When , a gentle and stylish otoko no musume (boy-daughter), found the dress at a back-alley antique shop, he felt an inexplicable pull. The dress fit perfectly despite its supposed doll-size origins. Its cursed beauty promised admiration but demanded a price.

It looks like you’ve provided a fragment of Japanese romaji and text:

The first night Ren wore it to a small gathering, his reflection smiled without him. The second time, strangers addressed him by a name he’d never given: Hina . By the third wearing, he couldn’t remove the dress—it had fused to his skin like a second shadow.

A possible interpretation/expansion could be: 「男の娘版・呪われた○なドレスで…」 ("Otoko no musume-ban / Norowareta ___na doresu de...") This suggests a theme involving a in a setting with otoko no musume (a male character presenting femininely, often in cross-dressing or anime/manga tropes).

Otoko No Musume-ban Norowareta Hna Doresu De In... Site

When , a gentle and stylish otoko no musume (boy-daughter), found the dress at a back-alley antique shop, he felt an inexplicable pull. The dress fit perfectly despite its supposed doll-size origins. Its cursed beauty promised admiration but demanded a price.

It looks like you’ve provided a fragment of Japanese romaji and text:

The first night Ren wore it to a small gathering, his reflection smiled without him. The second time, strangers addressed him by a name he’d never given: Hina . By the third wearing, he couldn’t remove the dress—it had fused to his skin like a second shadow.

A possible interpretation/expansion could be: 「男の娘版・呪われた○なドレスで…」 ("Otoko no musume-ban / Norowareta ___na doresu de...") This suggests a theme involving a in a setting with otoko no musume (a male character presenting femininely, often in cross-dressing or anime/manga tropes).

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