"Nicky, do you have any porn? I'm feeling so lonely tonight."
Late at night, my aunt pushed open the door to my bedroom, wearing nothing but a skimpy piece of lingerie. Her figure was full, soft, and seductive.
I'd been jerking off into her stockings and scrambled to yank the blanket over myself.
"Aunt Maggie, couldn't you at least knock before coming in?"
Her cheeks flushed red. "I'm so hot and bothered I can't stand it. That useless uncle of yours can't satisfy me at all. Just find me a few steamy videos so I can take care of myself."
I felt my own stiff length and smirked. "How about I take care of it for you?"
The Hired Bride
Subtitle : what happened to the bride ?
Blurb
For better , for worse ....
Till death do us part ....
Violet Myers took her vows before the altar , never has she imagined in her wildest dreams she would take up another's identity as a bride to the cold billionaire.
Several emotions were running through her mind ,was she ready to go on the journey of I do with someone's husband?
What if Ryan Reynolds finds out she is not the true Bride ?
What Happened to the supposed bride ?
Extract from the story
" I will definitely kill myself because I can't do this shit I can't "
" What do you mean she's dead ? "
" If you try to run your family suffers the repercussions and I'm sure you don't want that so be a good girl "
" I pronounce you man and wife "
Find out in the story what becomes of the duo's marriage.
Successful and egoistic Isabella Blair , CEO of Lush enterprise had a one night stand resulting to a baby ,In a society where single mothers are seen as second class citizens , she is forced to hired a daddy for her a baby under a guise as a chef .
# Blurb
“ ...... Not under my watch will you take my mate . He is mine and mine alone . ”
“ He was never yours . ” ......
Ashton an Alpha- in- waiting returns from a business trip, to conclude his marriage preparation and rituals with his betrothed Lydia a wife and Luna of Green woods Pack .
However , Things goes North when he finds his mate and lustful desires spring .
Ashton is torn between his mates and must choose one .
Who does he choose ?
Life Didn’t End when Diamond discovered that her sister’s new born belonged to her beloved husband. Life didn’t end when she found out they were both planning to frame her up for a crime so the traitors would have reasons to divorce her. She was supposed to be the victim of her husband’s betrayal but her own family branded her the Villain. For their own selfish gains, they willingly casted her aside forgetting every sacrifices they’d made for them. Like she meant nothing, she was divorced and casted away. Concealing her secret pregnancy for her husband, she fled to another city. She was supposed to have a fresh life with her kids but her past found her when her kids decided a bring her a husband. And it was no other than her nightmare, A man who was supposed to be dead - her Ex-husband’s mortal enemy. Right from the moment she set her eyes on him, she knew her life is about to the Jeopardized.
My husband, Carlton Stewart, looked me right in the eye and asked me to abort his unborn child. Then he asked for a divorce. That didn’t hurt me more than when I discovered the reason he asked me to abort his child. I felt so worthless and even more worthless when my husband threw me in jail after my sister accused me of a crime, we all knew I would never commit. Six months went down in speed and I was out of prison with six months pregnancy. Unconventionally, I met a young man who surprisingly was hell-bent on helping me take revenge on my ex-husband and all of them who’d hurt me.
The ending of 'Maggie Moves On' is such a heartwarming wrap-up to Maggie’s journey. After spending the whole book figuring out whether she should stay in her small town or chase her big-city dreams, she finally realizes that home isn’t just a place—it’s the people who make it special. The romance with the local carpenter, Silas, really blossoms in the last act, and there’s this super tender moment where she decides to renovate an old house right there in town instead of leaving. The epilogue fast-forwards a bit, showing her thriving with her own design business and Silas by her side. It’s the kind of ending that leaves you grinning because it feels earned—no rushed twists, just growth and warmth.
What I loved most was how the author didn’t make her choice feel like settling. Maggie’s passion for restoration ties everything together, and the town’s quirky side characters get little satisfying arcs too. It’s a story about roots and wings, you know? By the last page, I was totally convinced she’d made the right call—and weirdly inspired to appreciate my own 'wherever you are' a little more.
