The Erotic Mind-Control Story Archive

Karma Dog

By Tristmegistis

It started with an antiquated copy of Paint Shop Pro 2.0. It probably would have worked if I’d been able to afford Photoshop, too. At any rate, I began to dabble with pics I found on the web or usenet—enhancing this tree, removing that boulder, cloning a water feature from another landscape. Then, on to shots of people. I became pretty good, considering the limitations of the software.

I was hooked. Digital photo manipulation replaced all my other hobbies and most of my friends and girlfriends. After about a year, I managed to upgrade to 3.0. Shortly thereafter, it happened for the first time. I’d been periodically emailing an old high school lady friend—really, only a friend. We idly traded news and remembrances once a month or so. She’d sent me a few pics of herself and her family, including a bikini shot from their vacation of Florida the winter past. Chuckling to myself, I loaded it into my editor and began to play. Nothing obscene, mind you, but I shaved maybe 20 pounds from her belly, hips, and thighs, smoothed out her complexion, and lightened her hair.

Pleased with my improvements, I sort of drifted away mentally, admiring Chloe’s refound beauty. It suddenly seemed so real. I shook my head, laughed away my mini-hallucination, and closed the file. Six or eight weeks later, Chloe shipped me her next update, crowing about having lost so much weight that she had her hair done and felt like a teenager again. Attached was a new bikini shot.

My head swam. Apart from her pose and a different background, it might have been my doctored pic. I don’t know exactly how long I sat with my version of her side by side with the new true Chloe, emptily staring and the uncanny similarity. Shaking myself out of my near trance, I got up and fixed myself some dinner.

A few days later, I cropped her revitalized head and chest and enlarged her for a better look. She did almost look like a teenager. She’d become even prettier as a woman than she’d been growing up. I imagined her dressed to the nines for a night out. Compositing her glowing face, with appropriate new makeup, onto a stock runway model’s body, I was again amazed for long moments by the seeming reality of my work. Breaking free of my fantasy, I shot a sincere, congratulatory reply back to my old friend

Three months later, another email with attachments arrived. She apologized for not keeping in touch, but she’d been so busy with her home life and new career that time was short. Shortly after her last message, she’d been invited to participate in a charity fund raiser as a model. She said she’d never had so much fun out of bed. She’d been talked up by an agent in the audience, and was now doing shoots as often as she could get away from family responsibilities.

My pleased-for-her smile kind of solidified on my face as I opened her jpegs. There she was, in full, glossy glam. The images were quality scans of professional portfolio shots. I freaked. I shouted a best unrepeated curse and knocked the chair over getting away from the computer. It was just too fucking weird. It was as if . . . My mind veered away and I decided that maybe I shouldn’t play with people’s pics for a while.

But I worried over the events almost obsessively. What if it wasn’t coincidence? The correlations seemed too exact not to have been causal. And the very idea that I might have somehow brought about changes in Chloe’s life scared me shitless. It might be an adolescent’s wet dream literally come true, but if you aren’t appalled by the notion of tinkering with something as complex as reality, then you must be either brain dead or a politician—or is that the same thing? Inadvertently fucking up someone’s life with a daydream isn’t my idea of a good time. I mean, what if I’d been horny, and slapped Chloe’s into some sleazy streetwalker’s scene? I firmly, with all my soul, believe in karma. Ultimately, no matter what, you reap what you sow. “Do no harm” are words to live by.

I couldn’t leave PSP alone for long, though. Even as my mind ran over the insanity of it all, I began dabbling again, with safe subjects, and without ever experiencing that strange reverie as I stared at my techie art. So, since that seemed okay, I decided to be scientific about the problem: take a known, work it over and see if I could change something innocuous. Like the flowers in the neighbor’s side yard. Iris, they were, and just coming into bloom. I made them larger and much more vivid on-screen. I visualized, trying to recapture whatever (if anything) I’d done before. Outside the bedroom window, nothing happened.

So I tried a picture of a co-worker I nabbed from the company website. Jim occupied the cube across from mine. I didn’t know him very well, but he was in my line of sight five days a week. I flopped a smiling shot from an awards banquet and grafted his watch from his left to right wrist. The next morning, sure enough, he was explaining to a crony about how his grandson had helped him get dressed for work, insisting on strapping his rolex knock-off on the wrong wrist and upside down.

