Princess Serena’s Dirty, Stinky Pink Adidas – Nose in, tongue out, you drooling dirt-eater!
Serena sits relaxed in front of you on the chair, legs together, the old pink Adidas sneakers still firmly on her feet. The fabric is faded, the edges frayed, the soles black and sticky from months on the street – a perfect reflection of your own broken existence. You kneel before her, knees on the hard floor, eyes downcast, breath already shallow with excitement.
She leans back slightly, crosses her arms, and surveys you like a piece of trash. „Look at this,“ she says softly, almost amused. „These sneakers are older than you, more wrinkled than your soul, and yet… you want to lick them. Don’t you?“
Without waiting, she lifts her right foot. Slowly. Deliberately. The rubber comes closer – you see the cracks, the dried-on dirt, the small pebbles. „Tongue out. Now.“
You obey. The tip of your foot touches the edge of the sole first—salty, dusty, warm from her skin. She presses harder until your chin tilts back, your nose almost pressed into the shoe. „From front to back. Every millimeter. And woe betide you if you leave anything behind.“
Your tongue glides over the grooves, tasting asphalt, sweat, old rubber—she moves your foot slightly, twists it so you can reach the sides. „Deeper. Suck out the dirt. I want to hear you swallow.“
Suddenly, she pulls the shoe off—slowly, almost painfully. The foot beneath is damp, the inside of the shoe smells intensely of sweat, leather, and old foot odor. She holds it right up to your face.
„Put your nose in. Inhale deeply. This is your scent today.“
You press your nose in—musty, warm, overwhelming. She laughs softly. „And now… lick the inside clean. The whole sole. Every crease, every sweat stain. Until it shines.“
You dip your tongue in, taste the salty film, the stale moisture—she presses the shoe harder against your mouth until your lips are stuck to the inside.
„Keep going. Don’t stop. Until the inside of the shoe is as clean as your tongue is numb.“
The left foot joins in—first lick the sole, then take it off, smell it, clean the inside. She alternates, sometimes pressing the shoe shut, sometimes the foot, until you’re just drooling and panting. „See? You’re nothing. Just a cleaning rag for my broken shoes. And you love it.“