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FemmeForgie
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From Bro to Hoe: A Werebimbo Story - Part 1

From Bro to Hoe: A Werebimbo Story

By FemmeForge

It was just supposed to be a night of beers and bro-talk. But when the full moon rose, his best friend didn’t grow fur — he grew tits.

One second, Kyle was crushing a beer can. The next, his chest was ripping open a shirt with two massive, dripping tits, nipples so hard they cut through fabric. His cock didn’t get hard — it shrank away, leaving a smooth, soaking slit that quivered and leaked under the moonlight. His screams cracked into filthy moans, his voice going high and slutty as his ass swelled into a fat, fuckable bubble that begged to be grabbed.

On his knees, grinding in the dirt, Kyle’s body betrayed him — hips snapping, pussy drooling, tits bouncing heavy with every shudder. His hands clawed at his new curves while his mouth spilled out shameless cries for cock.

Trent could only watch, cock throbbing in horror and lust, as his best friend transformed into a pink-lipped, cock-hungry werebimbo moaning his name. Every full moon, the curse takes over again — turning his buddy into a dripping fuckdoll desperate to be filled, fucked, and ruined.

Now Trent has a choice: fight the curse… or give in and use his best friend’s new body the way it begs to be used.

Now every full moon is a nightmare soaked in tits, pussy, and horny flesh. Every howl is a moan, every scream a cry for cock. And Trent has to face the truth: you can’t save your best friend when the moon wants her holes filled.

Link for the PDF File: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1U3CV7hxByq26YtpN0r5FeZWX3XyYGwRg/view?usp=drive_link

Part 1

It was late—too late for anyone else to be up here but them. The van sat crooked along the cliff’s edge, its headlights long dead, the whole town stretched out below in glittering patches of light. From this high up, the world looked like someone had scattered broken glass across a sheet of black velvet. Every so often, a wave crashed far below, carried up as a dull roar on the night wind.

Inside, though, the world shrank down to the cramped van interior: leather seats that reeked of sweat and sun, a faint fog clinging to the windows, and the heavy press of heat that hadn’t left their bodies since practice. Or maybe since that limp afterparty they’d ditched early. Either way, it was just the two of them, same as always.

The only glow came from the dashboard, casting them in pale green shadows. Between them slouched a half-empty six-pack, condensation streaking the cardboard, the air thick with the mixed scent of beer, sweat, and leather.

Trent leaned back, legs spread, one arm draped lazily across the back of the seat. Even in downtime he had that easy dominance to him, the kind of guy who seemed built to take up space. His cut-off clung to his shoulders, showing the ridge of muscle beneath, and he moved with the casual comfort of someone who didn’t need to try.

Across from him, Kyle sat restless. Golden hair still damp at the roots, shirt clinging where sweat hadn’t fully dried, his thigh bouncing restlessly. Every few seconds he shifted—tugging at his shirt, wiping his forehead, fidgeting like the seat itself was biting at him.

Trent smirked, watching him squirm. He reached for another can, popped it open with a hiss, foam fizzing up the lip.
“Dude, you good? You look like you’re about to crawl outta your skin.”

Kyle let out a breathy laugh, too quick. “Yeah. Just… hot in here.”

Trent glanced toward the cracked window. Cool night air swept in from the ocean. “Hot? It’s freezing with that breeze. You sweating out the beer already?”

Kyle’s hand wiped at his forehead again, this time slower, like he only just noticed how damp he really was. “I dunno. Just—guess I’m wired. Can’t sit still.”

“Wired?” Trent took a pull from his can, smirk curling wider. “What, party was too wild for you? Couldn’t handle two games of beer pong?”

Kyle snorted, rubbing the back of his neck. “Shut up.”

Trent leaned forward, elbows braced on his knees, voice dropping into something softer but still teasing. “Nah, seriously, man. You’ve been jumpy since we left. Thought you’d be chill. You should be—hell, look at you.” His hand gestured at Kyle’s chest, his arms. “You’re jacked now. Bigger than me, even. Mr. Perfect Golden Boy.”

The words should’ve landed as a compliment, but Kyle stiffened instead. He forced a laugh that cracked midway, shaking his head. “Yeah. Guess I am.”

Trent chuckled, settling back again. “Shit, I created a monster. Skinny Kyle turned into a beast.”

Kyle’s throat bobbed. His hands clenched against his thighs. For a moment, he didn’t answer. He just stared at the lights below, jaw tight, something flickering in his eyes that Trent couldn’t place.

Then, under his breath, barely audible: “Monster. Yeah. Something like that.”

