The Blackmailed Exhibitionist
Part 6
by G. Lawrence
An adventurous young woman faces impossible choices
24-year-old Tracy Anders' best friend is using blackmail to compel her to more difficult missions. A warning from the author: as this series progresses, some elements have grown darker. The final chapter lightens up. There is nudity in this series but no sex. All characters are over 18 years old.
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Chapter Six
Devastation at the Racoon Diner
Even though it looked like I'd shaken possible pursuit after escaping the fairgrounds, I was still panicked. Lying naked in the back of a dump truck hiding under piles of trash offered little to hope for. A few stoplights later, I climbed out before the driver decided to use the compactor, falling on my knees in the gutter. Fortunately, the evening had not turned cold. I recognized the area. It was three more miles to Donna's house, and another mile to my apartment. Donna would think I fled home and be waiting for me. Leering. Drinking her damn wine. Wondering how I could possibly escape such an impossible situation. I couldn't face her now. It was too much. It was all too much.
And then I saw a familiar sight. A row of nice upscale condos in the Maplewood district. After several minutes of agonizing reflection, I reached a fateful decision. I was desperate now. Tired, sore, and covered in slime. There seemed little left to lose.
Two blocks later, while crouching behind a postal drop box, I studied the wide street. It was bright enough that I waited for a quiet moment, making sure there were no patrol cars, and made my dash, reaching the hedges on the opposite side. A second sprint gained me a stone path leading up several steps to a thick red door. I needed to think again. Was this a good idea? No, it really wasn't, but I was exhausted. Burned out. I knocked on the door so softly that I didn't know if anyone heard.
I jumped back when Ryan opened the door wearing brown slacks and a khaki short-sleeve shirt. He was very handsome at 6'2 and 190 pounds, with short dirty blonde hair and a square jaw. He was holding a beer. His eyebrows went up.
"Tracy? What is this? Why are you naked?" he asked. "What is that gunk all over you?"
I straightened before him totally vulnerable, shivering even though the summer night wasn't cold. Tears flowed down my cheeks. I began to speak but couldn't utter a word. This was a bad idea. Very bad. I turned to leave.
"Tracy, wait. Don't go," he urged.
"I'm sorry, I'm sorry," is all I could say. I stumbled going down the steps, barely able to keep my balance. I was out of strength. Ryan followed, grabbing me around the waist.
"No! No!" I shouted, fighting furiously. It was a good battle, for about fifteen seconds, and then there was no fight left in me. I went limp in his arms.
I recovered on the couch in his living room wrapped in a blanket. I noticed his phone on the coffee table recording me. Ryan was in the kitchen, returning with a glass of water. A First Aid kit lay open on the floor.
"My apologies for recording this," he gently said. "When a naked woman comes to a man's door late at night and starts screaming, he needs to protect himself."
"I understand. I'm sorry. I should go," I agreed. I tried to get up but could barely move. How was I going to get home? My apartment was still four miles away and I had no money. Or a phone. Would it be dawn soon? Would I need to walk through the city naked? Again. I fought to suppress the tears. My small body, only 5'4 and 112 pounds, had reached its limit.
"You should explain what this is all about, and don't say it's a bet or a dare, because I know better," Ryan cautioned.
"If I confess to a crime, can you say you caught me? Can you not mention I turned myself in?" I asked.
"What crime?" he said.
"Not murder or anything, but enough to go to prison. Can you promise to say I was caught?"
"Did you commit this so-called crime?"
"That's not important," I responded.
"I'm afraid it's very important," he insisted. Rather than hover over me, he pushed the coffee table back to kneel on the floor. Then he drew the blanket off my knees to apply ointment. They were scraped bloody from my day's adventures. So were my elbows. And other parts. I was bruised just about everywhere, looking like a purple quilt.
"I can't tell you," I said. "It's important for people to think I didn't turn myself in. This only works if being caught isn't my fault."
"What only works? You know this doesn't make any sense."
"If I told you, you'd think I was crazy. Or a freak."
"You've been running through the city naked for the last two months. That has to say something about your mental condition," he mentioned.
"You know? How? How do you know that? Did she--"
I choked off my words. If Donna knew I revealed her name, she'd release the photos. The fake blackmail evidence. Everything. It would be the end of the world. Who was this man? Was he trying to trick me? I felt my heart pounding. It was hard to breathe.
"Who? Tell me who you're afraid of?" he demanded, holding my arm.
"I can't. I can't. Please, just call the police. Have them arrest me. I'll confess to whatever they want. Anything."
