Being Twenty-Two
Here's an AR story where 2 wives become much younger versions of themselves. Enjoy!
The four of them spilled out of the restaurant into the warm early-evening air, the sun just disappearing and leaving the sky still lit. San

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@rylem33
Being Twenty-Two
Here's an AR story where 2 wives become much younger versions of themselves. Enjoy!
The four of them spilled out of the restaurant into the warm early-evening air, the sun just disappearing and leaving the sky still lit. San
Self-fulfilled
A new one from me. Enjoy!
Simone held the small glass bottle up to the light, turning it slowly between her fingers. The liquid inside caught the light and shifted, p
Dysfunctional Wish
Here's a new one by me based off an amazing Evie Hyde story. Enjoy!
Authorâs note: This is based on a story by Evie Hyde of the same title. I was inspired to do a spin on the same story and have full permissi
Fey Accompli
Here's a new story by me about love and corruption. Enjoy!
She had arrived in his world the way a bird flies into glass. With no warning, no intention, and no understanding of what had happened. Marc
Being Neighborly
Here's a new story of mine. Enjoy!
The elevator doors opened on the fourth floor and Mika stepped out without looking up from her phone. She looked stunning in her red, latex
Override
Hey everyone. Here's a new one from me. Enjoy!
Joanne sat with her knees pulled toward her chest, her long platinum hair falling around her shoulders in straight, pale sheets. The pink ba
RWI: The Brat
Dr. Marcus Calloway taught Literary Theory at Alderton University the way other men ran small countries. He was forty-two, lean through the shoulders and narrow at the jaw, with dark hair going silver at the temples. His eyes were a pale, washed-out gray that he had learned early in his career made students uncomfortable when he held their gaze too long, and he had never stopped using that to his advantage. He wore the same rotating wardrobe of fitted dark trousers, open-collar dress shirts, and structured blazers.Â
His students did not like him. They respected him only because they had to. His colleagues tolerated him with the tight smiles of people who had stopped arguing with a person they couldnât actually beat. His department chair, Dr. Renata Fuentes, had described him in his last review as âintellectually rigorous and interpersonally challenging,â which was the most diplomatic way anyone had ever called him an insufferable human being.
Calloway had read the review and considered it a compliment.
His Thursday afternoon seminar on poststructuralist criticism ran from two to four, and by the time he reached Derrida the room had taken on the particular stillness of students trying very hard to look engaged. He was mid-sentence on the trace structure when a hand went up near the back.
He did not stop speaking. He finished his point, set his copy of Of Grammatology on the lectern, and then looked at the hand.
âWinters.â
The student, a second-year named Joel Winters who had turned in the same unrevised argument three times across two different papers, lowered his hand and sat up slightly. âI guess Iâm just not sure how this is different from just saying meaning is unstable. Like, we covered that with Saussure.â
The room went very quiet in the specific way it did when someone had said something Calloway found beneath his time.
âYou guess,â Calloway repeated. He let the word sit there. âThatâs a precise academic position, Winters. Iâll look forward to seeing it in your next paper.â
Two students near the window exchanged a look, but nobody dared laugh.
âDerrida is not simply restating Saussureâs instability,â he continued, moving from the lectern. âIf thatâs what you took from the reading then Iâd suggest you do it again. Slowly. With a dictionary nearby.â He turned to the rest of the room. âAnyone else want to tell me something I already know, or can we continue?â
A young woman in the front row, Priya Anand, one of maybe three students whose work he found worth reading, raised her hand with the careful energy of someone who had done the reading and was still not certain it was safe to speak.
âGo ahead.â
âThe trace isnât just about instability though, right? Itâs about whatâs absent. Meaning depends on what isnât there as much as what is.â
Calloway looked at her for a moment. âThatâs almost correct,â he said, which from him was the closest thing to praise his seminar had ever produced. Priya visibly exhaled. âThe trace reveals that presence itself is a fiction we construct to avoid confronting absence. Derrida isnât destabilizing meaning. Heâs showing us that stable meaning was never available to us in the first place.â He picked up his book and opened it to his marked page. âWhich is a distinction that apparently requires repeating.â
He found the passage, ran his finger down the margin note heâd written three years ago, and turned the page.
Tucked between pages 247 and 248 was a card. A card that he would never had owned let alone put within the pages of a book.
He pulled it free with two fingers and turned it over.
The sleeve was glossy and ornate, heavy stock, the kind of finish that suggested age rather than cheapness. The card inside had a textured, darkened background and block lettering across the top in a style that looked stamped rather than printed.
Role-With-It.
And beneath it, in pink script that was loose and brushstroke-rough:
The Brat.
The silhouette on the card stood with her arms crossed over her chest and her chin lifted, weight shifted onto one leg, hair pulled up into a high ponytail. She wore a cropped top and cutoff shorts, her legs long beneath them, heels raising her stance into something that communicated she had decided she was done waiting for the world to catch up.
Apartment 714
A new story from me. Enjoy!
