I'm glad you're liking this happenstance story so much that you wanted to expand, and continue expanding, on it. I hope all your works go like that; passion projects with no feelings of obligation.
Well, I guess that answers her question about what they will be doing until her father's ship shows up. By then, she should be locked into that body for at least a year...
I wonder what brought about the need to transport the Prince is such a manner? Personally, I'm hoping this all started as an elaborate prank that got out of hand.
The thing is, we don't know if she was the crown prince, or just an excess prince. Just as we don't know how she ended up a she (unless it's somewhere else and I missed it?) For all we know the King might be really happy about this.
Oooh. How interesting would it be if he knocked her up, she loses her regal status as a prince and therefore ability to be come king... then the BODYGUARD becomes the king, and the Princess becomes the queen? The hottest and least violent coup ever pulled off!
Maybe once he's got enough weeks of pumping into her to equal nine months she gets pregnant? You know an 'achievement unlocked' kinda thing. Then he'll get into the 'bonus rounds' ;-)
I know the public views are farther behind in the storyline, but I wouldn't be surprised if in addition to the +7 days, we're getting foreshadowing of a nine-month extension and surprise baby heir/heiress as well!
So, how did this start exactly? Noble hires a bodyguard to travel a few days incognito? Goes with full on polymorph rather than disguise spell because one not magic-detect-able? Bodyguard intended to change and knock them up because of secret - heto - crush?
>keep having sex >cum inside her like semen demon >gets pregnant and finds out spell become permanent when pregnant >when it becomes permanent she forgets how to be,act and what it was like to be a man. >turns into a girly wife with more kids on the way.
It's just a monochrome palette, that I've tried in various hues over the years. This palette evolved from the one I used in "Entry Level Positions", which was inspired by "Tawawa on Monday"
Well you see, one of the first CPC's was developed by an international body where most of the member nations' languages used noun-adjective ordering instead of adject-noun. The full name was translated but the acronym stuck to the original ordering. Like how today we have the "international system" of units but we call them "SI units".