost.”
Ethan’s head tilted slightly to the side now, fully relaxed. His face—softer than before—carried that same growing fullness. His cheeks rounded subtly, his jaw less defined beneath the forming beard.
And above—
His hair.
At first, it seemed unchanged.
Then—
A shift.
Subtle, but unmistakable.
The density at his temples thinned. Not dramatically—but enough that the line of his hairline began to recede, just slightly. A faint widening at the corners of his forehead.
Natural.
Gradual.
As if years were passing in minutes.
Ethan’s breathing remained steady.
Unaware.
Each inhale lifted his chest and belly together now—a unified, heavier motion.
Each exhale let him sink deeper.
Further.
More.
His shirt tightened again.
The fabric now clearly strained across his midsection, pulled taut over the rounded shape of his abdomen. Small creases formed where it resisted, the material no longer able to fall naturally.
Another breath—
And it stretched further.
Dr. Varenne’s smile returned.
Small.
Controlled.
But unmistakable.
“Good,” he said softly.
“Very good.”
Ethan didn’t hear it.
Not as words.
Only as something that allowed him to go deeper still.
And as he did—
The changes continued.
Slow.
Unstoppable.
Exactly as intended.
“Now,” Dr. Varenne said softly, his voice threading through the silence like something inevitable, “we’re going to make this… permanent.”
Ethan didn’t stir.
He couldn’t.
His body lay fully surrendered to the chair now—heavy, spread, molded into it as if it had always belonged there. His breathing was slow and deep, each rise of his chest and belly deliberate, grounded.
Unquestioned.
Dr. Varenne leaned forward slightly, elbows resting on his knees, fingers interlaced.
Watching.
Measuring.
Then—
He spoke again.
“Everything you feel right now… this weight, this calm… this absence of tension…”
A pause.
“…this is you.”
The words settled.
Not on the surface—
But deeper.
“Not something new,” he continued. “Not something added.”
Another breath from Ethan. Slow. Full.
His shirt stretched faintly again across his torso.
“…something revealed.”
Ethan’s face remained slack, softened by the growing fullness, framed now by the dense beard that had come to define it. His hairline, subtly receded, gave his features an older, more settled presence.
A different man.
And yet—
No resistance.
“Your body,” Dr. Varenne said, “has finally stopped pretending.”
The faintest shift in Ethan’s expression—like a thought trying to form.
But it dissolved instantly.
Replaced by stillness.
“Years of tension,” the doctor continued, voice lower now, more intimate, “were never strength.”
A pause.
“They were fear.”
Ethan exhaled.
Long.
Heavy.
His belly rose again on the next inhale—full, round, natural in its movement.
“And now…” Dr. Varenne whispered, “…you no longer carry that fear.”
He tilted his head slightly, observing the way Ethan’s body moved—how each breath seemed to reinforce the new shape, the new presence.
“Your body reflects that truth.”
Silence stretched between them.
Then—
“Repeat after me,” the doctor said gently.
A risk.
A test.
Ethan’s lips parted.
Barely.
“…this is me.”
The words came out slow.
Thick.
But clear.
Dr. Varenne smiled faintly.
“Yes,” he murmured. “Again.”
Ethan’s chest rose.
“This… is me.”
No hesitation this time.
No strain.
The words settled into him as naturally as his breathing.
“Good,” Dr. Varenne said.
He shifted slightly in his chair, his gaze never leaving Ethan.
“And you feel… better.”
A beat.
Ethan’s brow smoothed further.
“…better.”
“Calm.”
“…calm.”
“No tension.”
“…no tension.”
Each word sank deeper than the last.
Layer by layer.
Rewriting.
“You’ve always been this way.”
A longer pause.
This one mattered.
Ethan inhaled slowly.
“…always.”
No crack in his voice.
No doubt.
Dr. Varenne watched carefully.
Searching for resistance.
There was none.
Only that slow, grounded breathing.
Only that heavy, settled presence.
Perfect.
“And when you leave here,” the doctor continued, his tone returning to something more clinical—controlled, precise, “you won’t question it.”
Ethan remained still.
“…won’t question it.”
“It will feel natural.”
“…natural.”
“It is natural.”
A final breath.
Deep.
“…it is.”
Silence again.
But this time—
It was different.
Not empty.
Complete.
Dr. Varenne leaned back slowly, studying the result of his work.
The softened body.
The altered face.
The absence of tension.
The absence of doubt.
His lips curved.
Subtle.
Satisfied.
“Very good,” he said quietly.
And for a brief moment—
There was something in his eyes that had nothing to do with therapy.
Something far more deliberate.
Far more controlled.
Then it was gone.
Replaced by calm professionalism.
“Now,” he said, voice steady once more, “you’re going to wake up.”
A pause.
“And you’re going to feel… exactly as you should.”
Ethan’s fingers twitched.
Just slightly.
The first sign of return.
But nothing else changed.
Not the body.
Not the breath.
Not the truth that had just been placed inside him.
And Dr. Varenne—
Watched.
“Now… open your eyes.”
Dr. Varenne’s voice was calm again.
Neutral.
Professional.
As if nothing unusual had happened.
Ethan inhaled.
Deep.
His chest—and belly—rose together, full and steady.
Then—
His eyelids fluttered.
Slowly, they opened.
For a brief second, his gaze was unfocused, drifting somewhere between the lingering depth of hypnosis and waking awareness.
Then it settled.
Grounded.
Calm.
“…yeah,” he murmured, his voice lower than before. He cleared his throat slightly. “I feel…”
He paused.
Searching.
But not for long.
“…good.”
Dr. Varenne nodded once, observing closely.
“How do you feel?” he asked, tone light, almost routine.
Ethan shifted in the chair.
Or rather—
He tried to.
His body moved differently now.
Heavier.
More deliberate.
But there was no surprise in his expression. No confusion.
Only adjustment.
“Relaxed,” he said. “Like… really relaxed.”
His hand moved absently to his stomach.
It rested there naturally.
No hesitation.
No question.
He pressed lightly, almost unconsciously, feeling the soft weight beneath his palm.
A slow breath.
His abdomen rose.
Fell.
Stayed.
He didn’t react.
Dr. Varenne watched that moment carefully.
Then—
“Good,” he said. “That’s exactly what we want.”
Ethan nodded, sitting forward slightly.
The chair resisted for a fraction of a second before releasing him, as if reluctant to let go of the shape it had held.
He stood.
The movement was slower than it used to be—but to him, it felt normal.
Balanced.
Grounded.
He adjusted his shirt without thinking.
The fabric stretched across him.
Clinging.
Natural.
His other hand brushed briefly along his jaw.
Across the beard.
No surprise there either.
Just a passing, habitual gesture.
Dr. Varenne’s eyes narrowed slightly.
Observing.
Testing.
“And your anxiety?” he asked.
Ethan blinked.
As if the word itself was distant.
“…what about it?”
A beat.
Then a small shrug.
“I don’t feel it.”
Simple.
Certain.
Dr. Varenne allowed himself the faintest smile.
“And does anything feel… unusual to you?”
The question was carefully phrased.
Neutral.
Ethan paused.
Just long enough to matter.
Then—
“No.”
No hesitation this time.
“No, I feel… like myself.”
Silence.
Perfect silence.
Dr. Varenne nodded once more, satisfied.
“Good,” he said. “Then the session was successful.”
Ethan stretched slightly, rolling his shoulders.
The movement carried weight—but no tension.
No tightness.
Nothing held.
He reached for his jacket, draped over the side of the chair. He slipped it on, though it didn’t sit quite the same way anymore.
He didn’t notice.
Or rather—
He didn’t question it.
At the door, he turned back briefly.
“Thank you,” he said. “Really.”
Dr. Varenne inclined his head politely.
“You’re welcome.”
Ethan left.
The door closed softly behind him.
Silence returned.
Dr. Varenne remained seated for a moment, unmoving.
Then—
He exhaled.
Slowly.
A different kind of calm.
His gaze drifted toward the chair.
Still slightly indented.
Still holding the impression of the body that had just occupied it.
He stood, smoothing his sleeves.
Walked to his desk.
