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“Don’t Tread on Me”
By Illphated – illphated.com
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In the dusty heart of Lone Star Country, where the wind never learned to whisper and the sky stretched endless above the plains, there lived a cowgirl named Mae Delaney. Mae wasn’t just any cowgirl—she was a legend wrapped in satin and grit. Folks in town said she could outshoot, outdrink, and outsmile any man west of the Pecos. But it wasn’t the revolver at her hip that made people nervous—it was the fire in her eyes.
Mae had a saying she liked to toss around whenever some slick outlaw or silver-tongued politician tried to tell her how to live.
“Don’t tread on me,” she’d say, her lips curling into a teasing smirk, flirtation laced with warning.
One evening, during the height of Oscar’s Week in a strange, cross-temporal town where Hollywood met the old frontier, Mae found herself performing at a secret gathering—a smoky saloon lit with neon signs, vintage chandeliers, and eyes of every film hero she’d ever admired. She sang unreleased ballads, her voice weaving between the cracks of time, mixing cowboy courage with cinematic dreams.
The poster from that night—her arms above her head, cowboy hat tilted just right, a lasso draped like a ribbon of rebellion—became more than just artwork. It became a symbol. A symbol for every soul who’s ever stood their ground with a smile, knowing full well the weight of freedom.
Mae didn’t just play the part of a wild west cowgirl. She was the real deal. And she reminded the world, with a wink and a whisper:
“Flirt with fate all you want—but don’t tread on me.”
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