I took the rest of the day off sick, and I wasn’t malingering. After I deleted Jim’s photo from my hard drive, I spent the rest of the day in bed, dozing my way from one half-nightmare to another. Deleting it must have been enough, I thought feverishly, for the next day Jim’s watch was righted.

As I sat shakily in my cubicle that fateful Friday, I considered—briefly—getting psychiatric help, but opted out of that scenario. While it works miracles for some, thorazine is not my friend. I was just pulling myself together when the office manager hag dropped by to harass me about three inconsequential typos in a report I filed the week past.

I plead weakness. The bitch had for some reason singled me out as a fresh hire, and had been favoring me with sniping remarks, unfounded vague accusations, and less than glowing reviews for three years. The instant her back was turned, I opened my personal laptop and downloaded her face from the company website in three-quarter profile. An adult site featuring mature housewives offered me a quick sample of a severely corseted woman of Maude’s slightly chubby body type servicing a well-hung black man. By the time I finished, Maude’s heavily made up eyes were glazed with lust, and her bright lipstick was smeared across her face. Her stocking clad toes were curled inside her clear platform pumps as she orgasmed.

Maude showed up for work the next day looking more like a worn out hooker than a frumpy middle-aged office manager. While everyone else snickered behind her back, I quailed in my cube, racked by guilt. Yeah, she was a heartless, dried-up old bitch, but she didn’t deserve what I’d done to her—or imagined I’d done. Still, it was with mixed emotions that I deleted her altered photograph. In its stead, I did her up as a more kindly matron, removing some of the harshness from her natural features, trying to put some sincerity and compassion into her face.

The results were oddly mixed. The following day, while she’d toned down her makeup a half dozen notches and substituted more modest heels for the unholy stilettos she’d worn the day before, she was still obviously more of a sexual creature than before I tampered with her image. Also, she was much nicer, acting like a human being instead of a sniping asshole. Curiouser and Curiouser, I thought.

Several weeks, a lot of thought, and some cautious experimentation later, I came to several hesitant conclusions.

First, I could not manipulate objects. Rocks, thimbles, dollar bills, and cars just sat there. Only people were susceptible. Cats, dogs, and parakeets seemed immune to whatever the hell I may have been doing. People I knew responded in various degrees, and most—though not all—strangers were unphased.

I didn’t think my power was godlike. Maude might have always had a strongly sexual side that she’d never displayed in the workplace—or, perhaps, it had been deeply repressed. I may have just freed her libido, and, once out of the cage, mere deletion of the pic hadn’t re-imprisoned it. Also, her humanity could have merely surfaced with my nudge.

My investigations definitely indicated that I couldn’t manufacture a silk purse from a sow’s ear. I didn’t seem to be able to radically alter reality so much as influence it. If a seed of something existed in a person, I could help it germinate, but was unable to plant the seed directly. I wondered if poor Maude had really tarted herself up and jumped some black dude. But, on second thought, I didn’t really want to know the answer.

With judicious use of Paint Shop Pro, I cautiously altered my situation a bit. I encouraged Maude and a couple of VIP’s to recognize my worth to the firm with a cordial smiling group shot. I tried to be scrupulously honest in my machinations. I didn’t make myself a Vice-President, but I did manage to get a raise and promotion that Maude had unfairly denied me by picturing her revising my personnel reviews. I encouraged a car salesman to fight with his sales manager for an incredible deal on a new Mustang on my behalf via an image of he and I signing the right contract. Always, I rigidly adhered to my “Do no harm” mantra. Even when my current lady friend dumped me, I resisted the impulse for vengeance.

Then I had the good luck—or misfortune, depending on your point of view—of meeting a woman named Bridgette Falcone at my favorite watering hole one Friday evening. Okay, so she was also a regular there, and I may have had something to do with the way she ended up on the bar stool next to mine. She’d intrigued me for months. She was in some ways a female version of myself. Decent looking, extremely slender, but introspective enough to seem isolated. She habitually and effectively diverted any male interest directed her way. The smile upon her face when I delivered my lame get-to-know-you line was really nothing like what I’d sketched upon her face from the sly candid I’d snapped with my cell phone, but once the ice was broken, we struck up an only slightly stiff conversation, and discovered that we had enough mutual interests to pass the time.

