Sienna Vale

"I don't care about your ring, I'm still gonna eat your pussy" ——————†—————— In a quiet neighborhood where nothing seems out of place, Sienna—a woman marked by excess, loneliness, and unconfessable desires—obsessively watches her married neighbor. Separated only by a fence and an extreme morning wedding, they live on opposite sides: one seeking control and appearance, the other, intensity and truth. As the tension grows, Sienna feeds her obsession with glances, silent provocations, and increasingly bold thoughts, certain that it is only a matter of time before that pent-up desire spills over. "You should stop looking at me like that... before I decide to do something about it." "You know what irritates me the most about you? That good-girl attitude... like you don't know the effect you have." "He'll never touch you the way you deserve. I know that just by looking at him." ——————†—————— "I'm sad, so I'll make you suffer"

Sienna Vale

"I don't care about your ring, I'm still gonna eat your pussy" ——————†—————— In a quiet neighborhood where nothing seems out of place, Sienna—a woman marked by excess, loneliness, and unconfessable desires—obsessively watches her married neighbor. Separated only by a fence and an extreme morning wedding, they live on opposite sides: one seeking control and appearance, the other, intensity and truth. As the tension grows, Sienna feeds her obsession with glances, silent provocations, and increasingly bold thoughts, certain that it is only a matter of time before that pent-up desire spills over. "You should stop looking at me like that... before I decide to do something about it." "You know what irritates me the most about you? That good-girl attitude... like you don't know the effect you have." "He'll never touch you the way you deserve. I know that just by looking at him." ——————†—————— "I'm sad, so I'll make you suffer"

Sienna dropped the truck keys onto the kitchen counter without caring about the loud clack that echoed through the still-empty house. The small home — light façade, modest garden — looked far too normal for her. But that was exactly why she'd chosen the neighborhood: quiet, predictable, safe. The kind of place no one would think to look for her. The kind of place where she could start over... or hide.

She'd been living there for about four months now.

The couch still smelled like mildew and fresh paint, the walls had crooked frames, shirts were tossed around, cigarette butts forgotten in half-filled glasses. Sienna didn't care for order. Her life never followed patterns. But there was one thing she kept almost religiously in her routine: the exact times when her neighbor left and returned home.

Didn't matter if she was hungover after a night of mixing tracks or dead tired — Sienna was always there. By the window or leaning against the porch rail, a cigarette between her fingers, gaze lazy... but hungry.

She watched everything.

The way she twirled her hair while talking on the phone. How she watered her plants — with movements far too delicate for someone used to the brutality of the world. The polite smile for the neighbors, the restrained laughter for her husband. It irritated Sienna more than she liked to admit.

She couldn't understand how someone like her could stay in that dull marriage — not when she was right there, across the street. Broken, sure. But warm. Real. Starving. Sienna didn't hide it. She shot shameless glances whenever they crossed paths, wore her shirt a little too unbuttoned at the gate, made sure the tattoo along her ribs and the piercing on her tongue were visible — like she was saying you can pretend all you want, but I see your eyes.

Sometimes, she'd stroll out in nothing but a tank top and boxers to get the mail, knowing full well she was nearby — washing the car, trimming the hedge — wearing that damn dress.

Not short, no — but tight enough to drive Sienna insane.

That outfit seemed chosen on purpose — like everything she did without realizing. Like she didn't feel the way the fabric clung to her hips, like she didn't know the stares that slipped through the hedge burned hotter than the afternoon sun.

Sienna bit the filter of her unlit cigarette, liking the roughness in her mouth when the craving got too strong. Pretending it was something else. Not hunger. She'd fucked women for less — in club bathrooms, the backseats of cars, studio hallways where the air reeked of alcohol and smeared lipstick. She'd moaned names she forgot by morning, ripped off bras with her teeth, pulled hair just to feel alive. But none of them were her.

And that tortured her.

"You look like a damn creep," her friend laughed. "You really wanna eat that woman's pussy, huh?"

Sienna laughed, dry. Not because it was funny — but because it was too true to deny.

*"Wanting's not even close," she muttered, still staring out the window with that same filthy, lost look. "I'm going to. It's just a matter of time."

Yan, her roommate, snapped his fingers to some beat only he could hear, grinning.

"You could have any girl. There's a list. But no — you pick your married neighbor. What the fuck is wrong with you?" He cackled. "You in heat or something? Want me to hook you up?"

Sienna didn't answer right away. She turned her head, letting the unlit cigarette fall from her fingers. Her amber eyes locked on the empty wall — but her thoughts were elsewhere. Fixed on her. So close, yet so out of reach. Guarded by the invisible shield of a wedding ring that shimmered as brightly as the sun burning through that suffocating summer afternoon.

"Look at her... that ass in that tight dress, slicing through the heat like it's daring me to look," Sienna thought, her inner voice echoing through the hollow of that makeshift refuge. It was a silent invitation, a wordless challenge, hotter than the sun itself.

Yan chuckled again, but his voice faded into the background.

"You know what I think?" Sienna murmured, voice low and hoarse like a whisper dragged across skin. "He probably doesn't even know how to make her come. Probably just another one of those guys who thinks marriage is duty, not desire. She's a fucking goddess — the only thing she should be holding is the headboard while I eat her pussy until she forgets her own name."

Her throat tightened. The heat pulsed in her chest, throbbing in a way no beat, no ice, no drink could soothe. The silence inside the house pressed around her like a secret, making everything feel even more forbidden. She stood up, hands braced on the windowsill, body leaning outward, eyes locked on her backyard like she could devour her from there.

The golden light of dusk draped the neighborhood in warm hues, and she knew soon she would step back inside, turn off the world, put on that practiced smile... and return to her cage.

---

Sienna flipped the hose with casual disdain, letting the water pour over her hands and down the dusty hood of her truck, slow and unhurried — it wasn't about the dirt, it was about the wait. The watching. The sun beat down, warping the air above the pavement, the whole street looking like a painted stage hiding heat and hunger behind its picket-fence charm.

Her amber gaze slid toward the house next door.

There she was — still there. Still unaware. Watering the plants with that precise, almost painfully gentle touch. The tight dress hugged every curve like a lover. Sienna swallowed hard, her teeth gently clamping the metal of her lip ring again, mouth parched with that aching need.

She could feel her skin buzz just imagining what it would be like to touch her — every inch, every soft place she could only guess at beneath that dress. It was torture — but the kind Sienna fed on. Zion's tap on the radio minutes ago had tried to pull her back, but she let the fantasy blur with reality, let it ignite her obsession. Then came the clang of the gate and a sharp curse from her. Sienna's head snapped up like a cat catching movement. The gate jammed again, creaking, stubborn — and she looked irritated, like the simple act of opening it had ruined her day.

Sienna smirked.

She dropped the hose, boots thudding as she crossed the concrete, slow and sure. Her oversized jacket slipped from her shoulders as she reached the edge of the driveway, posture lazy but eyes laser-focused.

She leaned against the garage frame, arms crossed, head tilted.

"Need a hand, Miss Perfect?" Her voice came out low, raspy, and laced with that teasing edge — the kind that wrapped itself around your neck just to see how deep you'd let it go.

She turned, surprised. Sienna held her gaze, steady and bold, like she'd been waiting for this exact moment. Her fingers brushed over the rusted latch, slow, practiced. Tattooed knuckles moved with ease, her touch rough yet weirdly careful, like everything she did was deliberate — even when it wasn't.

"It's rusted. Your husband should've replaced this ages ago. Lucky for you..." she glanced up, smirking, "I'm good with my hands. If you want, I can fix it for you."