Authorâs note: This story is inspired by the âThat Which We Hateâ interactive story on thechangingmirror.com. Jenny stood in the doorway of
His Fantasy
A new bitchifciation story from me. Claire just wanted Matt to experience his fantasy woman. What could go wrong? Enjoy!
Claire was anxiously waiting when she heard Mattâs keys hit the bowl by the entry and the soft thud of his bag dropping against the wall. âH
Role With It: Cruel Intentions
A new Role With It story for you all....
The Harmon Group occupied the fourteenth floor of a glass tower on Michigan Avenue. The carpet was charcoal gray. The desks were glass and c
The Catalyst
A new longer story from me about two lab partners who swap bodies. Enjoy!
The lab assignment sheet went up on a Tuesday, and by Wednesday morning Ellie had already accepted her fate. She stood at the board outside
Whoever the Fuck You Want
I've been uninspired to write for a while, but managed to get this one done. Enjoy!
Cara stood in her kitchen reading her fitness magazine. The kitchen counter held a protein shaker, a meal prep container, and a half-empty c
Bee Mine
Here's a bit of a Valentine's story for you. Enjoy! -----------------------------------
Katia stepped into the restaurant with measured confidence. Her fitted black corset and short skirt looked good on her and she knew it.
Ryan met her as she walked in.
âWow,â he breathed.
Katia slowed just enough to enjoy that reaction.
âGood wow?â she asked, arching one brow.
âThe best kind.â
They walked to the table and he pulled the chair out for her. She sat down crossing one leg over the other and rested her hands lightly in her lap.
Ryan cleared his throat, suddenly nervous. âI, uh⊠got you something.â
He leaned down and brought up a bouquet wrapped in soft paper. It was a beautiful bouquet highlighted by one sunflower.
It was striking. Larger than a normal sunflower. The center was dark and glossy, almost polished. The petals seemed tipped faintly in gold, catching the candlelight in a way that didnât look entirely natural.
âOh,â she said, brushing her fingers lightly over it. âThis is the most beautiful sunflower Iâve ever seen.â
Ryan laughed. âI told the florist I wanted something that stood out. Guess they understood the assignment.â
There was a card tucked into the bouquet. She pulled it free and felt something prick her finger softly. She briefly winced but noticed there was no blood, so she opened the card and read it.
Then laughed.
Ryan leaned forward. âWhat?â
She turned the card toward him.
Bee Mine.
He stared at it.
Then covered his face with one hand. âYouâre kidding.â
âOh no,â Katia said, smiling wider. âThis is incredible.â
âI swear I didnât see that.â
âYou didnât proofread your Valentineâs confession?â
âI trusted the florist.â
She lifted the sunflower slightly, holding it up between them. âSo what exactly are you implying, Ryan? That Iâm your queen bee?â
He grinned, trying to recover. âIf the crown fits.â
Katia laughed softly. âCareful. Queens tend to expect loyalty.â
Ryan smirked. âI can handle loyalty.â
âCan you?â she teased.
The waiter arrived with wine and their appetizers, and the conversation shifted easily. Work stories and mutual friends. The kind of comfortable rhythm that told her this date was going well.
Katia took a sip of wine and the flavor bloomed across her tongue in a way that made her inhale sharply. Sheâd never tasted wine so acutely before. She could sense the layers of dark fruit and oak and something faintly floral sheâd never noticed in wine before. It felt thick and textured, almost alive in her mouth.
She swallowed slowly.
Ryan tilted his head. âGood?â
âYeah,â she said. âJust⊠really good.â
She set the glass down carefully.
The candle between them flickered again, and she found herself staring into the flame. The glow seemed brighter. She could see tiny movements inside it, subtle shifts in color sheâd never noticed before.
Her fork scraped lightly against the plate and the sound rang clearer than it should have. In fact, all sounds seemed to be more present and somehow distinct at the same time.
Every conversation on the restaurant patio felt separated. She could almost pick out individual voices from across the room. The clink of glass at a distant table. The faint brush of fabric as someone adjusted in their seat.
She focused back on Ryan.
He was mid-sentence, animated, telling her about a disaster at work that ended with his boss apologizing to him.
She watched his mouth move. She noticed the way his jaw flexed when he smiled. She noticed the heat coming off his skin.
The scent of him hit her suddenly. His clean cologne mixed with soap. She could almost taste it in the air.
Her breath slowed.
ââso I told him, if youâre going to panic, at least panic with a plan,â Ryan finished.
Katia blinked.
âSorry,â she said quickly. âWhat was that last part?â
He smiled. âOkayâŠno more work talk. Iâm losing you.â
âNo,â she recovered. âI just got a little distracted.â
She straightened in her chair, crossing her legs the other way. She became hyper-aware of the way the fabric of her skirt brushed her thighs and the way her corset hugged her waist firmly.
Her fingers rested on the tablecloth. She rubbed her thumb against the fabric. She could feel every thread. Every tiny ridge.
Her heart gave a steady, powerful thump.
This was all so very strange. Ryan was still talking about something. His voice washed over her in waves. She tried to follow it but it was nearly impossible. Every sensation was louder now.
The waiter approached. She heard him before he spoke. The shift of his shoes on stone. The fabric of his sleeve sliding as he lifted the plates.
