NewU - Cover

NewU

Copyright© 2022 by TheNovalist

Chapter 14

Mind Control Sex Story: Chapter 14 - Pete is a normal guy. A college student, a friend, and the quintessential black sheep of his family. That all changes one rainy autumn night at the hands of an out-of-control car and a well-placed tree. Waking up in hospital, he realizes that something is different. A whole new world opens up to him. New friends, hot nurses, cities of the mind, and a butler that only he can see. But the shadowy specter of unknown enemies lurk in the background, ever watching and ever waiting.

Caution: This Mind Control Sex Story contains strong sexual content, including Ma/Fa   Consensual   Mind Control   Romantic   Heterosexual   Fiction   Horror   Humor   Mystery   Restart   Superhero   Science Fiction   Extra Sensory Perception   Paranormal   Magic   BDSM   DomSub   Rough   Anal Sex   Cream Pie   Facial   Oral Sex   Squirting   Tit-Fucking   Big Breasts   Body Modification   Doctor/Nurse   Small Breasts   Geeks   Revenge   Slow   Violence  

It didn’t even take ten minutes to drive the distance it had taken Mary almost two hours to walk. I pulled the car up outside the pretty-looking house. The gardens were well tended, the lawn was immaculate, and the wooden shutters that were closed over the windows had probably been painted every year for decades. This was a house that had seen a lot of love.

It was about to see a lot of violence too.

“Stay here,” I whispered to Mary as I unbuckled my seatbelt.

“But I...”

“Mary,” I said a little more firmly. “I need you to stay here. Please. This isn’t going to be pretty, and you don’t want to see it.”

She looked past me at the idyllic Christmas scene in her garden. The lights were still blinking from their places along the line of the roof, the hints of the Christmas tree could be made out through one of the shutters, and the wreath still hung definitely onto the front door. Under any other circumstances, this would be the last place you would expect such horrors.

She nodded solemnly.

“When I get out, I need you to lay your head in my seat. I don’t want you to get caught by a stray bullet if they start shooting.”

She looked down at my seat and then nodded again.

“This will be over soon, I promise.” I opened the door and climbed out of the car.

I looked out at the garden and rolled my eyes. “Alright, Jeeves. I give up. What is it with these people and hiding?”

There was a little light coming from a streetlight further down the street, a little more peeking through the slats of the shutters, but otherwise, the area was dark. That made the glaringly obvious glow of the inquisitors waiting for me even more obvious. Two were hiding behind the walls, one on each side of the garden. One was behind me, lying prone at the base of a tree on a small rise overlooking the street. A fourth was just inside the doorway. All of them were breathing soft and steady, each of them was peering at me, and all of them were armed.

Seriously, do they not know they glow in the fucking dark? This is embarrassing!”

I meant it. For a group of people who had tracked me so expertly, whittled down my location so quickly, spotted my trap so easily, and found a way to bypass it so ruthlessly, hiding behind a wall, in the dark, when they had the equivalent of a Hollywood searchlight pointed at them at all times was, frankly, ridiculous!

It is possible, Sir. We have never explored the possibility that they cannot see their auras as we can. No inquisitor has ever said anything to us about them. Perhaps you are right; it would explain why they are so laughably bad at any activity involving a low profile.”

I sighed and shook my head. “Whatever. It’s something to think about later. Is the family in there?”

Yes, Sir, An elderly gentleman and three children are in a bedroom on the upper floor and to the rear of the property.

Cool. Okay, let’s get this over with!”

I turned around to ensure Mary had lowered her head into my seat and had no view of what was about to happen. I felt the Inquisitor on the rise, steadying his breath, no doubt to control his breathing, ready for the shot with the long-barreled rifle that was almost certainly in his hands. These people were nothing if not predictable.

It’s not like I could clearly see them, it was still dark, but each of the intruders was silhouetted against the glow of their aura. I could see the air currents of their breath, I could even see the ambient air temperature around them changing, but as usual, their minds were completely blank.

Man-on-the-grassy-knoll was clearly focusing all his attention on me, so much so that he didn’t notice the roots of the tree that he was lying next to were un-burying themselves and coiling up behind him like a snake. My power-enhanced hearing was picking up the whispered communications off their radio earpieces.

“Position two, what is he doing?”

“He’s just standing there, looking at the house.”

“Is he armed?”

“Negative, no weapons sighted.”

“Received. Make ready your shot, and be prepared to fire if he acts aggressively.”

“Copy that.”

The almost silent click as the safety switch on his rifle was flicked off was almost immediately drowned out by the wet, squelching splat as two tree roots, each like a sharpened stake, were plunged into the back of his head. He was dead before he could make a sound. Still, for good measure, the roots ripped themselves in opposite directions and spit his head open like an overripe fruit.

With a deep breath, I took a few steps into the garden.

