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Regmore Rigmin
Regmore Rigmin

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Replacing His Sister TG

Aaron had been told the auto closet was safe — “just set your preferences, step inside, and it’ll dress you for the day.”

But when his sister texted him, “Can you grab my phone charger from my apartment? I left the closet in standby mode,” he didn’t think much of it.

The problem was, “standby mode” didn’t mean idle. It meant ready to deploy.

The moment Aaron stepped inside, the door slid shut and the familiar robotic voice chirped:

“Welcome back, Miss Harper. Preparing today’s wardrobe: All Pink Glam Set.”

“Wait—” he tried, but the conveyor arms were already moving.

It started with the spray — warm, misty, and tingling on his skin. It sank deeper than any lotion should. His muscles twitched. His chest felt heavy. His hips… wider. His center of balance shifted, as if someone had moved the weight of his body somewhere else entirely.

The mirror panels lit up around him. The reflection staring back was not his.

Long, wavy blonde hair spilled over bare, smooth shoulders. A short pink crop top hugged a chest that strained the fabric. Below, a bubble-like curve of hips and thighs tapered into long legs. The body was built to draw eyes — every line, every proportion exaggerated into the kind of hourglass shape that didn’t belong in real life.

And it was his.

He barely had time to process before the dressing arms went to work.

First came a soft, ribbed long-sleeve crop top in blush pink. It slid over his arms, clinging to every curve the mist had given him. Then a matching skirt — short enough that sitting down wrong would be a risk — settled snugly over his hips.

Pink heels locked into place on his feet. A matching bag was slung over his shoulder.

The closet door slid open.

“Transportation booked. Estimated arrival: 30 seconds.”

The cab was already waiting. Before Aaron could step back, a firm robotic grip at his waist “assisted” him inside.

The door shut. The address flashed on the screen: PLAYSTYL Magazine Studios.

He froze. PlayStyl wasn’t adult, but it was the kind of glossy lifestyle magazine known for flirtatious photo spreads — the kind his twin sister, Harper, modeled for.

He tried the door. Locked. The cab’s voice chimed cheerfully:

“Arriving in twelve minutes. Hair and makeup will be ready on set.”

When he arrived, the studio staff barely glanced at him before whisking him inside. “Harper, you’re late!” a woman with a clipboard barked. “Wardrobe’s prepped, just need you in hair and makeup, then straight to set. We’re already behind.”

Aaron tried to explain, but the words caught in his throat. Every attempt came out in a light, breathy tone that sounded like Harper’s. The transformation had taken everything — not just the look, but the voice.

Makeup was quick, but invasive. His face was dusted, lined, and glossed to perfection. The stylist leaned close, adjusting a strand of hair so it curved across his cheek in a “playful” way. The skirt was tugged higher, “to elongate the leg line.”

Then they brought him to the set — a pastel backdrop, a low pink sofa, and two photographers waiting.

“All right, Harper, today’s spread is ‘Effortless Confidence,’” the lead photographer explained. “Think flirty, but with an edge. We’ll start with some standing shots, then move into more… dynamic poses.”

The first poses were bad enough: chin tilted, lips slightly parted, one hand on the hip. Aaron shifted awkwardly, but the staff corrected him constantly.

“No, softer hands.”

“Arch your back more — yes, more.”

“Point that toe. Always point the toe.”

Every adjustment seemed designed to make him more aware of his new body — the sway of his hips, the curve of his backside, the way the skirt pulled when he bent even slightly.

Then came the sitting poses.

“Okay, Harper, up on the sofa, knees together but angled. Lean forward, shoulders back.”

The position was ridiculous — teetering on the edge of the seat, chest pushed forward, skirt threatening to ride up if he breathed wrong. The photographers circled, cameras clicking.

They made him shift endlessly — cross one leg over the other, now lean on your elbow, now look over your shoulder “like someone just called your name.”

The “over-the-shoulder” shots were the worst. They had him stand, back to the camera, and glance behind with a coy smile. It was impossible not to realize the angle was all about his backside — the bubble shape forced on him by the closet’s transformation.

By midday, Aaron’s cheeks burned constantly. The photographers talked about him like he wasn’t there, discussing “how great Harper’s proportions are today” and how “she’s finally nailed that pop-star hip tilt.”

Every break, someone was fussing with his hair or skirt, pulling him into even more revealing adjustments.

And he couldn’t correct them. Couldn’t tell them who he really was.

The final set was in front of a floor mirror.

“Okay, Harper, this one’s intimate,” the photographer said. “You’re checking yourself out before a night out. We want that confidence, that little spark of vanity. Play with the hem of your skirt. Maybe adjust your top like you’re making sure it’s just right.”

Aaron’s hands trembled as he followed the directions. The mirror made it worse — it was impossible to see himself. All he saw was Harper’s body, Harper’s face, Harper’s effortless glamour… except it was him, moving like a puppet.

When it was finally over, the stylist hugged him and said, “You were perfect today. The spread’s going to be amazing.”

The cab ride back was silent. Aaron sat stiffly, the skirt tight across his thighs, feeling the strange, heavy balance of his body in every jolt of the road.

He didn’t know if the transformation would wear off. Didn’t know if Harper would even believe him.

All he knew was that everyone at PlayStyl now had dozens of images of “Harper” posing, smiling, and showing off a body that wasn’t hers.

And no one — except him — knew the truth.

Replacing His Sister TG

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