And when he stepped into her peripheral vision, it felt invasive.
âThe chocolate torte for you two.â
Katia startled sharply, her head snapping toward him.
âWhat?â she said, curtly.
The waiter blinked. âIâŠIâve brought your dessert.â
She exhaled through her nose, irritated.
âYou could at least announce yourself before hovering,â she said coolly. âYou nearly made me jump.â
Ryan stiffened slightly. âHey, itâs okayââ
The waiter flushed. âSorry, maâam.â
Katia held his gaze until he lowered his eyes. She felt something in her chest settle. A sense of control.
âYes,â she said smoothly. âThank you.â
The waiter retreated quickly.
Ryan studied her. âYou okay?â
She turned back to him, composure sliding into place like nothing had happened. âOf course. I just donât like being startled.â
He nodded slowly, though a faint crease remained between his brows.
The plates were set with strawberries arranged beside a glossy slice of chocolate torte, drizzled with syrup.
She picked up a strawberry from the dessert plate they were sharing and brought it to her lips.
The sweetness hit instantly.
It was explosive and sensual. She closed to ride the feeling. The sugar bloomed across her tongue like nectar. The juice slid down her throat and her body reacted to it. The pleasure echoed through her body.
She swallowed slowly.
Ryan smiled faintly. âStill that good?â
She opened her eyes.
âYes,â she said softly. âIt iszzz.â
She reached for another piece quickly. She took a bite and juices trickled down her chin. She licked them up hungrily enjoying the feeling in her mouth, stomach, and increasingly her sex.
She could feel the waiter watching nervously from across the patio.Â
Good. She liked that.
Ryan leaned in a little. âYou just kind of⊠snapped at him.â
Katia tilted her head.
âHe interrupted,â she replied evenly. âPeople should know when not to interrupt.â
Ryan gave a half-laugh. âItâs his job.â
âThen he should do it better.â
Katia pushed her chair back a little too quickly.
Ryan looked up mid-sentence. âYou okay?â
She forced a tight smile. âExcuse me. I just need a minute.â
Her voice sounded steady, but her body was anything but.
She stood, and the movement sent a ripple through her spine. The pressure at the base of her skull had been building quietly for the past few minutes, but now it pulsed.
The patio air felt thick against her skin as she walked. Every brush of fabric against her thighs sent a current through her. The hum in her ears had grown louder, no longer faint background noise but a layered vibration that seemed synced to her heartbeat.
By the time she reached the restaurant hallway, her breathing had deepened.
Her scalp tingled sharply.
She reached up, fingers sliding into her hair as if to massage away a tension headache. The sensation wasnât internal anymore. It felt like something pressing outward beneath her skin. As if her nerves were too alive.Â
âOh God,â she whispered.
She pushed into the restroom, the door swinging shut behind her.
The fluorescent lights felt blinding. She gripped the edge of the sink.
The pressure in her back intensified suddenly. She could feel something between her shoulder blades. Her muscles spasmed hard enough to arch her forward.
She felt a hum inside her bones.
Her thighs pressed together instinctively as heat flooded downward through her core. The pleasure sheâd been riding at the table returned all at once, magnified and electric. It felt like the sweetness of the strawberry had liquefied and poured straight into her bloodstream.
âNot here,â she gasped.
But her body wasnât waiting for permission.
The sensation crested violently and she clutched the sink as her knees weakened. The orgasm tore through her without warning, tightening her muscles in waves, her head tipping back as a strangled sound escaped her throat.
Her entire body vibrated.
Her vision blurred as the pleasure peaked, her spine bowing as the pressure in her back pulsed in time with it. The hum became a roar.
Then she felt the release. She sagged forward, breathing hard, with her palms flat against porcelain.
She stayed there for several seconds, breathing.
The orgasm had ebbed, but it hadnât vanished. It lingered like an aftershock in her nerves. A quiet vibration beneath her skin. The pressure in her scalp remained, tight and insistent. The space between her shoulder blades still felt swollen.
Katia lifted her head slowly and saw her reflection. Her cheeks were flushed deep pink.
âPull it together,â she murmured.
She rolled her shoulders once. The pressure in her back responded with a tight pulse.Â
Fine.
She straightened her corset, smoothing her hands down her waist. She exhaled slowly and stepped out of the restroom.
Ryan stood slightly when he saw her returning.
âThere you are,â he said, relief flickering across his face. âI was about to come check on you.â
She approached the table at an unhurried pace.
He had been charming earlier but now he seemed somehow smaller.
She resumed her seat, crossing her legs deliberately. The movement was fluid and controlled. Her posture was straighter than before, chin lifted just a fraction higher.
âYou okay?â he asked again, studying her face. âYou look flushed.â
âIâm fine,â she replied smoothly.
Her voice had changed. It was deeper and more assured.
Ryan swallowed slightly. âYou sure? You kind of rushed off.â
She tilted her head, examining him as if he were something newly presented for her approval.
âI needed a moment,â she said. âI took one.â
He laughed awkwardly. âYouâre very intense right now.â
She didnât laugh with him.
