A real princess would… (Second Person Princess Tg/Tf)
Added 2025-06-28 21:00:12 +0000 UTCThis is a 2am Story, that means the quality might not be as high as you are used to from me. Full info about 2am Stories here.
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The sun is warm on your skin, golden and soft, like honey poured over silk. Birds trill in harmony above you, somewhere in the hedgerows and blossom-laden trees. Each of your steps lands upon a stone pathway, perfectly cut and lined with moss. Not the wild kind, but the gentle, decorative kind that never dirties your shoes.
You don’t remember arriving here.
That thought catches in your throat, a strange little knot of unease you can’t quite swallow. You glance down at yourself, your clothes are… fancier than usual. A high-collared blouse with pearl buttons, pressed and pristine. A layered skirt that swishes when you walk. Gloves. You never wear gloves.
The garden stretches ahead in curves and arcs, like a painting that changes every few steps. You don’t recognize the statues. Or the flowers. Or the taste of the air.
And yet… you walk. Because ahead of you, leading with effortless grace, is her.
The maid.
She’s been there since… since always? That can’t be right. You’re sure you only met her recently. A day ago? An hour? Time feels melted here, the memories smeared like warm butter on toast.
She walks a few steps ahead, glancing back over her shoulder with a smile that’s too practiced to be comforting.
“Anything the matter, princess?” she says sweetly. “You look so aloof.”
The word hits you like a pin to a balloon. Princess. She’s been calling you that… since…
Since forever, hasn’t she?
You blink. Something in your head shifts, subtly, like a portrait being tilted straight on a wall. The title fits too well. The more you hear it, the more natural it sounds.
Princess.
It rolls through your thoughts like a song half-remembered.
You open your mouth to speak, to question her, maybe even to protest, but all that comes out is a soft, uncertain hum.
She slows her steps. You stop just beside a marble fountain shaped like swans mid-kiss. Water trickled softly, rhythmically, like a ticking clock.
“You really must try to focus, Your Grace,” she says. “We’ve only just begun. A real princess,” she adds, brushing a bit of invisible dust from your sleeve, “Would never lose herself so easily.”
And suddenly, you wonder: Have you been losing yourself?
The thought fades as quickly as it came. The maid smiles, pleased with your silence. You realize you hadn’t meant to give it.
She offers her gloved hand.
“Shall we continue? There's still so much for you to become.”
You hesitate, but your hand is already lifting, fingers slipping into hers.
The garden goes on.
And so do you.
You’ve only taken a few more steps when the maid stops, so suddenly that you nearly bump into her. She turns with an unreadable expression, lips pressed, eyes scanning you with quiet disapproval. She tuts.
“Now I see what the trouble is,” she says softly, with a sigh as delicate as lace unraveling. “It’s your clothes. No wonder you feel so… off, princess.”
You blink, glancing down at yourself again. The blouse. The skirt. The gloves. All perfectly neat. Much too neat to be yours. But weren’t they fancy?
“Fancier than usual, yes,” the maid hums, reading your silence like a book she’s already memorized. “But still so plain, so pedestrian. A real princess,” she says, brushing your collar with a frown, “Would never wear something so modest. So forgettable.”
You want to speak. To ask what’s wrong with it. But her words trail through your thoughts like perfume, intoxicating and sharp.
Forgettable?
You can't be forgettable. You’re a princess. The idea feels… insulting.
Before you can voice anything, before you can even draw breath to try, she claps once, and the world shifts.
Out of nowhere, from the air itself, walls of soft pink velvet spring up around you, encircling you in a perfect circle. A dressing room. Not a tent. Not a structure. A full, gilded, magical fitting room, summoned into existence with the flick of her wrist and the subtle crack of certainty.
“Inside,” she says, not unkindly, but absolutely.
You don’t move.
She touches your back with a single gloved finger.
And you’re already stepping inside.
You don’t remember deciding to. You don’t remember walking. One blink, and the curtains are drawn closed behind you.
Warm light glows from nowhere. The air smells like powdered rose and crushed jewels. You stand in the center, arms awkwardly at your sides, as the maid steps in with you. The room does not feel cramped.
She hums as she walks around you. Fingers on your shoulder. Down your arm. Around your waist.
“We can’t have you feeling out of place,” she coos. “Not when your entire being must radiate poise. Grandeur. Perfection.”
The back of your blouse comes undone without warning, buttons slipping apart like they’ve been waiting for this. Fabric slides down your arms, and you barely have time to shiver before new silk replaces it. She moves with impossible speed. Layers unfold in her hands like magic: Embroidered corsets, silver-threaded skirts, tulle, ribbons, diamond-dusted lace.
She fastens, laces, smooths, adjusts. Every touch removes something that was yours, replacing it with something that is hers, and yet meant for you. More than meant. Destined.