Opened a small, leather-bound notebook.
And wrote:
Subject 27 — Complete compliance. Identity stabilization successful. No residual doubt.
He paused.
Then added:
Physical adaptation… optimal.
A faint smile returned.
Not warm.
Not kind.
Precise.
Controlled.
He closed the notebook.
Reached for the intercom.
Pressed the button.
“Next patient, please.”
A soft crackle.
Then movement beyond the door.
Dr. Varenne glanced once more at the chair.
Waiting.
Ready.
And as footsteps approached—
His expression settled back into perfect, reassuring calm.
As if nothing at all was wrong.
Under the Storm’s Skin
male weight gain - bearded - bear tf - hairy
The forest stretched endlessly around them, dense and alive, the kind of place where the outside world felt like a distant rumor.
Julien adjusted the straps of his backpack, breathing in deeply. “God, I needed this,” he said, glancing up at the canopy where sunlight filtered through layers of green. “No noise, no emails, no people.”
Marc smirked behind him, stepping over a root with easy confidence. “You say that now. Give it twelve hours before you start missing your coffee machine.”
Julien laughed. “I brought coffee.”
Marc raised an eyebrow. “Yeah? That powdered camping garbage doesn’t count.”
They kept walking, their pace light, practiced. Their movements had an effortless coordination—two bodies used to activity, to control. Their clothes fit them perfectly: slim hiking pants, breathable jackets, shirts clinging just enough to hint at their lean builds. Clean lines. Sharp silhouettes. Nothing excessive.
They looked like men passing through the forest.
Not belonging to it.
Marc pulled out his phone, glanced at the screen, then scoffed. “No signal. Officially off-grid.”
“Good,” Julien replied. “That’s the point.”
A distant rumble rolled across the sky.
They both paused.
Marc looked up first. “Was that thunder?”
Julien frowned slightly, scanning the patches of sky visible through the trees. The light had shifted—subtly, but enough. The gold had dulled into something grayer.
“Probably just passing,” he said. “Forecast didn’t mention anything serious.”
Another rumble. Louder this time.
Marc exhaled through his nose. “Of course it didn’t.”
The wind picked up—not strong, but sudden. Leaves shivered. Branches creaked.
Julien tightened his jacket. “Let’s keep moving. Campsite should be… what, another hour?”
“Yeah, if we don’t get lost,” Marc replied, though his tone was still light.
The first drop hit Julien’s arm—cold and heavy. He stopped. Another drop. Then three. Then ten. And suddenly— Rain. Not a drizzle. Not a warning. A wall.
“Okay—shit,” Marc muttered, already pulling his hood up. “That escalated fast.”
Within seconds, they were soaked. Their clothes clung to them, outlining every line of their bodies, turning light fabric into weight. The trail beneath their feet darkened, softened.
Julien wiped water from his face, blinking against it. “We need shelter.”
“No kidding,” Marc snapped, though there was no real irritation—just urgency.
They stepped off the trail, instinctively moving closer together as visibility dropped. The forest changed under the rain. Sounds dulled, then amplified. The air thickened. Every direction began to look the same.
“Do you remember seeing anything back there?” Julien called over the downpour.
Marc shook his head, water dripping from his jaw. “No. Just trees and more trees.”
Lightning split the sky—brief, blinding.
A second later, thunder cracked so loudly it seemed to shake the ground beneath them.
Julien flinched despite himself. “Okay, yeah, this is not ‘passing.’”
The rain intensified further, if that was even possible. It soaked through layers, through skin, chilling and heavy at the same time.
Marc squinted ahead, wiping his eyes again. “Wait—there!”
Through the curtain of rain, barely visible between the trees—
A shape. Angular. Still. Man-made.
Julien followed his gaze. “Is that…?”
“Cabin,” Marc said, already moving. “Has to be.”
They pushed forward, slipping slightly on wet ground, branches snagging at their clothes. The structure grew clearer with each step—a small, weathered cabin, half-hidden by the forest, its wood darkened with age and rain.
Julien let out a breath that was almost a laugh. “You’ve got to be kidding.”
Marc reached the door first, grabbing the handle. “Please don’t be locked.”
He pushed.
The door creaked open.
They both froze for a fraction of a second, standing on the threshold, rain pouring behind them, the interior dim and still.
Julien glanced at Marc. “Well?”
Marc gave a short shrug. “Better than drowning out here.”
Another crack of thunder decided it for them.
They stepped inside, pulling the door shut against the storm.
Immediately, the sound of rain softened—still loud, but distant now. Contained.
The air inside was different. Warmer than expected. Heavy. Still.
Julien ran a hand through his soaked hair, water dripping onto the wooden floor. “Okay… that’s… lucky.”
Marc leaned back against the door, catching his breath. “Yeah. Real lucky.”
For a moment, neither of them spoke. Outside, the storm raged. Inside, the cabin waited. The door shut with a dull thud behind them. For a moment, neither Julien nor Marc moved.
The storm still roared outside—rain hammering against the wood, wind pressing insistently against the walls—but inside, everything felt… muted. Contained. Almost insulated from the chaos beyond.
Julien exhaled slowly, wiping water from his face again. “Okay… we’re good. We’re good.”
Marc nodded, though his eyes were already scanning the room. “Yeah. Yeah, this is… actually not bad.”
The cabin was small, but solid. A single main room. Rough wooden walls darkened by time, a stone hearth long gone cold, a heavy table near the center, and a narrow bed against one wall. Everything looked old, worn—but maintained, in a strange way. Not abandoned. Just… waiting.
Julien shifted uncomfortably, his soaked shirt clinging to his skin. “God, I’m freezing.”
“Same,” Marc said quickly. He pulled at his sleeve, grimacing at the way the fabric stuck. “We need to get out of these.”
Julien nodded toward a set of hooks near the wall. “Looks like someone left stuff here.”
They stepped closer.
Hanging there were several pieces of clothing—thick flannel shirts, heavy wool pants, suspenders. All of it oversized. Rough. The kind of clothes made for long days of labor, not weekend hikes.
Marc let out a short laugh. “You’ve got to be kidding me. We go from Decathlon to full-on lumberjack?”
Julien smirked faintly. “Better than hypothermia.”
Marc grabbed one of the shirts, holding it up. “This thing’s huge.”
“Yeah, well,” Julien said, already pulling off his wet jacket, “we’re not exactly in a position to be picky.”
They stripped quickly, more out of necessity than comfort. Wet fabric peeled away from their bodies, hitting the wooden floor with soft, heavy sounds. The air against their skin felt warmer than expected—not cozy, but not cold either. Just… present.
Marc paused briefly as he pulled his shirt over his head, running a hand across his arm.
“…Weird.”
Julien glanced over, halfway through changing. “What?”
Marc frowned, flexing his fingers slightly. “I don’t know. Just—” He shrugged. “Feels like the air’s warmer than it should be.”
Julien exhaled through his nose. “Yeah, I thought that too. Cabin’s probably insulated or something.”
“Yeah. Probably.”
Marc didn’t sound entirely convinced—but he dropped it.
They pulled on the clothes.
The fabric was coarse, heavier than anything they were used to. Julien slipped into a thick flannel shirt, the sleeves hanging past his wrists, the shoulders loose. The pants bunched slightly at his waist even when tied.
Marc buttoned his own shirt, shaking his head with a grin. “Okay, yeah—this is ridiculous.”
Julien chuckled, rolling his sleeves. “We look like we’re about to chop wood.”
Marc glanced down at himself. Then paused.
“…Huh.”
Julien noticed the shift. “What?”
Marc tugged lightly at the front of his shirt. “It’s just—” He hesitated. “It doesn’t feel as loose as it should.”
Julien raised an eyebrow. “What, you shrink in the rain?”
Marc smirked faintly. “Very funny.”
But he looked down again.
The fabric still hung on him—but maybe not as dramatically as it had a moment before.
Julien adjusted his own shirt, then stilled.
There was a subtle difference. Hard to define.
The weight of the fabric on his shoulders felt… different. Not heavier exactly—but more present. Like it had settled into place rather than draping loosely.He flexed his hand unconsciously, then pressed his palm briefly against his side. Warm. Warmer than it should have been.
