Click cover to enlarge it
Who can judge a person’s reactions during stress situations? The prisoners of war who give in to their captors’ demands, the kidnapped heiress who joins forces with her abductors — both must act without past experience to guide them. Both must make decisions in a vacuum, without benefit of familiar people or situations to guide them. The end result can be either a very negative or a positive experience.
In ABUSED FAMILY Janet Summers finds herself and her family in just such a situation. Held captive in an isolated mountain cabin, she not only meets her captors’ sexual demands but, to her horror, finds herself responding to them. Janet and her children are forced to indulge in acts that are not only forbidden by society, but also by their own moral code. Yet, in spite of their shame, they turn the experience into a positive one, uniting them as a family.
This is a shocking story, the story of one family’s reaction under stress. Yet who are we to judge their response?
Janet Summers glanced furtively about her at the shadows cast by the abandoned warehouses that lined both sides of the street. There was no telling what lurked in those shadows, no telling who might be waiting there to do her harm. She wished that she had had enough sense to take a busier street, but she had decided on the shortest route to the train station and there was no turning back now.
Janet had decided to work late at her real estate office this evening, which would have been perfectly all right if her car hadn’t refused to start. Now she was stuck in the city with no way home to the suburbs except the train. She could have taken the street she usually took to the depot when this sort of thing happened, but her four children were at home waiting for her and if she didn’t catch the ten o’clock train she wouldn’t be able to get home until two in the morning. The route she had decided upon would get her there in time, as long as no trouble came her way.
Fictional reading for entertainment purposes only.
Note: This story is the same as catalog number BC-1011 in the original publications (a duplicate).