The Mirror's Edge by CandyBaby (Patreon)
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The Mirror’s Edge!
By CandyBaby
© 2019-2055 QoSBookclub
All Rights Reserved
No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed or
transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, contact us by sending us a DM us on patreon.com/QoSBookclub
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are a product of the author’s imagination. Locales and public names are sometimes used for atmospheric purposes. Any resemblance to actual people, living or dead, or to businesses, companies, events, institutions, or locales is completely coincidental.
**DEVIN DICKIE NOTE**
All characters are OVER 18 years of AGE! This is a bullying fantasy and not real. The acts in the following written work are only consensual sexual choices and fantasy humiliation scenarios.
Bullying is NOT OKAY and If you or someone you know is being bullied, please alert the authorities.
Chapter 1: The Game Begins
The house gleamed like a polished blade, its glass walls catching the late afternoon sun and throwing it back in sharp, fractured lines. Nathan stood in the kitchen, slicing tomatoes for dinner, the knife trembling slightly in his hand. The air was thick with the scent of basil and Elle’s perfume—a jasmine-edged whisper that followed her everywhere. She hadn’t come home yet, but her presence lingered in the house, in the way every surface seemed curated to her taste: stark whites, cold chrome, a single orchid in a vase that cost more than his monthly freelance earnings.
He glanced at the clock—6:47 p.m. She’d be home soon, her heels announcing her arrival before her voice did. Nathan’s stomach twisted, a mix of anticipation and unease. He loved her, loved the way she filled a room with her certainty, but lately, that certainty had turned inward, probing at the soft spots he’d tried to hide. He adjusted his glasses, pushed back his sandy hair, and tried to focus on the cutting board. The tomatoes bled under the knife, too ripe, too fragile.
The front door clicked open, and Elle’s voice sliced through the silence. “Nathan, darling, is that you playing house again?” Her tone was honeyed, but there was a barb beneath it, a playful cruelty that made his shoulders tense. She stepped into the kitchen, her tailored blazer slung over one arm, her black pencil skirt accentuating the curve of her hips. Her dark hair was pulled into a severe bun, emphasizing the sharp lines of her face. She looked like a predator who’d already spotted her prey.
“Just finishing dinner,” Nathan said, forcing a smile. He wiped his hands on a dish towel, suddenly aware of how small he felt in his faded T-shirt and jeans. Elle’s eyes flicked over him, appraising, lingering on the slight softness at his waist.
“Always so domestic,” she said, stepping closer. Her fingers brushed the edge of the counter, then trailed along his arm, leaving a trail of heat. “But you know, I was thinking today... you could use a little... softening.” Her lips curved, not quite a smile. “All this hard work, it’s making you so... rigid.”
Nathan swallowed, unsure if she was teasing or testing. “Softening?” he asked, his voice catching.
Elle tilted her head, her eyes glinting. “You’re so tense, darling. Always trying to prove something. What if you just... let go a little?” She reached into her bag and pulled out a bundle of fabric, soft and shimmering. A silk robe, pale lavender, the kind she wore after her evening baths. She held it out, letting it drape over her fingers like a challenge. “Try this on. For me.”
Nathan laughed, a nervous sound. “What, your robe? That’s not exactly my style, Elle.”
Her smile tightened, just enough to make his pulse quicken. “Your style,” she said, her voice low, “is whatever I say it is tonight.” She stepped closer, the robe brushing against his chest. “Humor me, Nathan. Or are you too... limited for that?”
The word limited landed like a slap, subtle but stinging. Nathan’s cheeks burned. He wanted to argue, to point out that he’d always been enough for her—hadn’t he?—but her gaze held him, unyielding. He took the robe, the silk cool and foreign in his hands. “Just for a minute,” he muttered, turning toward the bedroom to change.
“No,” Elle said, her voice sharp now. “Here. Where I can see you.” His breath caught. The kitchen felt too bright, the glass walls exposing him to the world outside. But Elle’s eyes were the real spotlight, pinning him in place. He fumbled with his shirt, peeling it off, then slipped into the robe. The fabric clung to his skin, too smooth, too delicate. He felt ridiculous, exposed, but when he looked at Elle, her expression was one of triumph, not mockery. “Better,” she said, circling him like a sculptor assessing her work. “You look... softer already.” Her fingers grazed his shoulder, adjusting the collar. “But you’re still so stiff. Relax, Nathan. Let me see the real you.”
The real you. The words echoed, twisting something inside him. He wanted to please her, to be what she wanted, but the robe felt like a costume, a role he didn’t understand. “I look stupid,” he said, half-laughing, hoping to break the tension.
Elle’s smile vanished. “Stupid?” she repeated, her voice cool. “No, darling. You look like you’re finally trying. But you’re right—you’re not there yet. You’re still holding on to that...
ordinary little shell of yours.” She leaned in, her lips brushing his ear. “Don’t you want to be extraordinary for me?” Nathan’s throat tightened. Her words were a lure, pulling him deeper into her orbit. He nodded, unable to speak, and she stepped back, satisfied. “Good boy,” she murmured, turning to pour herself a glass of wine. “Keep it on for dinner. Let’s see how it feels.”
