-sexwithmuslims- Angel Princess- Max Dior -a Dr Direct
Princess was raised on pearls and politesse. Dior was raised on boardroom betrayals. Their families have been feuding for three generations, and their engagement is not a love match but a merger—a hostile one disguised in champagne flutes.
Note: As these names appear to reference specific characters (potentially from original fiction, roleplay, or a specific fandom like South Korean web novels or dramas), this post is written as a general character analysis/fic rec style. If these are your OCs, feel free to adapt the specifics! In the glittering, high-stakes world of drama and desire, few ensembles capture the heart quite like the tangled quartet of Angel , Princess , Max , and Dior . On the surface, they are archetypes: the ethereal savior, the gilded heir, the stoic guardian, and the velvet-gloved manipulator. But beneath the designer labels and tearful confessions lies a web of romance more intricate than a couture gown. -SexWithMuslims- Angel Princess- Max Dior -A dr
Their romance is slow-burn gasoline. Max doesn’t court Angel; he surveils her from a distance, convinces himself it’s for her protection, and only slips up when he catches her crying over a dying patient. He doesn’t offer a handkerchief. He just sits on the floor beside her, back against the wall, and says, “Stay angry. I’ll watch the door.” Princess was raised on pearls and politesse
Nothing physical happens between them—Dior would never betray a truce with Max that way. But the longing is palpable. He sends Angel anonymous first-edition poetry books. She leaves him wildflowers on his car. It’s a romance of glances and near-misses, a parallel universe they’re too honorable (or too cowardly) to enter. Note: As these names appear to reference specific
Princess and Max should despise each other. She finds his silences rude; he finds her dramatics exhausting. But when the family business threatens to tear all four apart, it’s Princess and Max who build the bridge.
At a charity gala, Dior fixes the strap of Princess’s broken heel without being asked. He doesn’t kneel—he never kneels—but he does bend. Later, she finds a note in her clutch: “You looked beautiful falling. Don’t do it again.” 3. Angel & Dior: The Dangerous What-If Trope: Forbidden Attraction / Unrequited (or is it?)