• New been sissy submissive to ********
    New been sissy submissive to mistress
    Yay
    Wow
    Love
    Haha
    6
    2 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • I asked ChatGPT what it knew about me from my chat history.
    I asked ChatGPT what it knew about me from my chat history.
    0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 1KB Ansichten
  • With the new verification, this site has gone way down
    With the new verification, this site has gone way down
    Like
    3
    4 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 1KB Ansichten
  • Someone I just met really likes this one ..I'm new to this should I wear it for them ?
    Someone I just met really likes this one ..I'm new to this should I wear it for them ?
    3 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3KB Ansichten
  • #Newgirl
    #Newgirl
    Love
    Like
    Yay
    21
    2 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3KB Ansichten
  • My new fishnet pantyhose and red nail polish. Ready to go for a coffee.
    My new fishnet pantyhose and red nail polish. Ready to go for a coffee.
    Love
    Like
    Yay
    15
    2 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • New me
    New me
    Love
    Yay
    10
    0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 949 Ansichten
  • Another new dress but I don’t like the colour of the top half. Looks good with my jacket and turns into a nice skirt with my black body underneath. Gave me an idea so tried with yesterday outfit too. Quite pleased with myself!
    Another new dress but I don’t like the colour of the top half. Looks good with my jacket and turns into a nice skirt with my black body underneath. Gave me an idea so tried with yesterday outfit too. Quite pleased with myself!
    Love
    Like
    24
    28 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3KB Ansichten
  • New pyjamaaas
    New pyjamaaas
    Love
    Like
    Yay
    31
    5 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • I just woke up, last night i slept in my new body stocking it felt amaxing slippery. Now i put some heels and silicone breast on and took these pictures for you all.
    I just woke up, last night i slept in my new body stocking it felt amaxing slippery. Now i put some heels and silicone breast on and took these pictures for you all.
    Love
    Yay
    Like
    20
    0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 908 Ansichten
  • Oops, MattressCatie let slip some Yoruba in a PM, guess she's a new variety of Nigerian scammer!
    Oops, MattressCatie let slip some Yoruba in a PM, guess she's a new variety of Nigerian scammer!
    Like
    Haha
    Love
    5
    1 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • Got new jakcet. Kinda short.
    Got new jakcet. Kinda short.
    Love
    Like
    20
    2 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • Got a couple new dresses today to take pics in and a new set of stockings to try with the dresses. I love the way these new stockings look. Please look forward to the upcoming pics I post
    Got a couple new dresses today to take pics in and a new set of stockings to try with the dresses. I love the way these new stockings look. Please look forward to the upcoming pics I post
    Like
    Love
    15
    7 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 1KB Ansichten
  • Love this combo ..... Also, My new outfits got delivered today ... Super excited to try them all on tonight make some new content
    Love this combo 😊..... Also, My new outfits got delivered today 🥰... Super excited to try them all on tonight ❤️ make some new content 🤗
    Love
    Like
    21
    3 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 1KB Ansichten
  • Hi all , I'm a newbie here looking to make new friends and happy to find this site
    Hi all , I'm a newbie here looking to make new friends and happy to find this site
    Like
    4
    2 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 1KB Ansichten
  • I needed a new maids outfit, a friend kind of has a long term loan of my old one
    I needed a new maids outfit, a friend kind of has a long term loan of my old one
    Love
    Like
    23
    11 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • Afternoon everyone hope you are all well
    New dress not sure of rhe dress colour on me though
    Afternoon everyone hope you are all well New dress not sure of rhe dress colour on me though 🤔 😊
    Love
    Like
    11
    3 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • Is anyone on here in Bristol, UK? Or nearby? Looking for a new playmate.xx
    Is anyone on here in Bristol, UK? Or nearby? Looking for a new playmate.xx
    4 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • I just had my hair cut and with just -12 I just had to show you my new.... bikini top:)
    I just had my hair cut and with just -12 I just had to show you my new.... bikini top:)
    Love
    Like
    Yay
    Wow
    26
    7 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • Pink pink pink! new wig and dress hope everyone’s week is going well so far xx
    Pink pink pink! new wig and dress 😍 hope everyone’s week is going well so far 🥰😘xx
    Love
    Wow
    24
    13 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • My new dress
    My new dress 😘
    Love
    8
    0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • More pics of my new dress along with another pair of wife’s knickers! Threw these away also? It felt like my birthday! He he