“…You feel that?” he asked.
Marc glanced up. “Feel what?”
Julien hesitated, searching for the right words. “I don’t know. Just… warmer. Like—” He shook his head. “Like my body’s holding heat or something.”
Marc shrugged, walking past him toward the center of the room. “We were just out in a storm. Bodies do weird things.”
“Yeah,” Julien said quietly. “Yeah, that’s probably it.”
Marc dropped into one of the chairs near the table. The wood creaked slightly under his weight.
He blinked.
“…Did that always do that?”
Julien looked over. “Do what?”
“The chair,” Marc said, shifting slightly. Another creak. “Feels like it’s… I don’t know. Lighter or something.”
Julien stepped closer, resting a hand on the back of another chair. It felt solid. Normal.
He pushed it slightly. “It’s fine.”
Marc let out a breath, rubbing his face. “Yeah. Yeah, I’m just tired.”
Julien nodded slowly, though his gaze lingered for a second longer than necessary.
Outside, the storm showed no sign of stopping.
Inside, the cabin settled around them.
And beneath the warmth of dry clothes and the illusion of safety, something—subtle, quiet, undeniable—had already begun to shift.
Time lost its shape inside the cabin.
Minutes stretched. Or maybe it was hours.
The storm never let up. Rain battered the roof in steady waves, sometimes soft, sometimes violent, as if something outside was testing the limits of the walls. The light beyond the window had dulled into a permanent gray, making it impossible to tell how much of the day had passed.
Inside, the air remained warm.
Too warm.
Julien shifted in his chair, rolling his shoulders slowly. The flannel clung differently now—not tight, not restrictive, but… settled. As if it belonged where it rested.
He frowned slightly and tugged at the fabric near his chest.
It didn’t fall away like before.
Across from him, Marc exhaled sharply, dragging a hand through his hair.
“Okay… no, seriously.”
Julien looked up. “What?”
Marc was staring at his own arm.
“I shaved this morning.”
Julien blinked. “…Yeah?”
Marc raised his forearm slightly, turning it toward the light.
A faint shadow darkened the skin—not just stubble, but more than that. Thicker. Denser. Not fully grown, but wrong for the span of a few hours.
Julien leaned forward, squinting.
“…Huh.”
Marc let out a dry laugh. “Huh? That’s your reaction?”
Julien hesitated. “It’s probably just the lighting.”
Marc looked at him.
Then back at his arm.
“…Yeah,” he said slowly. “Yeah, okay. Lighting.”
But he didn’t sound convinced.
A low crack of thunder rolled overhead.
Julien shifted again, this time leaning forward, elbows on his knees. The movement felt… heavier than it should have been. Subtle, but there.
He froze for a second.
Then pushed himself upright again, more deliberately.
Marc noticed.
“You okay?”
“Yeah,” Julien said quickly. Too quickly. “Just stiff.”
Marc nodded, but his eyes lingered.
Silence settled between them again—thick, almost tangible.
Julien’s gaze drifted toward the small mirror fixed to the wall near the bed.
He stood, almost without thinking, and walked toward it.
The man staring back at him looked like him.
Same face. Same features.
But—
He leaned closer.
There was something in the lines of his jaw. Not different, exactly. Just… fuller. Softer around the edges. His cheeks carried a faint weight that hadn’t been there that morning.
He lifted a hand, brushing his thumb along his jawline.
Rough.
He stilled.
That wasn’t possible.
He had shaved. Carefully. Smooth skin.
Now—
Not a full beard.
But the beginning of one.
Already.
Behind him, Marc let out a short, humorless chuckle.
“Okay, yeah, no. This is—this is bullshit.”
Julien turned.
Marc was on his feet now, pacing once across the room before stopping abruptly.
“This is just… what, some kind of reaction?” he said, gesturing vaguely. “Humidity, stress, I don’t know—people hallucinate weird stuff all the time.”
Julien watched him, saying nothing.
Marc kept going, faster now.
“We’ve been hiking all day, we get caught in a storm, adrenaline spikes—body does weird things. That’s it.”
Julien glanced down briefly at Marc’s shirt.
It fit him differently now.
Not oversized.
Not really.
The shoulders filled it more. The fabric rested against his chest instead of hanging loose.
Marc followed his gaze—and immediately crossed his arms.
“What?”
Julien shook his head. “Nothing.”
“Say it.”
Julien hesitated.
“…Your shirt.”
Marc looked down sharply. For a second— Just a second— Something flickered across his face. Then he scoffed, loud and forced.
“Oh, come on. You think I just—what, grew into it in two hours?”
Julien didn’t answer.
Marc ran both hands over his face, exhaling hard.
“This is stupid,” he muttered. “We’re tired. That’s all.”
He dropped back into the chair. It creaked again. Louder this time. Marc froze. Slowly, he shifted his weight. Another creak. He looked up at Julien, something uncertain breaking through his expression.
“…That didn’t do that before.”
Julien didn’t reply. He was too busy noticing his own breathing. Deeper. Heavier. His chest rising more slowly under the flannel, the fabric moving with a weight that hadn’t been there earlier.
He pressed his hand lightly against his side again. Still warm. Warmer. And now— Softer. He pulled his hand away. Marc leaned forward, elbows on his knees, staring at the floor.
“This is just in our heads,” he said quietly. “It has to be.”
Julien looked at him. Then, slowly, back at the mirror. The man reflected there hadn’t changed completely. Not yet. But the difference was no longer something he could ignore. Subtle. Quiet. Undeniable. And outside— the storm kept raging.
If anything, it grew louder—as if it had been waiting.
Inside the cabin, something shifted with it. Not subtle anymore. Not quiet. Marc stood abruptly, the legs of the chair scraping harshly against the wooden floor.
“No.”
Julien looked up, startled by the tone. Marc was breathing faster now, his chest rising heavily beneath the flannel. The fabric—once loose—stretched faintly across his torso, clinging in places it hadn’t before.
“This isn’t normal,” Marc said, voice tight. “This isn’t—this isn’t just stress or whatever you think it is.”
Julien stood slowly.
“I never said it was.”
Marc let out a sharp, humorless laugh. “Right. You just… what? Accept it?”
Julien hesitated. That was the problem. He didn’t have an answer. Another crack of thunder shook the cabin, the walls groaning softly in response. Marc ran both hands through his hair—then stopped.
His fingers lingered at the top of his head. Something… different. He pressed down slightly, as if testing it. Less density. Less resistance. His jaw tightened.
“No. No, no, no—”
Julien took a step toward him. “Marc—”
“Don’t,” Marc snapped, backing away. “Don’t say my name like that.”
Julien froze.
Marc’s breathing was louder now. Rougher. His face—fuller, undeniably—was flushed, whether from heat or panic, it was impossible to tell. The beginnings of a beard darkened his jaw, no longer subtle, no longer deniable.
“This place—” Marc gestured wildly around them. “There’s something wrong with this place.”
Julien glanced instinctively at the walls, the low ceiling, the hanging clothes. The warmth. The stillness. The way everything felt… settled.
“…Maybe,” he admitted quietly.
Marc stared at him.
“You hear yourself?”
Julien swallowed.
“I’m just saying—we don’t know what’s happening.”
“Exactly,” Marc shot back. “So we leave.”
Another silence. Heavy.
Julien shook his head slowly. “In this?” he said, gesturing toward the door as the wind howled outside. “You won’t make it ten minutes.”
“I’ll take my chances.”
“You’re not thinking clearly.”
Marc stepped closer now, his presence suddenly… larger. Not just emotionally—physically. His shoulders filled the space between them, his frame heavier, grounded in a way that hadn’t been there before.
“Thinking clearly?” Marc repeated. “You’re the one standing here like this is fine.”
Julien felt it then. Not just the heat. Not just the weight. But something deeper. A pull. Subtle, but steady. As if the cabin itself was asking him to stay.
“I’m not saying it’s fine,” Julien said carefully. “I’m saying running out there won’t fix it.”
Marc shook his head, stepping back again.
“You don’t get it.”