“This is better,” she says.
You can’t see yourself, but you can feel it.
The weight of the gown. The tight elegance of the bodice. The cool shimmer of the gemstone embellishments against your collarbone. The faint rustle of skirts so wide they seem to float.
And then—
“A real princess,” she whispers, her voice right at your ear, “Would always wear the absolute fanciest clothes out there.”
Your thoughts stutter.
Of course.
Of course.
What else would you wear? What else could you wear?
The question is absurd. You forget it even formed.
She draws the curtains back, and the dressing room vanishes, vanishing like smoke kissed by the breeze. The soft warmth fades. The garden returns.
But you don’t feel like you’ve returned.
You feel elevated.
The dress trails behind you with royal gravity. You can hear it swish, hear the glitter catching the sun. You don’t remember how you got here, not really. But looking down at yourself now…
You can’t imagine ever having looked any other way.
The maid beams. “Much better.”
And you nod, because yes. Of course it is.
You walk in silence for a time, the garden unfolding around you in new colors and shapes. Statues with unfamiliar faces. Birds that trill in harmonies too perfect to be natural. Flowers in shades you don’t think exist outside of dreams.
And yet, something inside you itches. A question, faint but persistent, pushes at the back of your mind like a bookmark trying to fall free.
How did I get here?
Your eyes drift. Your thoughts try to chase the memory.
But—
Your chest shifts. Subtly.
A softness. A fullness.
You blink, trying again. Where did I live before this? Was I even—
There it is again. A new weight, faint but growing. Your dress presses tighter against your chest. Fabric strains. The air seems warmer.
Who is she, really? That maid—
Your breasts swell a little more. You feel them expanding. Not just larger, rounder. Heavier. Each breath lifts more weight. You glance down, and your heart skips—
You can see them growing.
Two plush, perfect orbs pushing outward with every flicker of memory. Each stray thought feeds them. You’re watching them fill the front of your bodice like rising dough.
You swallow, panic fluttering somewhere beneath the silken haze.
No, this is too much. This isn’t—
SNAP.
The sharp twang of tension breaking. The pressure releases all at once. Your bra has given up, undone by your own stray thoughts.
You clutch at your chest instinctively, arms crossed, but it’s hopeless. There’s too much. Too much softness. Too much bounce. The dress still holds, barely, but what’s underneath is in full disarray.
You spin toward the maid, who was already looking at you in disappointment. Then she sighs.
“I—I don’t think we need to—” you begin, voice tight, but—
She’s already summoning the fitting room again.
Velvet curtains bloom around you in a whisper of magic. You’re inside before you can decide to move. She steps in calmly, eyes half-lidded with patient amusement.
You try again, shaking your head.
But you don’t get to start.
She interrupts without raising her voice.
“A real princess,” she says, brushing your wrist aside, “Never complains about actions their servants do in their service.”
Her hands already undo your ruined undergarment. You flinch—but not in resistance.
“They simply let their servants work… and feel superior,” she continues, sliding a folded something from nowhere, “That they have servants for these sorts of things.”
The words fall over you like warm water.
And just like that, you can’t complain. The protest dies in your throat. No embarrassment. No resistance.
Just… pride.
Because of course you shouldn’t be doing this yourself. That would be ridiculous.
The maid lifts the new brassiere, this one far larger, impossibly elegant, trimmed in silver thread and soft ruffles, and fits it against your now-massive chest with practiced ease. It hugs you perfectly. Firm, yet indulgent. It lifts, shapes, pampers.
You let her work. You don’t even try to help.
Your hands fold behind your back without thought, your chin lifting a little higher.
By the time the clasp clicks into place, your discomfort is gone. Replaced with a quiet, smug rightness.
The curtains vanish. The air shifts, and you’re back in the garden again, dressed, composed, and better.
The maid gestures for you to continue walking.
You obey.
The question of how you got here having long been wiped from your head.
The garden stretches onward, beautiful and endless. The path curls like a ribbon, guiding your heels through quiet, perfumed air.
But now a different thought flickers in your mind.
Why are you obeying her?
It creeps in like smoke under a door. The maid, the fitting room, the dress, the bra—your feet have kept moving, your body submitting without resistance, but… why?
You try to make sense of it. You try to think.
The moment you do, there’s a weight again—but not in your chest this time.
It starts low. A warmth, a pressure in your hips. You frown slightly, shifting your legs as you walk.
The weight grows heavier.
Your steps begin to sway, not by choice but by design. Your hips roll more with each motion. Your thighs press together in unfamiliar ways. Every step makes your rear bounce—a little more than before. Then a lot more. The dress strains behind you, fabric tugging and resisting as your backside expands with sensual inevitability.
You try to clench. To stop it. To think your way through it.
But the more you think, the more it grows.