    More pics of my new dress along with another pair of wife’s knickers! Threw these away also? It felt like my birthday! He he 🥰 😘
    Love
    7
    0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • I'm recruiting newbie subs that wants to serve me and get trained and completely owned by Me #sissyslut #femboy
    I'm recruiting newbie subs that wants to serve me and get trained and completely owned by Me #sissyslut #femboy
    Haha
    Love
    3
    0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3KB Ansichten
  • She chose the necklace last.
    That was always how it went, hair first, then the glasses, the careful line of lipstick that made her look like she knew what she was doing even when she didn’t. The mirror showed her a woman with copper rose hair and a smile she’d practiced for years, one that said I’m fine, thank you, without inviting questions.
    The turquoise collar lay on the dresser like a memory she wasn’t ready to wear today.
    Instead, her fingers closed around the spinel and garnet strand.
    It was cool in her hand, heavier than it looked. The stones weren’t perfect, no two were the same. Pink spinel caught the light softly, purple deepened toward dusk, and the garnets glowed like embers that refused to go out. Freeform. Unapologetic. Honest. She liked that about them. They didn’t pretend to be anything other than what they were.
    The magnetic clasp clicked shut at the back of her neck with a small, decisive sound.
    At 51 centimetres, the necklace didn’t sit high and declarative like the turquoise one. It rested lower, closer to the heart. A quiet line of colour against her skin, silver tones flickering when she moved. It didn’t announce her presence, it stayed with her.
    She leaned closer to the mirror.
    The spinel echoed the warmth of her hair. The garnet answered the lipstick. Together they softened her face, drew the eye downward, slowed everything. This wasn’t a necklace for making an entrance. It was for conversations that lasted longer than planned. For afternoons that drifted into evening. For being seen without being displayed.
    She smiled again this time without rehearsing it.
    Some jewellery was armour. Some was memory. This one felt like continuity, like all the versions of herself agreeing, briefly, to coexist. The woman who once wore turquoise like a shield. The woman who now preferred stones that looked as if they’d lived a little.
    She reached for her coat, left the turquoise where it was, and stepped out.
    The necklace moved with her not loudly, not urgently but faithfully, stone against skin, colour against breath, proof that beauty didn’t have to shout to be real.
    She chose the necklace last. That was always how it went, hair first, then the glasses, the careful line of lipstick that made her look like she knew what she was doing even when she didn’t. The mirror showed her a woman with copper rose hair and a smile she’d practiced for years, one that said I’m fine, thank you, without inviting questions. The turquoise collar lay on the dresser like a memory she wasn’t ready to wear today. Instead, her fingers closed around the spinel and garnet strand. It was cool in her hand, heavier than it looked. The stones weren’t perfect, no two were the same. Pink spinel caught the light softly, purple deepened toward dusk, and the garnets glowed like embers that refused to go out. Freeform. Unapologetic. Honest. She liked that about them. They didn’t pretend to be anything other than what they were. The magnetic clasp clicked shut at the back of her neck with a small, decisive sound. At 51 centimetres, the necklace didn’t sit high and declarative like the turquoise one. It rested lower, closer to the heart. A quiet line of colour against her skin, silver tones flickering when she moved. It didn’t announce her presence, it stayed with her. She leaned closer to the mirror. The spinel echoed the warmth of her hair. The garnet answered the lipstick. Together they softened her face, drew the eye downward, slowed everything. This wasn’t a necklace for making an entrance. It was for conversations that lasted longer than planned. For afternoons that drifted into evening. For being seen without being displayed. She smiled again this time without rehearsing it. Some jewellery was armour. Some was memory. This one felt like continuity, like all the versions of herself agreeing, briefly, to coexist. The woman who once wore turquoise like a shield. The woman who now preferred stones that looked as if they’d lived a little. She reached for her coat, left the turquoise where it was, and stepped out. The necklace moved with her not loudly, not urgently but faithfully, stone against skin, colour against breath, proof that beauty didn’t have to shout to be real.
    Love
    Like
    Yay
    11
    0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 6KB Ansichten
  • I need a new ***** and cross dresser ready to be explored and trained forever
    I need a new slave and cross dresser 👗 ready to be explored and trained forever😇
    Haha
    Love
    3
    1 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • cant wait for my new pink panties to come in the mail
    cant wait for my new pink panties to come in the mail
    Love
    Like
    13