Trent leaned forward, elbows resting on his knees, his can dangling between two fingers. His voice had dropped into something easy, almost lazy.
“You remember freshman year? Coach tried putting you on O-line for a week. Skinny-ass Kyle trying to hold off dudes twice his size. Shit was hilarious.”

Kyle managed a weak laugh, shaking his head. “Yeah. Lasted one practice before I got flattened.”

“Flattened? Man, they carried you off like roadkill.” Trent grinned, his teeth flashing in the dashlight. “Whole team thought you were gonna quit that day.”

“Thought about it,” Kyle admitted, rubbing his palms against his shorts. “Hell, I thought about it a lot back then. Wasn’t built for this. Not like you were.”

Trent cocked his head, half a smirk still there but softened. “You make it sound like I didn’t bust my ass too.”

“Yeah, but you didn’t have to the same way,” Kyle said. He leaned back, staring at the ceiling like he was replaying it all. “You were already… you. Big, strong, everyone knowing your name. I was just the tagalong. Your shadow.”

“Tagalong, huh?” Trent chuckled, leaning back too. “Could’ve fooled me. You stuck it out, man. Not a lot of guys would’ve. And look at you now.” He gestured at Kyle’s frame again, almost proud. “Not exactly my shadow anymore.”

For a second, the weight between them shifted. The van hummed in the silence.

Kyle smirked faintly. “Remember cutting class sophomore year? We ditched that history test and drove out to the lake.”

Trent’s grin widened. “Shit, yeah. Borrowed my uncle’s shitty fishing boat. Nearly sank it ‘cause you thought you could stand on the edge and piss over the side.”

Kyle barked a real laugh that time, shaking his head. “I swear you almost let me drown.”

“I almost did let you drown,” Trent corrected, laughing too. “Would’ve been easier than hauling your dumb ass back into the boat.”

The laughter faded into a quieter moment, both of them staring out through the foggy windshield at the glitter of lights below.

“Crazy,” Trent said finally, softer now. “Feels like we’ve been doing this forever. Just… finding a spot, drinking, shooting the shit.”

“Yeah,” Kyle said. His voice had dropped low, almost wistful. “Feels like… we always end up here. Just us.”

Trent glanced over, something unreadable flickering behind his eyes. “Guess we do.”

The laughter lingered, thin and tired, before it bled into silence again. Outside, the cliff wind whistled against the van. Inside, the air was thick with the smell of sweat and beer, the quiet hum of the engine block cooling.

Kyle leaned forward, elbows braced on his knees, staring at the six-pack between his sneakers. He rolled an empty can between his palms, metal clicking faintly. “Y’know… sometimes I think about it. All the shit we’ve done together. All the years. Feels like it all went by too fast.”

Trent cocked his head, studying him. “Getting sentimental on me, bro?”

Kyle’s laugh came quick, almost forced. “Maybe. Just… feels like we’re not kids anymore. Back then, it was simple. Classes, practice, sneaking off, whatever. Just you and me against the world.”

Trent smirked, but softer now, a memory tugging at the corner of his mouth. “We were punks. Raising hell, thinking we had it all figured out.”

Kyle turned his head, catching Trent’s profile in the green glow. His chest ached in a way he didn’t want to name. “Yeah. But it mattered, y’know? Having someone there. I don’t think I’d have made it through half that shit without you.”

For a second, Trent didn’t answer. He tipped his can, watching the foam slide around the lip, his brow furrowed just a little. “…Guess I don’t say it much, but… you’ve been solid too, man. Always.”

The words hit harder than they should have. Kyle swallowed, throat tight, his chest burning with something more than the strange fever stirring inside him. He wanted to say it — I don’t just look up to you. I don’t just want to be like you. I wanted you.

His mouth opened, but the words stuck. What came out instead was a weak laugh, his eyes darting away. “You ever think about how people look at us? Always together. Always the same two idiots.”

Trent chuckled. “What, like we’re a package deal? Yeah, I’ve heard the jokes. Doesn’t bother me.” He shot Kyle a sidelong glance. “Never thought it bothered you, either.”

Kyle’s stomach twisted. He let the silence stretch too long, his fingers tightening on the can until it crumpled slightly in his grip. Finally, he forced a grin that didn’t reach his eyes. “Yeah. Doesn’t bother me.”

But under the weight of Trent’s gaze, with the full moon climbing unseen above them and the heat building in his veins, Kyle felt the truth pressing against his teeth, begging to spill out — only to be drowned by the next rush of sweat and trembling that rolled through him.

