My heart raced as I knocked on the dark blue door of apartment 301. It was 2:45 in the afternoon and I had 45 minutes before the roommate came home from her last class. Even though I'd completed many other successful hunts, even though I'd planned everything down to the smallest detail, there was always that nervous excitement that came with the execution of a new hunt.
All of my senses were heightened and I heard soft footsteps approaching from the other side of the door. The peephole went dark as someone peeked out.
"Hello?" I heard a soft, feminine voice say.
"Hi," I responded cheerfully, overcoming a catch in my throat. "I'm the plumber working downstairs on some noisy pipes in apartment 201, the apartment below yours. I need to come in to bleed the air from the pipes up here. Your landlady, Mrs. Gaul, said you'd be home."
Maybe it was my blue coveralls with the "Ace Plumbing" patch sown on the left breast. Maybe it was the baseball cap with the matching patch. Maybe it was the large toolbox in my left hand. Maybe it was my winning smile or maybe it was hearing her landlady's name. It was probably all of them put together -- I'm a stickler for details. In any case, I heard the deadbolt slide back and the door swung open to put me face to face with my prey.
She was prettier up close than through the binoculars that I'd been using to track her movements. Asian, short and petite, with long shiny black hair that stretched down to her lower back. Her dark brown eyes were tastefully lined and her pink lips shimmered with a faint pearly sheen. Small gold hoops decorated her earlobes. A red cotton knit camisole hugged her body from the soft curves of her bosom down to her narrow waist, ending a couple of inches above the top of a pair of jeans that rode low on her hips. Red toenails accented her bare feet.
"Sorry to bother you," I said apologetically. The fake moustache tickled slightly as I flash her another warm yet sheepish smile.
"It's OK, come on in." She smiled back and stepped aside.
Walking pass her into the small foyer, I scanned the living room straight ahead; as I expected, no one there. She turned to shut the door and deadbolt it. I quickly bent down to place my toolbox on the floor and smoothly rotated back towards her while withdrawing my right hand from the pocket of my coveralls. That hand held a Talon T-250C, a 250,000-volt stun gun that's very capable of incapacitating a large man for several minutes. As my prey turned towards me, I pinned her back against the door with my left forearm and stuck the contacts into the soft skin of her bare midriff. A squeeze of the trigger and I zapped her for a few brief seconds. I caught her as she became dead weight, her limbs twitching asynchronously.
I slipped the stun gun back into my pocket and eased the petite girl down onto the linoleum, working quickly before she could regain the use of her muscles. A stain began darkening the crotch of her jeans as she lost control of her bladder. I opened the toolbox and pulled out an eye mask. You know, one of those things that people put over their eyes to block out the light when they're trying to sleep? I positioned the mask over her eyes and secured it by pulling the thin elastic strap around the back of her head. The "Hello Kitty" design seemed somehow appropriate.
She gurgled slack-mouthed as she lay twitching on the floor. I peeled off a strip of duct tape that was stuck underneath the lid of the toolbox, leaving another one there for later use on her roommate. Sealing the Asian girl's mouth shut, I made sure she had enough space under her nose to breath. I pulled out a pair of soft ballistic nylon cuffs that I tightly wrapped and strapped around her wrists, and clipped the cuffs together behind her back. Next, I bound her ankles together using an identical pair of cuffs. After I had finished, I grabbed her under her armpits and dragged her to the middle of the living room floor, where she wouldn't be able to make a lot of noise kicking around.
****************
It's funny how I'd come to regard these adventures as hunts. I grew up outside a small town in Montana. My father spent a lot of time working the family cattle ranch, so I mostly hung around my grandfather, who taught me, among other things, how to track & hunt. I got good at it -- if it moved, I could track it, kill it and skin it. In fact, I made quite a bit of money in my teen years trapping and hunting, enough to buy myself a brand new Jeep Wrangler in high school.