I've read a ton of 'Taken' fanfiction, and Maggie Grace's portrayal of emotional vulnerability is often a central theme. Writers love to explore her character Kim’s trauma post-kidnapping, focusing on moments where her tough exterior cracks. Many fics depict her struggling with trust, especially in relationships, which adds layers to her personality. Some stories dive into her nightmares or panic attacks, showing how she’s still haunted by the past. Others focus on her bond with Bryan, where she lets her guard down, revealing a softer side. The best fics balance her strength with those raw, fragile moments, making her feel real and relatable.
Another angle I’ve seen is how writers use small gestures to show her vulnerability—like flinching at loud noises or hesitating before entering crowded places. These details make her trauma feel visceral. Some AU fics even reimagine her as a survivor in different settings, like college or a small town, where her past subtly influences her actions. The emotional depth in these stories often hinges on Maggie Grace’s performance, which fanfiction amplifies by exploring what the movies only hinted at.
Grief in 'Bluets' is like a color that seeps into every page, staining Maggie Nelson's thoughts with its persistent hue. She doesn't just write about loss; she lets it bleed into her obsession with blue, turning the book into a mosaic of sorrow and beauty. The fragmented style mirrors how grief fractures reality—one moment she's analyzing Goethe's color theory, the next she's raw with heartbreak. What stands out is how Nelson refuses to 'get over' her pain. Instead, she lets it coexist with intellectual curiosity, proving grief isn't linear. Her blue objects—flowers, fabrics, skies—become lifelines, tiny anchors against the void. The book's power lies in its honesty: grief isn't conquered; it's carried, like carrying a vial of blue ink that leaks when you least expect it.
Maggie Grace's portrayal of Irina in 'The Twilight Saga' was brief but impactful, and fanfiction writers have seized that potential to explore her character in depth. Most stories reimagine her relationships by delving into her past with the Denali coven, especially her bond with Tanya and Kate. Some fics focus on her unresolved tensions with the Cullens, crafting narratives where she survives Laurent's death and seeks revenge or redemption. Others take a romantic angle, pairing her with unexpected characters like Carlisle or Jasper, blending angst with slow-burn chemistry. The best works balance her vengeful nature with vulnerability, making her more than just a footnote in the vampire world.
Another popular trope is rewriting her fate entirely—alternative universes where she joins the Cullens or becomes a central figure in the Volturi conflicts. These stories often explore her humanity, questioning whether her loyalty to family outweighs her thirst for justice. Writers love to amplify her psychic abilities, too, imagining scenarios where her precognition alters key events. The emotional depth in these fics is staggering, from raw grief over Laurent to complex alliances with Bella or Leah. Grace-centric stories thrive because they fill the gaps the movies left behind, giving her a voice that’s both fierce and heartbreaking.
The moment Glenn and Maggie first crossed paths in 'The Walking Dead' was such a standout scene—it's burned into my memory! It happens in Season 2, Episode 3, titled 'Save the Last One.' Glenn's on a supply run with T-Dog when he stumbles upon Maggie at her family's farm, the Greene homestead. The chemistry between them is instant, even amid all the zombie chaos.
What I love about this episode is how it shifts the tone from pure survival to something more human. Maggie's introduction brings a glimmer of hope and normalcy to the group, and Glenn’s playful charm starts to shine. Their relationship becomes one of the show’s emotional anchors later on, but this first meeting is just... quietly perfect. No grand gestures, just two people connecting in a broken world.
I've come across 'Maggie Dubonet BBW Big Tits from DivineBreasts' in discussions about niche adult comics, but pinning down the exact author is tricky. The title sounds like it might be from a smaller indie publisher or even a self-published work, which often makes authorship harder to track. DivineBreasts isn't a mainstream imprint I'm familiar with, so it could be a pseudonym or collaborative project.
Sometimes, artists in this genre use multiple pen names across different platforms, which adds to the confusion. I'd recommend checking forums like The Erotic Comics Database or niche subreddits where fans catalog obscure titles. Even if the creator's identity isn't clear, those communities might have insights on similar works with that signature style—think bold lines and exaggerated proportions, like early 'Betty Boop' meets modern webcomics.