As they ate, the robe clung to Nathan’s skin, a constant reminder of her gaze. Every bite felt like a performance, every glance from her a judgment. She talked about her day—clients, campaigns, her effortless command of the boardroom—but her eyes kept drifting to him, assessing. “You’re not like them,” she said once, mid-sentence, her fork poised in the air. “Those men at work, all bluster and ego. You’re... malleable. That’s what I love about you.” Malleable. The word settled in his chest, heavy and ambiguous. Was it a compliment or a critique? He didn’t ask. He just wore the robe, ate his dinner, and tried to ignore the way his reflection in the glass walls looked like a stranger.
Chapter 2:
The Wardrobe Shift
A week later, the lavender robe hung in Nathan’s closet, nestled between his flannel shirts and faded jeans like an interloper. Elle had insisted he keep it, calling it “a gift for your potential.” He hadn’t worn it since that night, but its presence was a quiet pressure, a reminder of the line she’d drawn in the sand. He told himself it was just a game, a quirk of her unpredictable nature, but the memory of her voice—malleable—kept him awake at
night, staring at the ceiling while Elle slept beside him, her breathing steady and sure.
She’d been busier lately, her marketing firm demanding late nights and weekend calls. When she was home, though, her attention was laser-focused, a spotlight Nathan couldn’t escape. That Saturday, she breezed into the living room where Nathan was sketching a logo on his tablet, her arms full of shopping bags. The labels were high-end, names he recognized from her wardrobe, not his.
“Presents,” she announced, dropping the bags at his feet. Her smile was bright, but there was an edge to it, like a blade catching the light. “I thought we’d have some fun today.”
Nathan set the tablet down, his stomach knotting. “More robes?” he asked, trying to keep his tone light.
Elle laughed, a sound that was both warm and sharp. “Oh, darling, we’re past that. This is about... elevating you.” She pulled a shirt from one of the bags, a flowing tunic in pale ivory, its fabric sheer enough to hint at the skin beneath. “Try this. It’s androgynous, modern. Perfect for you.”
Nathan eyed the shirt, its cut unmistakably feminine despite her words. “That’s not really me, Elle. I mean, it’s nice, but—” “Not you?” She arched an eyebrow, stepping closer. Her fingers brushed his cheek, lingering just long enough to make his breath hitch. “You don’t get to decide what’s you anymore, Nathan. Not when you’re so... unfinished.” Her voice dropped, low and intimate. “Don’t you trust me to know what’s best?”
The question hung between them, heavy with expectation. Nathan wanted to argue, to point out that he liked his jeans, his plain tees, his unremarkable comfort. But her eyes held a challenge, and the memory of her disappointment last week—the way she’d called
him limited—still stung. He took the shirt, his fingers brushing the soft fabric.
“Fine,” he said, standing. “I’ll try it on.”
Elle’s smile was triumphant, but her words cut deeper. “Good. But don’t just try. Commit. You’re always so half-hearted, Nathan. It’s... disappointing.” She sat on the couch, crossing her legs, her posture a study in control. “Show me you can be more.”
He changed in the bedroom, avoiding the mirror. The tunic felt alien, its loose fit accentuating his narrow shoulders, the hem brushing his thighs. When he stepped back into the living room, Elle’s gaze was immediate, appraising. She stood, circling him, her fingers adjusting the collar, tugging the fabric to sit just so. “Much better,” she said, her voice a purr. “You look... open. Vulnerable. It suits you.” She stepped back, her head tilted. “But you’re still fighting it. Why is that? Afraid of what people might think? Or is it that you know you’re not enough without me guiding you?”
Nathan’s face burned. “I’m not fighting,” he said, but his voice was weak, unconvincing. “It’s just... different.”
“Different,” she echoed, her tone mocking. “That’s your problem, Nathan. You cling to ordinary. You could be so much more if you’d just let me shape you.” She reached into another bag, pulling out a pair of slim, tailored trousers in a soft gray. “These next. And lose the jeans. They’re so... pedestrian.”
He complied, the act of changing under her scrutiny feeling like a surrender. The trousers hugged his legs, accentuating their thinness, making him feel exposed. Elle’s approval was immediate, but it came with a price. “See?” she said, her hand resting on his hip, possessive. “This is what I mean by potential. You’re starting to look like someone I could show off. Not just...
well, you know.” She let the sentence hang, the implication clear: the old Nathan wasn’t enough.
That night, they went to a gallery opening, one of Elle’s work events. Nathan wore the tunic and trousers, his discomfort masked by her arm linked through his. Strangers’ glances lingered, their curiosity a silent judgment. Elle leaned in during a quiet moment, her lips brushing his ear. “They’re looking at you,” she whispered. “Not because you’re out of place, but because you’re finally interesting. Don’t ruin it by being... small.”