Kyle stared at the crumpled can in his hands, the aluminum cold against his palms, but his thoughts were miles away. Trent’s words echoed in his ears, soft and steady, and all he could think about was how long he’d been chasing him.

From the start, Trent had been everything he wasn’t. Strong. Confident. The guy everyone looked at when he walked into a room. Kyle had told himself he just wanted to be that. To catch up, to stand beside him without looking like the weak little brother tagging along. That was what pushed him into the gym, what made him grind through the pain and turn his body into the bulked-up beast it was now.

But somewhere along the way, something shifted.

He couldn’t remember exactly when it started — maybe in the locker room, when he caught himself staring too long at the way Trent’s pecs bunched when he peeled off his shirt, or how the veins in his arms popped when he clenched his fists. Maybe it was the sound of his voice, that deep, easy tone that could cut Kyle down with a joke but still make him feel safe. Or maybe it was that night by the lake, Trent hauling him back into the boat, hands gripping him tight, strong, unshakable.

Whatever it was, it crept in slow until Kyle couldn’t deny it anymore.

The admiration curdled into something else. Something darker.

He remembered lying awake at night, his cock straining hard against his shorts, thinking about Trent in ways that made his stomach knot with shame. Fantasies that came uninvited, depraved images of being under him, taken by him. His fist around his thick cock, stroking in a frenzy while he imagined Trent’s weight on his chest, his voice growling in his ear, telling him what to do.

It terrified him.

He was supposed to be the big one now — the jock god with the muscles, the abs, the cock that made girls gasp. He was supposed to be the one in control, the one splitting cheerleaders open and making them scream his name. That’s what he built himself for. That’s what his body proved.

And yet, in the dark, his fantasies weren’t about girls at all. They were about Trent. About being pinned down, bent over, made into something less. His mind whispered things he couldn’t even repeat to himself in daylight — that maybe all his muscle, all his cock, all his hard work, wasn’t about being the man on top, but about being hot enough for Trent to want.

Kyle squeezed his eyes shut, shame burning hotter than the fever rolling through his body now. Fuck. What the hell’s wrong with me?

But no matter how many girls he fucked, no matter how many parties he swaggered through with his chest out and his cock swinging like a prize, the thoughts always came back. Trent, pressing him down. Trent, looking at him not as a friend but as something to use.

And that was the part that broke him: the way those thoughts didn’t just make him hard — they made him desperate.

I’m supposed to be a man. A dominant. A big cock alpha.

But deep down, something inside Kyle wanted the opposite. And it haunted him.

Kyle’s grip on the can tightened until the aluminum groaned, but his thoughts weren’t in the van anymore. They were back to the day everything cracked.

He’d thought he was just sick at first. Weird sweats at night, strange waves of heat, his body twitching in ways he couldn’t explain. He’d brushed it off — too much protein, not enough sleep, pushing too hard at the gym. But then came the talk. The one that still made his stomach clench when he thought about it.

It wasn’t his coach, or his teammates. It was his own family.

He remembered sitting at the kitchen table, his mother pale and tight-lipped, his uncle refusing to meet his eyes. They’d told him what ran in the bloodline — what happened to certain men on nights of the full moon. Not beasts with claws or fangs. Not wolves. Something worse. Something humiliating.

A werewoman.

A curse that stripped muscle and cock, that twisted a man into a submissive, slutty parody of womanhood, hot and horny and helpless. A body built to moan, to beg, to be fucked.

The words still burned in his skull: “It runs in the blood. Every full moon, the curse shows itself. You’ll turn into a werewoman. A creature of lust. A submissive, slutty bimbo, no matter how hard you fight it.”

He’d laughed at first. He had to. It sounded insane. But when he saw the look on their faces — when his uncle muttered about “your grandfather’s shame” and his mother whispered, “God help you, Kyle” — the laughter had died in his throat.

The horror had settled in its place.

And yet, this curse didn’t care. It promised to rip it all away, peel him out of his skin, and spit him out as something obscene: a blonde, bouncing, desperate bimbo in heat. Submissive. Mindless. Needy. A whore.

He shivered, not from the ocean breeze but from memory. He hated the thought more than anything, hated the idea of being trapped in a body that wasn’t his, a body that existed just to moan, to beg, to spread its legs. It horrified him. It disgusted him.

He’d spent years building himself into the man he was — a dominant, hung, musclebound jock who owned every room he walked into. He was supposed to be the guy splitting pussies open with his cock, not whimpering as one was spread inside him. He was supposed to be the beast, not some moaning, bouncing bimbo with her tits spilling out.

