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PRISON DADDY - Coming Soon

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PRISON DADDY - Coming Soon
A multi-generational incest saga told across 13 chapters. This is not a love story. This is a horror story about a man who never leaves his cell—and the women who keep coming back.

The Premise
Fifteen-year-old Esme starts writing letters to her Uncle Rafael in prison. He tells her stories about her father—a man who died in an accident before she was born. Beautiful stories. Her father and Rafael were best friends. Her father loved Esme's mother deeply. He would have been an amazing dad if he'd lived to meet her.
Rafael becomes her connection to the father she never knew. Her confidant. Her protector from afar.
Every word is a lie.
Rafael IS Esme's father. He raped her mother Carmen when she was sixteen—his own sister. Carmen has spent fifteen years trying to shield Esme from this horror, telling her nothing about her father, ensuring she has no contact with Rafael.
But silence creates a void. And Rafael fills it with stories.
Then Abuela Rosa makes her move. She arranges for Esme to accompany her on an Extended Family Visit—elderly woman with accessibility needs, teenage granddaughter as caregiver. Guards wave them through with sympathy.
It's a trap Rosa set fifteen years in the making.
By the time Esme discovers the truth—that there never was a best friend who died, that he raped her mother, that every story was fabricated—she's already in love with him.
And she's already pregnant.

What Makes This Different
Most prison stories are about escape. About men who get out and hunt their victims.
Not this one.
Rafael serves his full thirty-year sentence. Never leaves. Never needs to. Because Esme brings herself to him. Every three months. For fifteen years. Bringing their children. Building a family inside prison walls during 48-hour Extended Family Visits.
He built a cage out of visiting hours. And his mother held the door open.
And fifteen years later, when their daughter Luna is fourteen? Esme realizes she's standing exactly where Rosa stood.

Esme's Story—From Fifteen to Thirty
This is Esme's story told from inside her head across fifteen years. You're with her the entire time—from the first visit at fifteen to age thirty when she realizes what she's become.
At fifteen, she's a victim who doesn't understand what's happening to her.
At twenty, she's convinced herself it's love because the alternative destroys her identity.
At twenty-five, she's built a domestic life inside visiting hours—fertility tracking, bringing the kids, playing house in prison trailers.
At thirty, she has four children. Luna—her oldest—is fourteen.
COVID kept them from visiting for three years. Luna was eleven the last time she saw Papi in person. Now she's fourteen. She's begging to visit him again. She misses him. She wants to see him.
She doesn't understand that she's not eleven anymore.
Esme sees what Luna doesn't. Rafael sees it too. And when he asks for Luna specifically. When the prison approves the visit—
Esme knows exactly what will happen. She lived it. She survived it. She's spent fourteen years calling it love.
But she brings Luna anyway.
Esme realizes she's no longer just surviving the cycle.
She's perpetuating it.

What You're Getting
Months of letters grooming Esme with a fabricated identity
Carmen's desperate attempts to protect Esme—and how silence becomes weapon
Rosa weaponizing disability accommodations to deliver Esme to Rafael
Extended Family Visits weaponized for systematic abuse
Four pregnancies across fifteen years—Luna, Mateo, Sofia, Diego
A relationship that evolves with every encounter—from victimhood to acceptance to domesticity to complicity
The moment Esme learns the truth—and chooses the lie anyway
Esme at thirty with four children, still visiting every three months
Luna at fourteen, innocent and missing her Papi—unaware of what she looks like now
Esme making the same impossible choice—differently than Carmen, differently than Rosa, but failing just the same
No escape. No justice. No redemption arc.
Carmen tried to shield Esme by telling her nothing.
Rosa filled the silence with access to Rafael.
Rafael filled the void with stories.
Esme filled her womb with his children.
And fifteen years later, Esme stands where Rosa stood.

What You're NOT Getting
❌ No redemption arc. Esme doesn't "wake up" and realize she was groomed. She knows. She chooses it anyway.
❌ No escape. Rafael serves his full thirty-year sentence and maintains total control from inside the entire time.
❌ No justice. The system enables every bit of this.
❌ No happy ending. This is a story about cycles that don't break—they evolve.

⚠️ CONTENT WARNINGS
Read these carefully. This goes to very dark places.
Core Elements:
Father/daughter incest (Rafael/Esme—she doesn't know until after she's pregnant) | Uncle/niece incest (what Esme believes during grooming) | Brother/sister incest (Rafael/Carmen, backstory) | Multi-generational abuse | Child of incest
The Abuse:
Months of letters grooming with fabricated identity | Identity manipulation | Orchestrated meeting (Rosa weaponizes disability) | Prison rape (Extended Family Visit trailers, age 15) | Systematic breeding (four pregnancies, fertility tracking) | Underage (Esme 15, Luna 14) | Explicit sexual content throughout | Genital tattooing | Teenage pregnancy | Mother's complicity (Esme and Luna, final chapters)
Psychological Horror:
Carmen's silence becomes weapon | Identity destruction | Truth reveal after pregnancy | Choosing the lie | Protection becomes complicity | The void Rafael exploits | Victim becomes enabler
Institutional Failures:
Prison system enables abuse through Extended Family Visits | Guards facilitate it | Social services miss every sign | Rafael maintains total control from inside for thirty years
Rape/non-con throughout | No happy ending | No escape | No justice

⚠️ TRIGGER WARNING
This story will hurt if you have triggers around:
Incest (any form) | Father/daughter dynamics | Multi-generational abuse | Child of incest discovering their origins | Grooming | Fabricated identity | Grandmothers who enable | Mothers who become enablers | Disability weaponized | Teenage pregnancy | Prison settings | Reproductive coercion | Identity trauma | Stories where the abuser wins | Stories where victims perpetuate cycles
There is no escape. There is no justice. There is no happy ending.
The abuser never leaves his cell. His mother delivers the first victim. Fifteen years later, that victim delivers the next.

Why I'm Writing This
Most prison stories are about men who escape and come after you.
This one is about a man who doesn't need to escape. He just waits. And they keep coming back.
The horror isn't the violence. The horror is the choices. Carmen chooses silence to protect Esme—and creates the void Rafael exploits. Rosa chooses her son over her daughter and granddaughter. Esme chooses to believe the stories because the truth destroys her identity.
And at thirty, Esme makes another choice. Not the same as Rosa's. Not the same as Carmen's. But it fails just the same.
This is about how cycles perpetuate through choices that seem right at the time—or impossible, or inevitable, or the only way to survive what you can't change.
If that sounds like something you can handle, I'll see you in the comments.
If not—please protect yourself and skip this one.

Tags:
Father/Daughter Incest | Uncle/Niece Incest | Brother/Sister Incest | Multi-Generational Abuse | Child of Incest | Grooming | Fabricated Identity | Prison | Extended Family Visits | Underage (15, 14) | Breeding Kink | Forced Pregnancy | Reproductive Coercion | Complicity | Victim Becomes Enabler | Dead Dove Do Not Eat | Rape/Non-Con | No Happy Ending

Kinjite
He built a cage out of visiting hours and stories about a man who never existed. His mother held the door open. She walked in. And fifteen years later, she holds the door open for her daughter.

Prison Daddy
Coming Soon

 

WARNING! ADULT CONTENT...

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