Julien’s voice softened. “Then explain it to me.”
Marc opened his mouth— And stopped. Because he couldn’t. Because there were no words for what was happening to them. Only the feeling. The change. The loss of something familiar, slipping further away with every passing minute.
“I’m not staying here,” Marc said finally.
Julien’s chest tightened.
“…Marc.”
But Marc was already moving. He grabbed his pack from the floor, fumbling slightly with the straps—his hands less precise than before, thicker somehow. He shrugged it on anyway, ignoring the way it sat awkwardly against his broader back.
Julien stepped forward. “Wait—at least let the storm pass.”
“No.”
Marc moved to the door. His hand hovered on the handle for a fraction of a second. Then he turned back. For a brief moment, something flickered in his expression.
Fear. Real, unfiltered.
“…You’re coming?” he asked.
Julien didn’t answer immediately. He looked at Marc. Really looked. At the heavier line of his jaw. At the way his shirt now fit like it had been made for him. At the presence he carried—solid, undeniable.
Then he glanced around the cabin. The warmth. The stillness. The strange, growing sense of… belonging. He shook his head.
“…I think we’re safer here.”
Marc stared at him. Disbelief. Then anger.
“Unbelievable,” he muttered.
He yanked the door open. The storm exploded inward—wind, rain, cold slamming into the warm space like a living thing. For a second, Marc hesitated on the threshold.
Then— He stepped out. The door slammed shut behind him. Julien flinched. Silence rushed back in, broken only by the muffled violence of the storm outside. He stood there, unmoving. Listening. Waiting for the sound of footsteps. A voice. Anything. But there was nothing. Only the storm. And the cabin. Holding him.
The storm swallowed Marc almost immediately. The moment he stepped beyond the threshold, the warmth vanished—ripped away by cold rain and violent wind. It hit him like a wall. His breath caught in his throat as water soaked through him in seconds, clinging to his already heavy clothes.
“Shit—”
The word was torn from his mouth, carried off into the storm. He pushed forward anyway. One step. Then another. The forest had changed. What had felt open, almost inviting before was now dense, shifting, hostile. The trees blurred together under sheets of rain. The ground, once firm, had turned slick and uneven beneath his boots.
Marc wiped his face, but it didn’t help. Water kept pouring into his eyes.
“Just keep moving,” he muttered to himself. “Just… get out.”
But out of what? He didn’t even know which direction he had come from anymore. A branch caught his shoulder—harder than expected. He stumbled, barely catching himself. His balance felt… off. His body didn’t respond the way it should have. Slower. Heavier.
His breath came faster now. Too fast. His chest heaved under the soaked flannel, the fabric clinging tightly to him. His stomach—he felt it with every step now—shifted, pulled downward with a weight that hadn’t existed hours ago.
“No,” he said under his breath. “No, this is—this is nothing.”
He kept walking. Or tried to. The ground gave way beneath his foot. Marc slipped. Hard.
He hit the forest floor with a wet, heavy thud, the impact knocking the air from his lungs.
For a moment, he didn’t move.
Rain hammered against him, cold and relentless. Mud seeped into his clothes, into his skin.
He groaned, trying to push himself up. His arms trembled. Failed.
“…Come on,” he muttered, voice weak now.
He rolled slightly onto his side, grimacing as pain flared through his leg. Something wasn’t right. Not just the fall. His body— It felt wrong. Too heavy to lift. Too slow to obey. His head spun. The forest tilted. The storm roared louder.
Then— Nothing.
Inside the cabin, Julien stood near the door, unmoving. He had tried not to think about it. Tried to convince himself that Marc would come back. That he’d realize it was too dangerous, that the storm would force him to return.
But the minutes passed. Too many. And the silence— No footsteps. No voice. Nothing. Julien exhaled slowly, his hand tightening unconsciously at his side.
“…Damn it.”
He grabbed his jacket. It felt tighter than before. He ignored it.
The moment he opened the door, the cold hit him—but it didn’t bite as sharply as he expected. His body held the warmth longer now, like it refused to let it go.
Still— The storm was brutal.
“Marc!” he shouted into the rain.
No answer. Julien stepped out, pulling the door shut behind him, and moved into the forest. Each step was deliberate. Grounded. Heavy. Branches scraped against his arms, but he barely felt them. His focus narrowed, cutting through the chaos of the storm.
“Marc!”
A pause.
Then— Something. Not a voice. A shape. Half-hidden against the ground. Julien moved faster. And then he saw him. Marc lay sprawled in the mud, motionless, his body partially turned to the side. Rain soaked him completely, his clothes plastered against him, outlining a form that had changed far beyond anything Julien could deny now.
“Shit—Marc!”
Julien dropped to his knees beside him, grabbing his shoulder. No response.
His face— Fuller. Heavier. His beard now unmistakable, dark against his skin. Julien swallowed hard.
“Hey—hey, come on.”
He shook him again. Nothing. But he was breathing. Slow. Deep. Julien exhaled in relief.
“Okay… okay.”
He slid an arm under Marc’s shoulders, trying to lift him. And froze.
“…Jesus.”
Marc was heavy.
Not just dead weight—real weight. Solid. Dense.
Julien adjusted his grip, straining slightly as he pulled him upright. Marc’s body sagged against him, unresponsive.
“Come on,” Julien muttered. “Come on, man…”
He got him to his feet—barely. Marc slumped immediately against him, his full weight pressing down. Julien staggered, then steadied himself. Step by step. Slow. Difficult. But steady.
The forest seemed longer on the way back. Or maybe it was just the weight.
The effort.
Julien’s breathing deepened, his chest rising heavily under the flannel as he pushed forward, dragging, supporting, carrying.
By the time the cabin came into view, his muscles burned—but not in the way he expected. There was strength there now. Endurance. Something grounded.
Something that held. He reached the door, shoved it open, and guided Marc inside. The warmth rushed over them again.
Julien lowered him carefully onto the bed. For a moment, he just stood there, breathing hard, rain dripping from his clothes onto the wooden floor. Then he moved. Quick. Efficient. He pulled Marc’s boots off first, then his soaked pants, peeling the heavy fabric away. The flannel shirt followed, clinging stubbornly before finally giving way.
Julien paused. Just for a second. Marc’s body— There was no denying it now.
Broader. Heavier. Covered in thickening hair across his chest and stomach. His torso rose and fell slowly, solid, grounded in a way that felt almost… immovable.
Julien swallowed. Then grabbed a dry blanket and pulled it over him.
“Yeah…” he murmured quietly. “You’re not going anywhere.”
He sat back slightly, watching him. Outside, the storm still raged. But inside— Marc was breathing. And Julien, for the first time since he had left— wasn’t alone anymore.
Marc woke slowly. Not all at once—but in fragments. First, the weight. A deep, crushing heaviness pressing him into the mattress, like his body had sunk into something that refused to let him rise. Then the warmth—thick, enveloping, almost suffocating.
His breath came in low, slow pulls. Too slow. His chest rose… and fell… heavy beneath the blanket. Then came the ache. Dull. Everywhere. Not sharp pain—something broader. Like his entire body had been strained beyond what it was meant to carry.
His eyes opened. The ceiling above him was unfamiliar. Wooden. Dark. Still. The cabin. Memory came back in pieces.
The storm. The argument. The forest— Marc inhaled sharply and tried to sit up. Bad idea. His body resisted. Not just from weakness—but from weight.
“—ugh…”
The sound that left his throat was deeper than he expected. Rougher. He pushed again, slower this time, bracing his arms against the bed. They trembled. Thicker. He froze. His gaze dropped. His hands.
Broad. Heavy. The fingers thicker, the veins less defined beneath a layer of something softer.
“…no.”
The word barely escaped. He forced himself upright. And immediately felt it. His stomach.It shifted as he moved—pulled downward with a weight that made his breath hitch. It rested heavily against his thighs as he leaned forward, undeniable, impossible to ignore.
Marc stared at it. Then touched it. Slowly. The flesh yielded under his palm.
Warm. Real.
“…No,” he said again, louder this time.
A chair creaked somewhere in the room. Marc’s head snapped up. Julien. Sitting across from him. Watching. Marc blinked.