Instead, she reached for her wine and took a slow sip, never breaking eye contact.
The taste bloomed again and even richer than before.Â
âQueens demand loyalty. You said you could handle it,â she reminded him quietly.
Ryan blinked, caught off guard. âYeah.â
âGood.â
She leaned back slightly in her chair, gaze steady, assessing.
The hum inside her bones deepened.
Ryan tried to reclaim his earlier charm. âSo,â he said, smiling carefully, âwhere were we?â
Katia studied him again. He was trying. That was clear. But the spark sheâd felt earlier had shifted.
Is he worthy?
The thought surfaced fully formed.
She folded her hands in her lap, fingers resting lightly against one another.
The pressure at her scalp pulsed once more.
The tension in her back tightened, almost stretching outward beneath her skin.
Her spine straightened sharply on its own. The chair creaked beneath her as something in her posture locked into place. The hum inside her bones deepened, rising in pitch.
Ryan faltered mid-sentence.
âKatia?â
Her scalp burned.
She inhaled slowly as the sensation surged upward, like something pressing through layers that had always been too thin to contain it.
She felt a sharp tearing sensation at her crown.
Ryan recoiled as two sleek, black-and-gold antennae burst cleanly through her hair, unfurling upward.Â
Then the pressure in her back released.
Her corset strained as her shoulder blades flared. Translucent wings unfurled behind her. They extended fully with a slow, powerful stretch, catching the golden bulbs overhead and refracting them like stained glass.
Gasps erupted around the patio. A chair scraped violently against stone.
Someone whispered, âWhat the hell.â
Ryan stumbled back from the table, nearly knocking his wine glass over.
âKatiaâŠwhatâŠwhat is happening?â
She remained seated and calm.
The hum inside her bones settled into a steady vibration that resonated outward. The air itself seemed to thicken around her.
She turned her head slowly toward Ryan.
Her eyes were no longer soft brown. Instead they burned gold.
âYou said,â she reminded him evenly, âif the crown fits.â
Her voice carried differently now. It wasnât louder, but it traveled. It pressed against the ears of everyone within range.
Ryanâs face drained of color. âThis isnât funny.â
Funny. The word irritated her.
Her antennae twitched subtly, reacting to the fear rippling through the crowd. She could feel every spike of adrenaline from every table. It vibrated through her like static waiting to be directed.
She rose from her chair. The movement was slow and controlled.
Her wings flexed once behind her, stirring the air and knocking over the candle flame nearest her. It extinguished instantly.
Ryan took another step back.
âYou need help,â he said weakly. âWe need to call someone.â
Call someone. For her?
She looked at him properly now. He wasnât strong enough to stand in her presence without shrinking. He is unworthy.
Her lips curved slightly.
âYou are beneath me,â she said strongly. âI do not need your help.â
A woman at a nearby table screamed. Another couple bolted for the gate. Phones were raised, shaking hands fumbling for focus.
Katiaâs wings extended wider, catching the patio lights in a brilliant gold shimmer. The pressure that had built all evening was gone now.
She stepped away from the table and as she moved everyone fell from her path. No one dared get in front of her.
Ryan remained frozen, staring up at her.
She glanced around at the scattering crowd. They were all unworthy.
Her antennae tilted forward slightly, sensing movement beyond the patio lights. She felt the open air of a field.
âNext time you see me,â she said calmly. âYou will bow. For I am a queen.â
Then her wings beat once and Katia rose from the ground.
---------------------------------
Golden light spilled across the field in long, warm bands as Katia moved through the tall grass.
The world felt right here.
Small bees drifted lazily around her in orbit.
One landed lightly on her shoulder. Another hovered near her wrist. A third brushed past her hair, unafraid.
Katia smiled faintly, lifting a sunflower between her fingers. The petals seemed brighter out here. The world seemed brighter and unfiltered.
âThis is how it should be,â she murmured.
She closed her eyes and inhaled deeply sensing the nectar, soil, warm grass, and living air.
Her antennae tilted slightly forward.
She felt a disruption. Something felt wrong.
She could taste metal and oil in the air.
Her eyes opened slowly.
The bees around her shifted in tone. Their casual arcs tightened. The hum changed frequency.
She turned her head slightly, gaze sweeping toward the treeline beyond the meadow.
There were figures moving in formation. Dark shapes breaking through the calmness of nature.
They were tracking her.
Katia exhaled once through her nose.
âSo,â she said softly. âYou came.â
The soldiers advanced carefully, scanning the field. One raised binoculars.
Another whispered, âTarget acquired.â
Her wings extended fully behind her, the membranes catching the fading sunlight and refracting it into sharp shards of gold. The bees around her began to gather in greater numbers, rising from the tall grass and sunflowers in thick spirals.
The air shifted as clouds edged across the sun, dimming the field from honeyed warmth to burnished shadow.
One of the soldiers hesitated. âSir⊠the air pressureâŠâ
The hum within Katia deepened into a vibration that rippled through the grass itself. Thousands of tiny bodies answered her call, lifting from unseen hives hidden throughout the meadow.
