

The Diaper Deal: Savannah’s Surrender
Book 2 in the Diaper Deal series. An influencer’s soft-girl empire, stripped down to powder, pacifiers, and pink plastic shame.
Savannah Blake had the look.
Blonde waves, blue eyes, and that soft-girl glow that sold serums and self-care in equal measure. Her feed was a masterclass in curated vulnerability—matcha lattes beside broken mirrors, affirmations beside crying selfies, always perfectly filtered. She was wellness and chaos. Girlboss and good girl. The brand and the breakdown, all in one.
But a million likes doesn’t cover six figures in debt—and Savannah learned the hard way: no one’s too pretty to fail.
When the Regressive Reformation Authority came knocking, there was no manager to negotiate. Just a sleek little contract with one option circled in pink.
Nine months. Total regression.
Diapers, discipline, and the kind of surrender that doesn’t leave room for captions.
Welcome to The Diaper Deal—a full-body reset for the desperate.
You sign the contract. They take your name, your choices, your voice. You trade adulthood for structure, routine, and the soft, smothering kind of shame you can’t selfie your way out of.
There are no phones. No mirrors. No privacy. Just padded reminders, pastel routines, and the slow erosion of everything you thought made you real as you start a new life as someone's obedient little project.
Savannah thought she could outlast it.
Smile through it. Stay pretty. Play the game.
But the system doesn’t care about posture or poise. It isn’t here to break you violently. It’s here to unmake you completely—gently, clinically, one humiliating step at a time.
She used to post about softness like it was a choice.
Now it’s her only option.
The Diaper Deal: Savannah’s Surrender is a psychologically rich, deeply immersive descent into curated collapse and systemic regression. Equal parts dark dystopia and emotional erotica, this second installment in The Diaper Deal series explores what it means to lose everything slowly—until the girl who once built her brand around control is diapered, dependent, and utterly undone by the very system she thought she could game.