The Erotic Mind-Control Story Archive

Night Games part 19

By T. MaskedWriter

“Well, when he took us inta court, I couldn’t believe my eyes.
The judge was a fishing buddy that I recognized.
I said ‘Hey, judge, old buddy, old pal.
I’ll pay ya that hundred I owe ya if you’ll get me outta this spot.’
So, he gave my friends a little fine to pay.
He turned around and grinned at me and said
‘Ninety days, Jerry! When you hot, you hot!’
N’ I said ‘Thanks a lot!’”
—Jerry Reed, “When You’re Hot, You’re Hot

Contessa Helena de San Finzione left the conference room, accompanied by Balozi Faraji, the President of Uongo. Lady Maria Louisa Francesca de San Finzione followed, escorted by Troy Equals.

“You gave a most convincing presentation, Mr. Equals.” Faraji said in Swahili. “I shall sign La Contessa’s revised treaty instead.”

Helen translated to English for Troy. She regretted again using her power on Faraji when she should have just done what she ended up doing and just let him talk to her economist. Troy produced one of his cards and responded.

“I’ll be happy to answer any further questions. Having to work with the diamond companies is inevitable. With this plan, you’ll be doing so from a position of strength.”

Faraji agreed. He turned to Helen.

“I have people to advise that we are changing the treaty.” He told her. “And some diamond company executives to disappoint.” Faraji looked down at his wrist. “And a watch to return.”

“I’ll escort you out.” She replied, then turned to Troy. “I’m going to see my guest out like a proper hostess. But thank you for everything.”

“And then what? You’re going to need real rest soon, Helen.”

Helen hadn’t gotten much sleep while they were trying to recover the Star of Uongo. Troy had used mind control to do what they called “giving a boost.” He commanded her to take a ten-second nap and get the mental rest of a full night’s sleep. However, it had limits. Her body was still going on what it had since she’d last slept, and she was risking the possibility of a hard, sudden crash if she kept going too long and physical exhaustion caught up with her.

“I’ll have some more coffee.” She reassured him. “I still have other guests to deal with.”

“I think we should be with you for that. You passing out in the interrogation room with them would be bad.”

She nodded, then went to escort Faraji to his limo. Troy went to tell the others that they’d be going to Fort Ernesto. Maria returned to her job of ruling the country while her great grandmama saw to this matter.

* * *

MPs entered the room. One of them opened the door to the cell that held Tracy Baker, Alice Mei, Oscar Dodge, Morris Sinclair, Franz Hauber, and Spencer Malone. Together with Gordon Walker, who was still in the infirmary after his fight with Julie Equals, they formed the group that Helen had given the name “Baker’s Half-Dozen” in her head.

“Mei.” The MP said. “You’re up.”

Alice gave a worried look to the others. Tracy reached out her hand and touched Alice’s briefly. Then she followed the MPs out of the holding area and into an interrogation room. Helen sat smoking in the interrogator’s seat and gestured for Alice to take the other. She sat down across the table from her. Helen’s friends watched and listened in the other room, from the other side of the one-way mirror.

“Hi, Alice.” Helen said with a stream of smoke into the air between them. “Hope you don’t mind smoking. Well, actually, one of the cool things about being Contessa is that it doesn’t matter if you mind. And I’m planning to be in this room for a little bit here. So, yeah, smoking’s gonna happen.”

“Then go ahead, I guess.”

“Thank you.” Helen said, beaming. She reached into her black Prada Arcade bag and pulled out a SanFinTech tablet. Something else in the bag clinked when she brought it out and brought up Alice’s info. “I figured I’d start with you because your file’s the shortest. You actually have no criminal record. Speeding and parking, sure, but nothing anybody doesn’t have. Nothing real. I’m amazed.”

“I don’t go out in the field with the guys much.” Alice admitted. “I had to this time for the GPR, but I’m usually back at the base with Tracy and Spencer. Gordon wears a helmet camera if they might need my advice in the field. We learned that from the Gold Room job.”

A look of disappointment appeared on Helen’s face.

“I know this is your first time, Alice, but as someone who’s been in your seat, you’re making this too easy for me. Unless this is your way of making a plea deal.”

“It’s not.” Alice insisted. “We talked after Tracy came back from whatever you showed her and decided that being honest with you would be the least painful route. No, I know those guys aren’t going to sell me out, so I’m not going to sell them out either.”

The disappointment disappeared.

“That’ll save us some time, then. We can skip this ‘how ya doing/where were you on the night’ shit and get straight to the important stuff. So, let’s start with why someone with a spotless record would be a part of this team.”