Later on, after graduating from Montana State, I moved to Houston, taking a job with a mid-size consulting firm. I quickly rose through the ranks and established myself as an ERP expert. Being a consultant, I can spend anywhere from a few months to a year and a half at different companies, different cities, across the country. I manage to keep myself fit, even on the road, making sure the hotel where I'm staying had a workout room or at least a 24 Hour Fitness nearby.
The concept of hunting people, specifically young women, developed slowly as a way of transferring my skills from the wilderness to the urban jungle. It's hard to describe the rush I feel during a hunt. Weeks of planning and preparation, of stalking your prey so that you feel as if you've known her for years, culminating in an intense sexual release combined with the feeling of complete power over another individual; it is as strong an aphrodisiac as you will ever know.
My hunting grounds are the colleges and universities that are somewhat close to the city where my consulting engagements happen to be located. Fridays are usually travel days for consultants; most fly back to their home town to spend the weekend with their families. Not for me. Fridays are my hunting days. Early in my engagement, I'll drive out to a residential area close to the campus I've targeted, looking for apartment buildings that cater to students. A vacancy sign is an easy opportunity to meet the manager and get his or her name; throwing out the manager's name to your quarry is a very effective way of opening doors.
I'll stake out a couple of buildings over the next few Fridays, scouting for potential prey. I'll look for young ladies who are returning to their apartment early in the afternoon, during a time when most other students are still at class. If I find someone with potential, I'll get her schedule down over the next several weeks, making sure she has a regular Friday routine. Many times, there will also be a roommate to consider, so working out the timing is a little more complex. Bagging two birds in one hunt, however, is often rewarding enough to be worth the extra planning.
Sometimes I'll spend the rest of the weekend hanging out in the same area. I'll check out as much of the landscape as possible, mapping the layout of the apartment building, marking the exact location of her apartment, and deciding on escape routes and parking spots. As a consultant, I can make good use of my analytical skills to develop a strategy that would maximize my chances for success while minimizing my risks. Geez, that sounds like some piece of BS straight from one of my company's glossy marketing brochures.
Outside of my preparatory activities (or should that be predatory activities?), I'll make a side trip to the campus, just to take in the ambience of the school or even to buy a souvenir T-shirt. Go Dawgs and all that stuff. Or I'll spend a few evenings checking out some of the local watering holes. I love hanging out in college towns. There's a certain energy that keeps me young, that keeps me fresh, that I miss from my college years.
This particular consulting engagement, scheduled to last 18 months, was in San Diego, a city on the Pacific coast just north of the Mexican border. Southern California is blessed with a relatively high density of colleges and universities, and the California lifestyle suits my tastes in women. I had decided the Los Angeles area, about a hundred and twenty miles up the coast, would be ideal hunting grounds for this particular engagement -- close enough where the commute wouldn't be taxing, far enough away to be safe.
Last semester, I hunted at USC. When I was at Montana State, one image that had always stuck with me while watching USC football games on TV was that of the USC cheerleaders in their form-hugging sweaters, which always seemed to creep up to reveal their smooth tummies every time they thrust their pompoms high into the air. That alone was enough to stimulate the salivary glands of every red blooded American male, so I was eager to make USC one of my first hunts in southern California. It was tough finding a good hunting situation there, however. The neighborhood around the campus was pretty scary, even for a long-time hunter like me. The hunt turned out extremely well, though, even if I didn't luck onto any cheerleaders.
I never hunt the same campus twice in the same school year -- too risky. So my next hunt, my current hunt, took me to Westwood, which is the area surrounding UCLA. The University of California Los Angeles is only ten or so miles down the Santa Monica freeway from USC, but the two environments are worlds apart. The Westwood neighborhood is more upscale and considerably safer; coeds aren't as afraid of walking back to their apartments by themselves.
Another plus for me was the high Asian student population at UCLA. I did some quick research on the web and found a racial makeup of almost 40% Asian. In fact, while I was hanging around the USC campus one weekend, I overheard a student disparagingly refer to their rival school as the University of Caucasians Lost among Asians.