Once. Twice. And for a second— His brain refused to process what he was seeing.
“…Julien?”
The voice that answered was calm.
“Yeah.”
But the man— The man was not the one he had left.Julien sat heavily in the chair, his posture relaxed, grounded. His frame had expanded—broad shoulders filling the flannel, his chest thick, his stomach resting naturally beneath it. His arms were larger, covered in dense hair that caught the low light of the cabin.
His face— Fuller. Bearded. A thick, dark beard covering his jaw, blending into heavier features that gave him a presence Marc had never seen before.
And his hair— Thinner at the top. Noticeably so. Marc stared.
“…What the fuck.”
Julien didn’t react immediately. He just held his gaze.
“I was wondering when you’d wake up.”
Marc shook his head, backing slightly against the wall behind the bed.
“No—no, that’s not—what the fuck happened to you?”
Julien exhaled slowly.
“…Same thing that happened to you.”
Marc let out a broken laugh.
“Yeah? Yeah, okay—good one.”
He looked down again. At his body. The size of it. The weight. The hair across his chest, thick and dark, rising and falling with each heavy breath. His hands—still resting on his stomach—barely spanning its width. His throat tightened.
“This isn’t real,” he said quickly. “This is—this is some kind of—of—”
He pushed himself to his feet. Or tried to. The movement was clumsy, unbalanced. His center of gravity had changed. His body didn’t move the way he expected—it lagged, shifted, pulled. But he managed. Barely.
“Mirror,” he muttered. “I need to—”
Julien didn’t stop him. Didn’t move. He just watched. Marc crossed the room in uneven steps, each one heavier than the last, until he reached the small mirror fixed to the wall. And looked.For a moment— Nothing.His mind refused to connect what he was seeing.
The man in the reflection—He was large. Obese.
His face round, cheeks heavy, jaw softened beneath a dense beard that fully covered his lower face. His neck thicker, blending into his shoulders.
His eyes— Wide. Panicked. Familiar. Marc’s breath caught.
“No…”
He leaned closer. The mirror didn’t change.
“This isn’t me.”
He touched his face. The reflection followed. The beard scratched under his fingers. Real. He grabbed the edge of the mirror, gripping it tightly.
“No—no, no, no—this isn’t—this isn’t possible—”
His voice cracked. Behind him, Julien spoke quietly.
“It is.”
Marc spun around.
“How are you so calm?!” he snapped. “Look at you! Look at—this—” he gestured wildly between them “—this isn’t normal!”
Julien met his gaze.
“I know.”
“Then why aren’t you freaking out?!”
A pause. Julien leaned back slightly in his chair, the wood creaking under his weight—but holding.
“…Because it’s not stopping,” he said simply.
Marc froze. Julien’s eyes dropped briefly—to his own body, then back to Marc.
“It didn’t stop when you left. It didn’t stop when I stayed.”
Marc shook his head, backing away again.
“No. No, we just—we just need to get out of here.”
Julien didn’t answer. Marc’s breathing quickened. His chest rose faster now, his body moving with a heavy, visible effort.
“We leave,” Marc insisted. “We go back. We find someone. A hospital, a—something—this can be fixed.”
Julien watched him. Long. Quiet.
“…Can it?” he asked.
Marc opened his mouth. Stopped. Because he didn’t know. Because deep down— He already felt it. This wasn’t something external. It wasn’t something on them. It was in them. Marc looked back at the mirror. At the man staring back. And for the first time— The panic didn’t disappear. But it shifted. Into something heavier. Something harder to escape.
Outside, the storm had begun to fade. But inside—there was no going back.
Marc stumbled back from the mirror. One step. Then another. As if distance alone could undo what he haseen.
“No… no—”
His voice came out strained, uneven. His chest rose faster now, dragging air in heavy, audible pulls. The movement made everything worse—his body moved with him, responded with weight, with presence.
There was no separation. He shook his head violently.
“This isn’t me.”
Behind him, Julien didn’t move. Didn’t interrupt. Marc kept backing up until the edge of the bed hit behind his knees. He dropped onto it heavily, the wood creaking under him. His hands went to his head, fingers digging into his scalp—
Then stopping. Again. That same spot. Less hair. More skin. He let out a broken sound, somewhere between a laugh and a gasp.
“No, no, no—”
He pushed himself up again, restless, agitated, pacing now—but the pacing was wrong. Slower. Each step deliberate, weighted. His body resisted speed, resisted urgency.
It imposed something else.
“Say something!” he snapped suddenly, turning toward Julien. “You’re just sitting there—say something!”
Julien met his gaze. Calm. Grounded.
“I don’t think fighting it is helping,” he said quietly.
Marc stared at him in disbelief.
“Fighting it?” he repeated. “You think this is something you just—accept?”
Julien’s eyes flicked briefly over Marc’s body. Not judgmental. Not shocked. Observing.
“It’s already happened,” he said.
“That’s not an answer!”
Marc’s voice cracked again, louder this time, filling the cabin.
Julien leaned forward slightly, resting his forearms on his thighs. The movement was slow, controlled. Natural.
“You felt it out there, didn’t you?” he said. “Your body not responding the same way. Heavier. Slower.”
Marc didn’t reply. Because he had. Because he still felt it. Julien continued.
“It didn’t feel like something being done to you,” he added. “It felt like… something settling.”
Marc shook his head violently.
“No. No, that’s not—don’t twist it like that.”
But his voice had lost strength. Julien stood up. The shift was subtle—but it filled the room. He wasn’t just bigger. He occupied space differently now. Stable. Rooted.
Marc’s eyes flicked over him again despite himself—the breadth of his shoulders, the way his shirt stretched naturally across his chest and stomach, the quiet confidence in how he moved.
Julien took a step closer. Marc instinctively tensed.
“Don’t.”
Julien stopped. Held his hands open, non-threatening.
“I’m not saying it’s normal,” he said. “I’m saying… it’s real.”
Marc let out a slow breath, his chest rising and falling heavily.
“I don’t want this.”
Julien nodded once.
“I know.”
Silence stretched between them again.
The storm outside had softened now—rain still falling, but no longer violent. Just steady. Persistent. Marc’s gaze drifted back toward the mirror. Then away. Then back again. He hesitated. And this time— He didn’t rush. He stepped closer. Slowly. Like approaching something dangerous. Or inevitable. He stopped in front of it.
The man in the reflection didn’t change. Didn’t flicker. Didn’t give him an escape. Marc exhaled shakily. His hand lifted again—almost automatically—and rested on his stomach.
It shifted slightly under his palm. Heavy. Warm. Present. His fingers pressed in. The flesh yielded. He swallowed.
“…It doesn’t feel wrong,” he whispered.
Julien didn’t answer. Marc’s brow furrowed, confused by his own words.
“I mean—” he tried again, voice unsteady “—it’s not… what I was. But it—”
He stopped. Because he didn’t have the words. Because what he was feeling wasn’t panic anymore. Not entirely.Something else had slipped in. Something quieter. Julien spoke softly behind him.
“It feels… stable.”
Marc’s eyes closed briefly. Then opened again. Still staring at himself.
“…Yeah,” he admitted.
The word barely audible. But real. Outside, the rain continued to fall. Inside— the cabin held them. Not as intruders anymore. But as something that belonged. Silence settled again in the cabin. But it wasn’t the same silence as before. Something had shifted.
Marc’s hand still rested on his stomach, fingers slowly pressing, exploring the weight, the warmth… the presence. His breathing steadied, no longer panicked—just deep, heavy.
Across the room, Julien watched him. Not with concern anymore. With something softer.
“Feels different, doesn’t it?” Julien said quietly.
Marc didn’t answer immediately. His thumb moved slowly across his skin, feeling the texture, the thickness, the unfamiliar density that now felt… consistent.
“…Yeah,” he admitted.
He lifted his gaze. And this time, when he looked at Julien— He didn’t recoil. He observed. Really observed. The breadth of his shoulders. The way the flannel stretched across his chest. The weight of his stomach resting naturally as he sat. The beard—full, dense, framing his face in a way that made him look… older, yes—but also stronger. More present. Marc swallowed.
