Looking for story ideas about blackmail

lroberto

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Dec 3, 2020
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Looking to write a story about blackmailing my friendwife into becoming my subservient slut against her desire to do so. we are both military and i was thinking that her husband would be away/deployed and i would either help her out around the house and find something, or some other way i would find some leverage.
thinking that whatever it is it is enough to keep her obedient, allowing me to gain further leverage as i dominate her.
i cant seem to come up with anything that is natural and not too forced and something that makes sense.
Thank you for any help.
Rstone80 in kik if you want to chat that way aswell.
 
Perhaps work with what you mentioned, help her around the house keeping your eyes open for some sign of cheating on her part. Maybe you find an email on her computer from a male indicating they've been intimate. Keeping a copy for yourself for proof, hint around about how hard deployments are for those left behind as well as those deployed, maybe over a glass of two of wine she'll confide about her being unfaithful although it stopped short of penetration. If she doesn't eventually you present the proof and offer to keep her secret if ...........
 
Blackmail stories usually are told from the perspective of the person being blackmailed, rather than the blackmailer, but it seems your intention is to tell it from the perspective of the blackmailer.


Here's how I approach questions like this: what turns you on? What is erotic about this scenario?

A blackmailer is not a sympathetic character, so this is very tricky.

A few ideas for what he could blackmail her about:

1. He discovers nude/porn photos of her on the Internet. This is a common theme. It's embarassing, but it's not the kind of thing that makes her a bad person. But why does your character want to blackmail her?

2. She cheated on her husband, and your character found out. He's doing this as an odd form of justice.

3. She committed a crime of some kind, and your character found out. He found some papers. Or maybe she stole something from the house of the base commander at a party and he finds it in her house. She's a kleptomaniac and can't control it. He takes a picture of it in her house so he can prove it and she can't deny it.
 
All very good ideas. Thank you again. Can't wait to start writing now.
Since you are all experienced, what are some good ways to ensure/reinforce the submission. Like acts or activate to make her realize she has no choice and helps to make her submit. Thank you again
 
Blackmail stories usually are told from the perspective of the person being blackmailed, rather than the blackmailer, but it seems your intention is to tell it from the perspective of the blackmailer.


Here's how I approach questions like this: what turns you on? What is erotic about this scenario?

A blackmailer is not a sympathetic character, so this is very tricky.

A few ideas for what he could blackmail her about:

1. He discovers nude/porn photos of her on the Internet. This is a common theme. It's embarassing, but it's not the kind of thing that makes her a bad person. But why does your character want to blackmail her?

2. She cheated on her husband, and your character found out. He's doing this as an odd form of justice.

3. She committed a crime of some kind, and your character found out. He found some papers. Or maybe she stole something from the house of the base commander at a party and he finds it in her house. She's a kleptomaniac and can't control it. He takes a picture of it in her house so he can prove it and she can't deny it.
I think you make a good point about the perspective of the person. I enjoy the breaking down of the person and the forced subservience. Thanks for your comment
 
If you and the husband are military, I think a good blackmail would be that you have something on the husband (war crimes?). Maybe even something he couldn’t help...killing an Afghani civilian on accident or to save a buddy, and you have proof. If she doesn’t do as you say, you will turn him in, he’ll go to jail and she will lose everything.

I think a wife would go a lot farther to save her husband than she would to hide something.
 
If you and the husband are military, I think a good blackmail would be that you have something on the husband (war crimes?). Maybe even something he couldn’t help...killing an Afghani civilian on accident or to save a buddy, and you have proof. If she doesn’t do as you say, you will turn him in, he’ll go to jail and she will lose everything.

I think a wife would go a lot farther to save her husband than she would to hide something.
I like this idea, very smart and I think good leverage. Thank you
 
You could use the plot of saving husbands life in last deployment. Now he is still deployed but you are back for good and you could use your influence to bring him back...🤤
 
I like your story. I have not seen such stories before. In the last few years, it has become popular to cover stories from the side of the antagonist or the main villain. Therefore, I think many people will like your idea. However, it would be best if you decided whether to arouse the reader's sympathy or disgust for the main character. People are now quite aware of blackmail and how to get rid of blackmailers. It is impossible to presuppose the story as another case of bullying the victim. Try to speculate about the guilt of the victim and the fraudster, who is to blame, and who needs help in this situation.
 
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Blackmail stories usually are told from the perspective of the person being blackmailed, rather than the blackmailer, but it seems your intention is to tell it from the perspective of the blackmailer.
This also could be written in 3. Person POV, so you could easily switch perspectives.
 
This also could be written in 3. Person POV, so you could easily switch perspectives.

True, but a potential dramatic problem with doing it this way is eliminating the element of suspense and surprise. Suspense is part of the fun of a blackmail story: the person being blackmailed doesn't necessarily know what the blackmailer intends to do, or why, or what's going to happen next, and if you tell the story from the blackmailer's perspective you may give things away and eliminate some of this suspense.

This isn't NECESSARILY true. I once read a novel by Dean Koontz that was told from the perspective of both a serial killer and the intended victim, and although the killer revealed a lot about himself, the author waits until near the end of the story to reveal that the killer actually is a sheriff. I thought it was well done and a fun, shocking twist.
 
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