ais and the obsession he has with being married to you, every time you refer to him as your husband he can feel his dick twitch beneath his clothes, he loves holding your hand, toying with your wedding band whenever you're out together especially in front of leander
▌ Sivir brought her friend the gift that keeps on giving: a heavy bag of gold and a kiss to the cheek. "Happy Valentine's Day." 「 @nameaprice 」
❝ Uwaaaaaooow, thank you so much ! ❞ As soon as her lips left the hexblood's cheek, it bloomed with color. The bag almost forgotten, weighting it in her hands & recognizing it as currency.
❝ Ah, Sivir . . . I can't possibly take this. That feels heavy . . . much. I really don't need money. I swear you being here is better than anything I could buy with gold. ❞ A polite reassurance, already softly pressing the satchel the bounty hunter's way. Well, perhaps she could buy some treats . . . No. That's not proper.
Exclusive: Current system for asylum-seeking minors set to end the day after UK leaves EU
The Home Office is preparing to end the current system of family reunification for asylum-seeking children if the UK leaves the EU without a deal, the Guardian has learned.
The government has privately briefed the UN refugee agency UNHCR and other NGOs that open cases may be able to progress, but a no-deal Brexitwould mean no new applications after 1 November from asylum-seeking children to be reunited with relatives living in the UK. Even if there is a deal, the future of family reunion is not certain.
Lawyers and campaigners say they will be trying to get through as many claims as possible in the next two months, warning that the impact on migrant children stranded alone in countries such as Greece and Italy could be “fatal” as more head for the Channel to try to cross to the UK irregularly.
A spokesman for the UNHCR said: “[We understand] that if the UK leaves the EU without a deal, the Dublin Regulation, which allows for the transfer of asylum-seeking children and adults within the EU to join family members, will no longer apply to the UK.
“UNHCR urges the UK government and its European partners to work together to ensure that appropriate arrangements remain in place for asylum seekers, refugees and stateless people.”
The Home Office has previously been criticised for making it difficult for young migrants to join family in the UK but lawyers say it is still a vital route for highly vulnerable child migrants, many of whom live on the streets in mainland Europe.