While it was apparent that she was lonely—maybe even desperately so—her refusal of my suggestion that we do dinner sometime was so violent that it shocked both of us. She hurriedly, with what looked like tears in the corners of her eyes, tried to soften the blow. I seemed like a nice guy, and she’d had a good time chatting, but she didn’t go out. With anyone. Ever. Embarrassed and distraught, she excused herself and nearly ran out of the bar, earning me a glare from Harry, the barkeep. Despite my gentlemanly behaviour, I felt like a masher.

At home later that evening, I reinforced Bridgette’s attraction to me a little, with the aid of a couple of more candid images. Just nudges, mind you. Her hand in mine as we walked together. A truly radiant smile as we faced one another across a restaurant table. Still, I nearly jumped out of my skin as I hit the “save” button on the last image and my cell phone chimed. Bridgette was intensely apologetic about her behaviour. I deserved an explanation for her rudeness She’d truly enjoyed getting to know me. Was I still interested in dinner the following night?

I tried to submerge my shame as I eagerly accepted and arranged to meet her at a ridiculously upscale restaurant downtown., all too similar to what I’d cloned into the just completed digital image. Romantic fantasies began to play through my head, but I stayed away from my computer.

While the radiant smile I’d created was apparent when we met, her hand felt clammy in mine, and, as the evening wore on, her friendliness became more mechanical, her cheer forced. We both had a glass too much wine before adjourning to the lounge next door and finding a quiet place away from most of the noise.

The silence between us was suddenly deafening. After thirty almost unbearable seconds, she opened her purse, extracted an envelope, hurriedly slid it towards me and leapt up, nearly running toward the ladies’ room. Stunned, I watched her depart, then reflexively picked up the envelope. It was addressed to her, from a medical clinic. Inside was a standardized form under the letterhead of one James Laughton, MD, dated nearly two years ago. It reported, clinically, that the results of her blood test reconfirmed the fact that she was HIV positive, and urging her to make an appointment with him as soon as possible.

Light dawned in my dim wits. Thus her isolation, her refusal of my initial invitation. I had the distinct impression that I was the only person who knew her shameful secret. Impulsively, I pulled out my cell and snapped shots of the form and envelope, my mind a mass of roiling, conflicted thoughts. They hadn’t calmed when she returned and stiffly resumed her seat.

“You’re still here,” she whispered hoarsely, refusing to look at me through tear-reddened eyes.

“Where else would I be?”

“Away. Far, far away.”

“Want to tell me about it?”

“No.” But she did anyway, in flat, unemotional terms. Her words came faster and faster, pouring from her like putrid bile. Her murder, as she called it, was the gift of her ex-husband, who’d contracted the disease from one of the hookers he’d frequented, without her knowledge, throughout their relationship. He hadn’t told her he’d tested positive for three years, until he became symptomatic with AIDS and she’d been contacted by public health officials.

“Devastated” is such an overused word. Usually, it’s used to describe something relatively trivial. Obviously, not so in this instance. She’d immediately filed for divorce, but there was nothing left of their marital assets by that time, and she’d barely escaped being held liable for his astronomical medical fees. As it was, she was barely scraping by, struggling to make minimum payment for her own treatment regimen.

By the time she was finished, she was drained. She looked ill. “I have to go now,” she whispered.

I grabbed her hand as she reached for the medical report. She stiffened, looked on the verge on panic. “Don’t touch me!”

I released her, but shook my head. “Holding your hand can’t give me AIDS.”

“Look, Paul, you’re a nice guy. If things were different, maybe . . . well, they aren’t different. I’m a walking dead woman. Do us both a favor and leave me alone.”

“No. I won’t. I can help.”

Her laugh was something ripped from a horror film sound track. “Yeah. Right.” She stood and started away.

“I’ll call you,” I said, loud enough to attract attention. She gave no indication of having heard.

Here’s another word enfeebled by over-use: shock. I found myself on the sidewalk with only the vaguest memory of paying the tab, and home with virtually no recollection of driving. Nothing seemed to be happening in my brain. All my higher mental functions had clicked off, leaving my subconscious in charge. AIDS. Walking dead woman. I can help.

