Mind control gay

Archive of Our Own beta

Jack Puttman never put out to produce enemies.

On the opposite, over the last year, he had been steadily accumulating lovers -- though that, too, was the result of unexpected happenstance rather than ambition. After he used his minor magical talent for Augury to save the nature from a rampaging demon by binding her to his service, one thing, as they speak, led to another. Now, in addition to the unearthly Sin Demon, Jack is also attended by an exiled High Sidhe noblewoman, a shapeshifting Puca, and a prominent wizard; all dominant, all brilliant, all beautiful. All, through their own means, bound to him.

Unbeknownst to Jack, and despite his top efforts, his docile demon managed to make enemies for him when she eliminated a scion of the local vampire clan, and now they are hungry for his blood.

Unbeknownst to the vampires, they don't stand a chance.

If only the vamps were the only things coming for him...



Archive of Our Own beta

Before the tadpoles took up residence in our heads, we had names, goals, and masks. But we did not include ourselves.
Only when everything was taken from us by the Guilds, mind control, and betrayal, did the chance for a recent beginning appear.

At a political ball on a forgotten planet, Tav is abducted, her powers suppressed, and reality begins to fracture. Astarion, Gale, Shadowheart, and Wyll must choose between survival, loyalty, and rebellion.
This is not a story about loss, but about how identity is born out of trauma, manipulation, and resistance to the system. There is some politics, a lot of world-building, psychological horror, and the uncertainty of one's own mind.

It is not a retelling. Skillfully, maybe a little. But mostly, it is a shift in perspective.
No magic, no gods. Instead, there is mental power, biotechnology, iconic tadpoles in a recent form, and shattered minds.

Michelle Meyers is the candidate for far right nationalist party One Nation in the seat of Bateman in Western Australia's state election on Saturday.

Her outlandish comments about LGBT people and thought control attracted widespread attention in February. Neither Meyers nor federal One Nation MPs responded to questions about her views at the time.

But when faced on Thursday with a reporter from Out in Perth – the West Australian LGBT news website that broke the story – Meyers finally spoke on the issue.

At a function with party leader Pauline Hanson at the Mount Hawthorn pub, Meyers told Out in Perth they had "trolled her big time".

“I never said that," she said. “I was misquoted, you never looked into any of the references that I set up and I was told that you were out to bag me because I don’t support your view.”

Asked if she stood by her implication that same-sex parented families are "fake families", Meyers said: “Yeah, they are, they’re fake families.”

Pledge Master

The first thing that Tim saw when entering the Gamma Phi chapter house was a pair of firm, shapely buttocks attached to a set of square male hips. Despite the engaged chaos of the rush party inside, his eyes seemed drawn to them, fixating for a moment on the tanned guy flesh, lingering for a brief second on the cleft between. He imagined the way the firm muscle would feel beneath the flesh, the way the heat would climb into his hands, the way the sweat would taste.

He looked away, quickly, after the image had burned itself into his libido. He'd learned young that it was best not to be caught staring. People might get the wrong -- or in his case, right -- impression.

The groans and laughter that came from the crowd in response to the upperclassman mooning the party from the balcony served as a counterpoint to Tim's lust.

"College, right?" Chris laughed. "How's your head?"

"Better," Tim said.

Both boys were freshmen from the same tiny town, best friends since childhood. They were both outcasts back in high-school, too smart, too curious for the provincial mindset that Little Falls had encouraged, both had agreed to come to Met