To the outside observer, not a sound had been made. A few of them may have heard a muffled grunt and a few soft thuds coming from behind one of the walls. But they would never have guessed that an assassin’s silenced weapon had inexplicably jerked its barrel upwards in its owner’s hands, and the firing pin, without any input from the trigger, had sent six bullets into the skull of the man looking down at it in confusion. Most people wouldn’t know that there was rarely a Hollywood-Esque scream after a headshot. The brain’s ability to command other parts of the body, namely the lung, lips, or vocal cords, was usually cut off by the sudden and violent introduction of lead projectiles and skull fragments.

Perhaps a few more of them would have heard the gasps of air as the assassin’s friend, hiding behind the wall on the other side of the garden, had the shoulder strap of his assault rifle suddenly and mysteriously wrap around his own neck and squeeze with the power of two freight trains pulling in opposite directions. They may not know that woven nylon straps are an incredibly strong material capable of handling massive loads before breaking. The power of those loads, when pressed down onto a human throat, wouldn’t just strangle a man but would crush his windpipe, along with all the essential arteries and nerves in the neck, into a mushy pulp against his spine. They may, however, have commented on the fact that the sudden pressurization of blood inside his head would have caused his eyeballs to burst out of their sockets and blood to jet violently out of his nose and ears.

But, of course, these witnesses weren’t around. There was only me, striding quietly, calmly, yet purposefully up to the door of the house after already dispatching three of the six men left guarding Mary’s family.

The fourth man, the one tucked just out of sight on the inside of the doorway, was hissing desperately into his radio, trying to get a situation report from men who were no longer alive to give one. Of course, by the third attempt at contact, he had worked out that something was wrong.

“One, this is five, contact lost with all sentries. Contact is assumed hostile, over!”

“Received, five ... four, terminate the family. Five, engage the target, and I will engage from the window.”

A window to my left on the ground floor shattered, and the shutters burst open, but I was already too close to the house for the intruder there to get a decent shot. The man at the door lunged around the corner, his weapon raised, only for the clip to fall out of the bottom of it and the round in the chamber to eject itself harmlessly onto the wooden floor. The man only had time to blink at it before his own tactical vest yanked him forward while his pants jerked backward, tipping his body forward until his head was pressed against the door frame. The heavy composite door slammed closed.

Once, twice, then a third time. Again and again, the man’s skull was crushed under the force. His body was tossed back into the house, crashing into another man running for the stairs - presumably the one sent to dispatch Mary’s family. The weight of his dead friend knocked him off his feet and sent him hurtling into the post at the bottom of the stairs.

The man known as “one,” still wearing his ski mask and still brandishing his submachine gun, came careening around the corner just as I crossed the threshold into the house. The collar of his sweater jerked tightly around his neck and hoisted him, kicking and thrashing, into the air; his silenced weapon unloaded half its clip into his friend and then promptly disassembled itself. Caught as he was still scrambling to his feet, the man known as “four” took most of the rounds to his chest before slumping lifelessly against the stair post.

“Now,” I glared at the man being held in midair by his own clothes. “I am going to go upstairs. If a hair is so much as out of place on anyone in this family, your night is going to end very, very badly. Probably in about a week.” I started up the stairs. The man stayed hovering where he was. “You know, I’m getting quite a taste for this whole torture thing; I wonder if I should be worried about that.”

A few moments later, I opened the door of the rear bedroom. Stan, his face caked in dried blood, looked fearfully up at me as I stepped inside. But his face seemed to soften as he saw that I was not only unarmed but was not wearing a mask either.

“Are you ... the man they sent my wife to find?” He asked in a whisper. The three children were all sleeping on the one single bed behind him.

“I am. Mary is fine; she is outside in my car.” I whispered back. Stan started to pull himself to his feet. “No, please, I need you to stay here for just a little longer. I need to ... err ... have a chat with the man who thinks that any of this is okay.”

Stan leveled his gaze at me. “I fought for my country in the Falklands, son. I am no stranger to violence.”

“I know, Stan,” I said with a soft smile. “But what happens if one of those children wakes up to find you’re not here? What if they come downstairs, looking for you, and see ... the mess? You and I may be familiar with death, but they don’t need to be.”

He looked over his shoulders at the three sleeping pictures of innocence. He sighed deeply, nodded, and sat back down. “Mary is okay?”

“I’m not going to lie to you; the weather took its toll on her. I’ve warmed her up and dried her off as best I could, but she is probably going to need a new nightie. Otherwise, she is fine. Physically, at least.”

He nodded with another sigh of relief. “Thank you, son. I appreciate that.”

“You have nothing to thank me for,” I said as I turned back towards the door. “None of this would have happened if it wasn’t for me.”


There is a scene in the movie Sin City where Mickey Roarke’s character drives a knife into the guts of a man he is questioning just to make sure he is being taken seriously. Gerard Butler does something similar in Olympus Has Fallen. I had always thought that was just a bit of Hollywood’s trademark over-dramatization, but I am never one to shy away from admitting I was wrong.