    0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • I need new friends if you want to add me on snap chat here is my account https://www.snapchat.com/add/toychicafnaf85?share_id=pF7GfctioJ4&locale=en-AU (to the people on here I'm not trying to scam or anything I just want some new friends that I can talk to but massive respect to the people on here Catching bad people and scammes)
    I need new friends if you want to add me on snap chat here is my account https://www.snapchat.com/add/toychicafnaf85?share_id=pF7GfctioJ4&locale=en-AU (to the people on here I'm not trying to scam or anything I just want some new friends that I can talk to but massive respect to the people on here Catching bad people and scammes)
    Love
    5
    1 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • Are you really wiling to be my property? explore the new world with me as your ********?
    Are you really wiling to be my property? explore the new world with me as your mistress?
    Love
    Haha
    6
    6 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • My new Track, released today
    My new Track, released today ♥️
    Love
    Yay
    6
    0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • In the Hills after the Bomb they mostly call me The Late Detective. Late to justice, late to lunch, late to the end of the world. The sky was the colour of an old television left on after the station died, tilted at a Dutch angle like God had nudged the tripod and walked away. In this town, fabric tells the truth faster than people. I walked through it swaddled in turquoise satin, layered, intentional, defiant. My trenchcoated attire was heavy silk satin, the kind with a weight to it, a gravity. Satin doesn’t flutter; it arrives. It caught the light even in monochrome, turning every streetlamp into a confession. Underneath, the Victorian mourning attire did what it was designed to do: announce loss while indulging excess. Glossy deluxe blouse frills, cut wide and deep, each fold edged like it had a memory. They whispered when I moved. Satin remembers. It always does. The hijab headscarf was oversized turquoise satin, wrapped high and proud, smooth as a bribe sliding across a table. Over that, a chiffon voile veil, sheer, unforgiving, honest. Chiffon doesn’t hide anything; it only softens the blow. It floated just off my face, catching the radioactive breeze, turning my grief into motion. Taffeta anchored the gown beneath it all, crisp and slightly petulant, holding its shape like a stubborn alibi. Taffeta never forgets it’s there. I knew the case was serious the moment I saw the mannequins. The Garment District had been stripped naked. Not torn apart, undressed. Racks stood empty, arms out like they were asking questions nobody wanted to answer. The air smelled wrong. Usually it was starch, dye, steam, ambition. Now it was dust and panic. Silk was missing. All of it. Not just silk as a category, but silk as an idea. Satin-faced charmeuse. Heavy duchess satin meant for gowns that expected to be remembered. Raw silk with its tiny imperfections, honest as a tired smile. Silk twill that knew how to hold a line. Gone. Satin too, proper satin, not that plastic nonsense. The good stuff that slides between your fingers like it’s trying to escape. Satin that makes even cheap tailoring look like it has a lawyer. Vanished. Taffeta bolts were missing next. Crisp, noisy taffeta that rustles when you walk, announcing your presence whether you like it or not. The kind of fabric that refuses subtlety. Someone had wanted drama. And chiffon. God help us, chiffon. Weightless, floaty, translucent. Chiffon that catches on breath, on light, on the idea of movement. The chiffon racks looked like a graveyard of empty hangers. Voile too, cotton voile, silk voile, the gentle middle child that designers rely on when they want softness without surrender. Gone like a promise after the bombs. This wasn’t theft. This was curation. The femme fatale found me tracing the grain of a wooden cutting table, my gloved fingers remembering where silk had once lain. “They took only the best,” she said, lighting a cigarette like it was an accessory. “Nothing synthetic. Nothing that couldn’t mourn properly.” That told me everything. In the apocalypse, fabric becomes currency. Silk means water, means safety, means time to think. Satin means power. Taffeta means spectacle. Chiffon means hope. Voile means tenderness, the most dangerous commodity of all. I followed the trail through tailor shops and bombed out ateliers, past pattern paper fluttering like white flags. A single thread of turquoise voile snagged on a rusted nail led me uphill, toward the old soundstages where dreams used to be pressed, steamed, and sent out into the world with a smile. Inside, the thieves had laid it all out. Bolts of silk arranged by weight and weave. Satin draped over chairs, catching the light like liquid. Taffeta stacked with military precision, crisp edges aligned, ready to explode into skirts and coats. Chiffon suspended from rigging, floating in layers, a cloud of almost nothing. Voile stretched and tested, light passing through it like mercy. They weren’t stealing to sell. They were building. A final show. A post apocalyptic couture reveal. If the world was ending and it always was then it deserved a proper wardrobe. They surrounded me, guns low, eyes hungry. I adjusted my veil, let the chiffon breathe. “You can’t hoard fabric,” I told them. “It has to be worn. Silk dies in the dark.” The Choir hesitated. Madame Bias frowned, fingers brushing a length of satin like she was checking its pulse. The Cutter looked at my gown, at the way satin, taffeta, and chiffon argued and reconciled on my body. Fashion did the rest. In the end, the fabrics went back out into the streets. Seamstresses worked by candlelight. Mourning gowns bloomed. Trenchcoats shimmered. Veils floated through fallout like prayers that hadn’t given up yet. I walked home heavy with more layers than I arrived wearing, turquoise against the end of the world, every material doing what it was born to do.
