Wonder of a young girl given a strange gift, something that she like any woman would cherish a piece of jewelry; what seemed permanently stuck in place turned a fantasy fun life into something more carnal and spiteful.
Anna, a bright child having at her young age a heightened ability to sense people, knowing by body language and their tone of voice as whether they be truthful about anything said.
Her donning the ring to her finger set forth a rebirth of power, the spirit of one evil woman, she holding an eternal disdain for the male gender, but disliking of women who would delight in treating a man to anything he had as a desire. It was of her desire and the desires of men that the conflict came into being, one that by the power and knowledge learned by Circe the witch, she delighted in ruling over men by trampling on them down a peg of two.
A night of sleep to Anna had the spirit of Circe working her evil ideals upon the subconscious mind of a very moral and quite religious girl.
Circe had learned from others in times past that what a person might dream about at night, can influence their judgment by being awake during the day.
Memories of both foes and friends abound in the mind when sleeping, and the spirit of Circe having seen these, began to make plans as to whom she would thrill to make some male a life of one perfect form of Hell. The primary personage to which Anna felt her life and self demeaned was none other than her elder brother.
Ken enjoyed playing jokes on his very truthful and gullible little sister. Anna would often take of face value what anyone in the family said as if factual and worthy to be broadcast to others. This was where Ken could be a devil, he making remarks as if heard of news and delighted when Anna made a fool of herself recanting what she heard to her parents to some visiting family member.
So to Circe the thought of giving Ken his due seemed as if her first easy conquest. Happenstance sided with the ring and Circe, she having come to life where the owner of her powers living on or near where many animals resided. One of her more favorite tricks done, offered to men their becoming as virile stallions. She would allow them their delight with two or a few mares before the farm owner would decide to geld the animal. This act leaving the manly minded horse in a dull doldrum of sexual lusting, as without his big jewels he had no manner to requiting the urges.
Men changed into swine had the favor of keeping their jewels, but by the vile lifestyle they would see Circe and plead for her unrelenting mercy. Delighted in the ease she could change a man in species, she felt equally tickled when they who were the bolder of men so changed, she made of them as sows for the other swine boars to rut.
Sensuality and sexual depravity stood as the building blocks to how Circe thought and of what she held in her mind as a primal wish of someday becoming as on of her animalistic humans and discover what it was like to become as it is to be a beast.
The wakening of Circe in the twentieth century had her feeling elated at the obvious naive attitude of mankind toward the knowledge and use of magic. This thrilled her so, as from the mind and memories she probed in Anna as the child slept, Circe knew her hunting of men was soon to become better than ever before!