“You don’t look…” he hesitated, searching for the word. “…wrong.”
Julien’s brow lifted slightly.
“No?”
Marc shook his head slowly.
“…No.”
He stood up again, more carefully this time. His movements were still heavy—but no longer resisted. He crossed the room, each step grounded, deliberate.
When he stopped in front of Julien, the difference in their bodies was undeniable. And yet— It didn’t feel like distance anymore. Marc hesitated. Then, almost instinctively, he reached out. His hand pressed lightly against Julien’s chest. Warm. Firm beneath the softness. Julien didn’t move away. Marc’s fingers shifted slightly, testing the weight there, the thickness.
“…You’re solid,” he murmured, almost to himself.
Julien let out a quiet breath.
“So are you.”
Marc huffed a faint, surprised laugh.
“Yeah… I guess I am.”
Julien’s hand lifted in return, slower, giving Marc time to pull back. He didn’t. The contact came to rest at Marc’s side—then lower, at the curve of his waist, where the weight of his body settled naturally. Marc tensed— Then didn’t. Julien’s thumb moved slightly, not exploring, just… acknowledging. Present. Marc exhaled.
“That’s… new,” he said.
Julien’s lips curved faintly.
“Not bad, though.”
Marc met his gaze again. Something unspoken passed between them. Recognition. Not of who they had been— But of what they were now. Closer. Heavier. Real in a different way. Marc’s hand shifted, gripping lightly at Julien’s shirt now, feeling the fabric stretch over him.
“You fill this out better than I did,” he muttered.
Julien let out a low chuckle.
“Same goes for you.”
Marc shook his head, but he was smiling now. Slightly. Uncertain—but real. Their proximity lingered. Neither stepping away. Neither rushing. Just standing there, bodies close, breathing slow and deep, the warmth of the cabin surrounding them. Marc’s gaze dropped briefly—to Julien’s beard. Then back up.
“…It suits you,” he said.
Julien tilted his head slightly.
“You too.”
A pause. Then— Marc closed the distance. Not rushed. Not desperate. Just… certain. Their foreheads brushed first.
Then, slowly— They kissed.
It wasn’t sharp or urgent. It was heavy. Grounded. Like everything else they had become. Time seemed to stretch again. But differently now. Outside, the storm had faded. The rain had stopped. The forest had gone still. But inside— Neither of them noticed. The cabin held them. And for the first time— they weren’t resisting it anymore.
They Do Not Keep What They Steal
Racial tf - white to black
The village appeared just before sunset. It wasn’t on any map. Daniel had been walking for hours through dense, humid forest when the trees suddenly thinned, revealing a clearing dotted with low clay huts and thin trails of smoke rising into the orange sky. He stopped.
“…Well,” he muttered under his breath, adjusting the strap of his satchel. “That’s promising.”
A few figures had already noticed him. Men first. Still. Silent. Watching. Then the children, peeking from behind their mothers’ legs. Daniel gave a polite smile, raising one hand slightly—not quite a wave, just enough to appear harmless.
“I’m not here to cause trouble,” he called out, his voice calm, controlled.
No one answered. A man stepped forward after a moment. Older. Lean. His face marked with deep lines and white ash patterns across his forehead. The others shifted slightly behind him. Authority. Daniel recognized it instantly. The leader.
“Good,” Daniel said softly, almost to himself.
Then, louder:
“I’m looking for something.”
The old man didn’t react right away. His eyes moved slowly over Daniel’s clothes—the worn khaki, the boots, the compass hanging at his chest… then finally his face.
When he spoke, his voice was low. Measured.
“You are not from here.”
Daniel smiled faintly.
“No.”
A pause. The air felt heavier now. The old man took a few steps closer. Behind him, the villagers remained perfectly still.
“You come for the temple.”
This time, it was a statement. Daniel hesitated, but only for a fraction of a second. Then he shrugged lightly.
“I’ve heard stories.”
The old man’s eyes hardened.
“Stories are not for you.”
Silence spread across the clearing like a shadow. Daniel exhaled slowly, forcing a relaxed tone.
“Look… I’m just passing through. Exploring. That’s all.”
The old man stepped closer again. Close enough now that Daniel could see the details in his eyes—dark, unwavering… and something else. Not fear. Certainty.
“You take nothing,” the old man said. “Nothing from the ancestors.”
Daniel’s smile thinned slightly.
“I don’t believe in curses.”
A murmur passed through the villagers. Soft. Uneasy. The old man didn’t move.
“That is why you are in danger.”
Daniel let out a quiet breath, almost amused.
“Danger doesn’t usually come with warnings.”
Another silence. Longer this time. Then the old man spoke again, slower.
“Only one of us can carry what rests there.”
He gestured vaguely toward the forest behind Daniel.
“The relic chooses its son.”
Daniel tilted his head.
“…Its son.”
“Yes.”
“And if someone else takes it?”
For the first time, something shifted in the old man’s expression. Not anger. Not fear. Something deeper.
“They do not keep what they steal.”
Daniel let out a quiet chuckle.
“I’ve heard worse.”
He adjusted his satchel again, already turning slightly away.
“I appreciate the concern.”
The old man’s voice stopped him.
“Listen.”
Daniel paused—but didn’t turn back immediately.
“When the forest gives a warning,” the old man said, “it is not to protect itself.”
A beat.
“It is to protect you.”
Daniel glanced over his shoulder. Their eyes met one last time. Then he smiled. Confident. Dismissive.
“I’ll take my chances.”
And just like that, the moment broke. The villagers didn’t move. Didn’t speak. They simply watched him leave. Watched as he disappeared back into the trees. The old man remained where he was, unmoving, long after Daniel was gone. One of the younger men finally stepped closer.
“Should we stop him?”
The old man shook his head slowly.
“No.”
His gaze remained fixed on the forest.
“It has already begun.”
The forest changed as soon as the village disappeared behind him. It wasn’t immediate. At first, it was subtle. The air grew thicker. The sounds… fewer. No birds. No insects. Just the slow, rhythmic crunch of Daniel’s boots against the damp earth. He frowned slightly, adjusting the compass hanging at his chest. The needle trembled.
“…That’s new.”
He tapped it once. It spun. Then settled again—pointing somewhere deeper into the jungle.
“Good enough.”
He kept walking. It took him another two hours before he saw it. The entrance. Half-buried in vines and roots, carved stone emerged from the earth like something trying to crawl back into it. Daniel stopped.
A slow smile spread across his face.
“…There you are.”
He stepped closer, brushing aside thick strands of vegetation. Symbols covered the stone. Worn. Ancient. Deliberate. He didn’t recognize the language—but he didn’t need to. Warnings always looked the same. He ran his fingers across one of the carvings.
“Yeah… I’ve seen worse.”
The entrance was narrow. Dark. The light from outside barely reached inside the first few meters. Daniel pulled a small lantern from his bag and lit it. The flame flickered violently for a second—then steadied. He hesitated. Just for a moment.
Then—He stepped in. The temperature dropped immediately. Cool. Still. The kind of stillness that didn’t feel empty… but occupied. Daniel exhaled slowly.
“Alright.”
His voice echoed softly along the stone corridor. Too softly. As if something swallowed the sound before it could travel far. The first trap almost got him. A faint click beneath his boot. He froze.
“…No.”
Slowly, carefully, he shifted his weight back.
A second later— A spear shot across the corridor from the wall ahead. Fast. Precise. Deadly. It slammed into the stone behind him with a sharp crack. Daniel stared at it for a second. Then let out a breath.
“…Okay.”
A small grin.
“Now we’re talking.”
Further in, the path narrowed. Pressure plates. Hidden gaps. A section of floor that dropped away into darkness when he tested it with a loose stone. He adapted quickly. Observing. Testing. Learning. Each step calculated. Each movement deliberate. The deeper he went, the more the temple seemed to resist him. Not violently. Not chaotically. But intelligently. As if it was… watching.
Then, he reached the chamber. It was vast. Far larger than the entrance suggested. The ceiling rose into darkness, supported by thick stone pillars carved with the same symbols as outside. And in the center, A pedestal. Simple. Unassuming. And on it, The relic. Daniel didn’t move at first. He just stared.