Rounder. Softer. Heavier.
This isn’t right, you start to tell yourself. I didn’t agree to—
SNAP.
A subtle pop, muffled under layers of silk and lace—but unmistakable. You feel it.
Your panties have surrendered. Somewhere beneath the ornate gown, something has failed catastrophically. You freeze, trying to pretend it didn’t happen. You press your hands down behind your skirt, trying to hide it.
But she’s already looking.
The maid turns without a word. A slow, expectant smile curls her lips as she lifts one hand, fingers curling through the air.
The fitting room returns.
You’re inside it again before you can even gasp.
She enters behind you. You try to speak.
“I don’t think this is nec—”
No sound comes.
You try again.
“I… I… don’t—”
But the words crumble in your mouth. Something’s wrong. You know what you mean to say, but your tongue rebels.
The maid tilts her head, almost pitying.
“A real princess,” she says as she peels away the ruined undergarment, “Must always act like a real princess.”
With that, something cracks—not outside, but within.
The word I vanishes from your thoughts like a dropped glass, shattered on marble.
You open your mouth, but we comes out.
“We… beg your pardon.” No, that’s not right. “We, demand explanation.” No—still not what you meant, but it feels correct, proper.
Humbleness begins to rot at the edges of your thoughts. Apologies fade. Uncertainty withers. Your inner voice stiffens into poise. Your posture straightens with pride you didn’t earn, but now believe is yours by birthright.
She dresses you in new panties, lacy, royal, tailored to your outrageous hips, and you murmur thanks that sounds more like condescension. The words twist on their own.
“We expect excellence from our servants, and you are… adequate, we suppose.”
You didn’t mean to say that. You really didn’t.
But you can’t say it any other way now.
The curtains fall. The fitting room disappears.
And you walk again, hips swaying with new authority, chin held higher. Even your voice feels different now. Richer, heavier with arrogance. Every word you say tastes like velvet and judgment.
You do not sound like yourself anymore.
But you sound correct.
The garden twists around you in a blur of petals and marble. You walk with practiced grace now, hips rolling like clockwork, chin high, back straight. You don’t remember being taught this, you just know it. Your body moves with aristocratic certainty.
And yet, deep beneath it all, a voice still squirms.
Something isn’t right.
The maid is too perfect. Too calm. Too… intentional. Her every word reshapes you. Her every smile is a spell. She’s doing something to you—you know it.
You just don’t know what.
So you try to think, really think. You dig your mental heels in. We must understand. We must see the shape of this. You try to reason your way out. Find a gap, a truth, an escape.
But your body betrays you again.
You feel it immediately, the shift.
Your chest grows heavier with each theory you form. Your backside flares wider with every suspicion you dare to whisper inside your skull. Your thighs thicken. Your legs stretch, graceful and long. Your bust expands, now absurdly massive, jostling with every step, bigger than your head and still growing. Hair pours down your back like a royal banner, silken and endless.
The dress is losing the battle. The seams tighten. The neckline plunges. You feel fabric catching where it shouldn’t, clinging where it never did before. Even walking becomes a spectacle, your hips sway with excess, your dress hiked by sheer volume, your body a caricature of nobility.
We cannot let her see this. We must hide it.
You try. You press your arms in. You keep your back straight. You pretend nothing is wrong.
But she stops.
You don’t see her summon it. You only know it has already appeared.
The fitting room. Again.
The curtains wrap around you like silk chains. The air grows warm with perfume and velvet light. The maid steps inside with the click of her heels and closes the space behind her.
She doesn’t say anything at first. Just opens one palm.
And from it unfolds, no, blossoms, a pair of panties so absurdly opulent they defy reason.
Gossamer lace, embroidered with gold. Studded with gemstones. Ruffles, bows, filigree. A royal crest stitched where no royal crest has any business being. They shimmer like a crown in cloth form.
You open your mouth to object, to stall, to deflect, but she speaks first.
“A real princess,” she says, with honey in her voice, “Always tells her servants when she has a problem.”
You freeze. Her eyes are gentle. Her smile is patient.
But the words strike deep.
You try to hold it in.
But your mouth opens—on its own.
“We, require an immediate adjustment,” you say sharply, voice thick with condescension. “This bodice is offensively small, this brassiere is insufficient for our glorious stature, and our dress, our dress, mind you, no longer befits a princess of our proportions.”
You gasp, inside.
But you can’t stop.
“Our hips demand freedom. Our chest deserves reverence. We will not tolerate such common discomfort.”
You snap your mouth shut. That last line hit your ears like a gavel.
You did not mean to say that.
You just couldn’t stop.
She smiles. Kindly. Sweetly. With victory unspoken.
She wastes no time.
