I started three mind control stories at about the same, interring one about two-thirds of the way through. It was, well, let's just say it's best interred. I'm still working on the other.
As to this story, there is another chapter in the works.
I've read a slender magazine named Science News for years. Recent articles about the brain's pleasure centers and neural progenitor cells were the inspiration for this story. Not that you asked, but I highly recommend Science News to any Literotica layperson interested in science.
As always, all story characters engaged in sexual activity are eighteen years of age or older.
* * * *
Kahili was watching Linda peck at her salad. Both had just tried out, unsuccessfully, for the new dance revue at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas. Kahili had begged off ordering lunch, saying she'd already eaten. The truth: she was out of money.
Linda, who had recently been in the same circumstance, recognized Kahili's hungry look and thinking that Kahili was just the kind of desperate girl Rico had told her to be on the look-out for, the kind who, if they worked out, would earn Linda a crisp $100.00 bill, slid the salad across the table.
"My eyes were bigger than my stomach, do you want some? It won't sit well in the frig and I hate wasting food."
"Sure, thanks" said Kahili, who ate just enough to dull her hunger and then, worrying about her weight - how many calories were in that salad dressing Linda had gooped all over the lettuce - pushed the plate away.
"C'mon, why don't you come down tonight. They're looking for new girls and the money's great."
Kahili was depressed, friendless and lonely, about to be booted from her filthy boarding house because she couldn't pay the rent, out of money, no job prospects, no place to go. While the thought of a roomful of drunken men staring at her as she stripped was repulsive, it was better than living on the streets or returning to her father.
* * * *
It was 3:00 A.M. Henry Jamison, for the thousandth time, reviewed his life, while Bill Quigley, his friend and head of security at Jamison Enterprises, worked several computers and a couple of phones.
Henry had loved Camille. They were cut from the same cloth, high school sweethearts from middle-class families. They'd married young, she'd had Kahili right away, and then became his biggest cheerleader as he, harnessing the power of the internet before his competitors even knew it existed, turned the family florist shop into a national delivery service. With costs at near zero, profits poured and Henry expanded into an array of down-market products that other on-line retailers ignored.
But success had a price. Henry told himself that if he was faithful, and he had been, and made a lot of money he was a good husband. He was usually on the road or at the office and, when home the job came with him. Living in a world of money and society wholly new to him, infatuated with his own success, he was the was king of the hill, the hot new thing. His wife, a small town girl, was uncomfortable in this new world and, isolated and lonely, lived for two things, their daughter and, increasingly, a dangerous drug habit.
Quigley had tried to warn him, but Jamison, too busy to pay real attention, would accept his wife's bland assurances that everything was under control before scurrying off to the next deal. Then he got the phone call, Camille was in the hospital. She never got out.
Kahili blamed him; he blamed himself and, mired in depression and self-loathing, he was unavailable to Kahili when, grieving the loss of her mother, she most needed him. Instead, as he had with Camille, he substituted money for care, further widening the rift between them. When Kahili declared she wanted no part of his world and threatened to drop out of high school, she was sent to an expensive boarding school. When she got herself kicked out of it and said she wanted to be a ballerina, she was enrolled at the best school in the country. But while talented, she'd started far too late to succeed in one of the most competitive fields in the world.
She developed an eating disorder, the expensive treatment facilities had temporary successes.
By the time Henry understood his mistake it was too late, his attempts at reconciliation still-born in the face of Kahili's unremitting hostility. At eighteen she declared herself independent, took her mother's maiden name Blondell, and moved to Las Vegas to make it as a dancer.
Through it all Quigley kept close tabs on her. And so far, he'd reported, she'd avoided drugs. But Quigley was not optimistic.
Sitting there, Henry recalled his friend's words: "Boss, so far so good, but she's got an addictive personality: impulsive, sensation-seeking, parades her non-conformity, socially alienated, compulsive. We should be worried."
* * * *
Quigley put down the phones, turned to his friend.
"She auditioned at the MGM, didn't get the job We talked to the hiring guy, he was like all the rest. Says she's a good dancer, but she dances like a ballerina and they want something more..."
Henry saw his friend pace, understood why, and said, "C'mon Bill, you can say it."
"... sexual. She's been starving herself again, he said she had the build of an eight year old boy. My guys thanked him, let him know we'd make it worth his while if he hired her for the next show.
"After she was cut she ate lunch with a fellow dancer named Linda Johnson. We couldn't get close enough to hear the conversation. Kahili went back to the boarding house, told the land lady she had a job that night and would be able to pay the rent. She went to a strip club named Heavenly Bodies, met Linda, they went backstage."
* * * *
Kahili had been dancing in stilettos for six hours. She was exhausted, everything hurt; the men were fat and ugly, the place stank, and her tips, especially compared to the other dancers, scant. Linda suggested she try looking happier on stage and when asked for a lap dance, put her heart, soul, and rump into it, but Kahili couldn't fake it. She hated the place, the men, hell she didn't even like sex.
She said she was leaving, but the manager, backed by a heavily-muscled bouncer, said he promised his public an even dozen dancers and he'd deliver an even dozen dancers.
During a short break Linda laid out a line of cocaine.
"Hey Kahili, take a hit, it will get you through the night."