The Erotic Mind-Control Story Archive

Author’s Note: This is another edited ASFR story I wrote some years ago, rewritten to emphasize the mind control elements.

I hope readers enjoy it.

Digits

Julie sat down at a table close to the stage. She had already seen Dire perform before—several times before, in fact—but tonight would be different. Her interview was right after the show. She would be watching his performance tonight knowing she might be up there on stage with him, perhaps even as early as tomorrow night. She had to fight to keep still, she was so excited!

She knew she had the right stuff. Now, all she had to do was convince Dire, but she didn’t think that was going to be too difficult. All he had to do was just look at her. It was a gimmick older than vaudeville, she knew. A man walks into the average magic show. What’s the first thing he sees? What most catches his eye?

The girls, obviously.

There’s the stage, of course, and the props, not to mention the magician himself, sure, but in all likelihood the first thing noticed will always be the magician’s female assistants, clad in the most revealing and exotic costumes imaginable. That was the whole point. The girls drew attention away from the magicians performing their acts. The less attention paid to them, the more they could get away with. It was a standard, even traditional part of the show, and Julie knew she could do it. She had never had problems capturing a man’s attention before.

Of course, aside from the girls, there was very little else traditional about this particular magician, but that didn’t worry her. Julie had arrived early to see him live and in action, and, like all those other times she had seen his act, he was, in a word, unique.

Dire the Decadent, he was billed. Illusionist Sinister.

Dire the Fist. Dire the Dangerous.

He was setting himself on fire tonight.

Julie watched, as utterly absorbed in the performance as the regular audience. The lights dimmed. The band started playing low, dreamy music. From the ceiling above the stage, a narrow cage lowered on thick chains. Its metal bars were blackened and smoke-stained, and seeing it, the audience erupted in spontaneous applause. They knew. Even Julie, a professional in the business, couldn’t help clapping. No one was on stage yet, but the crowd was going wild. Dire’s reputation was all that was needed.

The “Inferno Cage” had helped establish Dire’s fame, or infamy in this case, in the first place. No one knew how he did the trick, not even other magicians in the trade, and no one else quite dared to repeat it. In truth, no one else wanted to.

The curtains in back of the cage parted slightly, and then the man himself was there. The applause grew even louder. Dire walked up to the front of the stage and did a slight bow. He was dressed casually, jeans and a jacket; the standard tuxedo or skintight costume was simply not his style. In a way, Dire was a sort of anti-magician. He rarely spoke when he was performing, and his manner gave the impression that he really didn’t care whether or not the audience was watching, though they always did.

He gave only one performance a night, and in that performance he did only one trick, chosen randomly from a large repertoire. He ignored his audience, horrified it more than once, and in general seemed to express nothing but contempt for them overall.

And the people loved it.

Dire turned his back to the crowd and began testing the fire-blackened cage. He gripped the bars and gave them a strong shake. He took a key out of his pocket, fit in the lock, and, grunting with effort, managed to finally turn it. The cage door squealed in pain as he opened and closed it.

Eventually, Dire turned around. He was center stage. He raised a heavily ringed hand, the only flamboyant thing about him: a piece of silver jewelry on each finger.

From either side, Dire’s trademark girls finally made their appearance. Once again the audience cheered, louder than before, it seemed.

Dire’s Digits. A quintet of beautiful young women, dressed in red pantaloons and other assorted harem fashion. Their exposed skin was body painted a bright shining silver. They gleamed like liquid metal.

Julie clapped loudly. She hoped to be among their number soon, a “Dire’s Digit-Girl” herself.

She knew she had it in her.

She watched, fascinated. The girls moved mechanically, like machines built to exacting, and lovely, standards. No expression crossed their beautiful faces. They were emotionless. Dire stood there in the middle still holding up his fist, working his fingers, and the Digit-Girls responded, as if connected to him.

It was a great act. The Digit-Girls ignored the audience as much as their leader did.

Julie was so looking forward to her interview.

She hoped Dire would be around to make it.

Dire came to stand in front of the cage on a small pile of blankets. He closed his eyes and held his nose. Julie’s eyes wandered back and forth between the illusionist and his collection of silvery assistants as they began pouring gasoline all over him. The smell was overwhelming in the small theater. No one could mistake the fluid for anything else.

