ransvestia
Cindy Brenner felt very silly in the top hat and dark trousers that David normally wore. It was lucky that the boys and girls in the troupe were so close in height and weight. But, the suit jacket was still a size too large, and besides, this idea of Nadine's was out- rageous. She wouldn't blame the boys at all for not going along with it. She looked about at the others. Only Sally looked uncomfortable while Ace was positively beaming.
Cindy heard the rustling of the evening dresses before she saw the "girls" enter the stage. She heard Ace's guffaw, too, which didn't help any of them—not even the super-cool Rosalie, peering out past the props, her top hat at a rakish angle. Marty was the first one to come into Cindy's view. In the long black wig and the black evening dress, he looked just like he had in his previous performance as “Jackie.”
A blonde followed Marty, so much like Jean Harlow in her white, sequinned gown that Cindy's breath was taken away. It was only when the blonde turned in profile and went blushingly to line up with Ace Demanski that Cindy realized that "she" was Babe Corbin. He looked so real, even in the sexy way that he walked on his white, high heels, that Cindy was intrigued.
The brown-haired girl in the dark blue evening gown, tight all the way below her knees, save for the flared little skirt just above her ankles, wore Cindy's dress in a nervous kind of way. She was forced to take small steps by the skirt, but she moved most woodenly. "David?" asked Cindy breathlessly. The brunette was very thickly made up, her heavy earrings and thick hair giving her an exotic appearance.
"If you laugh, I'll kill you!" David Rennick muttered from lips heavily painted with scarlet. Apart from the shake of the jelly-filled bra at his chest, his panties and tights were giving him a very odd feeling inside the soft but clinging dress.
"No," said Cindy, shaking her head. "You look all right."
But that made David feel even worse.
Nadine had already announced her "surprise" to the audience so that the burst of applause that erupted as the curtain went up was a shock to the performers. They didn't really recover from their first
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