Author's Notes:
This is the first part of a science fiction novel featuring female pairings. The story is long, and the sex starts slowly--very slowly--as I develop the characters and plot. I'm interested in story, not just sex scenes. Skip this story altogether if that doesn't appeal.
Content Warnings:
Day One
contains fetish sex: soiled panties, sweaty armpits, reluctance, and humiliation. There are dark themes. Consent is delayed. The characters are forced, but become willing participants in the end, as they give into unexplored desires and continue relationships started under duress.
Trigger Warnings:
There's a reference to an attempted suicide. The AI (artificial intelligence) takes hostages to force compliance. Some hostages are harmed. Torture is threatened.
Editing:
A warm thanks to shadysweet--volunteer Literotica editor and author--for proofreading this section.
Day One
Chapter 1: Snatch
When the air raid siren sounded, activity in the gymnasium stilled. Everyone went silent. The alert tone's pitch and volume slowly scaled up before tailing off again, repeating its cyclic wail.
Marisa tapped her toe impatiently, waiting for the siren to end. Her nervous energy always ramped up ahead of a competition. As a coach, Marisa felt the same anticipatory excitement that had prefaced her own high school and collegiate wrestling matches. Burning with a competitive fire, she channeled it into shaping every aspect of her star athlete's performance.
Marisa's style was to lead by example. Under her coaching, Kellen quickly rocketed up the collegiate rankings in the 55kg class. She'd been diligent before they'd teamed up. On seeing her coach, a woman twice her age, train alongside her on conditioning and strength, Kellen had upped her game to match Marisa's fierce intensity.
Before the alarm, Marisa had observed Kellen continuing to spend time with a boyfriend, Darian. Her focus, by then, should have switched to preparing for her second match: adhering to her established routines; centering herself and relaxing with deliberate, regulated breathing; preparing her mind with positive self-talk and visualization.
It had irked Marisa to see the two still talking. After a long internal debate--far too long--she'd finally decided to act subtly. Just walk over, using her proximity to send the message that Kellen needed to get on with things. The fact Marisa had hesitated at all, instead of going straight over, was a sign their dynamic had shifted. It sent up warning bells--just not as annoyingly loud as the damned klaxon. The fault was entirely hers. How many of her own rules had she broken?
The lapse couldn't have been more poorly timed. Kellen was about to square off against her fiercest rival, Fiona Holland. They were as evenly matched as any two wrestlers Marisa had ever known. Their record, in head-to-head competition, was four wins each with four losses. For the past year and a half, they were ranked second and third, internationally. Their respective positions flipped each time they faced one another. And now that Ciara Walsh had just aged out, collegiately, Fiona held the top ranking with Kellen second.
No, Kellen wasn't to blame. But at the same time, the young wrestler would be ill-served if Marisa started to second guess herself. She'd vowed, six weeks earlier, that if Kellen's focus slipped, they'd have to make changes. And that's where they stood.
Marisa ran a hand along the nape of her neck, compressing tense muscles. Her headache was intensifying. Tied in a messy top knot, her hair was a stunning uniform grey. Quickly tied without thought, her loose strands looked as if they'd been artfully teased into alluring, diaphanous wisps. They hung at her temples, and along the back of her slender neck. Marisa's ashen locks had always been much greyer than blonde, starting at fourteen. It had been striking as a young woman, turning heads. At forty, her smooth complexion, delicate bone structure and piercing blue eyes still conveyed youth. And she still turned heads.
Marisa's body had remained slender, her muscles toned. She was fifteen centimeters shorter than Kellen, at 1.55 meters. As an athlete, she'd competed in the 48kg class. Her diminutive stature and slight frame made her no less intimidating.
After her divorce, Marisa had craved a change. She'd adamantly refused to simply wait out the remaining year of her marriage contract with Magnus. Having already renewed their partnership three times, both admitted their spark was gone. They were merely best friends, raising a son together.
For Magnus, ending things in divorce hadn't stung. He understood that once Marisa made up her mind, she wouldn't be swayed. It wasn't personal.
For years, Marisa's employer, the University of Oslo, had allowed her to pare back her scouting as she and Magnus raised a young son. She'd limited her activities to Europe and North Africa. Once Davis was older--and given Magnus's willingness to accommodate her travel schedule--she'd expanded her scouting to Asia, Australia, and the Americas.
As a talent scout, she'd discovered Akissi Djedje, convincing her to compete collegiately in Norway. The African wrestler won two Olympic silvers for the Ivory Coast. As a result, Marisa was accorded a great deal of leeway.
At a high school tournament in Victoria, British Columbia, Marisa had identified Kellen's talent immediately. The seventeen-year-old athlete was truly gifted. Marisa contacted the university's Athletic Director, praising Kellen's potential. During the conversation she dropped the O bomb: Olympics. That captured his interest. Then, she made a request; both parties understood that
demand
was closer to the mark. She'd make every effort to recruit the young Canadian, but only if she could coach her personally. She'd still scout, but Kellen would be her priority.