The man, who refused to be called anything but “one,” was sneering defiantly at me until one of Mary’s razor-sharp knives was driven through his arm and into the armrest of the chair he was pinned to. Funnily enough, he stopped sneering after that.

“Fucking Evo scum!” he spat in Swedish as Fiona and Jerry cringed from their place, removing the last of the intruder’s bodies from the hallway. I had called them after speaking to Stan, and they had pulled up outside the house about fifteen minutes later. Together, they had guided Mary, her eyes closed, through the wreckage of her front porch, up the stairs, and reunited her with her family. The time was now 10:27 PM, and I was very aware that I was working on a deadline.

Jeeves was keeping me up to date on the location of the fourteen other Inquisitors; they were all still gathered at the abandoned warehouse a few miles away. Not only had they not moved, but they had also made no attempt to contact any of the members of the team left behind. Of course, the thought had occurred to me that it was the house team that was meant to maintain contact. Contact that they were almost certainly late for by now. But I was hoping that they hadn’t worked out that they were being tracked yet, so I still had something of the element of surprise in my favor.

I held up Becky’s blood-splattered ID card and swung it in front of one’s face. I had found it on the counter in Mary’s kitchen, the proof that she had been taken. Still, the fact that the note had said two people, yet Jeeves could only identify Becky, plus there now only being Becky’s ID as proof, was bothering me more than it should have. “I am only going to ask you one more time; then I am going to start cutting pieces of you off and feeding them to you. Who else was taken?”

“Jesus, that’s dark, dude,” Jerry muttered as they dragged the last body outside and promptly incinerated it. Nothing but ash and scorch marks remained of the rest of the team. Both of my assistants had been horrified at the state of the men who had invaded Mary’s house. Fiona had gagged violently when they had found the remains of the sniper on the rise, but they had both understood the stakes. These men had taken someone important to me, and there were no lengths I wouldn’t go to to get them back. There may have been some sort of unspoken rules of conduct within the Conclave, but I was not beholden to them. When it came to protecting those I loved, nothing was off the table.

One glared at me.

I cut off one of his fingers and stuffed it down his throat. Unfortunately, his immunity to my powers meant that I could not force his jaw to chew it for me, nor could I compel him to swallow. His physical body was just as resistant to my powers as any other Inquisitor. His ability to resist biology was less so. I clamped my hand over his mouth and pinched his nose with my fingers. The salivary glands, stimulated by the inability to breathe, coupled with having something hard in his mouth, went into overdrive.

He swallowed.

“One done, nine to go,” I said calmly yet menacingly as I pressed the blade against his next finger. “Then we move onto your toes ... No prizes for guessing where we will go after that.”

“Fuck you!” he barked, “I am ready to die for my creed.”

“Die?” I arched an eyebrow at him. “Who said anything about you dying? I am not going to kill you, sunshine; I am going to keep you alive. It’s all set up at the cottage. I have saline to keep you hydrated, Epinephrine to make sure you don’t pass out on me, antibiotics to keep you infection-free, and let’s be honest here. There is enough of you to feed to you to keep you alive for months ... if not longer. You know, I have grown up hearing stories about how much a human body can be put through before it shuts down. You are an Inquisitor. Aren’t you even a little curious to find out if your body can tolerate more than a human’s?”

He chose not to answer.

“The thing is,” I went on. “I have absolutely no idea how to find your boss. He sent me a lovely letter, invited me to this grand party, and ended it by saying I would be able to find him. But I will level with you; I have no fucking idea how to find him.” Yes, of course, that was a lie, but one didn’t need to know that. “The problem for you is that he is holding one of my friends, maybe two of them, and if I don’t get to this party by midnight, he will kill them. So right now, I am just wanting to make someone suffer. It’s a way of feeling like I am being productive and less helpless when, really, I’m feeling anything but. If I can’t save her...” I held the ID badge up again, “Then, at least, I can punish you.”

“If I tell you what you want to know, you will kill me anyway.”

“Again, says who?” I squinted at him. “I don’t know where you people are getting your information from, but I don’t want to kill anyone. All I want to know is who they have and where they are. You don’t have to give me names, you don’t have to tell me trade secrets, and I don’t need to know your King’s master plan. All I am asking you for is which of my friends have been taken, which I would find out when I get to the party anyway, and where they are being held, which your leader seems to think I already know. If you tell me that, I will let you go. You have my word that I will not harm another hair on your head.”

One looked like he was thinking about it.

“10:35. I don’t know how far away this party is, but I’ve gotta be there by midnight. Time’s-a-ticking. I don’t think I need to tell you that if time runs out for me, it runs out for you, too.”

“Okay, I will answer those two questions, and you will let me go, yes?” One finally said.

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