blgrngmnfrnc
blgrngmnfrnc
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blgrngmnfrnc · 1 month ago
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blgrngmnfrnc · 1 month ago
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blgrngmnfrnc · 1 month ago
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blgrngmnfrnc · 1 month ago
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blgrngmnfrnc · 1 month ago
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blgrngmnfrnc · 1 month ago
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Two brothers. Same blood. Same war.
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blgrngmnfrnc · 1 month ago
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blgrngmnfrnc · 1 month ago
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Driven only by brute strength and primal, manly urges.
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blgrngmnfrnc · 1 month ago
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blgrngmnfrnc · 1 month ago
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Low hangers, an inviting, always-welcoming bubble butt begging for trouble — daddy energy that hits like a hammer.
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blgrngmnfrnc · 1 month ago
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blgrngmnfrnc · 1 month ago
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Every year, in late September, Mark leaves for San Francisco with a firm handshake, a business itinerary, and a lie he’s told so many times it feels like truth. Claire waves him off like she always does—no suspicion, no questions. She’s never heard of Folsom Street Fair. He intends to keep it that way.
Because Mark isn’t there for work. He’s there to dominate.
In the daylight, he walks among thousands of men in leather, latex, and chains—tourists gape, cameras flash, but Mark doesn’t pose. He’s there for the ones who kneel. The ones who crave to be broken open.
At night, it begins.
In a private dungeon just off Folsom Street, Mark strips down to the harness and gloves. Lube glistens on his forearm. Men wait for him—eager, trembling, holes stretched wide in anticipation. He chooses them carefully: some young and tight, others experienced and hungry. They call him “Sir,” or “Daddy,” or nothing at all once the gag goes in.
He fists them slowly at first, savoring the resistance, then pushes deeper until he feels their surrender—muscle by muscle, moan by moan. Elbows on backs. Arms vanishing into men like they were built to be filled. He watches their eyes roll back and smiles when they beg for more.
He loves the power. The filth. The moment they stop being men and become nothing but vessels for his control. He finishes inside them sometimes. Other times, he leaves them leaking on the floor, used and grateful.
By Monday, he’s in a button-down shirt again, sipping overpriced airport coffee. By Tuesday, he’s back home, slipping into bed beside Claire with a soft kiss on her shoulder.
She never asks.
And if she did—he wouldn’t stop.
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blgrngmnfrnc · 1 month ago
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blgrngmnfrnc · 1 month ago
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Colonel Raynor didn’t need to speak to be obeyed. His body did it for him — the way it moved, balanced and grounded, carved by decades of unyielding repetition. He didn’t project command. He embodied it. Men straightened at his approach without meaning to, their spines remembering something more primal than rank.
In the training yard, he was relentless. Precise. His gaze swept through the ranks like a heat-seeking predator, locking onto the bulls built for the hardest trials — thick-necked, broad-chested, their weight riding low, with a presence that drew the eye downward whether one meant to look or not. Everything about them hung heavy — strength, stamina, and something else that filled the fatigues with quiet threat. They wore power like a scent: raw, impossible to ignore.
He chose them not because they struggled, but because they could handle more. Because something in them responded — not just with grit, but with a fire they didn’t always name. His training demanded closeness. Contact. He pressed them into service not as tools, but as extensions of his will — human platforms, living instruments through which discipline and something unspoken passed.
And when he moved, men noticed. They didn’t want to — but they did.
His technique was flawless: deliberate, steady, balanced. But it was his form that stayed in the mind. Every part of him honed, yet the focus always returned to the center of his mass — the source of his strength, his rhythm: his glutes.
They weren’t just powerful. They were sculpted, lifted, and absurdly well-defined — a force in motion. When he dropped low into each squat, slow and purposeful, those muscles tensed and released like a promise. They didn’t ask to be seen. They insisted on it.
Some recruits learned to avert their gaze. Others didn’t bother. And a few — the ones Raynor chose most often — didn’t want to.
During certain drills, when the Colonel positioned himself with quiet precision, the contact that followed was never accidental. His weight, his control, the way his body settled, the direction — it created a closeness that went beyond instruction. Sometimes, without a word, without a signal, the right parts of their bodies locked into place with a brute inevitability — fitting together like the hidden grooves of some primal design, crude and perfect, made for one another.
That’s when it happened.
Chest heaving, minds locked in discipline, they felt it: the unmistakable pressure of their rising hardness meeting a space that was there — impossibly, undeniably — for them. Warm, firm, and inviting beyond reason. An opening that didn’t resist, didn’t flinch — it welcomed. Not loosely, not weakly — no. It gripped, it fit, with a practiced pliancy wrapped in a slippery heat, carrying with it a sensation — subtle but certain — that the other selected brothers-in-arms had passed this way before. A paradox of flesh: tight, yet yielding; broken in, yet eager, as if untouched. Every inch along that narrow path felt like a sanctum, drawing them in, knock by knock, toward the innermost gate.
The shock of it hit like lightning. Bodies trained to endure suddenly wanted — urgently. The contact sent waves through their spines, a pleasure so foreign, so unmistakably male, it felt like a new language scrawled deep into muscle and marrow. Nothing in their time with women had prepared them — how could it?
This wasn’t about roles. Or desire. Or even choice.
It was the body stumbling on a door it had never known existed — and recognizing, in an instant, that it had always longed to pass through.
None of them expected it.
And none of them pulled away.
The soldiers were not innocent.
Not really.
Even as they told theselves they were straight, something in them had already shifted. What began as endurance beneath the Colonel’s weight turned into something else. Not surrender, but ignition. Beneath the sweat and silence, a fire climbed through their guts, thick and consuming, until it demanded an outlet — demanded action.
