Everyone in the story is over 18 years old. This work of fiction is a product of the author's imagination and the characters, incidents or dialog are not to be construed as real. This story includes scenes of graphic sex and should NOT be read by minors or anyone that might be offended by such filth. No one should publish or post this story anywhere else without the author's written permission.
The length of this story is around 13,000 words and takes up 4 pages on Lit.
Tags used on this story are: mind control, gang bang, cum, cum eating, forced, control, hypnosis, blond, breasts, nipples
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It's been a year since that day and I still have difficulty believing what happened. I'm writing it down to see if it sounds any more believable in black and white than it does in my head. Sometimes I wonder if it really happened.
I tried to forget it and succeeded in not thinking about it for months at a time. Then a year later, it all came back like a kick to the nuts. It was Sunday, and we slept in late, I got up and put the coffee on, and went out to get the paper.
I've started being more attentive to Annie since that time, acting more like I did when we were newlyweds. Not just in bed, but in all the little things I used to do for her. Opening doors, helping with the housework, helping with the meals, getting flowers, things like that. I've been trying to treat her like the lady she is. I want to show her that I still love her, love her with all my heart.
So I was going to fry up some bacon and scramble some eggs for her, bring it all up on a tray, bacon and eggs, orange juice and coffee. And of course, the Sunday paper. I thought we could lounge in bed and read the paper like we used to on Sunday mornings. Hopefully we would put the paper down at some point and ... enjoy each other.
So I headed out to get the paper, having made sure the door wouldn't lock behind me. It only takes once to be stuck out in your pajamas without a cell phone to take precautions for the rest of your life.
I headed back and when I got closer to the door, noticed a piece of paper hanging from the knob. A door hanger. My first thought that there was no election for some time, that some eager beaver politician was starting his campaign early. I picked it and intended to toss it in the recycle bin when I got inside.
I didn't pay attention to it, and just lay on the newspaper, only noticing some sort of map. You know the kind, just lines showing roads and highways, tiny lettering giving the names and route numbers of the roads, with a star showing where "IT" was. I never tossed it into the recycle bin.
My mind lazily just assumed it was a sale of some sort, perhaps a farm sale since it appeared to show rural county roads turning off of some Interstate. I do remember now, in retrospect, that before I went back inside, I looked out across the street, looking at all the front doors that I could see.
I didn't see any door hangers on any of the other doors, and again my mind lazily assumed they had gotten up earlier than I had and had taken them down. After all who puts a door hanger on a single door, I mean why do that, it would be crazy or something. Wouldn't it?
So, bacon, eggs, orange juice, coffee, tray, paper, the single rose I picked up on the way home yesterday. Napkins, forks, spoons, sugar, salt, pepper. Then upstairs to see my beautiful sexy wife.
It was wonderful, she was just coming out of the bathroom, had put on a nightgown, (We had fun last night and she fell asleep without one), and was belting her short robe over it.
A good breakfast in bed and I picked up all the detritus and put the tray on the chair by the door, then got back into bed as she pulled the Sunday paper towards her.
"What's this Carl? Did it come with the paper?" Annie asked, picking up the door hanger and handing it to me.
"Oh, I was going to toss it, just a door hanger, some sale or something," I said as I sat down on the bed, my pillows fluffed behind me so I could lean on the headboard.
Then I turned it over and looked at it. Annie was dissecting the paper, finding the sections she wanted to peruse. I was frozen, staring at the hanger. My mind gibbering in terror. How? How did they know? How did they find me? Find Us. Oh god oh god oh god!
All in silence, I couldn't talk, I was frozen and numb just staring at the flier. It advertised the "Annual Kurt, Kasim and Lorena yard sale" thousands of items new and old, something for everybody, explore our maze of thousands of items in the back, peruse the wonderful kitsch items in front. Come one come all. See map for location on back.
On the back, under the map, in bold letters, "YOU cannot miss this."
"YOU." What did they mean by "YOU"? Surely they didn't mean us, did they?
My hand started shaking, Annie looked over and took it from my hand.
