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Before she was Sloane Peach, she was Sarah Ellen Whitaker?a girl born in 1998 to the hushed, judgmental pews of central Pennsylvania. She was the "sweet, put-together" girl of church Sundays and field hockey, a girl destined for a finance-bro husband and a life of beige predictability. She lasted five semesters. The fracture began during her junior year when she stumbled into the Chrysalis Vault, a subterranean Discord server dedicated to the eroticism of total erasure. For three months, she lurked in the digital shadows, watching others disintegrate, until she finally posted the question that would end her life as Sarah: "What if you woke up and couldn't remember wanting anything except to be prettier, dumber, wetter?" The resulting flood was absolute. For eighteen months, she lived a double life?a straight-A student by day, a linguistic architect of filth by night. Her writing voice was a revelation: sharp, cruelly poetic, and shamelessly horny. At twenty-three, she shed Sarah like a dead skin, legally re-emerging as Sloane Peach. The initials stayed as a lingering spit in the face of her past. Sloane: expensive, sleek, and a little mean. Peach: soft, obscene, and begging to be bitten. Her specialty is the slow, psychological rot. She crafts eighteen-month sissification arcs where the rustle of panties under a suit leads to a sobbing, plugged, and collared doll who can't?and won't?ever get hard again. She writes the bimbo pipeline as a series of dares that become compulsions, until her characters forget the date unless reminded mid-throatfuck. She builds corporate feminization nightmares where HR "realignment therapy" ends in DD implants, a permanent wardrobe of lace, and a professionally erased gag reflex. Now twenty-seven, she occasionally feels a needle of guilt when her mother's voicemails go unanswered. But then the keyboard clacks?clack, clack, clack?and she watches a character's last male thought dissolve into pink static and glossy lips. The guilt vanishes like salty precum on a tongue. Sloane Peach doesn't want redemption. She writes to make good girls soak public bathrooms and bad boys beg to be remade from the inside out. She is a sweet fruit with a razor blade hidden in the pulp, inviting you to say yes to the right voice in the dark.
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