The thought had haunted him. He remembered lying awake, drenched in sweat, imagining it against his will: his big pecs swelling into tits, his abs melting into a soft waist, his cock shrinking into nothing while a wet, aching slit took its place. The image made his stomach flip, his throat dry with panic. Not me. Never me.

Every time the heat rolled through him before a full moon, every time the shivers came, it felt like his body was laughing at him, reminding him of what was waiting.

It horrified him. Terrified him. Because he knew what he was supposed to be: a man, dominant, untouchable, dripping with power and cock. And the curse was the cruelest thing he could imagine — tearing all of that away and turning him into exactly the opposite.

He shook his head now, trying to shove the thoughts down, the way he always did when they crept in. The van was too small for them, too close to Trent, too dangerous.

Don’t think about it. Not now. Not ever.

Instead, he forced his mind back to safer ground — to the mirror at the gym, where he’d first seen his chest bulk out thick, where his arms had started to swell like stone under his skin. To the summer afternoons when girls at the pool had stared openly at his eight-pack, when guys slapped his back like he’d finally earned his place. To the weight of his cock swinging heavy in the locker room, pride filling him up like no curse ever could.

That was who he was. That was who he had to be.

I’m Kyle. The golden boy. The beast I made myself into. Nothing else.

Kyle let out a shaky breath, rubbing his palms together like he was trying to scrub off a layer of sweat that wouldn’t leave. His leg bounced faster. Finally, he broke the silence, his voice rough.

“You know, I wasn’t always like this.”

Trent raised a brow. “Like what? Jacked? Golden-boy quarterback?”

Kyle gave a half laugh, but it was strained, almost bitter. “Yeah. That. Everyone just… sees me now and assumes I’ve always been that guy. Big muscles, tall, girls staring, coaches hyping me up.” His eyes flicked down, then out toward the windshield. “But I wasn’t. I used to be a rail. A joke. Just… skin and bones.”

Trent smirked, leaning back with his beer. “I remember. Freshman year. You were all elbows. Shit, I think my kid sister had bigger arms than you back then.”

Kyle winced at that, though he tried to laugh it off. “Yeah. Don’t remind me.” He paused, voice softening. “You don’t know what that felt like, man. Walking into the locker room, knowing I didn’t belong. Every time I caught the guys laughing, I wondered if it was about me. Hell, I knew it was.”

Trent tilted his head, his smirk fading. “Yeah, but you did something about it. Hit the weights. You’re not the same kid anymore.”

Kyle turned toward him then, eyes catching in the dashboard glow. For once, he didn’t look cocky or lighthearted. He looked raw. “You know why I started?”

Trent shrugged. “So you wouldn’t get shoved around?”

Kyle shook his head, blonde hair falling loose over his forehead. His voice dropped low, almost like he was confessing something he shouldn’t.
“It was because of you.”

Trent blinked. “Me?”

“Yeah.” Kyle’s gaze didn’t leave him. “You were everything I wasn’t. Strong. Built. Everyone respected you. I… I wanted that. I wanted to walk into a room and feel like I mattered. And when I saw you in the gym, killing yourself on those weights, it… it lit something in me. I thought—if Trent can do it, I can too. I wanted to stand next to you and not look like some scrawny kid tagging along. I wanted to earn my place next to you.”

For a second, Trent didn’t answer. The air between them got heavier, charged. Finally, he huffed a laugh, trying to cut the tension. “So what—you’re saying I’m your role model? Damn, I didn’t know I had a fan club.”

Kyle’s jaw clenched. His eyes darted away, his laugh sharp and uncomfortable. “Yeah. Something like that.”

But his hands were gripping his thighs now, knuckles white. His chest rose and fell too fast, breath hitching in little bursts. Sweat beaded at his hairline again, rolling down his temple.

Trent frowned. “You okay, man? You look like you’re about to pass out.”

Kyle swallowed hard, throat tight. The heat in his gut coiled like a knot, spreading up through his chest in sharp, feverish pulses. His breath came shallow, uneven, hitching like he was trying to swallow back a groan. His hands pressed harder into his thighs, but it didn’t help—the muscles underneath twitched and cramped like something was trying to force its way out.

“God… what’s happening to me…” he muttered under his breath, voice strained, almost breaking.

Trent leaned forward, frowning. “Kyle? Hey, man, you’re sweating bullets. You need water or something?”

Kyle shook his head too fast, blonde hair sticking damp against his temple. His laugh came out jagged, wrong. “I—I don’t know. Just… it’s hitting me. Like my body’s burning up from the inside.”