The word small echoed in his mind as they moved through the crowd, her hand guiding him, her presence a tether he couldn’t escape. He felt like a project, a canvas she was painting with her own desires. And yet, as her fingers tightened on his arm, he wondered if he was starting to crave the way she saw him—or the way she made him see himself.
Chapter 3: The Public Test
The city’s pulse throbbed through the open-air restaurant, a chic rooftop affair where Elle’s colleagues mingled under strings of amber lights. Nathan adjusted the collar of the androgynous blouse Elle had chosen—a flowing, slate-blue number that clung to his frame in ways that made his skin prickle. The tailored trousers hugged his thighs, their cut accentuating every movement, as if Elle had designed his discomfort to be seen. She stood beside him, radiant in a crimson dress that molded to her
curves, her arm looped through his with a possessiveness that felt like a leash.
“You’re doing wonderfully,” she murmured, her lips close enough that her breath grazed his ear, sending a shiver down his spine. “Everyone’s noticing you. Don’t you feel it?” Her voice was a velvet caress, but there was a sharpness beneath, a reminder that this was her stage, and he was her prop.
Nathan forced a smile, his cheeks warm under the weight of strangers’ glances. The blouse’s sheer fabric hinted at his skin, its softness a stark contrast to the rigid denim he’d once worn. He felt exposed, a specimen under glass, and Elle’s delight in his unease only deepened the sensation. “I feel... out of place,” he admitted, his voice low, hoping for a scrap of reassurance.
Her laugh was low, intimate, but it cut like a blade. “Out of place? Oh, darling, you’re exactly where I want you.” She leaned closer, her fingers trailing down his arm, lingering at his wrist. “Look at them. They’re wondering who you are, what you are. And you’re mine to show off.” Her nails pressed lightly into his skin, a silent claim. “Don’t ruin it by being... small.”
That word again—small. It lodged in his chest, a splinter of doubt. Nathan scanned the crowd, catching eyes that lingered too long, whispers behind wine glasses. Was it curiosity, judgment, or something else? Elle’s hand slid to his lower back, guiding him toward a group of her colleagues, her touch both anchor and chain. “Smile,” she whispered, her lips brushing his earlobe. “Show them you’re worth my attention.”
The conversation blurred—marketing strategies, client wins—but Elle’s presence dominated. She introduced Nathan as “my muse,” her voice dripping with pride and something darker, like ownership. Her colleagues, polished and sharp-edged, nodded politely, but their eyes flicked over him, assessing. One woman,
her lips painted a bold red, tilted her head. “Bold choice,” she said, gesturing to Nathan’s blouse. “Not many men could pull that off.” “He’s not like most men,” Elle replied, her hand tightening on Nathan’s waist. “He’s... pliable.” The word hung in the air, charged with implication. Nathan’s face burned, but Elle’s smile was radiant, daring him to contradict her. He didn’t. He sipped his wine, the liquid sharp on his tongue, and tried to ignore the way her fingers lingered, possessive, on his hip.
Later, as they stood by the railing, the city sprawling below, Elle’s mood shifted. She leaned against him, her body warm and unyielding, her perfume a heady cloud. “You’re learning,” she said, her voice low, almost a purr. “But you’re still holding back. Why is that, Nathan? Afraid to let go?” Her fingers brushed the hem of his blouse, grazing the skin above his waistband, a touch that sent heat curling through him despite his unease. “You could be so much more if you’d just surrender.” “Surrender?” he echoed, his voice barely audible over the hum of the crowd. The word felt dangerous, a line he wasn’t sure he could cross.
Her eyes locked onto his, dark and unyielding. “To me,” she said, her hand sliding up his chest, fingers splaying over the thin fabric. “To what I see in you. Don’t you want to be... desired?” The word was a lure, her touch a promise she could withhold. Nathan’s breath hitched, caught between shame and a desperate need to please her. She smiled, sensing his weakness, and stepped back, leaving him cold. “Keep up, darling,” she said, turning to rejoin the crowd. “Or I’ll find someone who can.”
The rest of the night was a haze of her laughter, her touch, her casual barbs. “Stand taller,” she’d whisper, or “Don’t fidget—you look nervous.” Each correction was a reminder of his inadequacy, a chisel chipping away at the man he’d been. By the time they left,
Nathan felt like a shadow of himself, reshaped by her hands, her eyes, her unrelenting will.
Chapter 4:
The Bedroom Power Play
The bedroom was a sanctuary of shadows, its dim light casting Elle’s silhouette against the glass walls. Nathan stood by the bed, his fingers tracing the edge of a black satin ribbon she’d left coiled on the pillow, its purpose unclear but heavy with intent. The blouse from the restaurant still clung to him, its fabric a constant reminder of her gaze. Elle entered without a word, her crimson dress replaced by a silk slip that slid over her skin like liquid, every curve a deliberate provocation.
“You did well tonight,” she said, her voice a low hum as she crossed the room. Her bare feet were silent on the hardwood, but her presence was deafening. “They couldn’t stop looking at you. My little project.” She stopped inches from him, her eyes tracing his frame, lingering where the blouse dipped to reveal his collarbone. “But you’re still not all mine, are you?” Nathan’s throat tightened. “I’m trying, Elle,” he said, his voice raw. “I wore what you wanted. I went along with it.”
