Leah’s plan to avoid using her diaper is to restrict how much food and drink she consumes. That plan fails almost immediately. The daycare attendees are given snacks regularly, and Tina frowns at Leah until she eats her snack and drinks her juice box. As a result, when she and her new peers are put down for their naps, Leah is fit to burst.
“Try to nap, Leah,” Tina whispers as she puts Leah in a crib. “Teenagers are always sleep-deprived. It’ll be good for you.” She then puts a pacifier into Leah’s mouth. Leah suckles on the pacifier obediently. She curls up in the crib, her bladder begging for release. There’s no way she’ll be able to hold it for the rest of the day.
Then, Leah has a thought. If she uses the diaper on purpose, it won’t count as an accident. She needs to take her victories where she can get them. Letting out an unintended sigh of relief, Leah wets herself. The “accident” isn’t large enough that it would merit a change. Hopefully, that will be the only time her diaper gets used today.
With her bladder emptied, Leah manages to fall asleep. As she sleeps, her body acts on instinctive urges. She begins to push. Hearing the soft grunts coming from her stepdaughter’s crib, Tina walks over. She had a feeling Leah wouldn’t be able to hold it; the daycare gives special snacks to the children to keep them from being constipated.
Tina can’t help a small, fond smile. Wearing a fuzzy pink onesie, sucking on a pacifier, and messing her thick diaper, Leah looks like a baby. To Tina, it’s an endearingly adorable sight. Leah finishes pooping with a soft sigh. Now, Tina has a choice. Should she change Leah while she’s sleeping, wake her up for a diaper change, or wait until she wakes up on her own to change her?