The magician had made his first appearances in small West Coast clubs less than two years before, in venues which catered exclusively to young people. The goth crowd, the rave parties, they really didn’t care for the traditional illusionist’s bag of tricks. You had to be different in order to get their attention, and, if nothing else, Dire was different. Between self-immolation, the Iron Maiden trick, and other sinister and painful looking illusions, with lots of simulated blood and gore, and the beautiful Digit-Girls, of course, Dire was being compared to a young David Copperfield or Criss Angel in overall potential.

He was youthful, handsome, and single, and he performed magic like no one else anywhere.

He was a rising star, and Julie hoped to attach herself to it.

Dire climbed into the lowered cage. One of the Digit-Girls closed and locked it. A couple of audience member were invited up to inspect. Julie had raised her hand to be picked, but she was ignored. The volunteers demonstrated that there were no false bottoms or mirrors or any other stage props involved.

The cage was exactly that, a cage, and once locked, it looked fairly well locked. Julie had worked with other magicians in the past, and she thought she had a pretty fair grasp of the fundamentals of stage illusory, but this . . . she didn’t see how this trick could be done. No substitution was possible. The cage was in the open air, with no curtain behind it, no place to set up mirrors or other tricks of the eye.

Slowly, Dire was raised into the air.

Julie was a professional: the cage was exactly what it looked like, a cage hanging in the air by a hook and a chain, nothing more.

While the others guided the audience member down off of the stage, another of the Digits walked over to the metal and fireproof platform Dire’s cage was hung over. She carried a lit torch.

Perhaps the spookiest thing: everything was done in dead silence. Dire had his mouth closed and hadn’t spoken a word. Dire’s Digit-Girls themselves never spoke. That was part of their mystique.

They truly didn’t seem human in a way. The lights reflected off of their metallic shading and made them look like giant hood ornaments brought to life. They were glossy. They shined. It was uncanny about how they moved, too. All of their actions were perfectly coordinated. The lift of one girl’s leg was matched by corresponding movements in another girl across stage, with no apparent communication. It was as if they were actually machines and were being controlled by one exterior force. It was weird.

Not to mention damn sexy.

Slowly, deliberately, Dire began pulling the rings off his left hand, one by one, dropping them to the floor. This was part of the act. The audience began counting. “ONE . . . TWO . . . THREE . . . .”

When the last ring hit the floor (“FIVE!!!!”), the Digit-Girl gently touched the torch to a long fuse attached to the platform. A fiery spark flew up the cotton strand, and a moment later Dire’s suspended cage was engulfed spectacularly in flames.

The audience gasped, many rising instinctively to their feet, some to help the burning man, others getting ready to flee. Julie remained where she was sitting, absorbed.

A column of fire rose up from the platform and through the locked cage hanging over it. Dire’s body was clearly seen burning inside for about five or six horrifying seconds before the smoke and flames obscured everything. The Digits stood in a semicircle around the sudden inferno, their silver skin tones turned a shimmering red in the blazing radiance. They were as still as statues, their faces unreadable.

The scene was surreal.

And then the fire just died. Snuffed out. Doused as completely as if drowned in water.

The cage revealed was black and smoldering . . . and completely empty.

“And Death shall hold no Dominion . . . ,” an amplified voice carried out across the clubroom, and suddenly there was Dire again in the back row! Unsinged. Unmarked. Ringed again. Alive.

He bowed. The audience erupted in clapping and yelling.

Julie watched, fascinated, clapping as loudly as anybody else.

She had just witnessed a miracle, she knew, perhaps better than anybody else in the room. Dire walked back to the stage, audience members furtively touching him as he made his way through them, possibly to confirm for themselves the man was unharmed, and rejoined his Digit-Girls waiting for him.

“Thanks,” he said simply once he got there. “Remember . . . there is no such thing as magic. There is only Life, and there is only Death. Everything else in-between is an Illusion.”

The audience continued clapping. Dire and the Digit-Girls bowed again and left, simultaneously. The ovation went on for minutes.

It was amazing. Simply amazing.

Julie knew she had to be a part of it.

She would do anything to be a part of it.

* * *

“So, Ms. Trent . . . how long have you been performing?”

It was an hour after the show. The two of them were backstage. Julie paused in her appraisal of the Inferno Cage, standing beside it now and still wondering how it worked. It was still smoking and hot.

She smiled at Dire. “A couple of years. I did a little work with Materblanc the Magnificent at the Magic Club, and then I was with Lance Burton in Vegas for a while.”