Her laugh was soft, dangerous. “Trying,” she repeated, stepping closer. Her fingers brushed his jaw, tilting his face to meet her gaze. “Trying isn’t enough, Nathan. I don’t want effort. I want surrender.” Her touch was electric, her nails grazing his skin just enough to make him flinch. “Take off the blouse. Slowly.”
His hands shook as he obeyed, unbuttoning the fabric under her unyielding stare. The blouse fell to the floor, leaving him exposed,
vulnerable. Elle’s eyes darkened, her lips parting slightly as she took him in. “Better,” she murmured, picking up the satin ribbon. “But you’re still so... unfinished.” She stepped behind him, her breath warm against his neck as she looped the ribbon around his wrists, not tying it, just letting it rest there, a suggestion of restraint. “Do you know how much I could shape you if you’d let me?”
Nathan’s pulse raced, caught between fear and a strange, aching need. Her touch was a current, pulling him under, and her words were a tide eroding his resolve. “What do you want me to be?” he asked, his voice barely a whisper.
“Mine,” she said simply, her fingers trailing down his spine, each touch a spark that made him tremble. “Completely. Utterly.” She stepped in front of him, the ribbon still dangling from her hand, and leaned in, her lips hovering just out of reach. “But you’re still clinging to that sad little version of yourself. Why, Nathan? Don’t you want to please me?”
The question was a trap, and he knew it, but her proximity, the heat of her body, made it impossible to think. “I do,” he said, his voice breaking. “I want to make you happy.”
Her smile was triumphant, but there was a cruelty in it, a flicker of boredom beneath her desire. “Then stop fighting,” she whispered, her fingers brushing his lips, the ribbon trailing across his chest. “Let me make you perfect.” She guided him to the bed, her movements slow, deliberate, each gesture a reminder of her control. The ribbon fell away, but the weight of her will remained, binding him tighter than any knot.
What followed was a dance of shadows, her commands soft but unyielding, his compliance a surrender to her vision. The details blurred into a haze of heat and whispered promises, her voice a constant thread weaving through his thoughts. When it was over,
Nathan lay staring at the ceiling, his body humming with the aftermath, the ribbon discarded beside him. Elle sat on the edge of the bed, her slip clinging to her skin, her expression unreadable.
“You’re getting there,” she said, her voice cool as she adjusted her hair. “But you’re still not enough. Not yet.” She stood, her silhouette framed against the city lights, and left him there, the echo of her words a sharper wound than any touch. Nathan stared at the ribbon, its black sheen a mirror of his unraveling self, and wondered how much further he could fall before he broke.
Chapter 5:
The Mirror Moment
Nathan stood before the full-length mirror in their bedroom, the morning light unforgiving as it spilled through the glass walls. His reflection was a stranger’s—hair grown longer at Elle’s insistence, curling softly at his nape; skin smoother from the “grooming routine” she’d prescribed, complete with lotions that smelled of her own jasmine scent. The silk camisole she’d slipped over his shoulders last night still clung to him, its pale rose hue a stark contrast to the man he thought he’d been. He touched the fabric, its softness a siren’s call, and felt a pang of something—shame, perhaps, or a deeper, unnamed longing.
Elle’s voice drifted from the bathroom, where she was applying her makeup with the precision of a general preparing for battle. “You’re staring again, Nathan,” she called, her tone laced with
amusement. “What do you see?” She emerged, a vision in a tailored white blouse and black skirt, her lips a bold crimson that matched the fire in her eyes. She crossed the room, her heels a deliberate rhythm, and stopped behind him, her reflection joining his in the mirror.
“I don’t know,” Nathan admitted, his voice barely audible. The camisole felt like a second skin, too intimate, too revealing. “I don’t... look like me.”
Elle’s hands settled on his shoulders, her touch firm yet deceptively gentle. “That’s the point, darling,” she murmured, her breath warm against his ear. “The old you was so... pedestrian. This”—her fingers traced the edge of the camisole, grazing his collarbone—“this is the you I’m crafting. My perfect little work of art.” Her words were a caress, but they carried a sting, a reminder that he was her creation, not his own.
He shifted, uncomfortable under her scrutiny. “I feel... exposed,” he said, his eyes fixed on the mirror, where his softened features seemed to mock him. “Like I’m not enough.”
Elle’s laugh was soft, a velvet blade. “Not enough?” She stepped closer, her body pressing against his back, her hands sliding down his arms. The contact sent a shiver through him, a mix of heat and unease that he couldn’t untangle. “You’re more than you’ve ever been, Nathan. But you’re still fighting me. Why is that? Don’t you want to be what I need?” Her fingers lingered at his wrists, her nails a subtle pressure that made his pulse race.
“I do,” he said, the words spilling out before he could stop them. “I just... I don’t know who I am anymore.”