“You said it yourself. Women’s pay in STEM fields is shit like everywhere else. Do you know where I was when Tracy found me? Making designer drugs because my paycheck only covered rent, usually keeping the lights on, and sometimes ramen. She showed me how to apply my degrees to much more fun and profitable activities. Plus, I get to see my theories put to the test. Tracy said you already know about the Gold Room. My idea was sound. It would’ve worked if they didn’t have more security than we anticipated.”

“And your stuff wouldn’t have worked last night if I’d planned for the possibility of gas.”

“How long did my adhesive hold?”

“They had to destroy the antique door. Now it’s going to be replaced by a modern one that won’t scrape the floor when it opens, the way I like.” Helen spotted a tiny triumphant upturning of Alice’s lips. “I’m sorry, are you smiling at the news that you destroyed my favorite door?”

“No. I’m smiling that my stuff worked.”

“I can respect science. Ok, Alice. Next question: What has Tracy told you about the letter?”

“Only that she knows who the father of your children is. She says there’s no point in telling us, since you’re just going to make us all forget it. I tried to explain that meant there wasn’t any point not telling us either, but she’s still keeping your secret. She was talking about sending it back to you before you showed up.”

“If I had a little pen and notepad, this is the part where I’d be checking off something.” Helen answered. I’ve got a few of these to get through today, so last question. How do you know Johannes Pretorius?”

“I don’t. Is that the name Tracy gave you? She’s the one who knows the people.”

That answer satisfied Helen as well.

“Ok, that’s all I need from you, Alice. Now, I’m not sending you back to the cell. The Ultimados are going to take you somewhere else until we can all meet up again. It’s that flair for the dramatic Tracy was talking about. They’ll wonder what I’ve done with you, and that’ll encourage them to keep up this ‘telling me the truth’ policy.”

Alice thought of the others back in the cell, wondering what La Contessa had done with her, and saw her idea working. Watching their numbers diminish, fearing what might be in store for them, and realizing that their only hope is being honest, so she’ll show mercy. An expression appeared on her face that conveyed the message “that’s a pretty good move” to Helen.

“Wow, you are evil.”

“My friends say I’m unfettered by principles.”

Helen motioned for the Ultimados to take Alice away and bring in the next one.

* * *

Troy & Julie Equals, Susan Bailey, and Nigel Mander watched Helen speak to Franz Hauber from the other side of the one-way mirror. Unbeknownst to Helen, Supervisor Luc Allaine of Interpol had also arrived to witness her interrogations.

“I must implore you, Troy; Susan.” Luc implored them. “I know that Helena will listen to you if you ask for mercy. I just barely feel comfortable calling her Helena after she told me I could.”

“I don’t think you have too much to worry about, Luc.” Susan assured him. “Helen’s doing what Troy calls her ‘Before I kill you, Mr. Blofeld’ routine, but if we think she’s going to do something bad, we’ll stop her. And yes, we’ll go by Troy’s definition of bad.”

That assuaged some of the detective’s concerns.

“I have not been in San Finzione long and only worked with La Contessa once before I moved here, but I have already learned that a large part of my job will be trying to do it around her. The laws prevent me stopping her involvement in criminal investigations and she can dispense summary judgment to any I should happen to catch.” He looked at the interview taking place on the other side of the glass. “Hernando warned me when I first came here that I might find myself overburdened with assistance. I see now what he meant.”

“I’m sure you get plenty of cases that don’t merit Her Countessness’ personal attention.” Mander told him, watching Helen handle Hauber. “The country’s got a justice system and a prison and everything. She only handles special situations like these.”

“Oui, I have visited Baglio Roncolare before. The walled-in place where things are pruned from the Vine of Society. A fitting name for a prison.”

Julie had something to say about that.

“This country had a long history of winemaking before becoming a tourist trap. You’ll still be able to bust punks. I mean, Helena doesn’t pay Prefect LeGrasse to sit on his ass and be incompetent. There’s still plenty of crime in San Finzione that doesn’t have her permission.”

Troy walked over and talked to the detective.

“Do you think none of us ever ponder the question ‘What if we one day have to stop Helen?’ That we haven’t discussed such things with and without her being part of the conversation? It took us two years to decide to teach it to her because I considered the consequences that long.”

“And we were ten when we found it.” Julie pointed out. “Considering the ethics of Doing What We Do is something Troy’s done from that moment on.”

“And I deal with the knowledge that if we’d taught her sooner, her mother might still be alive. She’s never held that against us. We won’t let her go too far, Luc.”