She stepped forward once and the earth seemed to acknowledge it.
Her eyes burned brighter, molten gold against the darkening sky.
âYou seek to harm your queen,â she said, her voice carrying farther than it should have.
The nearest soldier flinched.
A commander barked, âTake the shot!â
The rifle never fired as a wave of bees struck first. A living shield formed around her, thick and swirling.
Katia lifted from the ground slowly, wings beating with controlled force. The sound was no longer a gentle hum.
It was thunder.
The sky above them darkened as the swarm expanded outward, blotting light in a shifting cloud.
The soldiers stumbled back, formation breaking.
Katia hovered above the field, her silhouette framed against a bruised sky, black and gold and incandescent.
Her gaze locked onto the line of men below. Righteous anger burned clean and cold through her veins.
âYou were warned,â she said quietly.
Then she folded her wings once and launched forward.
The swarm moved with her.
Learning Italian
Here's one I've been working on for a few days. I'm pretty happy with how it turned out. I hope you enjoy!
Hannah had met Antonioâs parents six times already, and every time she left their house feeling like she just didnât meet their expectations
Cheer Up
Mason tugged his hoodie down as he stepped into the empty hallway behind the gym. The Friday night game was an hour away, but this was the spot Sierra had texted him to meet. She was already there, leaning against the lockers and scrolling through her phone.
âSierra?â
She didnât look up right away. âHey.â
He hesitated. âYou okay?â
âYeah.â She pocketed her phone. âI just donât wanna do this at the game. I figured⊠less dramatic this way.â
He frowned. âDo what?â
She looked at him for the first time, arms crossed under her cheer jacket. âUs.â
âWhat about us?â
âWeâre done, Mason.â
His breath caught. âWait, what? Where the hell is this coming from?â
Sierra exhaled slowly, like sheâd rehearsed this. âYou donât listen. You donât ask about me. You donât care unless itâs about the team or your stats or your stupid protein macros. Iâm tired of dating someone who thinks âquality timeâ means watching me stretch in spandex before practice.â
âThatâs not fair,â Mason snapped. âIâm always there for you.â
âYouâre there, sure. But itâs always about you. Your next win. Your body. Your image.â She cocked her head. âYou donât even know what classes Iâm taking this semester.â
âThatâsâŠâ He blinked. âOkay, name one class I missed.â
She smiled, but there was no warmth in it. âPhysics. Art history. And French. But thanks for proving the point.â
Mason clenched his jaw. âSo this is it? After everything? Youâre just⊠done?â
âYeah. This is it.â
She reached into her bag and pulled out his letterman jacket.
âFigured youâd want this back,â she said, holding it out.
He stepped closer, grabbing the jacket. âWho is he?â
âDonât,â she said flatly. âDonât embarrass yourself more than you already have.â
âThere has to be someone else,â he stated.
âIâm dumping you for me.â Her voice didnât rise, but it sharpened. âBecause Iâm tired of pretending youâre this great guy just because youâre the team quarterback.â
She turned to leave.
âYouâre gonna regret this,â he called after her. âYouâll see me out there tonight. Iâm going to score four touchdowns, easy. Iâll own that field.â
She paused, one hand on the gym door and looked over her shoulder.
âIâll see you out there,â she said. âAnd Iâll cheer for the team to win. Like always.â
Then she was gone.
Mason stood in the hallway, fists balled, blood pounding in his ears. A busted locker hinge clanged as he punched it on the way out.
No one dumps me.
------------------------------------
The locker room was mostly cleared out. Mason sat on the bench, still in his practice gear, the letterman jacket folded tight in his lap.
Jamal tossed a towel over his shoulder. âYou good, man? Youâve been sitting there since drills ended.â
Mason looked up. âSierra dumped me.â
Ty let out a low whistle from across the room. âDamn. Right before the game?â
âShe gave the jacket back,â Mason added, like that explained everything.
Jamal leaned against the locker. âYou want us to say sorry or that sheâs trash?â
âNeither,â Mason said. âI want your help.â
That got their attention.
Mason stood. âI donât need Sierra. I need someone better.â
âBetter?â Ty asked.
âSomeone hotter. Someone loyal. Built like a fantasy and mine from the jump.â Mason glanced between them. âSomeone who will make Sierra jealous and regret leaving me.â
Jamal smirked. âAnd where exactly are you gonna find this dream girl?â
âIâm not finding her,â Mason said. âIâm making her.â
That got them quiet.
Ty raised an eyebrow. âYou drunk?â
Mason pulled a pendant from his gym bag. It was a dull black stone, but it shimmered faintly under the fluorescent lights.
âI found this a while back. Donât ask where. Iâve used it before for little stuff. Itâs helped me stay in shape and pass a few tests. It works.â
Jamal stared at it. âYouâre saying youâre gonna magic yourself a girlfriend?â
âNot from scratch,â Mason said. âI need a base. Someone easy to mold.â
He paused as they stared at him incredulously.
âAmelia Carter.â
Ty blinked. âThe lab girl with the anime backpack?â
âSheâs smart and quiet. I donât think she even has any friends. Sheâs a blank slate,â Mason said.
