A Mother’s Extreme Measures – Part 1


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Chapter 1: A Mother’s Gaze

Khadija Al-Mansoor, widow of the late Abdullah Al-Mansoor, had long grown accustomed to the quiet strength required of her position. As the matriarch of the family, with two married daughters and her youngest son, Issa, still under her roof, she had carefully maintained her household’s dignity in the years following her husband’s passing. In their large villa, nestled in a prestigious part of Doha, life was meticulously controlled, from the domestic staff to the appearance of the gardens. Khadija’s life was an intricate balance of tradition and modernity, of upholding the family name while ensuring her children moved forward in their lives with respect and decorum.

Today, however, that balance felt precarious.

She had spent the morning at a social gathering—one of those endless engagements where conversations drifted between gossip and luxury shopping. Khadija had always played her part with grace, moving through the room with the same poise she’d perfected for years. But as the hours passed, she couldn’t shake a lingering unease. Perhaps it was the growing weight of managing the household alone, or perhaps it was the memory of her son’s increasingly distant behavior that gnawed at her.

By midday, she had cut her plans short. Her friends were planning a detour to the new designer boutiques, but Khadija found herself uninterested. A faint headache provided the perfect excuse, and with a few polite words, she had her driver bring the car around. As the sleek, black SUV maneuvered through the streets of Doha, her thoughts turned to Issa.

He was eighteen now, the baby of the family. Her daughters were long married, with children of their own, busy with their lives. But Issa remained under her care—a fact that often brought her comfort. Or at least, it used to. Lately, he had grown quiet, spending more time locked away in his room. She had attributed it to the usual teenage angst, but as the car rolled through the gates of their villa, the uneasy feeling inside her only deepened.

The house was eerily quiet as she entered. There were usually several maids about—cleaning, cooking, managing the small day-to-day tasks that kept the household running smoothly. Khadija had more than one maid on staff, a necessity in a house of this size, but today the air felt still, unnatural.

She walked through the cool, spacious foyer, her footsteps echoing against the marble floors. Everything seemed as it should, but that nagging feeling persisted. She moved down the hall toward the bedrooms, wondering if Issa might still be asleep. Perhaps he had been up late, studying or spending time online. Still, the silence was unnerving.

As she approached Issa’s room, she heard a faint sound—muffled, but unmistakably present. A sound that didn’t belong. Her hand stilled on the brass doorknob. Something was wrong.

She pushed open the door without knocking, and her breath caught in her throat at the sight that awaited her.

Issa was lying spreadeagled on his bed, his legs tied wide to the posts, wrists bound above his head. His skin glistened with sweat, his chest rising and falling in shallow, rapid breaths. And there, between his legs, knelt Jocelyn—the Filipina maid—her arm buried deep inside his body. She wore long, black latex gloves that shimmered under the soft light, her elbow nearly disappearing into Issa as she moved slowly, rhythmically, with deliberate care.

For a moment, Khadija couldn’t move. Her mind refused to process what her eyes were seeing. The room smelled of sweat, latex, and something far more obscene. Jocelyn’s free hand rested on Issa’s thigh, steadying him, while her other continued its grotesque task.

Issa’s face was a mixture of pleasure and pain, his lips parted in a low, breathless moan. He was lost in the sensation, completely unaware of his mother standing in the doorway, paralyzed by the unimaginable.

Khadija’s heart pounded in her chest, a roaring sound filling her ears as disbelief turned to fury. The world around her seemed to narrow, her vision tunneling in on the obscene tableau before her.

“Stop!” Her voice, sharp as a blade, cut through the air.

Jocelyn froze, her eyes wide with fear as she realized who stood before her. She yanked her arm free, causing Issa to gasp, his eyes snapping open in shock. He looked directly at his mother, his face draining of all color, his expression a mixture of shame and terror.

“What is the meaning of this?” Khadija’s voice shook with barely contained rage as she stormed into the room, her eyes fixed on the maid. “How dare you touch him like that!”

Jocelyn scrambled off the bed, her gloved hands trembling as she tried to find words, but nothing came. She looked to Issa for help, but he was as speechless as she was, his body still twitching from the sudden withdrawal of sensation.

“Get out of my house,” Khadija hissed, her voice low and deadly. “Now. You’re finished here. Go pack your things.”

“Madam, please, I—” Jocelyn stammered, but Khadija’s glare silenced her.

“Go.”

Jocelyn rushed out of the room, not daring to look back, leaving behind only the discarded latex gloves on the floor, glistening like a reminder of what had transpired in Khadija’s home.

Issa, still bound, sat up slowly, his wrists red from the bindings. His face was pale, his body trembling, and his eyes were downcast, avoiding his mother’s gaze.

Khadija’s fury burned hotter as she approached the bed, grabbing the black gloves from the floor and holding them up in front of him. “This? This is what you’ve been doing behind my back? Letting that woman… do this to you?”

