It brings me the utmost pleasure when you do this to me. I gaze upon you, my magnificent Master. You're so tall and sexy, with dark brown skin, golden brown eyes and curly Black hair. Your Nigerian father and Puerto Rican mother gave you the best of both worlds, making you one of the world's most beautiful Black men. From the moment I saw you in my psychology class at Howard University, I knew that you were the one for me. Tonight, I pledge myself to you. Mind, body and soul. Master Alberto Adewale, this sister from Detroit gives you her everything. With free will and without restraint, I offer you all that I am.
Rose is a common name, and I never felt that it suited me because everything about me is uncommon. How many six-foot-three, dark and lovely African-American women do you know in the world of Collegiate Swimming? Yeah, that's what I thought. Yet when you utter my name from your exquisite lips, you make it sound so musical, beautiful and unique. Yet your voice is absolutely masculine. I shudder as you bring your big, strong hand down upon my big, quivering Black butt. It never ceases to amaze me how gentle your demeanor is when you administer the swift, sensual punishment which I crave. Before I met you, my interest in BDSM was something I kept to myself. I simply could never see myself submitting to someone, even though I fantasized about it plenty of times.
When we first met, you saw right through me. I walked through the halls of Howard University like I owned the place. It's part of being a BAP. I'm a Black American Princess. Born and bred. My father is a Lawyer and my mother is a Michigan State Policewoman. I grew up in a middle-class household and I'm used to the good life. I always expect nothing but the best. You amazed me, my foreign-accented African-American Prince. Born in the City of San Juan, Puerto Rico, to Annabella Bautista, a mixed-race mother of Caucasian and Hispanic ancestry and George Adewale, a Nigerian-American immigrant father. You lived most of your life in the City of Lagos, Nigeria, with your father after the death of your mother. Although you're a U.S. citizen by birth, you spoke English with a strange accent when we met. And yet you were eerily comfortable navigating the social scene in our nation's Capital.