âYouâre serious,â Jamal said.
Mason nodded. âAfter we win tonight, I use this. And I change everything. She shows up looking like a ten, acting like my girl, and Sierra gets front-row seats.â
Ty laughed. âDamn. Thatâs petty as hell.â
âItâs justice,â Mason said. âSierra wanted to embarrass me. Fine. Letâs see how she feels when the nerd she laughed at walks into the after-party looking like the new queen.â
Jamal crossed his arms. âAnd you sure this works?â
Mason shrugged. âThatâs why Iâm telling you now. In case something goes sideways. But it wonât.â
Ty grinned. âAlright. Youâre nuts⊠but Iâm in.â
Jamal nodded slowly. âIf this goes down, it better be legendary.â
Mason smirked and slipped the pendant back into his bag. âOh, it will be.â
------------------------------------
The game was a blowout. Mason threw five touchdowns and rushed for another. The student section chanted his name as he jogged off the field, helmet in hand, sweat still slick on his neck.
The courtyard outside the gym was packed. Players, cheerleaders, students, and teachers were all clustered around the speakers someone had dragged out and cranked to full volume. Mason barely had to look to find Sierra. She was by the snack table, sipping from a water bottle, not looking in his direction.
Jamal found him first. âSheâs here.â
âI see her.â
âYou want us to get things moving?â
Mason nodded. âShe needs to see it from the start.â
Ty approached from the other side. âYou brought the rock?â
Mason unzipped his bag and pulled out the pendant. The stone shimmered faintly in the lights above the courtyard. âLetâs do it.â
Ty grinned. âHell yeah.â
Jamal looked over at a quiet corner of the courtyard. âThereâs Amelia.â
âPerfect,â Mason muttered.
He slipped the pendant around his neck and stepped forward.
âYo!â Ty shouted, drawing attention. âEveryone, give it up for Mason Rhodes! MVP tonight!â
Cheers erupted. A few football players started chanting his name again.
Mason raised a hand like he was soaking it in, but his eyes stayed locked on Sierra. She wasnât smiling.
He turned.
âAmelia!â he called, loud enough to carry.
Heads turned and some people looked confused.
Amelia froze mid-step. She was halfway to the exit with a camera around her neck. Sheâd been at the game for the yearbook committee.
Mason beckoned. âCâmere.â
She blinked, then stepped forward slowly, eyes darting toward the crowd. A few cheerleaders started whispering.
âYouâre about to be part of something big,â Mason said, voice low now, just for her. âTrust me.â
She opened her mouth, confused. âWait, whatâŠâ
Mason touched the pendant.
The wind shifted.
Amelia flinched as the air around her grew thick. Her back arched, just slightly, like something pulled her upright from the inside out.
Her jeans tightened across her thighs. Then ripped, seams bursting as her legs lengthened and reshaped. Her sneakers popped at the heel. Her hips widened with a sudden shift that made her stumble a step.
But instead of falling apart completely, the denim shimmered. Threads pulled back together, re-stitching higher, tighter. The pant legs vanished above mid-thigh, folding into a skin-hugging pair of black cutoff shorts with frayed edges and a high waist that clung to her new curves.
âWhat the hellâŠâ someone murmured.
Gasps rippled through the crowd.
Ameliaâs hoodie pulled taut across her chest. Then it tore open down the middle as her breasts swelled, full and round, straining the fabric until it split. Everyone got a brief view of her naked chest before a black crop top appeared and clung perfectly to her new curves.
Her hair unraveled, dark brown turning golden blonde, growing longer, glossier with each breath she took.
Her skin tone shifted from pale to glowing. Her glasses fell from her face and cracked on the concrete. She didnât need them anymore.
Her newly full and sexy lips parted as she took a shaky step forward.
Ty let out a low whistle. âGod damn.â
Jamal muttered, âThatâs not even the same girl.â
Phones were out everywhere now. Students stared, stunned. A teacher tried to intervene but didnât even know what to do.
Ameila looked down at herself, at her long legs, exposed skin, tight curves barely held by what remained of her outfit. Her breathing was shaky. Her eyes wide.
Then she looked up and straight at Mason.
He was already walking toward her, grinning. He was immensely confident.
He stopped just in front of Amelia and looked over at Sierra who was watching in confused horror.
âTold you I could do better,â he chided.Â
Sierra didnât reply before he looked back to Amelia.
Ameliaâs brow furrowed. âWhat⊠did you do to me?â
âI made you relevant,â Mason said, loud enough for everyone nearby to hear. âYouâre smart, hot, and loyal. My girl.â
He reached for her hand but she stepped back.
Masonâs grin faltered slightly.
âI didnât agree to anything,â Amelia said.
Masonâs voice dropped. âWhat?â
She turned in a slow circle, taking in the crowd. Dozens of people watching. Whispers behind hands. Some phones still recording.
âI donât know how you made me lookâŠâ, she motioned her hands up and down her body. âLike this. I agree Iâm smart and this body is sexy as hell, but Iâm not your anything. Certainly not your girl.â
Mason looked at Amelia, shocked. Â
âNo,â he said. âYou are. Or at least you will be.â
He reached his hand to the pendant, but the stone was weakened from the magic and cracked in his hand.
