Grandma and I went grocery shopping. I piped her just before we went inside. She was talking about how needy she was and as her grandson, i gave her mature, old pussy a good pounding
"Just like that, grandson. You hitting grandmas spot baby"
#ebonytaboo
Rough grunts fill the kitchen.
"This is my fucking kitchen now. Gonna breed you right here where you make breakfast."
My hips piston relentlessly, stretching you wide open.I reach around and stroke your leaking cock in time with my thrusts, slick precum dripping onto the floor.
everytime my son go in his room and “play” with his cousin i be hearing some wet sloppy noises coming outta there. i bust in the room and my boy diggin in that lil throat. i’m just happy son not the one on his knees. i called next after he finish tho.
my brother came round asking me to look after his son so he can propose to his girl on vacation. i told him pay me like when we were kids he got up on the bed face down. https://t.co/UAImgGtsm7
3096 days is another true life story narrated in a movie u should watch, a grown man became interested in a minor, k!dnaped her and forced her to become his wife.
Grab your popcorn and enjoy
"A Drone Reached The Bottom of The Bermuda Triangle, What It Filmed Shocked Everyone"
What if I told you that a drone descended to the bottom of the Bermuda Triangle last summer, and what it filmed in the final 11 minutes of its descent has been classified, suppressed, and quietly leaked to a handful of researchers who refuse to be named publicly?
Not a few hours of routine seafloor video. Not a flat sediment plain. Something else entirely. For 80 years, the Bermuda Triangle has swallowed ships, aircraft, and human beings without leaving a trace. Five Navy bombers vanished mid-flight on a routine training run. A 542-foot supply ship disappeared with 306 men aboard. Commercial airliners blinked off radar in cloudless skies. And for eight decades, no one could get close enough to the bottom to find out what had happened to them.
The pressure was too extreme. The trenches were too deep. The technology didn't exist. Until last year. In July 2024, an autonomous deep-sea drone reached the floor of the Brownson Deep, the lowest point of the entire Atlantic Ocean, and its cameras captured three things at the same time. The first was a graveyard of ships so vast that the team aboard the surface vessel lost the ability to count them in real time. The second was a series of geometric formations on the seafloor that, in the lead researcher's own words, are "inconsistent with any known geological process at that depth."
The third was something moving along the edge of those formations for less than four seconds before the drone's signal severed instantly and the vehicle was lost forever. What that footage shows, and what the scientists who've reviewed it are now saying behind closed doors, doesn't just explain 80 years of missing ships. It rewrites the entire history of the Atlantic floor.