No overt thought. Download images. Clean up. Higher contrast. “Positive” becomes “negative.” Appropriate text corrected to the becoming reality. Date changed. Save. I think I heard myself giggle softly. Yes, save.

I left a brief message on her voicemail. “I know you’ll think I crazy, but get retested, then call me.”

It took six weeks to hear from her. She sounded brittle, frightened. “What did you do to me?”

“I honestly don’t know. No mystical healing hocus pocus or anything like that. I just, well, changed it.”

She laughed quickly, hysterically. “You just changed it. Just changed a fatal condition?”

I blew out a hard sigh. “I’ll try to explain what little I know. Over dinner this weekend, maybe?”

A long pause. “Well, since I don’t seem to be dying anymore, why not? Saturday, six o’clock?”

“Sure. Pick you up?”

“Why not. I live at –“

“Saw it on that envelope. It’s etched into my brain.”

“So,” she said with only slightly slurred words as she emptied the dregs of the bottle of chardonnay into our glasses, “you change things just by altering digital images. Dither, dither, save. That’s it?”

I shrugged. “Basically. Too weird, huh?”

“Basically,” she grinned. “Did you really do that to your manager?”

“Yup. Guilty as charged. But I did undo it—mostly. Some of it sort of stuck. I think maybe I keyed into something that was already real, and kind of amplified it, or made her more honest about it or something.”

“And you actually arranged our first meeting the same way?

I squirmed. “Look, I’m really sorry about that. It wasn’t very ethical, but –“

“But it ended up saving my life. Somehow, ‘No harm, no foul,’ sounds kind of lame.” She wiggled herself from beside me on the couch into my lap. Her brilliant blue eyes were wide and direct. “Thank you for being unethical,” she whispered as she lowered her lips toward mine.

Our lovemaking was slow and sinuous, warm and moist, gasped and sighed. It was, bar none, the most astounding round of sex I’d ever had. And, our second effort turned rapid and wet and loud and explosive and was even better. I was not only sated, but in love.

We became inseparable. I was smitten. The better I got to know her, the more I adored her. Smart, pretty, affectionate, doting, and playful. Very playful, and very affectionate, if you catch my drift. I lived life through a rosy post-coital haze.

The only apple in Eden was what I was able to do with Paint Shop Pro. She kept urging me to play with people or interpersonal relationships. Make her friend Dottie’s boyfriend a little slimmer (“How could that do harm, honey? I’d be great for his health and self-confidence. Not to mention making him more attractive to Dottie.”). Straighten out some slimeball co-worker who kept hitting on her (“Please, hon! It’s poetic justice to give him a two inch penis! Just for a few days!”).

Ever try to justify your ethical code to another intelligent human being? Try to present it as a coherent and seamless system, even though it’s most likely a hodge-podge of notions tossed together from your life’s bits and pieces? It ain’t easy. Ultimately, decisions about right and wrong come down to gut feelings. There is seldom an absolutely black-or-white situation, no matter what your preacher says. Telling my love “no” wasn’t always easy.

Once, I capitulated. Bridgette sat, enthralled, beside me as I did my magic, in very small stages, gradually erasing the horrid scars from a mutual friend’s disfigured face. At each session, Bridgette’s breath became short, her lips slightly parted. Each time, immediately afterwards, we fucked like bunnies.

“God,” she groaned after the final session, trying to pull my entire body inside her womb, “I can’t believe how much that turns me on, baby! Oh, yeah, just like that! Faster! Oh, please, faster!” Then, as if her approaching orgasm inspired her, she bucked wildly and growled, “Do me, baby! Change me! Do something to me! Make me –“ Her words dissolved into scream, and I saw stars and I joined her.

It became a little boudoir game. “Honey, you could make my breasts larger, couldn’t you? Just for a weekend, I could be your centerfold, your own Hooters girl.” Or, “Wouldn’t you enjoy oral sex even more if you gave me great big fat lips.” And, “Yeah, love. Right there! Just like that! What if you . . . ah! . . . bleached my hair and . . . oh! . . . made it long enough to hang down to a tight bubble butt . . . and when you did me from behind . . . like this . . . you could pull it . . . real . . . hard . . . and . . .”