Her smile in the mirror was triumphant, predatory. “You’re mine,” she said, her voice low, dripping with promise. “That’s who you are. My perfect project.” She turned him to face her, her hands framing his face, her thumbs brushing his lips. The touch
was electric, a current that pulled him under, and he leaned into it, desperate for her approval. “Look at you,” she whispered, her lips hovering just out of reach. “So soft, so pliable. But you’re still not there, are you? Still clinging to that sad little shell of a man.” The words cut deep, each one a chisel against his faltering self-esteem. He wanted to argue, to reclaim some piece of himself, but her gaze held him captive, her touch a tether he couldn’t break. She stepped back, her expression cooling. “Get dressed,” she said, tossing a pair of slim, high-waisted trousers onto the bed. “We’re going out later. I want you to wear something... appropriate.”
Nathan obeyed, the ritual of dressing under her direction now familiar yet no less disorienting. The trousers, paired with a fitted shirt she’d chosen, accentuated his changing silhouette—narrower, softer, a canvas for her desires. As he buttoned the shirt, he caught his reflection again, the stranger staring back with eyes that were his but not his. Elle watched from the doorway, her smile a quiet victory. “You’re getting there,” she said, her voice a promise and a threat. “But you’ve still got so far to go.”
The rest of the day was a blur of her commands, her touch, her casual barbs that left him raw. “Stand straighter,” she’d say, or “Don’t fidget—you look weak.” Each correction was a reminder of his inadequacy, a step toward the version of himself she wanted. And yet, beneath the shame, there was a flicker of something else—a need to be seen, to be hers, even if it meant losing himself.
Chapter 6: Jamal’s Arrival
The gym smelled of sweat and ambition, a stark contrast to the sterile elegance of their home. Nathan stood awkwardly by the water fountain, the leggings Elle had insisted he wear clinging to his legs like a second skin. They were black, stretchy, and unmistakably feminine, paired with a loose tank top that did little to hide the changes in his frame. Elle had called it “athleisure,” a term that felt like another of her games. She stood a few feet away, laughing with a man Nathan hadn’t met before—Jamal, her “friend” from the gym.
Jamal was everything Nathan wasn’t: tall, broad-shouldered, his dark skin gleaming under the fluorescent lights, his confidence a tangible force. He wore a fitted tank top that showcased his sculpted arms, and his smile was easy, disarming. Elle’s hand rested lightly on his bicep as she spoke, her laughter bright and unrestrained. Nathan felt a knot tighten in his chest, a mix of envy and inadequacy that Elle seemed to sense without looking. “Nathan, come here,” she called, her voice carrying over the hum of treadmills. She beckoned him with a flick of her wrist, her eyes glinting with something unreadable. “Meet Jamal. He’s been helping me with my form.”
Nathan approached, his steps hesitant, the leggings making him hyper-aware of every movement. Jamal extended a hand, his grip firm but not unkind. “Good to meet you, man,” he said, his voice warm, but his eyes flicked over Nathan’s outfit, a brief curiosity that made Nathan’s face burn.
“Likewise,” Nathan muttered, withdrawing his hand quickly. Elle’s smile widened, her gaze darting between them like a predator assessing two very different prey.
“Jamal’s been telling me about his training philosophy,” she said, her hand lingering on Jamal’s arm. “It’s all about confidence, Nathan. Owning who you are. You could learn something from him.” Her words were light, but they landed heavily, each one a reminder of what Nathan lacked. She stepped closer to Jamal, her body angled toward him, her hip brushing his in a way that felt deliberate.
Nathan’s throat tightened. “I’m not really into gyms,” he said, trying to deflect, but his voice sounded small, swallowed by the space between them.
Elle’s laugh was sharp, cutting. “Oh, darling, it’s not about the gym. It’s about presence. Jamal has it. You...” She paused, her eyes raking over him, lingering on the leggings, the tank top, the softened lines of his body. “You’re still finding yours, aren’t you?” Her hand grazed Nathan’s shoulder, a fleeting touch that felt like a consolation prize. “But you’re getting there. Slowly.” Jamal chuckled, oblivious to the undercurrent, or perhaps choosing to ignore it. “Hey, anyone can build confidence,” he said, clapping Nathan on the back. “Just takes practice.” His touch was friendly, but it only deepened Nathan’s sense of inadequacy, the contrast between them stark under Elle’s watchful gaze. They moved to a corner of the gym, where Elle insisted Nathan join her for a “light workout.” She guided him through stretches, her hands correcting his posture with a possessiveness that made his skin tingle. “Loosen up,” she whispered, her fingers pressing into his lower back, her breath hot against his neck. “You’re so stiff, Nathan. Let me guide you.” Her touch was a command, her proximity a challenge, and he complied, bending under her hands, feeling the weight of Jamal’s presence nearby.
As they stretched, Elle’s attention drifted back to Jamal, her laughter brighter, her touches linger. She praised his strength, his
discipline, her words a subtle knife that carved at Nathan’s already fragile self-esteem. “Look at how he moves,” she said once, her voice low but loud enough for Nathan to hear. “So sure of himself. Not afraid to take up space.” The comparison was unspoken but deafening, and Nathan felt himself shrinking, the leggings a reminder of how far he’d drifted from the man he’d been.