And the Colonel, that pillar of control, didn’t resist. He offered. Subtly. Deliberately. In the bend of his spine, in the slow, arched flex of muscle, in the silence that invited rather than commanded.
That was all it took.
The beast inside the soldiers broke free — not confused, not ashamed, but driven. A need to take. To grip the man who ruled them all and claim him in the most carnal, unspoken way imaginable. Not out of rebellion — but out of reverence. Out of hunger. The contact became a collision. Hips, thighs, hands on waist — the power dynamic turned on its head. The Colonel didn’t stop him. He braced. Accepted. He let himself be opened, get split. And in that dark communion, the soldier found himself not lost — but born. Each thrust a declaration: not of love, not of defiance, but of masculine transcendence.
They were not men unmade. They were men remade — into something wild, virile, and eternally awake.
And the Colonel, above them, took all their big juicy cocks into his male rectum — with breath tight, fists clenched, and dignity intact. Because this was not humiliation.
This was ritual.
Raynor never acknowledged the stir he caused. He didn’t need to. His silence was part of the ritual. His body was not offered — it was imposed. And those who trained under him never forgot the feel of it.
Ever since, they've hunted it in the bodies of other men.
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blgrngmnfrnc · 1 month ago
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blgrngmnfrnc · 1 month ago
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blgrngmnfrnc · 1 month ago
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Colonel Raynor didn’t need to speak to be obeyed. His body did it for him — the way it moved, balanced and grounded, carved by decades of unyielding repetition. He didn’t project command. He embodied it. Men straightened at his approach without meaning to, their spines remembering something more primal than rank.
In the training yard, he was relentless. Precise. His gaze swept through the ranks like a heat-seeking predator, locking onto the bulls built for the hardest trials — thick-necked, broad-chested, their weight riding low, with a presence that drew the eye downward whether one meant to look or not. Everything about them hung heavy — strength, stamina, and something else that filled the fatigues with quiet threat. They wore power like a scent: raw, impossible to ignore.
He chose them not because they struggled, but because they could handle more. Because something in them responded — not just with grit, but with a fire they didn’t always name. His training demanded closeness. Contact. He pressed them into service not as tools, but as extensions of his will — human platforms, living instruments through which discipline and something unspoken passed.
And when he moved, men noticed. They didn’t want to — but they did.
His technique was flawless: deliberate, steady, balanced. But it was his form that stayed in the mind. Every part of him honed, yet the focus always returned to the center of his mass — the source of his strength, his rhythm: his glutes.
They weren’t just powerful. They were sculpted, lifted, and absurdly well-defined — a force in motion. When he dropped low into each squat, slow and purposeful, those muscles tensed and released like a promise. They didn’t ask to be seen. They insisted on it.
Some recruits learned to avert their gaze. Others didn’t bother. And a few — the ones Raynor chose most often — didn’t want to.
During certain drills, when the Colonel positioned himself with quiet precision, the contact that followed was never accidental. His weight, his control, the way his body settled, the direction — it created a closeness that went beyond instruction. Sometimes, without a word, without a signal, the right parts of their bodies locked into place with a brute inevitability — fitting together like the hidden grooves of some primal design, crude and perfect, made for one another.
That’s when it happened.
Chest heaving, minds locked in discipline, they felt it: the unmistakable pressure of their rising hardness meeting a space that was there — impossibly, undeniably — for them. Warm, firm, and inviting beyond reason. An opening that didn’t resist, didn’t flinch — it welcomed. Not loosely, not weakly — no. It gripped, it fit, with a practiced pliancy wrapped in a slippery heat, carrying with it a sensation — subtle but certain — that the other selected brothers-in-arms had passed this way before. A paradox of flesh: tight, yet yielding; broken in, yet eager, as if untouched. Every inch along that narrow path felt like a sanctum, drawing them in, knock by knock, toward the innermost gate.
The shock of it hit like lightning. Bodies trained to endure suddenly wanted — urgently. The contact sent waves through their spines, a pleasure so foreign, so unmistakably male, it felt like a new language scrawled deep into muscle and marrow. Nothing in their time with women had prepared them — how could it?
This wasn’t about roles. Or desire. Or even choice.
It was the body stumbling on a door it had never known existed — and recognizing, in an instant, that it had always longed to pass through.
None of them expected it.
And none of them pulled away.
The soldiers were not innocent.
Not really.
Even as they told theselves they were straight, something in them had already shifted. What began as endurance beneath the Colonel’s weight turned into something else. Not surrender, but ignition. Beneath the sweat and silence, a fire climbed through their guts, thick and consuming, until it demanded an outlet — demanded action.
And the Colonel, that pillar of control, didn’t resist. He offered. Subtly. Deliberately. In the bend of his spine, in the slow, arched flex of muscle, in the silence that invited rather than commanded.
That was all it took.
The beast inside the soldiers broke free — not confused, not ashamed, but driven. A need to take. To grip the man who ruled them all and claim him in the most carnal, unspoken way imaginable. Not out of rebellion — but out of reverence. Out of hunger. The contact became a collision. Hips, thighs, hands on waist — the power dynamic turned on its head. The Colonel didn’t stop him. He braced. Accepted. He let himself be opened, get split. And in that dark communion, the soldier found himself not lost — but born. Each thrust a declaration: not of love, not of defiance, but of masculine transcendence.
They were not men unmade. They were men remade — into something wild, virile, and eternally awake.
And the Colonel, above them, took all their big juicy cocks into his male rectum — with breath tight, fists clenched, and dignity intact. Because this was not humiliation.
This was ritual.
Raynor never acknowledged the stir he caused. He didn’t need to. His silence was part of the ritual. His body was not offered — it was imposed. And those who trained under him never forgot the feel of it.
Ever since, they've hunted it in the bodies of other men.
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