"Oh wonderful, a yard sale, how innovative to advertise it like that. Look behind the writing they've got a shadow image of that old house. Oh Carl, we've got to go, we simply must, I had such a good time last year!"
Yes, a wonderful time I thought. You haven't thought of it or mentioned it since the day after we got back. Except the one time you saw pictures of it and were horrified before you went into denial, or worse.
It made me start to think about that day again. Annie had put the flier on her nightstand and was looking through the paper. I went back to that day last year, when we found that yard sale. I let out a sigh and my my mind drifted back to how it all started.
It all started with a funeral. Annie insisted we go and I was off for the summer and had done most of the maintenance around the house that needed doing for the summer, so I figured why not. All summer off is one of the perks of being a professor in a small liberal arts college.
Not that I enjoyed visiting her relatives, but this time we were staying in a motel, and not at her sister's place. Her sister's house has lots of bedrooms. But one and a half bathrooms with two kids plus her sister and brother in law plus us did not make for fun in the mornings.
Her sister Tina is nice enough, and Clyde, Tina's husband is OK, and the kids were normal kids, but I like my privacy and their house had none. Oh yeah, the funeral was for Clyde's ex cousin in law.
Let see if I can get this straight. Clyde has a cousin. He married Kelly, then divorced her. But Tina, Annie's sister, liked Kelly a lot, so Tina and Kelly stayed in touch and remained fast friends. I think Clyde's cousin moved out West, Montana or Wyoming or some such.
Kelly remarried and that husband died of cancer. We hardly knew Kelly and had only met her husband once. But Annie was always looking for the chance to get together with Tina. So we went to the funeral.
I got out my dark blue suit and off we went in Big Blue, our old custom van, an outdated gas guzzler but great on the highway, and roomy. Annie didn't have to tell me that she hoped to stop at a few antique places on the way back to see what there was she could buy. Just in case I took out the rear bench seat, to make room for whatever.
Annie had been talking about a new coffee table for the den we had downstairs. The den wasn't fancy, but a good place to retreat to for the few days or week or so when it was hot and sticky in the late summer. And why not be comfortable when we had to go down there for a tornado warning. And a nice place to put visiting relatives, there was a bedroom and bathroom down there too.
The funeral was OK, it drizzled but we had umbrellas and didn't take to long. It seems like a grey drizzly day is fitting for a funeral. Afterwords everyone sat around and ate, I mean that's what you do don't you?
Tina even brought her spaghetti mac casserole, she claims she's famous for it and I always say she's infamous for it. She pretends to slap me and everyone laughs. But hey, it was all gone and I didn't see any of it in the garbage can.
So once it was over we had a long drive, about sixteen hours to get home. We had made it in two days going out to Madison on the interstate. But Annie wanted to take three or four going back leisurely like, taking two lane blacktops and going through all the quaint little towns.
Those were her words. So way stayed another day in Madison and headed back. I let Annie navigate, she had the GPS and I went where she said. All I did was keep my eye on the fuel gauge and start looking for gas stations when it started getting low. We had a good time for a while. Stopped at one so called antique mall, browsed for ever, then back on the road. She had me turn onto one county road after another.
Then I saw her starting to get out the paper maps, but didn't think anything of it for a while until we came to an intersection and she didn't say anything about which way to turn.
"So Annie, there's this intersection here, so which way do you want me to turn babe?" I said in a calm detached voice
She just rustled her map and tapped on the GPS. I didn't want to stop and just kept on straight ahead on the road we had been on. Annie still didn't say anything. I could see her looking out the window this way and that, and looking at the map and the GPS.
The road started getting a little worse for wear, lots of patches and the occasional little pot hole. Nothing serious. The land was flat as a pancake, empty fields with bunches of trees around the occasional farm houses, and planted windbreaks of trees extending off here and there. Not too many of either. Lots of fallow fields and wetlands with cattails, tall native grasses and scrub.
We got to a stretch of land that was low lying, with wetlands stretching off on either side, lots of open ponds and small lakes and tall grasses in between. Red wing blackbirds perched on fence posts or low bushes, and the occasional waterfowl paddling around. I stopped for a big snapping turtle a couple of feet around as it crossed the road.