Later, in the car, Elle’s mood was electric, her fingers drumming on the steering wheel. “Jamal’s something, isn’t he?” she said, her eyes fixed on the road but her voice heavy with implication. “So... commanding. You felt it, didn’t you?” She glanced at Nathan, her smile sharp. “Don’t worry, darling. You’re still my favorite project. For now.”
The words hung in the air, a promise and a threat. Nathan stared out the window, his reflection faint in the glass, the leggings still clinging to him like a second skin. He wanted to ask what she meant by “for now,” but the question lodged in his throat, drowned out by the hum of the engine and the weight of her gaze.
Chapter 7:
The Breaking Point
Nathan’s hands trembled as he buttoned the blouse Elle had laid out—a sheer, ivory piece with delicate lace at the collar, unmistakably feminine. The fabric whispered against his skin, a cruel mockery of the man he’d once been, now buried under layers of her design. His heart pounded, a frantic rhythm that echoed the fear clawing at his chest. The mirror across the room loomed like a guillotine, ready to sever the last threads of his identity. He
avoided it, but the weight of his reflection was inescapable, a ghost haunting his every move.
Elle stood in the doorway, her silhouette framed by the evening light, a black slip clinging to her like a second skin. Her eyes, sharp and unyielding, raked over him, and a slow smile curved her lips. “You’re shaking,” she said, her voice a low purr that sent a shiver down his spine. “Is it fear, Nathan? Or anticipation?” She stepped closer, her heels clicking like a countdown, her perfume a heady cloud that made his head spin. “You’re so close to being perfect. Why fight it?”
Nathan’s throat tightened, his breath shallow. “I’m not fighting,” he lied, his voice barely above a whisper. The blouse felt like a cage, its softness a trap that made his skin crawl. “I just... I don’t know if I can do this, Elle. It’s too much.” His words were a plea, but they sounded weak, fragile, like the man he saw slipping away. Her laugh was soft, cutting. “Too much?” She closed the distance, her fingers brushing the lace collar, grazing his neck with a touch that burned. “You’re still clinging to that pathetic little shell, aren’t you? That sad, small man who thinks he’s enough.” Her nails pressed into his skin, just enough to make him flinch, and his pulse raced, a mix of dread and a traitorous heat he couldn’t suppress. “You’re not enough, Nathan. Not yet. But you could be, if you’d just let go.”
The words sliced through him, each one a blade against his faltering self-esteem. Fear coiled in his gut, a cold, writhing thing that whispered he was losing himself, that the man he’d been was already gone. He wanted to push back, to tear off the blouse and demand she see him—really see him—but her gaze held him captive, her touch a chain he couldn’t break. “What if I can’t?” he asked, his voice cracking, the question exposing the raw edge of his anxiety.
Elle’s eyes darkened, her smile sharp as a razor. “Then you’ll disappoint me,” she said, her hand sliding down his chest, fingers splaying over the sheer fabric. “And you don’t want that, do you?” Her touch was electric, a promise of intimacy laced with control, and Nathan’s body betrayed him, leaning into her despite the panic screaming in his mind. She leaned closer, her lips hovering just out of reach, her breath hot against his skin. “You’re so close, darling. Don’t ruin it now.”
The room seemed to close in, the glass walls reflecting his fear back at him, a kaleidoscope of a man unraveling. Elle guided him to the bed, her movements slow, deliberate, her hands commanding his every step. “Lie down,” she whispered, her voice a velvet command, and he obeyed, the blouse clinging to him like a shroud. The air was thick with tension, her presence a weight that pressed against his chest, making it hard to breathe. What followed was a blur of her whispered commands, her touch a tide that pulled him under, leaving him gasping in the aftermath, his fear a constant pulse beneath the haze of her control. When it was over, Elle sat on the edge of the bed, her slip shimmering in the dim light, her expression cool and distant. “You’re almost there,” she said, her voice devoid of warmth. “But you’re still holding back. It’s... disappointing.” She stood, leaving him alone with the echo of her words, his fear a cold knot that refused to unravel. Nathan stared at the ceiling, the blouse a second skin he couldn’t shed, and wondered if he was already too far gone to fight.
Chapter 8: The Epiphany
Nathan sat on the edge of the couch, his hands clasped tightly to still their trembling. The skirt Elle had chosen—a soft, flowing thing in pale gray—clung to his hips, its hem brushing his knees, a constant reminder of how far he’d fallen. His hair, now longer and styled at her insistence, framed his face in soft waves, and the faint scent of her jasmine lotion lingered on his skin. The living room felt too large, too exposed, the glass walls offering no refuge from the anxiety that gnawed at him. Every sound—the hum of the city, the creak of the floor—made his heart lurch, as if the world itself was closing in.