Issa flinched at her words, his lips trembling as he tried to speak, but no sound came. He swallowed hard, then, in a barely audible voice, whispered, “It was my idea.”

Khadija froze, her heart pounding in her chest. She stared at him in disbelief, her mind reeling. He had asked for this?

“You… asked for this?” Her voice was shaking with a mixture of rage and disgust.

Issa nodded, his face a mask of shame. “I told her to. It wasn’t her fault.”

Khadija’s breath came in sharp, angry bursts. She felt the ground shift beneath her, as though the son she had raised—the boy she had protected and cared for—had slipped away from her, replaced by someone she didn’t recognize. This was not her Issa. This was something darker, something perverse.

“You disgust me,” she spat, her voice trembling with rage. “I don’t even know who you are anymore.”

Without another word, she turned and stormed out of the room, slamming the door behind her.

In the silence that followed, Khadija’s mind raced. The boy she thought she knew had been hiding something so twisted, so deviant, right under her roof. She had raised him better than this—hadn’t she? What had gone wrong? How could she have been so blind?

She had lost her husband years ago, and now, in one horrifying moment, she felt as though she had lost her son as well. The house, once her sanctuary, now felt tainted.

 

Chapter 2: Silence and Distance

The days that followed the incident in Issa’s bedroom passed in a haze of silence. The once vibrant, albeit distant, energy of Khadija’s youngest son had all but vanished. Where Issa had been quiet before, now he was utterly withdrawn. His presence in the villa became ghost-like—moving between his room and the dining hall, sometimes emerging only for a glass of water or to retrieve something forgotten. He barely spoke, barely looked at her.

At first, Khadija convinced herself it was shock. After all, she had reacted so fiercely, her fury still burning in her memory. The image of her son, vulnerable and exposed, tangled with the disgust she felt seeing Jocelyn’s gloved hand where it had no right to be. But beneath the surface of her anger, guilt was festering. The image of Issa, pale and trembling as she tore him down with her words, haunted her.

She had done what she believed was right. Firing the maid was necessary—there was no other choice. But the absence of Jocelyn lingered like a shadow in the house. The other maids continued their work, oblivious to the storm that had passed through the family, but Khadija could feel the weight of the silence grow heavier each day.

Issa, for his part, seemed to shrink with each passing hour. The maid’s departure had clearly affected him more deeply than Khadija had anticipated. At dinner, his movements were mechanical, his food left untouched more often than not. Khadija watched him from across the long dining table, her heart sinking as she saw the hollow expression in his eyes.

One evening, nearly a week after that terrible day, Khadija finally mustered the courage to try to break through the wall that had grown between them. She entered his room after knocking lightly on the door—something she had rarely done before. The room was dimly lit, the heavy curtains drawn, casting shadows over the sparse, modern furniture. Issa was seated on the edge of his bed, his posture slumped, staring blankly at his phone, though his thumb didn’t move to scroll.

“Issa,” she began softly, her voice gentle, as though she was approaching a wounded animal. “We need to talk.”

He didn’t respond. His head stayed down, his eyes fixed on the screen in front of him, though Khadija doubted he was reading anything.

She crossed the room, sitting down next to him on the bed. The proximity was jarring, a reminder of how long it had been since they’d shared a comfortable silence. Now, it felt like a chasm.

“I know what happened… it wasn’t easy,” she said, her words slow and measured. “I was angry. I… overreacted.”

Issa’s expression didn’t change, his face still pale and expressionless. She could see the tension in his jaw, the way his hands curled slightly around the phone.

“Issa,” Khadija repeated, her voice firmer now, her frustration bubbling just beneath the surface. “Please. Talk to me.”

He blinked, but still didn’t look at her. His lips parted, as though he might say something, but no words came out. The silence that followed was oppressive. The boy who had once been so eager to talk to her, to share his day or ask questions about his father, was now completely unreachable.

Her heart sank. She didn’t know what to say—how to bridge the growing distance between them. Every word she tried seemed inadequate, as if nothing she said could reach him in this place he had retreated to. He wasn’t just quiet—he was somewhere else. Somewhere Khadija couldn’t follow.

She stood, frustration and sorrow twisting inside her. “You can’t keep shutting me out,” she said quietly, the weight of her own guilt pressing down on her as she walked out of the room.

But as the days continued to stretch into a painful routine of avoidance, Khadija began to realize that this was about more than the shock of her reaction. It was about the maid—Jocelyn. She had been more than just a household worker to Issa; she had been something deeper, something that Khadija had never considered. Her absence left a void in Issa’s life that was unmistakable.

Khadija would catch glimpses of him late at night, standing in the kitchen, staring at the place where Jocelyn used to prepare meals for him. He would linger in rooms where her presence had been most felt, as if hoping to feel something of her return.

The connection he had shared with Jocelyn had been secret, perverse, and wholly inappropriate, but it had been real to him. Khadija could see it in the way he moved now, like a body without a soul, craving what had been taken from him. His body language spoke volumes: the tension in his shoulders, the way his hands seemed restless, like they didn’t know what to do without her touch. He was yearning for her, for the things she had done to him.