As your haughty confession still echoes through the air, the maid gently lifts the jewel-laced panties and kneels before you. Her movements are reverent, almost worshipful, as if dressing you is a sacred act.
You barely register your own compliance. Your hips shift forward, legs parting just enough, your gown lifted by her gloved hands. The absurdly ornate panties slide up your thighs like a coronation. They stretch perfectly over your massive, wobbling curves, tight enough to frame, soft enough to pamper. They hug your hips like they were born to be worn there.
But she’s not done.
“Now,” the maid says calmly, stepping behind you again, “Let us address the brassiere. It’s quite beneath you.”
You feel her reach beneath your bodice with practiced hands, undoing clasps that strain in protest. The relief is immediate, your breasts, absurd in size, shift freely for only a moment before being cradled again.
She produces another bra.
This one is more than supportive, it’s architectural. Frilly, layered, heavy with elegance. Its laces curl like vines, its fabric soft as clouds. It clasps around you in pieces, each one enchanted to conform to your new form: Massive, shapely, perfect.
As she works, her voice trails at your ear:
“A real princess,” she coos, “Exists to be pampered… and to do whatever the people more important than her want her to.”
Her fingers press into the center clasp, sealing the bra like a treasure chest.
“Thinking is not something she needs to be good at.”
You sigh.
You should be panicking. You should be analyzing, resisting, doing something.
But all you feel is comfort. Deep, aching comfort. The kind that makes you want to let go. Stop planning. Stop worrying. Let others decide.
It’s what a good princess does, after all.
The weight on your chest is no longer a burden, it’s a privilege. You shift slightly, and the bra hugs you back. Soft. Supportive. Secure.
The maid hums again, circling you.
“A real princess always tries to look the best she can,” she says, adjusting your neckline. “From expression to looks, poses, etiquette… everything.”
She tugs a ribbon. Brushes your cheek. Smooths your skirt.
“It should come so naturally that it takes more thought to not act like a princess than it does to act like one.”
She smirks slightly. “Not that thinking is your strong suit.”
Her words drip over your mind like warm syrup: Sweet, slow, impossible to resist.
And you don’t argue.
You don’t even register the insult. It just… slides through you.
You feel your lips curl upward into a soft, seductive smile, one you didn’t mean to make. Your chin lifts. Your nose tilts ever so slightly above level. Your eyes narrow, not in suspicion, but in judgment.
You didn’t choose to do this. You just… are like this now.
Your chest juts forward proudly, vast and commanding. Your hips shift to the side with poise, dismissive and aristocratic, like you’re ready to sneer at anyone who dares speak out of turn.
Your entire posture breathes superiority.
Then comes the final piece.
The dress.
Oh, the dress.
The maid holds it up as if revealing a holy relic: Midnight blue silk embroidered with gold, studded with starlight and vanity. It has everything, everything: A scandalous boob window, tasteful thigh slits, embroidered crests, flared sleeves, flowing layers, and more glitter than a noblewoman’s dowry.
She lowers it onto your body like a royal mantle. It slips into place with a kiss of magic. Every seam tightens to perfection. Every line draws the eye to your figure. Every ruffle, every glint, every breath of fabric was made for you.
And you know it.
You look perfect.
Obviously.
Before you even realized it, you were standing in the garden again.
No sound. No fanfare. No grand transition. The fitting room was simply… gone.
Though for a moment, you weren’t even sure it had ever existed. The thought drifted slowly through the haze of your mind like a leaf on still water. But it didn’t matter, not really.
Nothing ever did anymore, except looking perfect.
Fitting room.
The words flicker again, and suddenly your hands rise without thought.
One lifts your breasts, your glorious, absurdly plush breasts, and you can’t help but admire how heavy and proud they feel, straining against your expertly fitted, laced, and bedazzled bra. The other slides along your hip and down, over the legendary expanse of your backside, tracing the lavish curve framed in silk and shimmer.
You sweep your hands down your thighs next—impossibly smooth, toned, and indulgently soft. Each step you take makes your legs glide with practiced grace, with sway, with seduction.
You laugh.
A soft, rich, haughty laugh.
Because of course you look amazing.
How could you not?
The maid approaches again, so composed, so patient. She gives a small bow, just deep enough to show respect, not so deep as to insult your station.
“Your Highness,” she says warmly, “The important people are ready to receive you.”
You smile, lazy and regal.
“Then lead the way,” you say with a gentle flick of your hand. “We shall not keep them waiting. Let them see what perfection looks like.”
You don’t know who they are.
You don’t ask. Asking would be undignified.
You’re reasonably sure you wouldn’t remember anyway.
And besides, what does it matter?
You know your purpose.
To obey those more important than you. To listen to your maid. To smile. To pose. To be dressed. To be adored.
To be… perfect.
Because that’s what a real princess does.
And you are a real princess.
Obviously.