    In the Hills after the Bomb they mostly call me The Late Detective. Late to justice, late to lunch, late to the end of the world. The sky was the colour of an old television left on after the station died, tilted at a Dutch angle like God had nudged the tripod and walked away. In this town, fabric tells the truth faster than people. I walked through it swaddled in turquoise satin, layered, intentional, defiant. My trenchcoated attire was heavy silk satin, the kind with a weight to it, a gravity. Satin doesn’t flutter; it arrives. It caught the light even in monochrome, turning every streetlamp into a confession. Underneath, the Victorian mourning attire did what it was designed to do: announce loss while indulging excess. Glossy deluxe blouse frills, cut wide and deep, each fold edged like it had a memory. They whispered when I moved. Satin remembers. It always does. The hijab headscarf was oversized turquoise satin, wrapped high and proud, smooth as a bribe sliding across a table. Over that, a chiffon voile veil, sheer, unforgiving, honest. Chiffon doesn’t hide anything; it only softens the blow. It floated just off my face, catching the radioactive breeze, turning my grief into motion. Taffeta anchored the gown beneath it all, crisp and slightly petulant, holding its shape like a stubborn alibi. Taffeta never forgets it’s there. I knew the case was serious the moment I saw the mannequins. The Garment District had been stripped naked. Not torn apart, undressed. Racks stood empty, arms out like they were asking questions nobody wanted to answer. The air smelled wrong. Usually it was starch, dye, steam, ambition. Now it was dust and panic. Silk was missing. All of it. Not just silk as a category, but silk as an idea. Satin-faced charmeuse. Heavy duchess satin meant for gowns that expected to be remembered. Raw silk with its tiny imperfections, honest as a tired smile. Silk twill that knew how to hold a line. Gone. Satin too, proper satin, not that plastic nonsense. The good stuff that slides between your fingers like it’s trying to escape. Satin that makes even cheap tailoring look like it has a lawyer. Vanished. Taffeta bolts were missing next. Crisp, noisy taffeta that rustles when you walk, announcing your presence whether you like it or not. The kind of fabric that refuses subtlety. Someone had wanted drama. And chiffon. God help us, chiffon. Weightless, floaty, translucent. Chiffon that catches on breath, on light, on the idea of movement. The chiffon racks looked like a graveyard of empty hangers. Voile too, cotton voile, silk voile, the gentle middle child that designers rely on when they want softness without surrender. Gone like a promise after the bombs. This wasn’t theft. This was curation. The femme fatale found me tracing the grain of a wooden cutting table, my gloved fingers remembering where silk had once lain. “They took only the best,” she said, lighting a cigarette like it was an accessory. “Nothing synthetic. Nothing that couldn’t mourn properly.” That told me everything. In the apocalypse, fabric becomes currency. Silk means water, means safety, means time to think. Satin means power. Taffeta means spectacle. Chiffon means hope. Voile means tenderness, the most dangerous commodity of all. I followed the trail through tailor shops and bombed out ateliers, past pattern paper fluttering like white flags. A single thread of turquoise voile snagged on a rusted nail led me uphill, toward the old soundstages where dreams used to be pressed, steamed, and sent out into the world with a smile. Inside, the thieves had laid it all out. Bolts of silk arranged by weight and weave. Satin draped over chairs, catching the light like liquid. Taffeta stacked with military precision, crisp edges aligned, ready to explode into skirts and coats. Chiffon suspended from rigging, floating in layers, a cloud of almost nothing. Voile stretched and tested, light passing through it like mercy. They weren’t stealing to sell. They were building. A final show. A post apocalyptic couture reveal. If the world was ending and it always was then it deserved a proper wardrobe. They surrounded me, guns low, eyes hungry. I adjusted my veil, let the chiffon breathe. “You can’t hoard fabric,” I told them. “It has to be worn. Silk dies in the dark.” The Choir hesitated. Madame Bias frowned, fingers brushing a length of satin like she was checking its pulse. The Cutter looked at my gown, at the way satin, taffeta, and chiffon argued and reconciled on my body. Fashion did the rest. In the end, the fabrics went back out into the streets. Seamstresses worked by candlelight. Mourning gowns bloomed. Trenchcoats shimmered. Veils floated through fallout like prayers that hadn’t given up yet. I walked home heavy with more layers than I arrived wearing, turquoise against the end of the world, every material doing what it was born to do.
    Like
    Love
    2
    0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3KB Ansichten
  • The case came in sideways, like everything else north of the equator these days.