“I’m not worried about any of you.” Luc replied. “I understand enough about your ability to know that it does not work over electronic media like the speakers between the rooms. What can you do if you should need to stop her from in here?”

“Break the glass.” Julie and Mander answered simultaneously.

“The price of loving her is always thinking about this.” Susan added.

On the other side of the glass, Helen was finishing with Franz. She lit another cigarette. It compelled Luc to do the same.

They continued watching as Spencer Malone was brought into the room.

* * *

Spencer took the seat across from Helen. She’d done two of these and had two more to go. And, from the looks on the faces of Baker’s Half-Dozen so far, her tactics had put them in the correct mindset of “tell her the truth and don’t try any shit.” The grin she was seated across from was new. Helen looked to where Spencer’s eyes were fixed and determined that they weren’t on the pendant they’d tried to steal from her.

“Am I actually going to have to tell you where my eyes are, Spencer?”

“Huh?” He huhed. “OH no, sorry. I just never expected to come this close to you. Besides, ain’t looking into your eyes a bad idea?”

“Staring at my tits isn’t a better one.”

“You’re gonna make me forget all of this anyway.” He pointed out. “Might as well enjoy it. So, this power, can you teach it to me?”

“One of the criteria upon which we judge who to share it with is how quickly after learning about it they ask us that question. The last person we shared it with never asked that, neither have the next three. Two of them CAN’T ask yet, but they don’t have to, they’re already in. You’ve just disqualified yourself, Spencer.” Helen tried to move on. She listened to his accent. “So, Houston, eh? You hear they’re gonna cut Alaska in half so Texas will be the THIRD-largest state?”

“Wow, you really can nail accents like that. Is that part of your power?”

“Yes and no. I’m… usually the one asking the questions here, Spencer.”

“I’ve read about you online for years. You think I’m going to pass this opportunity up? Hey, is it true that the only reason you don’t own Excalibur is that it won’t leave England without The One True King?”

“Can’t even fool it with the Chunnel.” Helen tried to brush off one of the many rumors she’d started about herself. “Now, let’s get back to your role on the team.”

“I sit at my computer and hack things. You want something hacked; I hack it. YOU’RE much more interesting. Hey, is it true you can’t be killed by fire?”

“We’re up in the air about cave-ins, too.” Helen answered, understanding how this one was going to work now. “I’ve never really been into the tech end of crime. At both the hotel and the castle, you had Morris break in and plant something rather than…” Helen made a motion of typing at a keyboard.

“You had a CCTV system at the hotel. The CC stands for ‘closed circuit,’ which meant there was nothing connected to the internet to hack. So, someone had to go in and manually patch me in. We encountered the same issue on the Eye of Andalusia job. I was able to take care of most of the other security, but the weight trigger on the stone was entirely mechanical, so I had nothing to hack again. And yeah, I could’ve gotten through your castle’s web security and found your personal computer that way in the time I was given, but all that does no good if the damn thing’s turned off! Lurking on your servers for the right moment would’ve given me time to be discovered. And you’re too smart to cloud-save anything useful. Having Morris put a tap on your computer was easier.” Spencer took a breath. “Ok, so, have you really been to Area 51?”

“I have.” Helen answered with a drag. “And there’s nothing there. All the good stuff’s hidden around Areas 1-50, but nobody even talks about them, because they’re all busy staring at 51 and waiting for the next laser show. Interpol tells me Lone Star’s a well-known name in hacker circles. A hacktivist who decided to sell his skills for profit. I’m detecting a theme with the people Tracy picks for her crew.”

“She surrounds herself with smart people. That Susan lady who showed me…” He sighed. “The greatest thing in the world said you did the same. People think the guy who spends all day on the computer doesn’t notice what’s going on around him, but I see you two have a lot in common. My turn. Is it true that you have the bones of Warren Zevon?”

“Warren was cremated, and his ashes scattered at sea, and that’s the ONLY reason I don’t. But I think I’ve got everything I need from you, Spencer. I’m ready for Morris.”

“Ok, but did you really…” Helen cut him off.

“Look, I’ve got a saying, Spencer: Everything they say about me is true, the lies doubly so. And before you ask me another, I think I need to reiterate what you said at the beginning. That you’ll only remember what I want you to remember.”

“But…”

Helen called for the Ultimados to take him to be with the others.