Kyle couldn’t sit still. His knee bounced in frantic rhythm, rattling the empty can at his feet. His palm slicked with sweat against the aluminum in his hand, gripping it too tight until the sides began to crumple with a faint metallic groan. His breath came fast, shallow, like the air inside the van wasn’t enough.

Trent’s eyes narrowed. He leaned in, brows knit. “You good, dude? You’ve been twitchy all night.”

Kyle shook his head quickly, maybe too quickly. “I—I dunno. Just feel… wired, I guess.” His voice cracked on the last word. He forced a laugh that came out more like a gasp. “Maybe I’m just—fuck, I don’t know. Maybe I’m crashing.”

But the heat rolling through him wasn’t like anything he knew. It licked up from his gut into his chest, spread into his arms, his thighs, everywhere at once. He shifted again, rubbing at the back of his neck, pulling his shirt away from his damp skin. Nothing helped. His body wouldn’t settle. His muscles twitched like they were firing on their own.

Trent frowned deeper, watching him. “Kyle… what’s going on? You’re white as a ghost one second and sweating your ass off the next.”

Kyle pressed the heel of his palm hard into his thigh, trying to anchor himself. His head dropped forward, hair falling over his eyes. “I don’t… I don’t know,” he whispered. “Feels like my skin’s on fire. Like something’s crawling under it.”

And then, the dread hit.

The rhythm of his own heart felt wrong — heavy, pounding, too strong, shaking him from the inside. The heat, the restlessness, the twitching muscles, the sweat pouring off him. He’d felt this before. Too many times, praying each time that maybe it wasn’t what he thought it was.

Recognition stabbed through him like a knife. His eyes widened. His stomach dropped.

No. Not here. Not now.

These symptoms were too familiar. The same ones he’d brushed off before, the ones he’d tried to pretend weren’t real. The warnings. The precursors. The whispers of the curse curling up through his blood.

Kyle’s hands started to shake, crushing the can flat without realizing. “Fuck,” he hissed, voice hoarse. “No. Not tonight…”

Trent straightened in his seat, alarm cutting through his casual slouch. “What? Not tonight what? Kyle, you’re scaring the shit outta me. Talk to me.”

Kyle dragged in a breath that rattled through clenched teeth, chest heaving. His gaze darted up to Trent, eyes wide and terrified. He opened his mouth, but the words caught in his throat. Because saying them out loud would make it real.

Kyle couldn’t stop moving. His knee bounced so hard the whole seat rattled. The beer can in his hand buckled under his grip, aluminum groaning before it finally collapsed, spraying warm foam across his jeans. His chest heaved like he’d just run suicides until collapse, lungs dragging air in frantic bursts that never felt like enough.

“Dude, what the hell?” Trent leaned forward, frowning now. “You’re all over the place. You good?”

But Kyle wasn’t good. He couldn’t even fake it. His skin was burning, every pore slick with sweat, his shirt sticking to him like he’d been doused in oil. His hands shook. His teeth chattered even though he wasn’t cold.

No, not this. Not now. Not here. Please.

His heart hammered so violently it felt like it might crack his sternum open. His throat was tight, strangling every breath into a rasp. He clawed at his chest like he could rip out the pressure building underneath his ribs.

It’s too much—it’s happening—it can’t be happening, not with Trent here—

Trent’s voice came again, sharper now. “Kyle. Hey. Look at me. You’re freaking me out, man.”

But Kyle couldn’t look at him. His vision was swimming, the edges blackening, every nerve screaming. He could hear his own pulse in his ears, loud, ragged, drowning everything out. His whole body jolted with tremors he couldn’t control.

And then his gaze — trembling, unwilling — dragged to the windshield.

He didn’t want to see. He knew what he’d see. But he had to.

And there it was.

The moon.

Full. Vast. Brutal. A glaring white eye staring straight through him. Its light poured in silver over the dash, washing his skin in a glow that felt like a spotlight, like the world had called him out.

Kyle’s breath shattered into a scream he barely muffled, a hoarse, broken noise caught in his throat. His stomach lurched as if he’d swallowed fire. His chest convulsed. His whole body recoiled like the sight alone had struck him.

“FUCK!” His voice cracked, raw and panicked. “No, no, no—shit, not tonight—not with you here—”

He doubled over, clutching his hair, shaking so hard the van itself creaked around him. His breaths tore out of him in quick, useless gulps. His eyes were wide, wild, glistening with sheer terror.

The truth was undeniable. Every symptom lined up, every family warning he’d buried clawing back into his skull. He remembered every cursed night he’d survived and wanted to rip his skin off at the thought of living it again.

It was the full moon.
And the change was coming.

To be continued...


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