Margie Taylor faced a cruel dilemma. She had just been violated against her will, yet had no one to turn to for help or support. Could she tell her church small group friends? Call the police? None of those options seemed to fit, as Margie now had a secret that couldn't get out.
She stayed home through the weekend. Nerve pills and alcohol replaced her Sunday morning small group Bible study friends. Margie desperately needed someone with whom she could share her pain, her violation, her manipulation. Yet, the pictures held her prisoner. Her friends would go into "fix it now" mode, ask a million questions, wonder why she didn't say something sooner. Part of her was simply too proud to let her Bible study girlfriends know how far she had fallen, even if she was innocent.
And the police? They'd ask a ton of questions too, and she couldn't even give them a name. No witnesses, no evidence, nothing. But most of all, she couldn't tell a solitary soul about the pictures. If word got out, and it would, her career as a top insurance agent would be over.
Sunday afternoon Margie scraped enough initiative to get her mom to keep the kids for the next couple of weeks. It was summer and they were out of school, and she was in no position at the moment to deal with them. She lay on the couch, in t-shirt and panties, buzzed from the wine and the xanax, and desperate for someone to talk to.
It seemed so surreal. Just a few days prior, Margie's life had been sunshine and roses. Now, she had been ravished by strangers and her very own x-rated pictures were in the possession of people she didn't know. With no one to with, no one to emotionally process her trauma, Margie picked up her phone and texted "can we talk" to the person who started her downhill slide. At least whoever this person was knew what happened.
Brian Webb had spent most of the weekend rotating between freaking out at what he had caused and super horny when watching the video results. He figured it was time to stop the game, as his impulsivity had already caused things to get way out of hand. Then came Margie's text.