Lantie Solyn
New Member
I am looking for a roleplay partner who can write at least four lines, uses proper spelling/grammar/punctuation, can let me know when they're leaving for prolonged periods of time, and will play the more dominant role, represented in the storyline below by Muse A.
PLEASE NOTE: There are elements of homophobia/stereotyping in this roleplay, but I don't support homophobia nor stereotyping. It's simply an aspect of the roleplay.
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Muse A was not gay.
In fact, he was just about as far from gay as possible.
He played football.
He had not only one, but multiple girlfriends.
He couldn't knit or act.
He wasn't well versed in chick flicks.
Clearly, Muse A was absolutely, positively, firmly not gay.
Who cared if he sometimes found his gaze lingering on the boy who sat in the back of his math class, Muse B?
Girls called other girls cute all the time, and it didn't make them lesbiαns, so why did it matter if he found Muse B slightly attractive?
(Not that he'd ever admit he did.)
After all, he was a teenage boy with hormones.
It was perfectly normal for him to notice Muse B's nice smile, or pretty laugh, or his cute bυtt.
Besides, it wasn't like Muse A was in love with Muse B or anything.
Sure, he found him physically appealing at times -- in a totally straight way -- but other than that, Muse B was just...weird.
He hung out in graveyards.
He was always reading horror novels.
He lived in a creepy old house.
He was gay.
All in all, he was was nothing Muse A would want, even if he was gay.
(Which he wasn't.)
Yet, when his friends make a wager, betting him two hundred dollars that he can't earn Muse B's love and then break his heart by the end of the school year, Muse A accepts almost eagerly.
Unfortunately, completing that little task quickly becomes much more complicated than the charismatic boy thought it would be, because Muse B seems to want nothing to do with him.