    Over the irradiated murky Atlantic pond, Glasgow didn’t rain so much as accuse. The drizzle slid down the soot-stained tenements like it knew every sin committed inside them. Post-war, post-bomb, post-everything that ever pretended to be civilized. The apocalypse didn’t flatten Scotland the way it did Los Angeles, it hollowed it out instead, left the bones standing and filled the gaps with whisky, guns, and ghosts.

    I wore black that night. Not the practical kind.
    The statement kind.

    A black oversized tartan satin headscarf wrapped tight around my hair, catching the light like wet ink. Over my face, a sheer black chiffon voile veil, the mourning lace thin enough to breathe through, thick enough to hide regret. The rest of me was Victorian grief dialed up to eleven: glossy black tartan blouse with rococo frills, satin panels hugging me like a second conscience, skirts whispering every time I moved. I looked like a widow who’d buried the world and decided it deserved it.

    In Glasgow, that bought me anonymity.

    They called me Han here too, though the locals said it like a question. I’d followed the trail across the Atlantic after a shipment of American surplus hardware went missing, Tommy guns, plasma pistols, a few toys left over from the end of the world. Fallout New Vegas tech, Hollywood Hills money, Highland routes. Someone was running iron through the glens and washing it down with single malt older than the war itself.

    The back streets off Trongate were crooked enough to make a Dutch cameraman weep. Buildings leaned in close, sharing secrets. Gas lamps flickered like they were afraid of what they might illuminate. I walked slow, heels deliberate, veil fluttering just enough to let the right people notice and the wrong people hesitate.

    That’s when the femme fatale found me.

    She leaned against a doorway like she’d been waiting for the end of the world to catch up. Hair platinum under a cloche hat, lips dark as a closed casket. Scottish, sharp, and carrying herself like a blade wrapped in silk.

