Forums » Uncategorized

"Revenge of the Flinker"

  • 1. apríla 2008 15:50:17 CEST
    "Revenge of the Flinker" is a much longer novel than "The Flinker" and was published nearly two years later. Here's a summary and some extracts:

    There was a time when every mature female had her own flinker to use and abuse, to feed and protect and, of course, to satisfy her sexual needs however much the flinker might suffer in the process of fulfilling those needs. She would never have even considered sharing him or allowing any other female to touch him, except possibly her own young vixlings as soon as they were of an age when an education in sexual matters started to become desirable.

    That was long ago, and as anyone will know who has read Susan Strict's The Flinker, the first book in this series, that world is now very different. For many years the shortage of flinkers has meant that society has become accustom to sharing those few remaining at public gatherings where each female of an appropriate age (and older) can satisfy her sexual needs on whichever flinker has been called, restrained, and forced to provide his services.

    Every flinker is called in turn. Every flinker that is, except one. Almost a recluse, he made his home where he was unlikely to be found. He might have lived there by the edge of the huge inland sea until he died of old age, if a remarkable series of events had not led to that great sea revealing one of its darkest secrets.

    Something is stirring deep in the sea. An army is on the move, and the lone flinker is convinced it is an army whose appearance will change the world for the better. He had not realised that the world was already changing. He did not know about Shardine who, readers of The Flinker may be surprised to learn, survived her death sentence and has taken her own path of rebellion against the society that condemned her. He had no idea that the world was already changing and that the sexual needs of the dominant females of the world were changing with it. He was about to find out.

    ********************************

    Extract one

    She tightened the straps, pulling his arms and legs towards the corners of the bed until he was stretched out uncomfortably and completely helpless. She stood staring down at him for some time before she slowly and deliberately started to undress.

    To the flinker, it was as if she was taunting him. She took her time, undoing one button or one fastening at a time and then pausing. As each garment came off, she held it out to one side of her before she dropped it on the floor and stopped to look straight at him for a few seconds.

    When finally she was completely naked she pressed her body with her hands, moving them slowly over her skin in small circles, concentrating on her breasts, her buttocks, and between her thighs.

    "Are you ready for me, Aarthloc?" she asked, startling him by using his name rather than simply calling him 'flinker' as she had been doing recently.

    He gulped and nodded, unable to take his eyes off her body. She really was the most beautiful matogle he had ever seen, and in so many ways so much more arousing even than Flick's young, firm and enthusiastic body.

    She touched his slambold lightly. "Later," she said. "I want that later."

    She was astride him, not sitting straight down onto his face with the urgency of matogles at a scortium. She seemed to hover above him, allowing him to look straight up between her smooth thighs. Her hands were flat on her stomach, and ever so slowly one of them crept downwards until two of her fingers touched the place that the flinker knew gave her the most pleasure. For several minutes then she did not move. He watched in silence, waiting for her inevitable descent onto him in the smothering, crushing smunter he knew so well.


    Extract two

    "We're short of flinkers," he said. "There might be thousands down there; maybe even tens of thousands if they have been trapped by the helmwater for centuries. It will solve all the problems if we can release them."

    Marthen shook her head sadly. "You are in fantasy land," she told him. "I'll go along with it if there is one chance in a million that my daughter is there and I can have her back. As for finding thousands of flinkers who will all think like you and overturn the Council's rules and regulations, forget it. It's not going to happen. You will have to put up with being smuntered by any female who wants to smunter you. That's the way of life now. Talking of which, I really haven't finished with you. Time to carry on with it, I think."

    Marthen knelt astride the flinker's face once more and started to lower herself onto him. This time she did not stop, and her firm flesh engulfed his mouth and nose completely.

    "Lick, flinker!" she cried. "Lick, if you want to breathe! It's about time you were smuntered properly, and if you are still conscious when I've finished then I promise you the most intense squinking you have ever had. Lick, flinker! Lick!"


    Extract three

    As she finished speaking, Flick plunged her face between Shardine’s legs again, pressing her tongue deep into her and licking fast and forcefully. Shardine gasped and shuddered, and as she did Flick moved her lips and tongue a little higher and sucked hard. At the same time she slid two fingers into Shardine as far as she could push them.

    The effect was immediate. Shardine’s body convulsed, and any possibility of her remaining quiet disappeared as her climax burst from within her. She shrieked.

    Flick did not stop. She sucked and licked, and her fingers worked in and out. Shardine squealed uncontrollably, her body shaking and twisting in spasms, and still Flick continued.

    For more than ten minutes Flick’s tongue, lips and fingers worked on Shardine while Shardine was completely helpless to stop her even if she had wanted it to stop. For Shardine it was an experience she could never have imagined, with one surge of ecstasy ripping through her body after another until the rapid peaks of climax merged into one continuous blur of impossible sensuality. It was the screaming, terrifying feeling Shardine had experienced at the special scortium, and yet it was so much more than that and without the brutal thrusting of the dozens of flinkers. As at the scortium, Shardine’s body was screaming for it to stop, but now at the same time her body screamed for it to continue.