Dire nodded, then reached into a trunk beside him and took out a yellow fold of cloth. “Show me collapsible flowers,” he said and tossed the bundle to her.

Oh, that’s too easy, thought Julie. Give me something that takes a little effort. Still, she went through the act and began pulling flower after flower from the special handkerchief. While she did so, Dire silently twirled the rings on his left hand. One was missing, Julie noted. The thumb ring.

Maybe he had lost it on stage?

“How’s that?” she asked a minute later, and he nodded.

“Good. Of course, it’s not really a part of my act, but I like to make sure all my ‘Digits’ know the basics. Dexterity is everything. So, what else can you do?”

“Oh, lot’s of different things,” Julie said. She was prepared to go all out on this interview. All out. “I’m skilled in any number of . . . tricks. Call me Julie.”

She smiled seductively and moved closer to the young magician.

He seemed to take the hint. Dire leaned over, reached up to Julie’s face with his right hand . . . and suddenly there was a deck of cards in it.

“Show me,” he said.

Julie sighed softly and began to go through a routine of some of the classics. The Packet Prediction. The Royal Wedding. Color Counts. They talked while the cards flipped between her nimble fingers.

“I seem to remember you from my audience a couple of times. You always watched so intently. I felt like I was being judged.”

Julie laughed. “You were. You’re the best illusionist to come around in the last ten years, I think. I want to be one of your Digits, Dire. You’re going places.”

He watched her fingers work. “So, you want to be a Digit, huh?” He laughed. “It takes a lot of skill to join my girls. A great deal of preparation too.”

“I’m sure.” A bridge of cards flew from one palm to the other. “Where’d you get the idea for the silver paint? It’s really . . . distinctive.”

Dire looked at her. “It’s necessary,” he said. “It comes with the rings.” He paused. “That’s pretty good card work.”

“Thank you,” Julie said. “I can do a lot with my hands.” She let the comment hang in the air of a moment. She finished with the deck. “Anything else I can show you?”

He nodded.

“There’s a dressing room down to the right,” he said, pointing. “I want to see you in costume . . . in full makeup, too. I’ll have one of the girls bring you everything you’ll need. She’ll help you prepare.”

“You want me in the bodypaint?” Julie was looking forward to that. Once Dire saw her as a Digit-Girl, that would go a long way toward getting her the job. Besides, she was curious. Dire’s assistants were beautiful in their silver coating, and Julie wanted to know what the paint felt and looked like on her.

“Yeah. Consider this an audition, albeit a strange one. We’re in a strange business. I’m going to tell my assistant to stay in character.” Julie looked at him questioningly. “She won’t speak, in other words. She’ll act like she does on stage, and she’ll report back to me about how you react. You understand?”

Julie shook her head. “No, but I’ll do it anyway. Which way again?”

He pointed. “Right along there.” She turned to go, and he stopped her, as if suddenly remembering something. “Oh, and I want you to put this on.” He stretched out a hand toward Julie’s face.

He pulled a ring, one the trademark rings, apparently out of her ear. He put it in her open palm.

“I thought you might have lost this,” Julie said. It was a big ring, but it fit over her own thumb well enough. Dire shook his head.

“It’s my lucky piece. They’re all my lucky pieces. I can’t do a thing without ‘em.”

Julie picked up her purse and left the prop area. “The next time you see me,” she said, leaving, “you’ll want me in the act, you’ll see.”

Dire watched her go through the dressing room door.

“I already do,” he said quietly. “I already do.”

* * *

Julie didn’t have to wait long. Dire’s assistant came in after about five minutes and pointed Julie in the direction of the shower. The woman didn’t say anything, and her face was calm, smooth, and expressionless. Julie took the hint. She took a long shower, and when she came out the costume was ready for her. It was identical to that which the Digit there was already wearing: scarlet billowy trousers drawn tight with bands at the ankles, silky and transparent, and an open vest for a top, also mostly scarlet red, though with black trimmings and gold leaf along the sides, drawn tight over and just barely concealing the woman’s full plump breasts.

The contrast with the silver skin was remarkable. Julie couldn’t wait to match her.

Not speaking, the assistant handed Julie a large jar. Inside was a silvery gel, not precisely the kind of paint Julie had imagined she would be putting on, but not unwelcome either. The gel caught the light like quicksilver but was not runny in the least. It was creamy, in a way, and taking a scoopful in her fingers, Julie found it cool and oddly soothing. The ring on her thumb gleamed.