And it terrified Khadija.

She hadn’t just removed a maid from the house; she had severed a bond, an intimacy that Issa had clung to. She thought it would end the problem—rid the house of the filth she had discovered—but in doing so, she had broken something in him. She saw it in the way his eyes followed the floor, the way he avoided her gaze as if ashamed of something he could no longer have. Jocelyn had become a part of him, in ways Khadija could barely understand.

Her efforts to talk to him became more desperate over the following days. She would approach him at dinner, trying to spark a conversation, only to be met with curt nods or silence. She would wait outside his door, hoping he would come out and say something, anything, but he remained locked away in his room.

Even her daughters had noticed. During one family lunch, Safiya, her eldest, had pulled her aside.

“Is everything okay with Issa?” Safiya asked, her tone casual but concerned. “He seems… off. Has he said anything to you?”

Khadija had forced a smile, brushing off the question with vague reassurances. She couldn’t tell her daughters what had really happened. It was too shameful, too raw.

But as the silence grew thicker, Khadija’s guilt deepened. The boy who used to be full of life had become a shell of himself. And no matter what she did, she couldn’t seem to bring him back.

Chapter 3: The Weight of Guilt

Khadija stood at the entrance of Issa’s room, her hand trembling as it rested on the doorknob. In her other hand, she held the same black latex gloves Jocelyn had worn that day—the day everything changed. The gloves were soft and smooth, cold to the touch, yet they felt unbearably heavy in her grasp. Hanging from her wrist were the same bindings she had ripped from Issa’s bedposts, the ones that had held him in place when she had walked in on that horrifying scene.

Now, they felt like more than just leather and fabric. They felt like the weight of her guilt, her shame, and the overwhelming responsibility she bore for what had happened to her son.

It had been days since Issa had shut down completely, retreating into himself in a way that left him almost unreachable. He barely spoke, barely ate, and the light that used to fill his eyes was gone. Khadija knew it wasn’t just the shock of her reaction that had caused him to wither—it was the absence of Jocelyn, the absence of what she had provided for him.

She had taken something from him, and that something had been more than physical comfort. It had been an escape, a release from the tension that seemed to gnaw at him constantly. And now, without it, he was a shell of the boy she had known.

The guilt was suffocating. She had been so quick to act, so quick to tear apart what she had seen as filth, without stopping to understand. And now, every day that passed without Issa returning to her felt like another nail in the coffin of their relationship.

I have to fix this, she thought, her grip tightening on the door. I can’t lose him.

The house was silent as she stepped inside his room. Issa was sitting on the edge of the bed, his body slouched forward, staring at the floor like he had been for days. His movements were slow, mechanical, and he didn’t even glance up as the door creaked open. The room smelled faintly of his cologne, mingling with the scent of something that felt too familiar—something that took her back to that awful day.

Her breath caught in her throat as she looked down at the gloves in her hand. They felt wrong in her grasp, but the guilt pushing her forward was stronger than her hesitation.

“Issa,” she whispered, her voice almost breaking under the weight of her emotions.

He didn’t respond. He didn’t even move. His face was pale, his eyes hollow and distant. He looked like a ghost, like the life had been drained from him entirely. And Khadija knew—knew—it was because of what she had done.

Her heart raced as she crossed the room, her footsteps soft against the thick carpet. She stood in front of him for a moment, unsure of how to begin, unsure of what words could even repair the damage. But as she looked at him, sitting there in his silence, her chest tightened with the unbearable weight of her guilt.

“I’m so sorry,” she whispered, her voice trembling as she knelt in front of him. “I didn’t understand. I didn’t know how much… how much you needed this.”

Her hands trembled as she raised the gloves, holding them out in front of her as if they were some sacred offering, a bridge back to him. Issa’s eyes flickered, for the first time in days, as they focused on the black latex. His lips parted, but no sound came out.

The bindings hung from her wrist like a reminder of the day she had torn everything apart. The sight of them brought her back to the moment she had stormed in, furious, disgusted, filled with righteous anger. But now, all that anger was gone. All that was left was the overwhelming need to fix the brokenness she had caused.

“I took this from you,” Khadija said softly, her voice filled with regret. “I didn’t understand what it meant to you… what she meant to you. And now… now I see it. I see how much you’re hurting.”

Her hands moved slowly, almost reverently, as she slipped the black latex gloves over her fingers, pulling them tight. The material clung to her skin, smooth and cool, molding itself to the shape of her hands. The sensation was strange, foreign, but it was necessary. She had to do this—had to give him what he needed.

Issa’s breath quickened, a barely perceptible change, but Khadija noticed it. She noticed everything about him now—the way his fingers twitched slightly, the way his shoulders tensed as if preparing for something.

“I want to help you,” she whispered, her voice thick with emotion. “I want to make this right.”

Issa finally looked up, his eyes locking onto hers. There was confusion there, fear even, but…