I rolled over, facing the wall, and began to sob. I felt the blanket being pulled up to cover my bare shoulder, and then Ryan had both hands on me, seeking to offer comfort.
"I don't need to call the police," he said.
"What do you mean?" I asked.
"Tracy, I am the police," he answered.
I turned to look at him. The soft blue eyes offered no menace. He stroked my hair, so dirty and matted. A tissue was used to wipe the tears.
"Detective Ryan Sutherland," he said, showing me a gold badge. "I can read you your rights and arrest you for the theft at Neiman Marcus. Or you can trust me."
"How much time would I get for stealing that bag?" I asked.
"All of the bags," he replied.
"What do you mean?"
"There has been a string of thefts. Over $80,000 worth," he explained.
"No, that's impossible!" I shouted, sitting up. "I was only there once, and I didn't even steal the damn thing! I put the purse back on the table before I left."
"That's not what the surveillance photos are showing," he warned.
Oh no, I thought. How could this happen? I realized now it was hopeless. It was all hopeless. I was going to prison. For how long? That would depend on whatever lawyer Donna hired for me. If she was even serious about getting me a lawyer.
"This could be your last chance," Ryan said, feeling my distress. "Tell me what's wrong."
"Do you have something to drink? Something strong? Anything but bourbon. And can I have a bath?"
Ryan frowned, looking deeply into my eyes, trying to make a difficult decision. Finally, reaching a resolution, he carried me into the bathroom, ran blissful hot water, and fetched me a rum and soda. I was a total mess, from my hair to my toes.
"How did you acquire all this muck?" he asked, helping to sponge me off. With my permission. I barely had the strength to lift the soap.
"I was hiding in a trash dumpster," I said. "At the county fair."
"That's not an everyday thing for you, is it?"
"You don't follow the internet much, do you?" I asked.
"At the precinct, we get a morning briefing of anything that's important," he answered. "I had the afternoon off."
"Do you have your phone? Look up the Summer Festival," I said, sure my exploits had gotten noticed by now. And they really had. There were dozens of posts. My jump from the Ferris wheel was the local feature of the day. A dozen phones had recorded me. Fortunately, none had my name.
"My God," he whispered, watching footage of my daring leap. Twenty-five feet from a gondola into a foam-filled bouncy castle. He looked at the phone, looked at me, and looked back at the phone, like he could hardly believe what he was seeing. "Tracy, you could have been killed! What were you thinking? Why in God's name would you do that?"
"I'd run out of options," I answered.
"There are always better options than that. Is this a thrill thing? Some sort of extreme exhibitionism?"
"Do I look thrilled?" I asked.
"You look incredibly cute, and precious, and extremely stressed. And I want to know why," he firmly answered.
I reached for the sponge. My undercarriage had liquids in it that would cause infections. They needed to be scrubbed out. I twisted, trying to reach down. It was hard, embarrassing, and humiliating. I started crying again. I hoped Ryan didn't think I cried all the time. He took the sponge from my hand.
"This isn't sexual," he said. "This is a health issue. Can we agree on that?"
"Yes, sir," I agreed.
He began to wash my most sensitive areas, gently and with compassion, and when the clumsy sponge wasn't doing a good enough job, he used his soapy fingers to make sure my vagina was clean. I closed my eyes, savoring his touch. It made me sad to think I might not be touched again by someone so special for many years. If I was touched at all, it would be someone like Donna. In prison.
An hour and two more shots of rum later, I was lying on his bed shaking with raw emotions. I told him everything. Absolutely everything. Reading the exhibitionist websites. Recruiting Donna. Creating the blackmail evidence. Being trapped under the pier at the lake. Hiding in the furniture store at the mall. The dance performance at the water fountain. It poured out of me like a psychotic nightmare until I was left drained.
"This evidence she has against you is fake?" he asked.
"Yes, but I have no proof of any of this," I concluded. "Donna has all the proof. She controls everything. Sometimes, I think she controls my thoughts. There is no way out, except maybe jail. She won't be able to control me there. At least, I hope she can't."
Ryan remained quiet, only asking a few questions. What he already knew, and how he knew it, was a mystery. Was Donna leaking clues? Was Miranda getting nervous? Looking for a fall guy? I was the perfect choice.
"You've certainly gotten yourself into a fix," Ryan decided, getting me another drink. The recording he had started earlier had been turned off. What was he thinking? He read my thoughts.
"You could get me in big trouble," he said. "We haven't actually done anything, but a detective being so intimate with a person of interest could damage my career."
"I would never want that. I would never hurt someone trying to help me," I protested.