“…That’s it?”
No visible traps. No mechanisms. Just… there. Waiting. He stepped closer. Slowly. Carefully. Nothing happened. He circled it once. Still nothing. His frown deepened.
“That’s disappointing.”
The relic was smaller than he expected. Worn. Dark. Its surface etched with faint patterns that seemed to shift when he looked at them too long. He reached out, Then stopped. The old man’s voice echoed faintly in his memory.
They do not keep what they steal.
Daniel smirked.
“…Yeah.”
He grabbed it. For a second, Nothing. Then the lantern flickered. The air tightened. And somewhere deep within the temple... Something shifted. Daniel frowned, looking around.
“…Hello?”
Silence. Heavy. Absolute. Then the flame went out. Darkness swallowed everything. Daniel stood there, the relic in his hand. Listening. Waiting. His heartbeat louder now. Too loud.
Then, A sound. Not from the walls. Not from the ground. From inside the chamber. Low. Almost… like a breath. Daniel swallowed slowly.
“…Right.”
He tightened his grip on the relic. Forced a grin no one could see.
“Time to go.”
And he turned, Unaware that the temple hadn’t tried to stop him. Not once. Because it didn’t need to.
Daniel didn’t run. Not at first. He moved quickly, yes—but controlled. Efficient. Focused. The way he always did. The way that had kept him alive this long. The temple let him leave. That was the first thing that bothered him. No collapsing walls. No final trap. No pursuit. Just the same corridors… silent… still… almost indifferent.
By the time he stepped back into the jungle, the sun had already begun to fall. The air hit him differently now. Heavier. Warmer. He exhaled sharply, rolling his shoulders.
“…Alright.”
He looked down at the relic in his hand. Still there. Still real. A slow grin formed.
“Worth it.”
That night, he made camp at the edge of a narrow clearing. Small fire. Minimal light. He didn’t want attention. Didn’t need it. He noticed the first change when he reached for his canteen. He stopped mid-motion.
“…What.”
His hand. It looked the same. And yet— Not quite. The skin. Darker. Not by much. Just enough to make him frown. He turned his wrist slightly, studying it under the firelight.
“Sunburn,” he muttered.
But it wasn’t red. It wasn’t irritated. It was… deeper. Even. He rubbed at it with his thumb. Nothing came off. A pause. Then a quiet chuckle.
“Alright… that’s new.”
He ignored it. The second change came the next morning. Daniel woke with a strange sensation. Not pain. Pressure. Like his skin didn’t quite fit right anymore. He sat up slowly, running a hand over his face. Then froze. His jaw. He pressed his fingers against it.
“…No.”
It felt different. Broader. Subtly—but undeniably. He stood quickly, grabbing a small mirror from his bag. Held it up. Stared. At first, Nothing. Then, He saw it. His face hadn’t changed. Not completely. But something in the structure… The angles…
“…No.”
His voice came out lower. Tighter. He leaned closer. Eyes scanning every detail. His nose— Was it always that wide? His cheekbones— Were they higher? He pulled the mirror away. Then brought it back. Again. Again.
“Sleep,” he said, forcing a breath out. “Just sleep.”
But he didn’t believe it. By midday, the heat had become unbearable. Not because of the sun. Because of his body. Sweat clung to his skin. But something about it felt… different. Thicker. His shirt stuck to him in a way it hadn’t before.
He stopped walking. Pulled at the collar. Looked down. The color. Not imagined this time. Not subtle. His skin— Was darker.
Daniel stood completely still. The jungle around him silent once more. Watching.
“…Okay.”
His voice was quieter now. Less certain. He wiped his arm with a cloth.
Hard. Again. Again. Nothing changed. He swallowed. Looked at his hand again. Longer this time. As if waiting for it to reverse. It didn’t.
A breeze passed through the trees. Soft. Almost gentle. Daniel closed his eyes for a second. Then opened them again.
“…It’s temporary.”
He adjusted the strap of his bag. Tighter than before. And started walking again.
Daniel didn’t sleep much that night. Not really. Every time he closed his eyes, something felt… off. His body. Too heavy. Too present.
By morning, the change was no longer subtle. He sat near what remained of his fire, staring at his hands again. Longer this time. No denial left. They were darker. Clearly. Deeply.
“…No.”
It came out as a whisper. He stood abruptly, pacing. Running both hands through his hair— Then froze.
The texture. His fingers stopped. Slowly… carefully… he touched it again.
“…What the hell…”
It wasn’t the same. Not soft. Not loose. Denser. Tighter. He grabbed a small mirror again, almost aggressively this time. Lifted it. Stared.
His hair— The curls were tighter now. Clinging closer to his scalp. Thicker. Unfamiliar. His breathing quickened.
“No. No, no, no…” He stepped back. Shook his head hard. As if he could force it to reset. It didn’t.
By midday, things got worse. His face. He felt it before he saw it. A strange tension beneath the skin. Like something shifting… settling… reshaping. He pressed his fingers along his jaw. Flinched.
“…Stop.”
He rushed to a patch of still water nearby. Dropped to his knees.Looked. And froze. His reflection stared back at him.
Darker. That part—he had already seen. But now— His face looked… Different.Not drastically.Not all at once. But undeniably. His jaw— Heavier. His nose— Wider. His lips— Fuller.
“…No…”
His voice cracked slightly. Lower.Rougher. He leaned closer to the water. As if proximity would fix it. It didn’t. His reflection didn’t waver. Didn’t glitch. Didn’t lie. It had already begun to settle. Daniel pulled back suddenly.Breathing harder now.
“This isn’t real.”
He stood. Turned away. Ran a hand over his face— Then stopped. The sensation. Different. His skin felt thicker. Warmer. Alive in a way that made him uncomfortable.
He looked down at his arms again. At his chest. At the way his shirt clung to him now— Not just from sweat. But from the shape beneath it. More defined. Denser.
“…No.”
But this time— There was no conviction behind it. He stumbled back slightly, sitting heavily against a tree. Silence. The jungle didn’t react. Didn’t care. And that was the worst part. Nothing around him was changing. Only him.
Minutes passed. Maybe longer.
Then slowly— His breathing began to steady. Not because he was calm. But because something else was. Something deeper. Something that didn’t see this as wrong. Daniel closed his eyes briefly.When he opened them again— The panic was still there. But softer. Blunted.
“…I need help.”
The words felt distant. Like they belonged to someone else. He pushed himself back to his feet. And for the first time since leaving the temple— He turned back. Toward the village. Because somewhere deep down— He already knew. They hadn’t tried to stop him. Because they knew… He would come back.
The village appeared sooner than Daniel expected. Or maybe, He had simply walked faster.His steps slowed as the trees began to thin. That same clearing. Those same huts. The same thin trails of smoke rising into the sky.But something was different.
Last time, They had watched him.Silent. Still. Suspicious. This time— Someone waved. Daniel stopped. Just for a second. A woman passed by him, carrying a clay pot.She glanced at him— And smiled. Not cautiously. Not curiously. Naturally.
A child ran past, brushing lightly against his arm. No hesitation. No second look. Just laughter. Daniel frowned slightly.
“…What?”
A man nodded at him as he walked by. The kind of nod given to someone familiar. Daniel turned slowly, scanning the village. No whispers. No tension. No eyes lingering on him. No one saw a stranger.
His chest tightened slightly. Not from fear. From something else.He kept walking. Toward the center. Toward the old man.
The chief stood exactly where he had before. As if he had never moved. As if he had been waiting. Daniel approached. Slower this time.
For a moment— The old man simply looked at him. Not surprised. Not curious. Certain. Then— A small smile appeared.
“You have come back.”
Daniel let out a short breath.
“You knew I would.”
The old man’s eyes lowered briefly. To Daniel’s clothes. The worn khaki. The satchel. The boots. Then back to his face.
“Without these…” the old man said softly, gesturing slightly, “I would not have known you.”
A pause.
“You wear your new form well.”
Daniel stiffened.
“That’s not—”
He stopped himself. Exhaled sharply.