Not being a modest person at all, Julie dropped the towel she had worn out of the shower and stood before the Dire’s Digit totally nude. The assistant’s expression didn’t change at all.

After a moment, and, truth to tell, a little disappointed from the lack of a reaction, Julie sat down at the makeup table. Using the contents of the jar, she began coating her hands and arms with the silvery material. It spread easily, and only a few drops went a long way. Within minutes the lengths of her whole arms were glistening silver, the coating making them seem slimmer than natural, highlighting them the same way long opera gloves sometimes can.

Julie admired her arms and hands in the mirror.

The paint did make them seem more attractive. Moreover, the gel on her skin was giving her a queer sensation. It was cool, yet almost electrically charged.

She folded her hands together, and the feel of her painted fingers pressing down upon one another was quite . . . thrilling. She could hardly tell where Dire’s thumb-ring ended and her skin began.

She shivered. The thin coating enhanced her physical sensations. Every touch was seductive. Julie couldn’t completely express in words how it made her feel, but she liked it. When the assistant began slowly spreading the gel over her back and shoulders, Julie didn’t complain or find it odd at all. Instead, she took another scoopful from the jar in front of her and began spreading it over her breasts.

Immediately, the cool sensation concentrated there, sending small currents of pleasure through her suddenly erect nipples. This is incredible, Julie thought. I’m getting all hot and bothered from a can of paint! And that woman behind her. She’s touching me . . . touching me like I’ve never let a woman touch me before. But she liked it, that touch, and she allowed it to linger.

Her thumb was throbbing in a pleasant, not to distracting way. It lulled her. She felt sleepy.

The Digit-Girl helped Julie to her feet and then got to her knees in front of her. Julie spread the silvery gel over her top, and the magician’s assistant worked on her legs from below. The feel of the paint over every inch of her body, from her neck down, with the assistant gently massaging the liquid there and suddenly there, was an incredible high.

She had never felt so good before in her life!

If asked at that moment where she was or why she was doing this, Julie wouldn’t have been able to answer. It just feels so good, she thought dreamily. She didn’t acknowledge the hands pressing onto her face, rubbing the deliciously cool silver into her cheeks and forehead. She just gave into the moment, the utter feeling of temporal ecstasy, and she fell into a deep, dark sleep.

* * *

Julie woke up an unknown time later feeling . . . different.

She opened her eyes and immediately fought a moment of vertigo. I’m standing up, she realized. I was asleep on my feet. She bounced back and forth for a moment trying to regain her balance, and to either side she felt a cool body standing next to her.

She focused and found herself standing in the middle of a row of the Dire’s Digits, three to either side, all standing at almost a military-like stance of attention. She was in the same costume as they, red harem pants and open vest, her breasts pressed tight against the narrow textured fabric and exposed to either side almost up to the nipple.

And silver. She was as silvery in appearance as they. As inhumanly beautiful.

“Lovely. Perfectly lovely. A complete set of five.” Julie saw Dire standing off to the side.

They were all backstage again, and he looked as if he were an officer inspecting his troops.

“We’ll run through the Iron Maiden first, girls. Positions, please.”

Shimmeringly, iridescent almost, the girls to either side of Julie silently spread out in a circle. The surrounded Dire and the upright metal casket he was standing next to.

“Julie, you stand right over here, please,” he said, indicating the centermost space before the casket’s engraved face. “You’ll take the lead in this.”

“What . . . oh, okay,” Julie said, somewhat dreamily. Things were happening so quickly, and she wasn’t sure how she had got there. She moved and obeyed by instinct alone.

Dire raised his left hand. His hand sinister. He was wearing all five rings again. Julie was no longer wearing hers. Her movements, unnoticed by her, matched those of the other Digit-Girls, arm swing for arm swing, gait perfectly in time. From a distance it looked altogether choreographed, but Julie remembered no training or instruction. She just moved.

Dire opened up the Iron Maiden, revealing its ghastly interior of spikes. He turned around and climbed inside, his back pressed close against the razor-sharp tips.

“We’ll skip the theatrics, I think. Julie, just close her up, would you?”

He shook his hand, releasing all five rings to the floor.

Still feeling like it was all an hallucination, Julie stepped forward, took each hinged half of the casket in a glimmering hand, and started closing them. She hesitated, though.