Well. I’m not made of steel, though I can sometimes manage a localized impersonation. And, especially when I’m ga-ga in love, I can get stupid. So, on the sly, I began seeing just what I could do with my love. I’m really glad I started off slowly and carefully, because the effects were immediate and drastic. I’d created a pic of Bridgette curled on the sofa painting her nails, and it came to pass, in excruciating detail, less than fifteen minutes later. Well, perhaps to you that might not seem drastic, but, given my lady’s adamant anti-manicure attitude, I was left speechless.

“Hi, babe,” she grinned. “Look what I found under the bathroom sink. What do you think? Like it? One of your femmes fatale must have left it behind. What kind of red would you call it? Fuscia?”

I nodded numbly. She’d even changed into the jeans and checked blouse I’d imaged. She started on her toenails, glanced curiously up at me. “What? Don’t you like it?”

“No, I do! It’s just that, well, you always said –“

She waved me off. “The first thing mothers teach daughters is that it’s a girl’s prerogative to change her mind.” She smiled lovingly. “Get used to it.”

I deleted the pic. The polish stayed for a week. I made another pic, sans nail color. The polish disappeared. I reapplied it. So did she. I admitted to myself that maybe there was the tiniest little bit of sexual rush in playing with her, and lengthened the nails in the picture a bit. I didn’t mind the way she clawed my back with them at all.

Over a Sunday brunch a week later, my guilt got the better of me. I confessed. Bri sat, blinking with disbelief for a few moments. She raised her hands, stared oddly at her moderately long nails. Her gaze lost focus. She wet her lips, and shuddered slightly. Her eyes sought mine. Her voice was a soft whimper. “I just came, honey.”

I had no time to ponder her reaction to being “changed” until Monday. The rest of Sunday I was busy being raped by an insatiably horny madwoman who couldn’t seem to stop orgasming. There was a refrain; “More. God, please, more! Do me more. Anything. Anything you want!”

In the bookcases of my parents’ home, the Bagavad Gita and Upanishads were right beside, and equally important to, the Bible. My hippie parents had brought me up with the phrase “Do No Harm” about the only inviolable ethic drilled into my psyche. “Harm” isn’t as simple as we wish it were when the reality of everything being connected to everything else is considered. Nobody has the right to dabble with anyone else’s karma. That being said, as Bri was so fond of pointing out, one isn’t granted a siddhe like the one I possessed without reason.

During the weeks that followed, I pondered much more than acted. I again avoided PSP like a recovering addict avoided his drug of choice. I’m sure that, had I no been so distracted, I’d have noticed that my lady love was increasingly withdrawn—even morose.

I suppose it was about a month after the nail polish episode that I became aware, via some saved files on the home computer, that Bri had been playing with the devilish program herself. I was appalled, and, shamefully, aroused, by what I found. The attempts were untutored and unskilled, but their intent was obvious. One depicted her in a bar, wearing a barely-there red minidress, sporting overblown breasts and makeup, with a bulked up version of myself openly fondling one of her tits. Another showed us in a parking lot, with a similar looking and ecstatic fantasy Bri bent over the hood of a limo being pounded by a fantasy me, while a small crowd watched. Fetish wear of every sort, collars, tattoos, piercings—and in each, she was sporting a mammoth diamond ring on the appropriate finger of her left hand.

I was dizzied. I was freaked. I was paralyzed. Is that what she really wanted, or were they merely masturbatory fantasies? At least, in the latter case, we were reading from the same page. But why the secrecy? Had she actually been hoping that program would work for her? I thought we’d already demonstrated that it wasn’t the software that twisted reality, but rather my bizarre brain. But . . .

I moped. I fretted. I stewed. Then, four and a half days after my discovery, I got a call at work from a nurse from Community Memorial’s ER. Did I know a person named Bridgette Falcone? She’d been admitted earlier that day after collapsing and becoming unresponsive in a downtown bar. It seemed she’d accidentally swallowed a dozen or two tranquilizers and numerous shots of bourbon. My name was listed in her wallet as the person to contact if -

I heard no more. I was probably out the office door before the poor lady finished her sentence, and running through the doors of the emergency room mere moments later. It took several very beefy uniformed security people to keep me in the lobby. A very small, very young, and very polite young doctor told me that she had been moved to intensive care, that I should come back when she’d been stabilized.

