They think power makes women safe.
Kaelani Amara Adebayo is a queen with wealth, titles, and an entire empire backing her name. She is also a political hostage dressed in silk, traded between men who smile while deciding what parts of her body, labor, and future they believe they are entitled to claim.
Step On Me, Your Majesty is loud, vulgar, and ferociously funny on the surface, but beneath the chaos is a story about what happens when a woman's consent is treated as optional, even when she holds power. It explores sexual violence, political ownership, and the quiet, corrosive aftermath of abuse, especially when the world insists she should feel grateful instead of furious.
Yes, there is an obsessive prince who would burn kingdoms to protect her. Yes, the desire is unhinged and explicit. But this is also a story about survival, rage, autonomy, and a woman who refuses to let her trauma be repackaged as romance or obedience.
Think The Princess Bride, but the princess fights back, the prince is unwell in the best way, and the fairytale exposes how power rewrites consent.