There was no false top or bottom, she saw, and the spikes looked very real.

“Are . . . are you sure? I’m not sure . . . what . . . what’s going on?” She didn’t want to kill the magician. The situation felt all wrong. She couldn’t remember anything past putting on the gel on in the dressing room. She didn’t remember handing him back his ring.

And there was something weird about her voice.

It sounded . . . metallic. Hollow, and very faint.

“Close it!” Dire suddenly yelled at her, and she did, his control over her immediate and unresisted.

Blood squirted out between the slammed doors, almost spraying Julie. There was a painful grunt from inside, and Julie went cold, even colder than she already felt.

Ohmigod, he’s dead, she thought. I’ve killed him.

She put her hands out—again, they seemed so silvery strange and so uncommonly lovely—and tried pulling the casket doors back open. They were locked, though, and impossible to budge.

Julie turned to the other assistants for help, but they just continued standing there, passive and impartial.

“Help me,” she called to them, her voice tinny and now almost inaudible. She sounded like a machine.

She tried running to one of them, and she actually did manage to turn in that direction, but finally she felt the control leave her limbs for good. It had been happening all the while, Julie realized, but in her confusion she had never noticed how more and more she had felt like a marionette, arms and legs guided by another’s will. She stopped, unable to move.

The memory of that twinkling ring shimmered in her mind.

And then she felt a hand on her shoulder, a ringed hand, near to the vest opening where her arm stretched through and the other side of her glittering breast peaked out.

It was Dire, of course. Unruffled, and unpunctured.

The rings were no longer on the floor.

“You were right, Julie,” he said. “You’ll make a wonderful Digit-Girl.” He put his hand on the swell of her breast and gently fondled her.

“What . . . what’s going on? What have you done to me?”

Julie felt her arms, her silvery body, changing. The sensation of ecstasy had worn off and was being replaced by a deep, deep sense of coldness . . . like she was being pressed in against cool metal.

There was more twinkling in her mind. Her fingers brushed against the sides of her thighs, her legs, and she was surprised to hear a slight tinkling sound, a soft ring of metal against metal.

“Why, only what you asked for, Julie,” the illusionist said. “I’ve made you a Dire’s Digit, just what you wanted. Congratulations.” He laughed.

She had no control left, she realized. And she could no longer speak. Her body felt “metallicized,” transformed to metal, though not metal. Her skin was still soft, but it was firmer too, and it reflected the lights above her as much as liquid mercury would.

Dire made a gesture in the air with his left hand. Julie felt herself responding. She moved forward against her will and bowed before her new master. When he walked down the corridor to the dressing rooms, all she could do was follow silently.

“Tonight we go on stage, and I introduce to the world the latest member of my collection.”

Julie couldn’t believe what was happening. It was a nightmare. A creeping darkness was clouding her mind, choking off her thoughts.

“It’s a good thing you showed up when you did,” Dire said, going into a storage area. “Leslie here has been getting stiffer for a while now, and frankly Maria is no longer able to perform at all. See?”

He gestured to the far wall. A Dire’s Digit-Girl stood—leaned, really—against the plaster surface.

Like the others, and like Julie herself, the beautiful silvery assistant appeared emotionless and coldly beautiful, a figure made of icy flowing metal. But there was a difference, too. Even the illusion of independent motion had ceased in her. Where the other Dire’s Digits appeared like living simulacra, robotic, this one was more like a silver-cast statue.

“They stiffen up, you see,” Dire confided to his new assistant. “I get control almost immediately, but after a few years my willpower just isn’t enough to keep up with the transformation. You just get increasingly more silvery, and then, eventually, you stop moving altogether.” He shook his head sadly.

Julie barely heard him. The world was narrowing into a dark corridor. Obey, she knew. All she had to do from now on was obey. How simple could life get?

“Fortunately,” her master continued, “I always find more.” He crossed the room over to Maria and tapped the tight, beautiful space between her breasts with his rings. Julie heard them chime hollowly.

“At least now I’ve a replacement. I was getting worried.” Dire walked back to Julie. She felt him exert his influence over her body, and she responded, approaching silently.

She no longer thought about anything at all.

“Slight of hand, Julie,” the illusionist said. She went down to her knees before him and opened her mouth. “Now, let’s see what other tricks you can do.” He dug his bejeweled left hand into her hair.

“But hurry . . . we’ve got to practice.”

After all, they had a show to get ready for.

END