    “You’re far from Hollywood, sweetheart,” she said. “And you’re dressed for a funeral that isn’t yours.”

    “Everyone’s funeral is mine eventually,” I said. “I just like to dress appropriately.”

    She smiled. That was the mistake.

    Her name was Moira Blackwood. Whisky broker. Gun runner. Mourner by trade. She dealt in Highland routes, smugglers who knew every fog bank, every forgotten rail spur left behind when the bombs fell south. The Americans supplied the firepower. The Scots supplied the patience.

    And someone was skimming.

    Bodies were turning up in the lochs. Empty bottles floating beside them like punchlines. Moira wanted to know who was cutting into her business before it turned into a clan war with automatic weapons.

    We took a train north that barely remembered being a train. Through valleys drowned in mist and radiation snow. I kept the veil on the whole way. In the Highlands, superstition still worked better than bullets.

    The smugglers met us in an abandoned distillery, barrels stacked like tombstones. The tartan of my outfit mirrored theirs, same pattern, different intent. They watched me carefully. Men always did when they couldn’t decide what category to put me in.

    That hesitation saved my life.

    When the shooting started, I was already moving. Heels skidding on stone, skirts swirling, revolver barking from beneath layers of satin and sorrow. Moira went down fast—winged, not dead. The real culprit bolted for the back door, carrying a ledger thick with names and lies.

    I caught him by the loch.

    The water reflected us in stark monochrome: him shaking, me looming, veil rippling like smoke. He confessed quickly. They always did when faced with someone who looked like death had chosen tartan satin couture.

    I left him there for the deep dark water to judge.

    By dawn, the Highlands were quiet again. Moira paid me in whisky older than memory and ammunition stamped with American lies. Fair trade.

    Back in Glasgow, I stood in a cracked mirror in a boarding house that smelled of coal and grief. I removed the veil last. Always last.

    Another city survived. Another secret buried. Another outfit stained with rain instead of blood.

    The world was still tilted. Still broken. Still rolling on at the wrong angle.

    But as long as there were shadows to walk and clothes that told the truth my mouth didn’t have to, I’d keep going.

