1. Jake's Magic Remote, Part I - The Accident


    Date: 3/17/2015, Categories: Fetish, Taboo, Voyeur, Author: WriterJim, Rating: 100, Source: xHamster

    and his coworkers resumed their tasks. The mail clerk ran up and stopped at his door. “Mr. Stevens? Here,” she said, looking a little flustered. “Urgent notice.” “Thanks,” he said, taking the envelope without looking at it. The girl nodded and hurried off around a corner. “Holy shit,” Jake said again as he watched her go. Jake tossed the envelope in his inbox and sat down again. His mind was racing. There were tests to be done! He needed to understand the object that had been placed in his bag. Starting with safety, of course. Before doing anything, Jake put three sets of extra batteries into his pockets, and the rest of the package in his bag. He wasn’t taking any risks there. Satisfied that he wouldn’t run out of juice, he picked up the remote and stopped time again. What a strange thing to do, he thought, but there it was. He picked up a pen from his desk, held it out, and let go. The pen hung in the air, frozen just like everything else. He started time again, and it dropped straight to the floor. He mentally checked one thing off his list: placed objects would not retain inertia from being placed. That was good; he’d hate to bump into someone and break their spine as a result of instantaneously moving them two inches to the left. Next he tested throwing a pen while frozen. Again it stopped moving just after it left his touch, but once time started it flew through the air as it would have when thrown. So inertia applied to frozen objects could carry forward, but it ...
    seemed that it was only the moment he let go that mattered. So he could only hurt people or objects as much as he could in the normal world. For his next test, he threw the pen before stopping time. Reaching out, he gently nudged it to the left and restarted it. It continued moving in the same direction. Testing again, he found that turning the pen changed its direction. So somehow the direction of movement was relative to the object’s position, which meant that, for instance, he couldn’t catch a bullet… but he could push one into a wall, or turn it around. He checked his watch, and found it was still running, which was interesting. His cell phone worked too, although it had no signal. He shrugged and sat down again. The computer was frozen. He looked at the hidden controls on his remote. Next to the world-pause button, there was a play/pause button like you’d expect to see on any VCR. He pointed the remote at the monitor and pressed the button. The monitor went black. “What the hell?” Jake pressed the power button on the monitor. It turned off and on again, then gave a “no signal” warning. Jake pointed the remote at the computer, pressed the button, and it came to life. “Awesome.” He looked at his watch and wrote down his relative time. “I can get all my work done and still enjoy my whole day.” The computer had no network connection. That made sense; the servers were frozen. That was fine though; he usually did most of his work locally and backed it up to the network every few ...
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