    When at last Flick did stop, Shardine was wet with perspiration and her breathing was in rapid little gasps that were almost sobs.

    “I can’t... don’t... please...” Shardine was hardly able to speak and had no idea what she was trying to say. She wanted to say something.

    Flick smiled with pleasure. “I’m glad that worked. I thought it would. I’ve never done it before like that. Now you can please me.”

    Without waiting for Shardine’s agreement, Flick jumped on top of her and positioned herself with her knees either side of Shardine’s head.

    “Ready?” she asked.

    “Let me recover my breath,” Shardine gasped. “I can hardly breathe now.”

    Flick shook her head. “No time,” she said firmly. “I need it now.”

    She lowered herself onto Shardine’s face, pressing hard on Shardine’s nose and mouth. Shardine spluttered, trying to recover herself enough to give Flick the attention of her lips and tongue on those places that should send Flick into the same ecstasy Shardine had just experienced. It seemed impossible to Shardine as she gasped and trembled from the intensity of her experience that she could possibly succeed in sending someone else into such a state, but she was determined to try.

    It took less than three minutes.

    Flick started to groan and to shake from almost the moment she touched Shardine's face. Shardine's tongue sent her into a series of squirming, quivering, gasping shudders, and as Shardine kept up the pressure with her lips and her tongue, sucking at Flick and moving her head to match Flick's movements, Flick reached grasmic as rapidly as Shardine had ever known any vixling grasmic while smuntering a flinker at a scortium.

    Shardine expected Flick to fall back, exhausted, as her grasmic faded. Instead, Flick settled down solidly on Shardine's face, her young, firm body forming an airtight seal over Shardine's mouth and nose. Little quivers of pleasure continued to run through Flick's body, but apart from that she was completely motionless. She did not seem to realise that Shardine was underneath her and, restrained securely to the bed as Shardine was, no matter what she tried to do Flick took no notice. Slowly but surely, Shardine lapsed into unconsciousness.


    "Revenge of the Flinker"

  • 20. marca 2011 21:03:29 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 20. marca 2011 18:25:06 CET
    Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi called the allied nations bombing his country "terrorists" Sunday, a day after the United States, United Kingdom and France began to enforce a United Nations-mandated no-fly zone to protect Libya's civilians from their leader.

    There was violence across the country on Sunday, with Gadhafi apparently shelling rebels in the west while allied airstrikes destroyed one of Gadhafi's convoys in the east, according to rebels.

    Gadhafi said the strikes were a confrontation between the Libyan people and "the new Nazis," and promised "a long-drawn war."

    "You have proven to the world that you are not civilized, that you are terrorists -- animals attacking a safe nation that did nothing against you," Gadhafi said in a televised speech.

    Gadhafi did not appear on screen during the address, leading CNN's Nic Robertson in Tripoli to speculate that the Libyan leader did not want to give the allies clues about his location.
    Fighter jets hit Libyan army convoy
    Action taken to stop Gadhafi
    Arab reaction
    Gallery: Civil war in Libya

    Throughout the address, an image of a golden fist crushing a model plane that said "USA" filled the screen -- a monument in Tripoli to the 1986 American bombing of Libya, in which one U.S. plane was downed.

    At the same time Gadhafi spoke, his regime was shelling the city of Misrata on Sunday morning using tanks, artillery and cannons, a witness said.

    "They are destroying the city," said the witness, who is not being identified for safety reasons. He said rebels were fighting back.

    Sounds of heavy gunfire could be heard during a telephone conversation with the man. There was no immediate word on casualties.

    CNN's Arwa Damon saw the remains of a convoy of at least 40 military vehicles destroyed by multiple airstrikes Sunday, leading charred bodies, twisted tanks and smashed trucks as far as she could see.

    Rebels with Damon told her it was a convoy of Libyan troops loyal to Gadhafi coming to attack the rebel capital of Benghazi.

    Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told CNN Sunday there would be continuous allied air cover of Benghazi.

    The no-fly zone is effectively already in place, he said on CNN's "State of the Union," adding that air attacks by coalition forces have taken out most of Libya's air defense systems and some airfields.

    International military coalition targeted air defense positions near the capital for a second day Sunday.

    Some Libyans welcomed the American, French and British military forces.

    Others remained fearful of Gadhafi.

    Libyans are "afraid to come out because when they do, he attacked them very, very severely," a woman in Tripoli said Sunday. "This is putting terror in all neighborhoods."

    The multinational military forces launched the attacks Saturday, convinced that Gadhafi was not adhering to a cease-fire mandated by the United Nations.

    American and British ships and submarines fired more than 110 Tomahawk cruise missiles and hit about 20 Libyan defense targets in western portions of the country, U.S. Vice Adm. William Gortney said at a Pentagon briefing.