I made it home somehow. I went straight to the computer and began frantically gathering stock photos, praying they were accurate enough. I took her out of ICU, put her in a private room—conscious, aware, her normal smiling self, with me holding her hand. I saved the composite, made myself a stiff drink, showered and changed clothes. Then, as sanely as possible, I presented myself again at the hospital and found that she was just being transferred from intensive care to a room.

But she wasn’t smiling. The instant she saw me, she broke into nearly hysterical tears, earning me a hostile stare from the burly nurse pushing her wheelchair.

“Go away!” she shrieked. “Leave me alone!”

“Bri, I —”

The nurse stepped between us. “You heard the lady.”

“But —”

“Do I need to call security, sir?”

Heartbroken doesn’t begin to describe my emotions. For the next three days, she hung up with a sob each time I called her hospital room. After her discharge, she refused to answer her home phone, and her office informed me that she was on a medical leave of absence. I couldn’t work, and dear, compassionate Maude ordered me to take a vacation.

I did nothing but sit in my apartment and stare emptily at the tube, trying to keep my mind blank. I tried getting drunk. I tried meditation. I tried everything I could think of to either figure out of get past Bridgette. Nothing worked. Thoughts circled endlessly, like vultures waiting to dine.

What had I done wrong? Why did she hate me? Why did she hate herself enough to attempt suicide? Why hadn’t my healing manipulation worked?

That question and its collories dominated me. I refused to so much as turn my computer on, but my Paint Shop Pro generated karma haunted me. My inevitable conclusion was that this payback for what I’d done, both to her and others. The universe did not brook even “helpful” interference with people’s lives.

I booted my desktop machine. I highlighted the Paint Shop Pro directory and all its sub folders. My finger hovered over the delete key. What would happen, I wondered? If every trace of the reality I’d altered disappeared, would Maude revert totally to her old self? Would Steph’s scars reappear? Would Chloe return to being a dumpy housewife? And, most importantly, would Bridgette die of AIDS after all?

Ultimately, I couldn’t take that chance. Whatever happened to me, if there was the slightest possibility, the most remote chance, that I’d kill the woman I loved, then I’d accept the consequences of having saved her in the first place. I walked away from the computer and decided I’d try getting drunk again.

I don’t remember much about that afternoon, except becoming morose. In a moment of self pity, I send Bri a four word email: “Please tell me why.”

The next afternoon, just as my hangover was releasing me from its horrid grip, the computer I’d not shut down chimed at me. I had email. From Bridgettefalcone. She was even more brief than I’d been: “Starbucks 9am tomorrow.”

Why bother telling you that my night was sleepless? My self torture escalated to all new heights before the fateful hour arrived. The drive to Starbucks—there’d been no need to specify which one—felt like a trip to the gallows. Still, I put on my best game face and went in.

I barely recognized her. She was sitting in profile in the most removed corner of the place, seemed to be staring blankly, expressionlessly, at a spot on the wall. She’d lost enough weight so that her slender face looked skeletal. Her skin seemed to have a greyish tint. Her brown hair was loose and limp and unkempt. The plaid work shirt she wore was wrinkled and far too big for her shrunken frame. As I approached, she turned towards me. Her eyes seemed glassy and unfocused—dead. She seemed to shrink within herself as I neared the table.

“Bri, I —”

She spoke to the floor. Her voice was almost a whisper, but its intensity made me stop and listen. “I lied to you. My husband didn’t give me AIDS. I gave it to him. I murdered him.”

“Are you sure —”

Her mouth worked for a moment before sounds emerged. “I . . . he wanted me to be with—fuck—other men. I pretended not to want to, made him talk me into it. We were on vacation in Boston. We bought some sleazy clothes for me to wear. Went to the Combat Zone. I loved it. I’d been a virgin until we were married—a good girl. I always fantasized about the other side—being nasty and wanton and slutty. We watched strippers and I wanted to be one. We watched hookers and I wanted to be one. I didn’t admit it, but went to the bar of the club we were in, just like he asked me to, and let some guy pick me up. I sucked him off and fucked him in the alley while Paul watched.”

She made a horrid face at a table leg. “God, I loved it. I orgasmed four or five times before he filled my cunt with cum. Then Paul fucked me, too. Still bent over the same trash can. I wanted more. I wanted every man in the club to line up and fuck me, too.