The first time I stumbled upon 'Calling Maggie May,' I was immediately drawn into its gritty, neon-lit world. Maggie's departure isn't just a plot twist—it feels like a punch to the gut, but in the best way possible. The story subtly builds her frustration with the agency's moral gray zones, especially after that harrowing case with the missing kids. She's not just quitting; she's rejecting the system that asked her to compromise too much. The way her final scene plays out, with that lingering shot of her tossing her badge into the rain, it's less about defiance and more about exhaustion. You get the sense she's not running to something but away from a life that's eaten at her soul.
What really stuck with me, though, was how the show parallels Maggie's arc with smaller characters—like that taxi driver in Episode 5 who tells her, 'You can't clean up the city if you're drowning in it.' It reframes her exit as part of a larger theme about burnout in justice work. The writers don't spoon-feed answers, either. That last phone call with her brother? No dramatic reveal, just static and rain. Makes you wonder if she ever found what she was looking for.
the emotional gut punches in this book are brutal in the best way. The death that hits hardest is Jack Culpepper, a character who starts off as this reckless, almost antagonistic figure but ends up being tragically layered. His death isn’t just a plot point—it’s a catalyst that ripples through the entire story, especially for Grace and Sam. Jack’s demise is tied to the werewolf curse, a brutal reminder of the stakes in this world. He doesn’t go quietly, either. There’s this haunting scene where his humanity flickers in and out during the transformation, making it all the more heartbreaking. The way Maggie Stiefvater writes it, you can almost feel the cold bite of winter and the desperation in his final moments.
Another death that lingers is Beck’s, Sam’s werewolf mentor. It’s quieter but just as devastating. Beck’s passing is shrouded in ambiguity for a while, which makes the reveal hit like a truck. His relationship with Sam was messy—part father figure, part cautionary tale—and his death forces Sam to confront his own fears about the curse. The book doesn’t shy away from the raw grief, either. Sam’s memories of Beck are tinged with warmth and regret, and it’s impossible not to ache for him. Stiefvater has this knack for making death feel like a character itself, something that shapes the living long after the last breath is gone. The way these losses weave into the themes of love, time, and transformation? It’s masterful. Every re-read leaves me wrecked in the best possible way.
Maggie Vera, one of the Charmed Ones in the reboot series 'Charmed', has a fascinating mix of powers that evolve throughout the show. Initially, her primary ability is 'Empathy', which allows her to sense and manipulate emotions—both her own and others'. This isn't just about feeling what someone else feels; she can dial emotions up or down, like amping up someone's courage or draining their anger. It's a power that feels deeply personal, especially when she uses it to connect with people on an emotional level. Later, she develops 'Telepathy', letting her read minds, which adds a whole new layer to her abilities. The combo of Empathy and Telepathy makes her incredibly perceptive, almost like a human lie detector.
What I love about Maggie's journey is how her powers reflect her growth. Early on, she struggles with the overwhelming nature of Empathy, but over time, she learns to wield it with precision. There's a standout moment where she uses her Telepathy to communicate with a comatose person, proving how versatile her abilities can be. The reboot also introduces 'Molecular Immobilization', a power she shares with her sisters, which lets her freeze objects or people. It's wild how her powers start so emotionally driven and expand into something more tactical. Maggie's arc shows how magic isn't just about flashy spells—it's about understanding people, and that's what makes her so compelling.
Maggie's death in 'Charmed' (the 2018 reboot) is one of those moments that hit me like a ton of bricks—partly because it was so unexpected and partly because of how it reshaped the show's dynamic. In season 3, Maggie sacrifices herself to save her sisters, Mel and Macy, during a confrontation with the Whispering Evil. The scene is heartbreaking: she uses her powers to absorb the corruption from her sisters, knowing it will kill her. What makes it even more gut-wrenching is the way her love for her family drives her to this act. The show really leans into the emotional weight of her choice, with lingering shots of her sisters' devastation afterward.
What I found interesting was how Maggie's death wasn't just a shock value moment—it had lasting consequences. Her absence forced Mel and Macy to grow in ways they hadn't before, and the show explored grief in a raw, messy way. The reboot's take on sisterhood always felt more grounded to me than the original, and Maggie's death underscored that. Even though she eventually returns (because, hey, it's a supernatural show), that initial loss still packs a punch. It's a reminder of how much the character meant to the series—and to fans like me who got attached to her warmth and humor.