    Mourning never goes out of fashion.
    The case came in sideways, like everything else north of the equator these days. Over the irradiated murky Atlantic pond, Glasgow didn’t rain so much as accuse. The drizzle slid down the soot-stained tenements like it knew every sin committed inside them. Post-war, post-bomb, post-everything that ever pretended to be civilized. The apocalypse didn’t flatten Scotland the way it did Los Angeles, it hollowed it out instead, left the bones standing and filled the gaps with whisky, guns, and ghosts. I wore black that night. Not the practical kind. The statement kind. A black oversized tartan satin headscarf wrapped tight around my hair, catching the light like wet ink. Over my face, a sheer black chiffon voile veil, the mourning lace thin enough to breathe through, thick enough to hide regret. The rest of me was Victorian grief dialed up to eleven: glossy black tartan blouse with rococo frills, satin panels hugging me like a second conscience, skirts whispering every time I moved. I looked like a widow who’d buried the world and decided it deserved it. In Glasgow, that bought me anonymity. They called me Han here too, though the locals said it like a question. I’d followed the trail across the Atlantic after a shipment of American surplus hardware went missing, Tommy guns, plasma pistols, a few toys left over from the end of the world. Fallout New Vegas tech, Hollywood Hills money, Highland routes. Someone was running iron through the glens and washing it down with single malt older than the war itself. The back streets off Trongate were crooked enough to make a Dutch cameraman weep. Buildings leaned in close, sharing secrets. Gas lamps flickered like they were afraid of what they might illuminate. I walked slow, heels deliberate, veil fluttering just enough to let the right people notice and the wrong people hesitate. That’s when the femme fatale found me. She leaned against a doorway like she’d been waiting for the end of the world to catch up. Hair platinum under a cloche hat, lips dark as a closed casket. Scottish, sharp, and carrying herself like a blade wrapped in silk. “You’re far from Hollywood, sweetheart,” she said. “And you’re dressed for a funeral that isn’t yours.” “Everyone’s funeral is mine eventually,” I said. “I just like to dress appropriately.” She smiled. That was the mistake. Her name was Moira Blackwood. Whisky broker. Gun runner. Mourner by trade. She dealt in Highland routes, smugglers who knew every fog bank, every forgotten rail spur left behind when the bombs fell south. The Americans supplied the firepower. The Scots supplied the patience. And someone was skimming. Bodies were turning up in the lochs. Empty bottles floating beside them like punchlines. Moira wanted to know who was cutting into her business before it turned into a clan war with automatic weapons. We took a train north that barely remembered being a train. Through valleys drowned in mist and radiation snow. I kept the veil on the whole way. In the Highlands, superstition still worked better than bullets. The smugglers met us in an abandoned distillery, barrels stacked like tombstones. The tartan of my outfit mirrored theirs, same pattern, different intent. They watched me carefully. Men always did when they couldn’t decide what category to put me in. That hesitation saved my life. When the shooting started, I was already moving. Heels skidding on stone, skirts swirling, revolver barking from beneath layers of satin and sorrow. Moira went down fast—winged, not dead. The real culprit bolted for the back door, carrying a ledger thick with names and lies. I caught him by the loch. The water reflected us in stark monochrome: him shaking, me looming, veil rippling like smoke. He confessed quickly. They always did when faced with someone who looked like death had chosen tartan satin couture. I left him there for the deep dark water to judge. By dawn, the Highlands were quiet again. Moira paid me in whisky older than memory and ammunition stamped with American lies. Fair trade. Back in Glasgow, I stood in a cracked mirror in a boarding house that smelled of coal and grief. I removed the veil last. Always last. Another city survived. Another secret buried. Another outfit stained with rain instead of blood. The world was still tilted. Still broken. Still rolling on at the wrong angle. But as long as there were shadows to walk and clothes that told the truth my mouth didn’t have to, I’d keep going. Mourning never goes out of fashion.
    Love
    2
    0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3KB Ansichten
  • Happy new month girls idk about you girls but this chica can't wait for summer time
    Happy new month girls idk about you girls but this chica can't wait for summer time
    Love
    Like
    12
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  • I'll be your fem boy num this months, happy New months of love to every one more days to explore a whole new world filled with love on here
    I'll be your fem boy num this months, happy New months of love to every one more days to explore a whole new world filled with love on here 💋💋
    Love
    Like
    Yay
    23
    1 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • My wifes new pantyhose
    My wifes new pantyhose
    Love
    Like
    12
    3 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3KB Ansichten
  • New dress for new year :)
    New dress for new year :)
    Love
    Yay
    Like
    37
    5 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • Here's some newer pics ladies hope u like
    Here's some newer pics ladies hope u like
    Love
    Like
    Yay
    18
    1 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • Got a new cell # (484)-501-5879 Text or call me if you want 2 meet up and **** me
    Got a new cell # (484)-501-5879💋 Text or call me if you want 2 meet up and Fuck me 🤭😜💋🥒💦
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    Like
    Haha
    Yay
    9
    1 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 1KB Ansichten
  • New blouse....and a skirt that I've had for some time, I absolutely love how it hugs me in all the right places
    New blouse....and a skirt that I've had for some time, I absolutely love how it hugs me in all the right places ❤️
    Love
    Like
    10
    0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 1KB Ansichten
  • New cheap pair
    New cheap pair
    Love
    Yay
    9
    1 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • My new uniform. I absolutely love it
    My new uniform. I absolutely love it
    Love
    4
    2 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten
  • I wanna be your #NewThang on the net! #Femboi #HaileyBaby #bwc #femboytiktok #sissyboy #femboyX
    I wanna be your #NewThang on the net! #Femboi #HaileyBaby #bwc #femboytiktok #sissyboy #femboyX
    Love
    Like
    Yay
    12
    2 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 4KB Ansichten 63
  • Got me new friend. Already leaking.
    Got me new friend. Already leaking.
    0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 934 Ansichten
  • With summer well and truly underway in Oz
    This top is perfect for the hot weather and goes very well with my 'new' skirts
    With summer well and truly underway in Oz 🇦🇺🌡️🌞 This top is perfect for the hot weather and goes very well with my 'new' skirts 😎
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    15
    2 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 1KB Ansichten
  • I love this off the shoulder top, I've had this top for a few years, which is unusual for me, the skirts are recent purchases.
    I tend to swap out my girlie clothes fairly often. I shop almost exclusively in charity shops, so I buy and then donate them back when I'm ready for something 'new'. I really enjoy the treasure hunt feel when I find something cool, this system is also handy to keep my closet from overflowing .
    I love this off the shoulder top, I've had this top for a few years, which is unusual for me, the skirts are recent purchases. I tend to swap out my girlie clothes fairly often. I shop almost exclusively in charity shops, so I buy and then donate them back when I'm ready for something 'new'. I really enjoy the treasure hunt feel when I find something cool, this system is also handy to keep my closet from overflowing 😅.
    Love
    Like
    10
    0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 1KB Ansichten
  • Been so busy lately but got a new sexy fit to pose in.. alot more pics coming soon
    Been so busy lately 🙃 but got a new sexy fit to pose in.. alot more pics coming soon😅💜
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    24
    4 Kommentare 1 Geteilt 4KB Ansichten
  • How do I look in my new panty host?http://t.me/Queenvaleriejeffrey
    How do I look in my new panty host?http://t.me/Queenvaleriejeffrey
    Love
    Haha
    Yay
    10
    3 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 3KB Ansichten
  • Amnesia...