* * *

Morris’ questioning went more quickly than the others. Not only had he agreed to Tracy’s plan of telling Helen everything and hoping for mercy, the motivation of getting to see how Gordon was doing was enough to get him to speak freely. The only surprise in it was his asking Helen for a cigarette twice during the conversation, which she was ok with obliging. She’d also determined that Troy was correct in his assessment that the man needed a better therapist than whoever he was seeing currently.

Oscar Dodge walked in and took the perp’s seat. Helen worked to stop her smile from becoming a grin. The only change to the room that had been made since Morris left was two empty coffee cups sitting on the table.

“Well,” she welled. “Oscar Dodge in my interrogation room. This is, indeed, an honor, sir. I mean, I pulled the Dodge Sting twice before knowing it had a name and it was named after you. I wanna do a little something with you. This is going to surprise my friends watching us on the other side of the mirror, too.”

He looked confused as she reached into her purse and pulled out the object that had clinked earlier. A small wine bottle emerged.

“I’m sorry the Ultimados don’t have proper wine glasses, can’t expect those on an army base. And no, I’m not a fan of alcohol at all. However, I AM the ruler of a country whose main export for centuries has been wine, and La Familia Royale owns wineries. Therefore, it’s expected of me to have a glass now and then.” She produced a corkscrew from the purse and opened the bottle. “And I’ve gotta be able to say I’ve had a drink with you.”

The older gentleman shrugged a shrug of acceptance and took his cup once Helen had filled it. He smelled the wine before taking a drink.

“Very nice.” He commented. “What year is it?”

“41.” Helen answered, taking a drink of her own. “When the Nazis invaded, their tanks destroyed the vineyards, and it took years to rebuild. Anyone telling you they’ve got a bottle of San Finzione wine dated from 1942-1950 is lying.”

“I’ll remember that.” Oscar told her. “And I saw the movie. I noticed the others never came back to the cell. Pretty scary, but I’ve picked up that scaring people is how you operate.”

“My friends have a joke about San Finzione’s real chief export being Fear of Me. Like I said in the cell, it’s good for business. It obviously doesn’t work all the time because we’re getting the chance to have this talk now. I’ll try not to fangirl, I just got to experience the other side of that with Spencer.”

“And I’d imagine you got the same with Tracy. The woman looks up to you.”

“You, too.” Helen agreed. “She spent most of that conversation pleading for mercy for the rest of you. And you were the first one she mentioned by name. Don’t worry, I’m planning to, and everyone else is fine and waiting for you in the mess hall. Except Morris, he’s been taken to see Gordon.” Helen leaned back and turned her neck toward the one-way mirror. “You hear that, everybody? I’m planning to show mercy.”

The intercom between the two rooms clicked on.

“Your definition or Troy’s?” Susan’s voice asked.

“A little of both.” Helen answered.

“Ok.” The intercom clicked off. Helen turned back to Oscar.

“And I notice you’re on a first name basis with everyone.” Oscar pointed out.

“La Contessa is on a first name basis with everyone, but most people are not on a first name basis with La Contessa. You can go ahead and call me Helena. I know you probably heard of me as Helen Parker, but there are five or six people in the world who get to call me Helen anymore and only two of them do it.”

“That’s fair, Helena.” Her smile grew a little bigger. “But yes, Tracy’s a natural leader. My own family… well, you’ve got kids too, and a great-granddaughter. You wouldn’t want this life for them, would you?” She agreed that she wouldn’t. “But Tracy, when she met me, she said she wanted to learn to play the game from the best. So, she tracked me down. I was laying low at the time, and disguise and forgery are my specialties. Do you know how hard it is to find me when I don’t want to be found? But she did it. And convinced me to teach her the things I knew about how to be a good criminal. Of course, then she heard about your past before all this and decided I was the best she could learn from, but YOU were the best she could take from.”

“I’ve been saying how she values all of you, but it did seem like you had a special place in her heart.”

“She’s the one who wanted to follow in my footsteps. My son and daughter know what Dad used to do for a living. Or rather, they think I used to. The grandkids think Grandpa’s a Parrothead who retired early and spends that retirement following Jimmy Buffett on tour, and that’s why I travel so much.”

“Buffett does a pretty good cover of ‘Lawyers, Guns, and Money.’” Helen mused.

“Speaking of Warren Zevon, did you know I was at one of the concerts at the Roxy where he recorded ‘Stand in The Fire?’ I couldn’t tell you which songs were from the show I caught, but I’m cheering somewhere in the background there.”

“Are you lying to me?” Helen asked excitedly. “I AM talking to a great conman who likely did his research on me before coming to my country. And I respect my elders, however, I won’t hesitate to do The Thing to get the truth out of you on a claim like that.”