Elle was in the kitchen, pouring wine, her movements graceful and assured. Jamal was there too, leaning against the counter, his broad frame filling the space with an ease Nathan could never muster. Their laughter drifted over, bright and careless, each note a dagger in Nathan’s chest. He felt like an intruder in his own home, a ghost in a body he no longer recognized. The skirt, the hair, the softened lines of his frame—they were all Elle’s doing, a transformation that left him teetering on the edge of panic, afraid of what he’d become, afraid of losing her if he didn’t. “Nathan, join us,” Elle called, her voice a siren’s song laced with command. She appeared in the doorway, a glass of wine in hand, her black dress hugging her curves like a lover’s touch. Jamal followed, his smile easy but his presence overwhelming, a stark contrast to Nathan’s shrinking sense of self. “Don’t just sit there sulking,” she added, her tone teasing but sharp. “You look so... delicate tonight. Show Jamal what I’ve made of you.” Nathan’s stomach churned, his fear a cold sweat that prickled his skin. He stood, the skirt swishing against his legs, and felt every inch of himself under scrutiny. Jamal’s eyes flicked over him, not
unkind but curious, and Nathan’s anxiety spiked, a wave of dread that made his knees weak. “Nice look,” Jamal said, his tone neutral, but the words felt like a spotlight, exposing Nathan’s vulnerability.
Elle’s smile was predatory, her eyes glinting with triumph. “Isn’t he?” she said, stepping closer to Nathan, her hand brushing his cheek. The touch was intimate, possessive, but it only deepened his fear, a reminder that he was hers to display. “He’s come so far, but he’s still so... hesitant. Aren’t you, darling?” Her fingers trailed down his neck, lingering at the collar of his blouse, and Nathan’s breath hitched, caught between terror and a desperate need to please her.
“I’m trying,” he said, his voice trembling, the words barely audible. The room felt like it was spinning, his reflection in the glass walls a stranger’s, a version of himself he couldn’t reconcile. “I just... I’m scared, Elle. I don’t know who I am anymore.” Her laugh was soft, almost tender, but it carried a cruel edge. “Scared?” She stepped closer, her body inches from his, her perfume a heady fog that clouded his thoughts. “That’s what makes you mine, Nathan. That fear, that surrender—it’s what I love about you.” Her hand slid to his waist, her touch a spark that made him tremble, his anxiety a live wire twisting inside him. “You’re not that dull little man anymore. You’re something better. Something I created.”
Nathan’s heart pounded, his fear a tidal wave threatening to drown him. But beneath it, a realization flickered, faint but undeniable. He was terrified, yes, but he was also bound to her, drawn to the strength that shaped him, the assertiveness that had remade him. He loved her, not despite her control but because of it, because she saw something in him he’d never dared to see
himself. The epiphany was a quiet earthquake, shifting the ground beneath his fear, giving it a strange, fragile purpose.
Elle’s gaze softened, but only for a moment. “You’re learning,” she said, her voice low, her hand still on his waist. “But you’re not there yet.” She turned to Jamal, her smile brightening, and Nathan’s fear surged again, the realization tainted by the sight of her hand brushing Jamal’s arm. “Let’s have some fun tonight,” she said, her eyes flickering between them, and Nathan felt the ground slip further, his epiphany a fleeting light in the shadow of her growing distance.
Chapter 9: Elle’s Departure
Nathan’s reflection in the bedroom mirror was a stranger’s, a specter crafted by Elle’s unrelenting hands. The dress she’d chosen for him tonight—a flowing, emerald-green number that hugged his softened frame—clung like a lover’s promise, its silky fabric a cruel reminder of his eroded self. His hair, now cascading past his shoulders in waves she’d styled, shimmered under the dim light, and the faint sheen of lip gloss she’d applied glistened on his lips. His heart thundered, a frantic drumbeat of fear that pulsed through every nerve. The room felt too small, the glass walls closing in, each reflection a taunt of who he’d become. He was drowning in her vision, and the terror of losing himself warred with the desperate need to hold her gaze.
Elle entered, a vision in a black leather dress that molded to her curves, her presence a storm that sucked the air from the room.
Her eyes raked over him, slow and deliberate, a predator savoring her work. “Look at you,” she purred, her voice a velvet blade that sliced through his fragile resolve. “My masterpiece.” She stepped closer, her heels a sharp staccato, her perfume a heady fog that made his head spin. Her fingers grazed the dress’s neckline, brushing his collarbone, and the touch sent a jolt of heat through him, tangled with a cold spike of dread. “You’re almost perfect, Nathan. Almost.”
His throat tightened, his breath shallow. “Almost?” he whispered, the word trembling with the anxiety that clawed at his chest. The dress felt like a cage, its weight a constant reminder of how far he’d fallen. “What more do you want from me, Elle? I’ve done everything you asked.” His voice cracked, exposing the raw fear that he was no longer enough, that he never had been.
Her laugh was low, cruel, and intoxicating, a sound that wrapped around him like a chain. “Everything?” She leaned in, her lips hovering just out of reach, her breath hot against his skin. “You’re still holding back, darling. Still clinging to that pathetic little ghost of a man.” Her fingers trailed down his side, lingering at his hip, the touch possessive and punishing. “You’re mine, Nathan, but you’re not... enough. Not anymore.” The words were a dagger, each one a calculated strike at his crumbling self-esteem, and his fear surged, a tidal wave that threatened to pull him under.
