Peter Green Gives Her the Side Chick Ultimatum
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Peter Green Gives Her the Side Chick Ultimatum throws you straight into the kind of messy, high-stakes situation Team Skeet builds its reputation on. This isn’t some shy first-time scenario—it’s a full-blown confrontation where the rules get rewritten mid-game. Savanna Siren plays the girl caught between loyalty and temptation, and Peter Green? He’s the guy who knows exactly how to tip the scales in his favor. The tension’s thick from the first glance, the kind that makes you lean in because you *know* this won’t end with polite conversation.
What starts as a simple visit turns into a power play when Peter makes his move. There’s no beating around the bush—he lays out the terms, and the camera catches every shift in her expression as she weighs the risks. Savanna’s performance sells the internal conflict: part of her wants to resist, but the other part? That part’s already imagining how good it’ll feel to give in. The back-and-forth isn’t just dialogue; it’s foreplay, and Team Skeet films it with that raw, almost voyeuristic energy they’re known for. You’re not just watching—you’re in the room, feeling the heat rise.
The sex that follows isn’t just a release; it’s a surrender. Peter doesn’t just fuck her—he *claims* her, and the way Savanna responds tells you she’s been waiting for someone to push her this far. The angles are tight, the lighting just dirty enough to highlight every bead of sweat, every gasped breath. Team Skeet’s HD work makes sure you don’t miss a thing, from the way her nails dig into his back to the moment she finally stops fighting what she really wants. It’s the kind of scene that doesn’t need a long buildup because the chemistry does all the work.
By the time it’s over, the ‘ultimatum’ isn’t just a title—it’s the whole damn point. This isn’t about choosing between two guys; it’s about choosing between who she was and who she becomes when Peter’s in control. The ending lingers not because it’s ambiguous, but because it *feels* real: messy, satisfying, and just a little bit dangerous. That’s the Team Skeet difference—scenes that don’t just play out, but *unfold*, with all the unpredictability of real desire.