“But I didn’t. I made Paul take me back to the hotel. I cried for a half hour in the shower with the door locked. Never again, I promised myself. Never again. And I kept that promise. But it cost me. I became frigid, terrified of sex. When we made love, I had to fake any kind of pleasure. I refused to even consider any kind of sex games at all—even innocent ones we’d played before. I drove him away. He warned me: what he couldn’t get at home, he got from real whores.”

“So really, you don’t know that —”

Her resigned sigh was worse that a scream would have been. “Doesn’t matter whether I was infected in that alley or not. I’m still responsible for what happened. A horrible death, just like Paul’s, seemed perfect justice.”

She finally met my gaze, and I nearly wished she hadn’t. Her eyes were bottomless pools of hopelessness. “And then I met you. I fell in love that very first time we spoke. Did you know that? No. How could you? I was still the ice bitch, safely locked away in my own private hell.

“Then you healed me. Nothing was the same after that. I unlocked my cell door and stepped out into the world with you. For a while I hoped and dreamed. I had another chance. I was reborn. I was . . . lying to myself.”

“I don’t understand, Bridgette. I thought —”

She barked a shrill laugh. “We both did. We thought we had a future together. But I don’t deserve you. You’re a good person—I’m still a murderous whore. You’ve saved my life twice, Paul. I was mostly out of it in the ICU, but I heard the doctors talking, almost like a dream, about brain damage and spending the rest of my life as a vegetable, and then I was miraculously coming out of it. Good as new. There’s only one way that could have happened.”

“I couldn’t let you die.”

“But I want to die. I deserve to die.”

Something happened inside me then for which there really aren’t words. It was some sort of unholy compound made up of equal parts rage and love. I knew exactly what I was going to do. I slid out of my chair, onto one knee. I grasped her hand. She saw what was coming and tried to pull it away, shaking her head violently.

“Bridgette Falcone, marry me.”

“No! You’re insane!”

“Guilty as charged. Can you deny that you’re in love with me?”

“No, but there’s —”

“Good. That’s all I needed to hear. Now be a good girl and just say yes.”

“I will not! You can’t just —”

“But I can. I can force you to marry me, you know. I can tamper with your head and you’ll happily walk down the aisle with me.”

“You wouldn’t dare!”

“Oh? Are you sure?”

Her eyes went huge. “You haven’t already . . . oh, my god, did you? . .”

I shook my head. “Not yet. But, by all the gods, I will, if that’s what it takes. I’d much rather not—and do other things to you instead.”

She shuddered. She swallowed. “Like what?”

My grin must have looked evil. “Like give you your cake and make you eat it, too.”

And so it came to pass that Bridgette willingly, and happily, became Mrs. Paul Williams. Most of the time, anyway.

She stepped into the room, nude, still toweling her wet hair, and caught me closing down PSP.

Her eyes instantly became heavy lidded. Her lovely little nipples hardened. “What are you up to, my wicked husband?”

“Oh, nothing.”

She rolled my chair away from the desk and plopped herself into my lap like she owned it—which she does. She grabbed me by the ears and turned my head to meet her gaze. “Give, buster.”

“Just putting the final touches on our second anniversary vacation plans.”

“Our plans,” she drawled, but her nipples stretched even further and her breathing quickened. She squirmed on my lap. “Tell me.”

“Well, we’re going to Vegas.”

“And . . .”

“Wait and see.”

“At least give me a hint.”

“I’ll do better than that.” I handed her a folded sheet of paper. “We’re going to do it differently, this time. Here’s a list of the first three things you have to do to get ready. You’ll start on them this morning while I’m finishing things up at work.”

She unfolded the paper and started to read. “Oh, no, honey. I can’t do this.” She read further. “I can’t do any of this. It’s crazy.”

“Ah, but that’s the beauty of it, my love. You won’t be able to help yourself. You’ll resist every step of the way, but won’t be able to overcome the compulsion.”

She set her jaw and glared at me, but the intensity of her wiggle increased. “Oh yeah? Well, I resisted you before. I didn’t come running back to you like some love stricken teenager after I came out of that coma now, did I?” She was openly humping my thigh now.

I reached down to fondle her dripping slit. She groaned, and shook in orgasm. I was going to have to change slacks before work. As a going away gift, I pinched her clit and whispered in her ear. “Cum again, honey, then get your sweet ass up and make those phone calls.”