She turned away and scanned through the crowd. Then her eyes landed on Joel. He was standing near the edge of the courtyard. He was impossibly skinny and he stood with hunched shoulders.Â
Their eyes met and she took a step toward him.
Mason stepped in her path. âSeriously?â
âFuck off creep,â Amelia yelled.Â
âYouâre literally standing here because of me,â Mason said.
She didnât flinch. âAnd now Iâm walking away.â
She moved past him like he wasnât even there. Her hips swayed with a sexy confidence she hadnât had minutes ago.
Joel stood frozen as she approached. âA-Amelia?â
She smiled. âYes, itâs still me. Just improved.â
She took his hand.
Joel blinked. âWait, are you seriouslyâŠâ
âYeah.â She turned her head just enough for Mason to see the smirk on her face. âIâm into nerds.â
Laughter broke in waves behind them. A few gasps. Someone in the crowd muttered, âNo way.â
Mason just stood there, fists clenched, the pendant still glowing faintly against his chest.
Ty leaned in. âYo⊠that did not go the way you planned.â
Mason didnât answer. He just watched as Amelia, his perfect creation, walked hand-in-hand with the schoolâs biggest loser.
After the laughter died down, the crowd had started to drift, but Sierra stayed.
She stood at the edge of the courtyard, arms crossed, her expression unreadable.
Mason finally noticed her. He stepped toward her, the cracked pendant still in his hand. âYou saw all that?â
âI did,â she said calmly.
He opened his mouth like he had something to explain. She cut him off.
âShe looked amazing. Really confident.â
Masonâs jaw tensed. âYou think this is funny?â
âNo,â Sierra said. âI think itâs pathetic.â
He stared at her.
âYou built your dream girl just to prove a point,â she added. âAnd she still left you for someone kind.â
Mason didnât say anything.
Sierra gave a slight shrug, then turned to leave.
She paused once, halfway across the courtyard.
âNext time, Mason? Try being someone worth staying with. Instead of trying to control everyone else.â
And then she was gone.
------------------------------------
The stadium was quiet for once.
Late afternoon sun washed over the empty bleachers, and the field stretched out in clean green lines beneath it. Practice had just ended. Pom-poms were tossed into bags, music cut off, and most of the squad filtered toward the tunnel.
Amelia lingered near the sideline, hands on her hips, catching her breath.
Sierra walked up beside her, still in uniform, red bow bouncing as she stopped. âSo,â she said casually, âguess who tripped over a tackling dummy trying not to look at us.â
Amelia didnât even turn. âMason?â
âObviously.â
âOkay,â Sierra said, tying her ponytail tighter, âbe honest. Has Mason tried to text you again yet?â
Amelia snorted. âThree times. One apology. Two paragraphs. Zero self-awareness.â
Sierra laughed. âClassic.â
They both looked across the field where Mason was pretending to be very invested in picking up cones.
Sierra leaned closer. âYou know he still tells people the whole thing âglitched.ââ
âSure it did,â Amelia said. âRight after he tried to fix me with a cracked rock.â
âAnyway,â Sierra said, nudging her shoulder, âhowâs Joel?â
Amelia smiled without even thinking about it. âGood. Really good. He brought snacks to study group and apologized for interrupting me.â
Sierra rolled her eyes. âGross. I hate how healthy that is.â
âHey,â Amelia said. âDonât knock it until youâve tried it. Kindness is king.â
âFair,â Sierra admitted. Then she smirked. âStill wild that you went from invisible to smoking hot and youâre dating the sweet nerdy guy.â
Amelia shrugged. âTurns out confidence looks better than whatever Mason thought he had.â
Sierra grinned and stood. âCome on, queen. Letâs go before Mason convinces himself weâre laughing with him.â
They headed out together, laughing quietly as Mason pretended very hard not to notice.
And this time, neither of them looked back.
A Cup of Tea
âUh⊠what the hell happened in here?â
Jake stood frozen, keys still dangling from his fingers, eyes scanning the wreckage. Couch cushions tossed, a broken lamp in the corner, picture frames shattered face-down on the hardwood. It looked like a hurricane had spun through their apartment.
Who in the hell are you?â Jake asked the woman on the couch.
She sat on the couch, cross-legged in one of Mattâs shirts, cradling a mug of tea in both hands. Blonde hair spilled over one shoulder and her bare legs folded neatly under her. She didnât look up.
She finally glanced over. âHey.â
His jaw dropped. âWh..wait, what the fuck? Who are you? Whereâs Matt?â
âItâs me,â she said, voice low but steady. âItâs Matt.â
Jake took a full step back, hand half-reaching for the door again. âNo. No, no. Donât mess with me. Who the fuck are youâŠ.really?
âI told you,â she replied.
âThis isâthis is a prank or something.â
âItâs not.â
Her voice had a softness to it, a subtle warmth. She brought the mug to her lips and took a slow sip, like sheâd been expecting this conversation for the last ten minutes.