He wanted to protest, to tear off the dress and reclaim some shred of himself, but her gaze pinned him, her touch a lure he couldn’t resist. “I’m trying,” he said, his voice barely audible, the admission laced with panic. “I’ve changed for you. Isn’t that enough?” Elle’s smile was sharp, her eyes glinting with a boredom that chilled him. “Changed?” she repeated, stepping back, her hand falling away. “You’ve become something beautiful, Nathan, but beauty isn’t enough when I’m... restless.” She turned, her
movements fluid, and gestured toward the living room, where Jamal waited, his broad frame lounging on the couch, his presence a stark contrast to Nathan’s fragile silhouette. “Jamal understands what I need. Someone who commands, not someone who... submits.”
Nathan’s heart lurched, the fear now a vise around his chest. “Jamal?” he echoed, his voice trembling, the name a wound. He followed her gaze, seeing Jamal’s easy smile, the way his eyes lingered on Elle with a hunger that Nathan couldn’t match. The dress, the gloss, the hair—they were all hers, but they weren’t enough to keep her. His anxiety spiked, a cold sweat prickling his skin, as the realization hit: she was slipping away, and he was powerless to stop it.
Elle crossed to Jamal, her hand brushing his shoulder, her laugh brighter, freer than it had ever been with Nathan. “I’m giving you your freedom, Nathan,” she said, not looking at him, her voice cool and final. “You’re my creation, but I’m done playing with you. Be who I made you, or don’t. It’s your choice now.” She leaned into Jamal, her body pressed against his, and the sight was a final blow, shattering the last of Nathan’s fragile hope.
As they left, her arm looped through Jamal’s, Nathan stood frozen, the dress a weight he couldn’t shed, his fear a scream trapped in his throat. The glass door clicked shut, and the silence was deafening, a void where her presence had once filled every corner. He was alone, a stranger in his own skin, and the terror of that truth was a cold, unending ache.
Chapter 10: The New Reflection
Nathan stood before the mirror, the emerald dress still clinging to him, its fabric a haunting echo of Elle’s touch. The house was silent, the glass walls reflecting a city that felt distant,
unreachable. His reflection was unrecognizable—long hair framing a face softened by her grooming, lips still glistening with gloss, eyes wide with a fear that had become his constant companion. His heart raced, a frantic pulse that echoed the anxiety twisting inside him. He was a stranger, a creation born of her will, and the terror of that truth was a weight he couldn’t shake. Yet, beneath it, something else flickered—a quiet acceptance, a realization that had taken root in the ruins of his former self.
He touched the dress, his fingers trembling, and the fabric seemed to pulse with her memory. Elle’s voice echoed in his mind, her cruel, intoxicating words: My masterpiece. My creation. She’d reshaped him, stripped away the man he’d been, and left him raw, vulnerable, exposed. The fear was a live wire, sparking with every glance at the mirror, every reminder of how far he’d fallen. But as he stared, the panic began to shift, giving way to a strange clarity. He’d stayed for her, not despite her dominance but because of it. Her assertiveness, her unyielding vision, had given him a purpose, a shape, even if it was one he barely understood.
The realization was a quiet storm, stirring the ashes of his anxiety. He loved her, not for who she was but for who she’d demanded he become. The dress, the hair, the gloss—they were her, but they were also him, a version he’d never dared to imagine. His fear didn’t vanish, but it softened, a shadow that no longer consumed him. He was terrified, yes, but he was also alive in a way he’d never been before, molded by her hands into something new, something hers.
He moved to the living room, the skirt swishing against his legs, each step a reminder of his transformation. The couch where Jamal had sat was empty, but the memory of Elle’s departure lingered, a wound that still bled. He sat, his hands smoothing the
dress, and let the silence settle around him. The city lights glittered through the glass, a world that didn’t know him, didn’t care. His anxiety was a low hum now, a companion rather than a captor. He thought of Elle, of her laughter with Jamal, her casual dismissal, and the pain was sharp but not unbearable. “You’re my creation,” she’d said, and he was. But in her absence, he saw something else—a man who’d survived her, who’d bent but not broken. The dress was hers, but the choice to wear it, to keep it, was his. He stood, returning to the mirror, and faced the stranger head-on. His reflection was soft, delicate, but there was a strength in it, a resilience born of surrender. His fear was still there, a quiet pulse, but it no longer defined him.
He touched his lips, the gloss a faint reminder of her touch, and a small smile curved his mouth. “I’m enough,” he whispered, the words a fragile defiance. Elle was gone, chasing Jamal’s fire, but Nathan was here, a new reflection forged in her crucible. The future was uncertain, the anxiety a shadow that would linger, but for the first time, he saw himself—not her creation, but his own. The mirror held no answers, only a man learning to live with the stranger he’d become, and in that ambiguity, he found a strange, tentative peace.
THE END