The AD hemmed and hawed before giving his response. "Sorry, but no."
Marisa didn't back down. Her resignation sat on the official doc server for the better part of a day before her implant signaled the receipt of an official communication. She read the cover letter, from the University President.
Dear Ms. Nyland,
We accede to your legitimate and reasonable proposition concerning Ms. Kellen Bennett's recruitment and training. Please see the attached, proposed employment contract. As you would be, henceforth, both coach and scout, I have authorized a commensurate annual salary increase. Additionally, please find the attached recruitment package that you may present to Ms. Bennett
With great esteem, Anita Enberg.
Rector, University of Oslo.
Kellen's parents had been anxious about the distance. As their first team act, the young wrestler raved about the university's academic and wrestling programs while Marisa impressed them with her steady charm and serious demeanor. She dropped the name of her greatest recruiting success. As Kellen's was a wrestling family, Marisa's role in Akissi's many accomplishments held weight with them.
The recruitment package was solid: the foreign student tuition, waved for four years; an unshared campus studio apartment at no charge; travel, food, academic tutoring, and incidental expenses, covered. And a generous top-up of Kellen's universal basic income. It had kicked in at sixteen. The UN had recently lowered the age of majority to sixteen for all member nations. That fall, Kellen moved to Oslo.
The air raid siren finally stopped. The noise had really been getting on Marisa's tits.
"Lockdown," the female AI voice stated calmly. "Lockdown."
A drill?
Holographic displays and handhelds exploded around her with flashes and alerts.
So, not a drill.
Marisa realized she'd disabled her implant. She could see others tilting their heads. It was something people just seemed to do, especially if they hadn't been implanted for long. Marisa blinked. The motion--and her clear intention behind it--reactivated her system. She started to lift hands to her ears, before quickly withdrawing them. It was an automatic gesture from her teenage years; something she'd always done to ensure her earbuds were firmly seated. She felt stupid doing it but hadn't been able to entirely break the habit. At least she wasn't tilting her head, like an idiot. Still, she didn't query the device. She did what she should have, long before, by approaching Kellen.
The four panels of the event display hanging from the gym's rafters switched to a grid of thumbnail views. They showed the university's perimeter cameras. Waterloo's Layton University was not one of the sprawling campuses of two decades earlier. It was one giant complex, designed to both lower its carbon footprint and make it more easily defensible. If the lockdown lasted for days, or even weeks, they'd have access to essentials, from food to accommodations. Marisa would push for the tournament to resume, of course, but ultimately, the AI would determine the protocols. It wasn't her first lockdown. If nothing else, she hoped to continue Kellen's training. Let her competitors get derailed and treat the interruption as a long, unanticipated break.
The central display cycled through full-screen views of various ingress points. Marisa watched as Wurtzite boron nitride plates slid into place, meeting in the middle. Self-repairing carbon fiber polymers strengthened the material, sealing the two halves. The measure would slow the aliens. External defense forces would slow them further or turn them to an easier target. As the laminae had silently met on screen, Marisa imagined a metallic clang as each door or window sealed over. The camera feeds weren't accompanied by audio, and even if they had been, Marisa knew the hermetic system was entirely silent. Her brain just thought there should be a sound, so provided one.
Striding over, Marisa studied Kellen. She was twenty years old. For the match, her long, medium-brown hair was tied in a loose ponytail. Her hair matched lovely brown eyes that sparked with intelligence. The light caramel highlights in her hair softened the irises, adding depth. They were her best feature. Marisa wasn't alone in the assessment.
Kellen smiled when she spotted her coach. Their eyes met. Marisa's stern expression never wavered, but she gave a quick wink in return. Kellen's smile broadened.
When the alarms had gone off, Kellen automatically reached for her handheld. It wasn't there. She was about an hour from the start of her match. Marisa's number one rule was
no distractions before a bout
. Well, Marisa had about a hundred
number one
rules, and that was one of them. Kellen saw the event display, realizing there had been an hour--about twenty minutes earlier.
Marisa would not be happy, quick wink or not.
Kellen glanced up at Darian. She'd been distracted. Darian should have taken his spot in the stands much earlier. Those words, though--the ones she'd longed to hear for so long--kept creeping up on her, stealing her focus: "I love you, Kellen."
"What's going on?" Marisa asked.
Darian's eyes went wide. "It's a snatch. A full-scale attack," he said.
Kellen side-eyed Darian's holographic display. His fingers spread apart in the air and the projected display widened.
The growing panic in the gym was understandable. An attack was frightening, but everyone feared abduction by the aliens. Not the same fears that had worked their way into pop culture when alien invasions were pure science fiction. People didn't fear living out their days in some sort of galactic zoo. Or being put on the alien's lunch menu. And certainly not the homophobic
alien