Oscar’s answer was to whistle the intro of “Excitable Boy.” Helen caught it on the second note and joined in. Helen took a drink, made a fist, and pounded the table, then stood up.

“Tell you what, Oscar. After that, I don’t care if it’s a con. YOU, sir, are free to go!”

He looked at the door, then turned back to her.

“It’s a great offer, Helena. But I can’t take it if it’s not there for Tracy and the others.”

“Are you sure?” She asked. “This isn’t a Prisoner’s Dilemma deal. Interpol’s already here by now, the Supervisor of the local office has probably been listening this whole time. He does his job, but he’s real person, not a cop. I’m sure if I ask nicely, he’ll agree to give you a head start.” She looked at the expression on his face and got serious again. “Ok, yes. Yes, I can see that you are. All right, then, Oscar. You can join the others in the mess hall. Tracy will be along shortly. We had a talk about my penchant for menacing and making her wait to find out what happened to you all has gotten the last of it out of my system. We’ll all talk again there.”

Helen grabbed the ash tray and they left for the mess hall. Two Ultimados followed them. The other two went to bring Tracy to them.

After a few moments, everyone who’d been watching and listening went to join the proceedings.

* * *

Tracy Baker was led out of the cell and to the mess hall. The sounds of a kitchen getting ready to serve lunch could be heard from nearby. MPs stood at all the exits to the room. She saw most of her people there, as well as the new faces she’d encountered last night before a bag was put over her head and she was brought here. Helen was speaking to her friends as she approached.

“Thanks for looking out for them.” Helen was telling her friends. “And me. Now, if you don’t mind, this next part of things is for criminals only.”

Troy, Julie, Susan, and Luc looked over at Mander, who would obviously be included in Helen’s statement. They told Helen they’d meet her back at the castle and left. She then turned to see Tracy approaching and went to the table where everyone except Morris and Gordon were seated. Helen sat down and motioned for Tracy to sit as well. A tray of food was waiting for her.

“Hi, Tracy.” Helen said. “Morris has gone to the infirmary to see Gordon. He’ll be on crutches and have a couple casts when you see him, but the doctors say he’ll recover. The others have already had lunch. Here’s yours.”

“Thank you, Helena.” Tracy said, sitting down graciously. “You dismissed your friends and Interpol. That’s worrisome.”

“It shouldn’t be.” Helen countered. “I had some things I wanted to say to all of you. One of you can tell the other two when we’re done.”

Helen took her ashtray to the head of the table. She lit a cigarette and laid her palms on the table, leaning forward and looking at the assembled group.

“I feel I should explain something first.” She turned to Tracy. “What you saw last night was a special case. Those things in my dungeons that were once men came at me through my family. They killed people and kidnapped my great-granddaughter to get to me. So, I took their minds away. I took every memory they had of a time when they weren’t being tortured night and day. They don’t even get to know what they did to deserve their fate. And my picture is everywhere so that they never forget the one thing I want them to know. That the only ‘why’ to their suffering is ‘I wish it.’”

Helen let the room consider that a moment before continuing.

“But you haven’t crossed that line. You’ve crossed a few. You tried to hit me in the home where my babies sleep. And you hurt their father, but Gordon’s paid for that. But you haven’t seriously hurt anyone else. The President’s guards have recovered. The two cops, well, were cops, and they’ll be fine. So, what to do with you. You’re all guilty, we know that. So, do I throw you into Baglio Roncolare? If so, which part? There’s the wing of the Baglio where we send people to be rehabilitated and then there’s the wing where we keep the people who need to be kept. And do you know how much I have to dislike you personally to get sent to prison in MY country? Apart from the ‘where my children play with their toys’ thing, you haven’t even done that. If there’s someone who’s pissed me off in all this, it’s Johannes Pretorius. We’re going to get him, it’s just a question of how.”

“And what can we do about that, Helena?” Tracy asked. “I gave you everything on the meet on the way to the castle. When his plane lands, your Ultimados will be waiting to nab him.”

“And once we’ve got him, yes, I can find something to charge him with. But for what I’ve got in mind for him, some of that theatrical stuff is called for. Therefore, I’m going to put off your sentencing and give you the opportunity to help me take him down.”

“Can’t you just take control of him?” Alice asked. “Then you can do whatever you want to him.”

“That’s true. But it won’t be as fun. Oh, and my way, you’ll still get paid. Interested?”

Everyone in the group looked at each other. Tracy then looked to Helen.

“What do we have to do?”