“This wasn’t supposed to happen.”
The old man tilted his head slightly.
“No?”
Daniel stepped closer now. Frustration rising again.
“You said only one of yours could take it.”
“Yes.”
“I’m not one of yours.”
The old man’s gaze didn’t change.
“Not before.”
Daniel’s jaw tightened.
“I want this reversed.”
There it was. Clear. Direct. For the first time— The old man moved. Just one step closer. Close enough now.
“You still carry it.”
Daniel hesitated. Then slowly reached into his bag. Pulled out the relic. Even here— Even now— It felt heavy.
The old man looked at it. Not with desire. Not with fear. With recognition.
“Return it.”
Daniel’s eyes narrowed slightly.
“That’s it?”
“Yes.”
“And this stops?”
The old man met his gaze. Unblinking.
“What has been taken… must be returned.”
A pause.
“And then?”
A slight tilt of the head. Almost gentle.
“The path will open again.”
Daniel searched his face. Looking for doubt. For hesitation. For anything. There was nothing.
“…You’re sure.”
The old man’s voice was calm. Certain.
“It is the only way.”
Silence stretched between them. Daniel looked down at the relic again. At the faint patterns shifting across its surface. At the weight of it in his hand. Millions.
Then— He looked at his own skin. His arm. His hand. No longer his. His grip tightened.
“…Fine.”
He slid it back into his bag.
“I’ll put it back.”
The old man nodded slowly. And for the first time— There was something else in his eyes. Understanding.
Daniel turned without another word. And began walking back toward the forest.
The forest felt different this time. Not hostile. Not oppressive. Familiar. Daniel noticed it immediately. The path he had struggled to find before, Now revealed itself naturally.
He didn’t hesitate. Didn’t stop. Didn’t question. His steps were steady. Instinctive. As if his body knew the way better than his mind ever had.
Branches didn’t catch his clothes. Roots didn’t slow him. The jungle parted—Not visibly. But undeniably. He tightened his grip on the satchel. On the relic inside.
“…Almost done.”
The words felt hollow. The entrance appeared sooner than expected. Half-buried. Silent. Waiting. Just like before.But this time— Daniel didn’t smile. He stepped inside without lighting a lantern. He didn’t need it.
The darkness didn’t feel like darkness anymore. It felt… Readable. He moved through the corridors without slowing.
Past the same traps. Or what used to be traps. The pressure plates— He stepped over them without looking. The broken floor— He avoided it without testing. The spear mechanism— He didn’t trigger it.Didn’t even glance at it. Because something inside him already knew.
“…Right.”
His voice echoed differently now. Deeper. Less foreign. He reached the chamber.The pedestal stood exactly as before. Empty. Waiting. Daniel approached slowly. For a moment— He just stood there. Looking at it. At the place where everything had begun.
Then— He reached into his bag. Pulled the relic out. The patterns moved faintly under his fingers. Like something alive.
“…You better be worth it.”
He placed it back. Carefully.Respectfully.
The moment it touched the stone— He stepped back. Waiting. Silence. Nothing. No sound. No movement. No light. Daniel frowned.
“…No.”
He waited longer. Still nothing. His breathing slowed. Then tightened.
“No, no, no…”
He stepped forward again. Looked at the relic. Still there. Still unchanged. He looked down at himself. At his hands. At his arms. No change. His chest rose sharply.
“You said—”
But there was no one there to hear it. Only the temple. And the silence. Daniel stood there for a long moment.
Then slowly— Something shifted. Not outside. Inside. The panic didn’t spike this time. It faded. Just slightly.
“…It’s not coming back.”
The realization came quietly. Without resistance. Without denial. He touched his arm again. The skin felt right now. Not wrong. Not foreign.Just… His. Daniel let his hand fall slowly.
For the first time— He didn’t look for what had been lost. He stood there. In the temple. And didn’t move. Because deep down— He understood something the old man hadn’t said.
The relic had been returned. But the change— Had never been the punishment.
Daniel didn’t rush this time. When he returned to the village, his steps were slower. Not uncertain. Just… quieter.
The villagers greeted him the same way. With ease. With familiarity. And again— No one saw a stranger. He found the old man near the same place. Waiting. As always. Daniel approached him directly. No hesitation.
“It didn’t work.”
The old man studied him calmly.
“I know.”
Daniel’s jaw tightened.
“You said it would.”
A pause. The old man nodded slightly.
“It will.”
Daniel frowned.
“That’s not funny.”
“It is not a joke.”
Silence. The old man stepped closer.
“What has taken time… will also return with time.”
Daniel searched his face. Looking for the lie. But the old man gave him nothing.
“…How long?”
The old man’s gaze shifted briefly toward the village. Then back to him.
“As long as it needs.”
That wasn’t an answer. Daniel exhaled slowly. Looked away. At the huts. At the people. At the life moving around him without effort.
“…I don’t have anywhere else to go.”
The old man nodded once.
“Then stay.”
Days Became Weeks. At first, Daniel counted the days. Then he stopped. The mornings came early. The work came naturally. Carrying water. Repairing structures. Learning rhythms. His body adapted faster than his mind.
Or maybe— It had already adapted.
The men welcomed him without question. Not warmly. Not coldly. Normally. They worked beside him. Spoke to him. Laughed with him. At first, he didn’t understand their words. Then— Slowly— He did.
The language came strangely easily. Like something remembered rather than learned.
His name did not. “Daniel” twisted in their mouths. Shifted. Softened. Until one of them laughed and said:
“Ekano.”
The others repeated it.
“Ekano.”
Daniel frowned at first. Then— He didn’t correct them.
The night of celebration came without warning. A fire at the center of the village. Voices. Rhythm. Movement.
Daniel—Ekano—stood at the edge at first. Watching. The old man joined him quietly.
“You still stand apart.”
Ekano glanced at him.
“I’m… trying not to.”
The old man’s eyes moved over him. His shirt. His boots. The satchel strap still crossing his chest. A faint smile.
“These still speak for you.”
Ekano looked down at them.
“…They’re all I have left.”
A pause. The old man tilted his head slightly.
“Are they?”
Silence. They stood there for a moment, watching the others. Men laughing. Talking. Moving without thought.
“You have worked,” the old man said.
“You have learned. You have stayed.”
Ekano said nothing.
“Do you feel worse?”
The question landed softly. Ekano thought. Really thought. His hands. His skin. His reflection.
“…No.”
The old man nodded.
“Do you feel lost?”
Ekano looked at the fire. At the men. At the life unfolding without effort.
“…Less than before.”
A longer silence. Then the old man spoke again.
“Do you know what your name means?”
Ekano glanced at him.
“No.”
“It means—”
A slight pause.
“The one who arrived and remained.”
Something shifted. Deep. Quiet. Ekano looked back at the fire.
“…That’s convenient.”
A faint smile from the old man.
Then—
More serious.
“If you knew of another temple…”
Ekano turned slightly.
“One that could return you to what you were… Would you go?”
Ekano looked down at his hands. Turned them slowly. Touched his arm. Felt his skin. His chest. His breath. He ran a hand through his hair. Closed his eyes briefly.
Then looked at the others. Men like him. Moving like him. Living without question. He didn’t answer immediately.
He didn’t need to. The old man already knew.
“…No.”
It came out quietly. But completely. The old man nodded once. Then, almost casually—
“You still wear the past.”
Ekano looked down again. At his clothes. This time— There was no attachment.
He stood. Set his satchel aside. And walked away. The old man watched him go.
A few minutes passed. Then— Ekano returned. Different. Simple cloth. Barefoot. Marked. Hands reached for him. Paint. Patterns. No hesitation. No ceremony. Just inclusion.
He didn’t resist. Didn’t hesitate. Didn’t think. He moved with them. Laughed. Danced. Sang. And somewhere— Without a clear moment— He disappeared. Not physically. But completely.
The old man stood at the edge of the fire. Watching. In his hands— The hat. Worn. Foreign. Out of place. His eyes scanned the men. Once. Twice.
Then he stopped. Because he could no longer tell. Which one had been Daniel. And which one had always been Ekano.