    Nineteen U.S. warplanes, including stealth bombers and fighter jets, conducted strike operations in Libya on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Tomahawk cruise missiles are unmanned and fly close to the ground, steering around natural and man-made obstacles to hit a target programmed into them before launch.
    U.S. fires missiles on Libya
    Gadhafi responds to air strikes
    Warplane falls from sky
    Libya cease-fire ignored
    RELATED TOPICS

    * Libya
    * United Nations Security Council
    * Middle East Conflict

    A senior U.S. military official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, said the cruise missiles landed near the city of Misrata and the capital, Tripoli.

    Scores of missiles were fired in the pre-dawn darkness, and the exact results of the mission were not immediately clear. The United States is expected to conduct a damage assessment of the sites.

    The salvo, in an operation dubbed "Odyssey Dawn," was meant "to deny the Libyan regime from using force against its own people," Gortney said.

    British Defense Secretary Liam Fox said the Royal Air Force deployed Tornado GR4 fast jets, which flew 3,000 miles from the United Kingdom and back -- making the venture the longest-range bombing mission conducted by the force since the Falklands conflict in 1982.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said the international mission "is necessary, it is legal, and it is right."

    "I believe we should not stand aside while this dictator murders his own people," Cameron said late Saturday night.

    But Gadhafi remained defiant, saying Libya will fight back against undeserved "naked aggression."

    In a statement broadcast on state TV, his military said the strikes killed 48 people -- "mostly women, children and religious clerics."

    "The majority of these attacks were on public areas, hospitals and schools. They frightened the children and women near those areas that were subject to this aggression," the military said.

    CNN could not immediately confirm the claim.

    But Russia said Sunday that innocent civilians were being killed, and urged more caution.

    The Foreign Ministry in Moscow cited reports that "non-military" targets were being bombed, including a cardiac center.

    "We are calling upon respective nations to stop the indiscriminate use of force... it is inadmissible to use the mandate resulting from UN Security Council Resolution 1973, the adoption of which was quite a controversial step, beyond the intended goals of the resolution, namely the protection of the civilian population," the ministry said on its website.

    China's foreign ministry said Sunday it did not agree with the use of force in international relations. And Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez also denounced the military intervention.

    "They (the United States) want to appropriate the oil in Libya; they don't care about anyone's life in that region," Chavez said.

    Gadhafi vowed to open weapons depots and said the U.N. charter provides the nation the right to defend itself in a "war zone." He has also issued messages to international powers and said Libyans are ready to die for him.

    Some residents said they could receive weapons to fight back.

    "We received a phone call around 3 a.m. that everyone should head out in the streets," a woman in Tripoli said. "Normal civilians are being able to have machine guns and take anti-aircraft machine guns ... to fire back at the airplanes."

    In Misrata, a witness said Gadhafi's forces are targeting fuel and power stations to make citizens believe the damage is being done by coalition forces. The witness, who was not identified for security reasons, said people celebrated allied airstrikes on loyalist positions in the city.

    CNN could not verify the account.

    U.S. President Barack Obama is planning for the U.S. portion of the military action in Libya to only last for a few days.

    "After that, we'll take more of a supporting role," said a senior administration official, who was not authorized to speak about sensitive military matters.

    Obama authorized U.S. military force on what happened to be the eighth anniversary of the start of the war in Iraq.

    In the next few days, U.S. military officials expect to hand over control to a coalition commander. Canada and Italy are also part of the coalition.

    Violence has raged in Libya following protests calling for democracy and demanding an end to Gadhafi's almost 42-year-long rule. The protests have been met by force from the Gadhafi regime, and some members of his military defected to the opposition.

    Another witness in Tripoli said she's terrified about how Gadhafi might respond to the airstrikes.

    "We're scared. We're not sure what will happen next," she said. "To be honest, I'm scared for my life."
  • 19. marca 2011 12:26:12 CET
    No more spam messages!
  • 19. marca 2011 9:39:40 CET
    Want to meet people? See movies and pictures? Do webcam one on one chat with other members? Play games? Of course you want all that and more. Well guess what, you can have it all for free - sign up today at http://www.kinkculture.com - the kinkfriendly social newtwork. If you're not on KinkCulture you haven't lived yet.
  • 14. mája 2008 19:19:07 CEST
    Well, dust, I'm here primarily because posts, profiles and pictures frequently provide inspiration for new characters and stories; secondly because there is obviously (judging from the feedback of messages etc) a very large number of people who love to read the stories and extracts I post (and it's nice to receive praise); and thirdly because, as you so bluntly put it, marketing: the more people who know about my stories and books, the more will buy them.
  • 14. mája 2008 4:04:11 CEST
    Strict Susan

    Are you here just for the marketing or are you seeking anything else?

    There is a 'novel' section.

    dust