The gynarchy is coming. Throughout the country, new laws and regulations have been established to ensure female supremacy. Now Alice wishes to do her part. She’s happily married to her husband, but Zack doesn’t quite understand just how powerful women have become. Yes, his wife keeps him locked in chastity, and he serves her, but he’s one of those stubborn boys who still thinks men should vote and work. He thinks a female-led relationship should be enough for her. But the President just signed a new law the moment it hit her it’s called the Vote of No Confidence. Now men have the option to “voluntarily” surrender their right to vote in perpetuity. Even their sons will be barred from the electorate. Zack won’t sign it. Or so he thinks. But his wife is determined to support the gynarchy. Besides, she’s a modern-day woman, an avid female supremacist, and she’s decided her husband has harbored these delusions of independence for far too long. Tonight, she’ll get him to sign his Vote of No Confidence. And just like that, he will accept his fate as a second-class citizen in public and her plaything at home. This 8,000 word story features female supremacy, bondage, male humiliation, and paddling. All characters are consenting adults over the age of 18.
Ritter is a strong writer with stories drifting to a firmly strong female supremacy theme. Her bio unabashedly states her thrill for control and men stripped of power. This story creates a future society clearly on the path to making men second class citizens in a matriarchy, well on the path to a gynarchy society. And Zach, the chaste subservient husband is living that progression as she "encourages" him to participate in the latest legislative action allowing men to sign away their voting rights with a vote of no confidence. The protagonist is a masterful manipulator fully asserting her dominance in the marriage and titillated with her power over Zach.
Zack was married to Alice, though it was a female supremacist marriage, so Zack was owned by Alice. He was intelligent, or thought he was, but he was outsmarted by her. She did love him, but treated him as her inferior. Well, he was. And now, she was going to take away more. I liked this story as it came across more intense than some stories.
Ms. Ritter keeps adding the glimpses of her society, we see it built brick by brick. One can only speculate by the strength of her characters in all of her stories, could this be a big “could be”?