    I have erased
    The trace
    Of Past
    My present
    Is not true
    The Fog
    Of Future
    Is a chance
    To whisper
    I Love You...

    I dont remember
    Who I am
    My record was
    once lost
    I thought
    They
    Might
    To try to check...
    Results were
    Void or False...
    And then
    I whispered
    I am
    I was
    A girl
    Girl Kate...
    Kate Aashe?
    Yes
    There is a file...
    We're waiting
    To update...
    To my surprise
    All matched
    And Weight
    And Hеight
    And lips
    And eyes.
    And fingerprints...
    I got a date
    For passport.
    I was touched...
    They let me ever read
    My past...
    Once married
    Twice divorced
    My future
    Looks
    Not very bright
    But still
    Quite light to go...
    Kind Doctor
    Checked my chromosomes
    But found only one
    The other was forever lost
    But seems nobody minds...
    I got my number
    My ID
    And made new hair cut...
    Ms. Aashe just forgot her dreams
    Long hidden in her past

    My very Past
    Has been erased
    My present
    Is not true
    The Fog
    Of Future
    Is a chance
    I never meet with You...
    Amnesia... I have erased The trace Of Past My present Is not true The Fog Of Future Is a chance To whisper I Love You... I dont remember Who I am My record was once lost I thought They Might To try to check... Results were Void or False... And then I whispered I am I was A girl Girl Kate... Kate Aashe? Yes There is a file... We're waiting To update... To my surprise All matched And Weight And Hеight And lips And eyes. And fingerprints... I got a date For passport. I was touched... They let me ever read My past... Once married Twice divorced My future Looks Not very bright But still Quite light to go... Kind Doctor Checked my chromosomes But found only one The other was forever lost But seems nobody minds... I got my number My ID And made new hair cut... Ms. Aashe just forgot her dreams Long hidden in her past My very Past Has been erased My present Is not true The Fog Of Future Is a chance I never meet with You...
    Love
    Yay
    21
    0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 4KB Ansichten
  • Miss Costy gots me a new top
    Miss Costy gots me a new top
    Love
    7
    0 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 1KB Ansichten
  • New body suit and leopard print heels hope everyone’s week is going well! Almost the weekend!! x
    New body suit and leopard print heels 😍 hope everyone’s week is going well! Almost the weekend!! 🥰🥰😘x
    Love
    Like
    Yay
    16
    13 Kommentare 0 Geteilt 2KB Ansichten