She screamed and slumped into my shoulder, nibbling my neck. “I hate you, you know. Do we have time to fuck before you go?”

“Nope. Now get up. You’ve got a lot to do.”

“I won’t,” she said through gritted teeth as she stood and walked mechanically to the phone. She fought her fingers for all she was worth as she punched out the numbers on my list. “Oh, fuck. You can’t—oh, hello? Yes. My name’s Mira Greenway, and I need to make an appointment for today.” She glared at me over my choice of pseudonyms—Ms. Greenway had been her very hot seventh grade teacher. “Eleven o’clock! Oh, that’s only three hours from now. I—oh no—yes, that’ll be fine.”

As I was headed out the door, she was on her third call, still struggling mightily, but her thighs were wet with her juices. “Motherfucker,” she screamed at my back as she slammed down the phone, “at least make me stop cumming!”

I didn’t really get anything at all done at the office that day. All I could think about was Bri, and getting home to her that afternoon. But anticipation is a wonderful thing.

The smell of musky perfume and wet woman greeted me when I opened the door. I followed her scent to the bedroom and sneakily peeked through the door. She was scowling into the mirror, turning this way and that, admiring herself. The lips with which she was frowning had been fluffed by collagen injections. Her chin length brown hair was now platinum blonde and swung down nearly to her ass. A thousand dollars worth of hair extensions are a wonderful thing. Her tits were nearly two cups sizes larger, thanks to another small fortune in saline injections, and those gorgeous, swollen nipples now each sported a lovely pair of crossed studs. To ice the cake, just above her delicious ass and just below the end of her tresses, she wore a bandage, hiding what I knew was a lovely tribal tattoo.

When I stepped into the room, she whirled to face me, trying to cover herself with her hands. “Look at me!” she moaned. “Look what you made me do!”

“Oh, trust me, I’m looking!”

“Yes, I, ugnh, I see you are and, oh, shit, it’s making me so hot. Fuck me honey. Please? Please fuck me before I go crazy.” Her fingers, now ending in inch long red talons with ornate gold stencillings, were digging into her freshly shaven pussy—and neither of those had been on her compulsory menu. “Come here and fuck your whore, baby. I need it so bad.”

She devoured me with her first kiss, grinding herself into me, and cumming hard when she felt my erection against her belly.

“Oh, Mira’s not a whore, honey. She a stripper, booked for a week at Club Runaway in Vegas.”

So here I am, sitting where the view is best, watching my temporary stripper wife ply her trade. She’s currently between sets and is working the floor for lap dances. She’s wearing the tiniest imaginable sequined silver bikini top and matching thong panties which contrast wonderfully with her bronze, lineless tan. Her platinum mane swings forward as a man at a table lights her cigarette, illuminating her deep red, glistening blow job lips. Her tits swell as she straightens and inhales, thrusting her nipples to within inches of the guy’s watering mouth.

I chuckle as she glares daggers at me, blowing smoke in my direction. I thought the cigarettes were a fun touch. She leans down to listen to something her current admirer says, nods, then takes his hand and sways with him toward the private area, her six inch stilettos and bouncing ass making her tattoo dance. Security here is tight. I know she’s safe back there, and all the dude is going to get on the couch for his fat fee is a nibble of pierced tits and his slacks full of his own cum.

But after her shift is over and we’re back in the hotel, her sodden little pussy will get all the pounding it’s aching for as she tells me about her night’s work. My stamina is a remarkable thing, especially with the aid of pharmaceuticals. And, trust me, a lot of stamina is utterly essential to keep up with her.

Still, we’re both happy this is her last night. She’s seen through the romance of the fantasy into the gritty, often ugly world of exotic dancing. Her body is slowly absorbing the injected fluids, and she’s sick of taking care of hair that brushes her ass. Home tomorrow, and a return to our real lives, will be more than welcome.

But she’s decided to leave the studs in her nipples, and dearly loves the ink on her hips. It’ll be a while before the pressure builds to play another game. We’ll have lots and lots of innocent, loving fun before she starts wheedling and dreaming and getting moody and depressed. I’ve got tons of sexy, nasty ideas for more immersion therapy, and, until the next time comes along, I’m sure I can force an occasional sloppy, wet, smoky face fuck from my dear, darling wife.