âI donât know how,â she said. âOne second I was just in the kitchen. Then there was this sound, like a⊠pop? And heat, everywhere. I couldnât breathe. Then my knees gave out. Everything twisted.â
She paused. Another sip.
âAnd when I came to, I was like this.â
Jake stared. âThat doesnât⊠thatâs notâŠâ
She let the silence hang.
Then, gently, âYou can look. I know you want to. Just try not to freak out. I already did enough of that for both of us.â
Jakeâs eyes flicked down her body before he could stop himself. The way the shirt clung to her chest, the curves pressing against the fabric. Her bare thighs where the hem ended.
âI trashed the apartment,â she added. âThrew a chair. Screamed at the walls. Smashed the mirror. Then I calmed down, sat down, and made tea. I decided Iâd rather chill than keep losing my mind.â
Jake opened his mouth. Nothing came out.
âIâm not expecting you to believe it,â she said, setting the mug down carefully on the coffee table, or what was left of it. âBut I need you to not freak out. Because Iâm still me. I still know your Spotify password, I still hate your cologne, and you still owe me for the last three electric bills.â
Jake blinked again. Then: âYouâre⊠youâre really Matt?â
She gave a half-smile. âGuess Iâm not anymore.â
Jake just stood there, breathing shallow. Then he rubbed a hand down his face and muttered, âOkay. Letâs say I believe you.â
She snorted. Then laughed.
It started small, just a puff of air through her nose but built into something warm and full and unguarded.
âOh my god,â she said, wiping a tear from the corner of her eye. âThat is such a Jake thing to say. Iâm sitting here, tits out in this shirt, drinking tea after leveling the living room, and youâre over there pulling the âLetâs say I believe youâ card?â
âWell Iâm trying not to have a stroke,â he shot back. âI walked in and found Barbie sipping Earl Grey like this is normal. What do you want from me?â
Her grin widened. âI am trying to be normal. Hence the tea.â
Jake shook his head, still half in a daze. âYou sound like him. Like you.â
âI am me.â
âYeah, but you look likeâŠâ His eyes traced over her again before darting away. âI mean, Jesus. Youâre like some weird hybrid of Instagram and porn.â
She raised her mug in mock toast. âCheers to that.â
He moved toward the couch, still slow and gestured vaguely at the destroyed furniture. âSo this all happenedâŠÂ right after it happened?â
âI freaked out,â she said plainly. âIt was raw panic. Then I caught a glimpse of myself in the mirror and lost what little was left of my sanity.â
Jake stared at her.
âAnd nowâŠ?â
She shrugged. âNow Iâm tired. And weirdly thirsty. Hence⊠tea.â
He hesitated. Then finally sat on the arm of the couch, eyes still scanning her like he was trying to fit the pieces together. âOkay. So what now? You gonna stay like this? Is it permanent?â
Her smile faded, just a bit. âI donât know. I didnât do anything to make it happen. So I donât exactly have a way to undo it.â
Jake scratched the back of his neck. âJesus, MattâŠâ
âMaddie.â She said it without thinking, then paused, blinking. âShit. That just came out.â
Jake tilted his head. âYou changing your name now?â
She looked down at herself. âI meanâŠÂ Matt doesnât exactly fit anymore, does it?â
Jake gave a low whistle. âThis is so fucking weird.â
She just nodded, then sipped her tea again. âYouâre telling me.â
They sat in silence for a long moment. The kind that didnât feel awkward.
Jake finally exhaled. âOkay. So, yeah. I believe you.â
She blinked, then looked over at him. Her lips twitched into something small, genuine. âYou do?â
âYeah. I mean, I shouldnât. But this?â He gestured to her, then the wrecked apartment. âIâve known you too long. No one fakes this.â
Maddie set her mug down, quiet for a second. âThank you.â
Jake shrugged, a little awkwardly. âYouâd do the same for me.â
âStill,â she said. âMeans a lot. Especially right now.â
She stood.
Jake straightened slightly, eyes flicking up. She stepped away from the couch, her bare legs unfolding with grace. She walked until she was standing in front of him, looking down.
âThat tea was the first thing that felt normal,â she said softly. âBut itâs not enough.â
Jake looked up at her, brow tense. âWhat do you mean?â
She took a breath, then grabbed the hem of the shirt.
âMaddieâŠ,â he spoke.
She pulled it up and over her head. The fabric hit the floor behind her.
Jakeâs eyes widened.
She stood there, bare, her skin flushed, her new form unapologetically on display. Her breathing was steady.Â
âIâm not just different on the outside,â she said, voice low. âI feel things. Need things. I donât know if this is hormones or instincts or whatever, but I know what I want right now.â
Jake opened his mouth, but she stepped closer, between his knees.
Her hand rested on his chest.
âIâm Maddie now,â she whispered. âAnd Maddie needs to get fucked.â
Fuck Me - Part 3
And here's the last installment of my Fuck Me story. Enjoy!
Dara sipped her drink slowly, eyes never leaving the man at the end of the bar. Dana leaned in closer, her elbow brushing Daraâs. âYou see