All characters are over the age of 18, and it is written in British-English. As I'm sure you can tell by the context, this story deals with mother-son incest. Be warned! But if you're into that kind of thing, please enjoy... hopefully.
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He was there, she could tell. There in the darkness outside her bedroom door. She didn't turn around to check, but she sensed his presence, his eyes, wide in the dark, his low silent breathing.
It wasn't the first time. At first, she'd felt concern and confusion about why he was there. Why was he watching her like this when she undressed? It was creepy, surely?
But no, she told herself. And she knew this wasn't being rational because he was her son. But surely, he should have grown out of this by now.
Today she felt some of the same concern, but lately there'd been something else she been feeling too, something she couldn't confess, even to herself. But it was unmistakable. Excitement.
She looked into the mirror, trying to catch a sign of movement, proof that he was watching her, but in the subdued light of her bedroom, and the dark of the space beyond, she could see nothing. She listened for him. Nothing; just the quiet ticking of the central heating, and the distant rumble of the traffic outside.
But she knew he was there.
She continued brushing her hair, pulling her robe tight around her. She felt deeply conflicted.
Why did he look at her like this? She was 42 years old; she could see the give-away lines on her face, the strands of grey in her hair when the dye had washed out.
She appraised herself in the mirror, trying - despite her growing excitement - to make a dispassionate assessment of what she saw.
But she was cheating, she knew. Cheating herself. Because she'd made up her mind but could not admit it.
She'd got ready that night feeling oddly detached. Part of her refused to believe the things the other part of her was doing.
The preparation ritual had been elaborate. It was as if she was preparing for a date. It was a long time since she'd been on a date.
She'd carefully prepared her make-up. Not so much to be obvious. Enough to accentuate her natural beauty. She'd dabbed on her perfume. Now she was brushing her hair.
She forced her face to look calm, but her nipples had no such control. They were painfully obvious, crinkled, and tight, thrusting through the sexy robe she had knowingly selected, pulled tight against her breasts.
But still she tried to normalise the situation.
Perhaps it was just love, innocent love, a son for his mother, she'd told herself many times before. But she knew she was kidding herself. She knew now there was much more to it than that.
She took a deep breath to steady her nerves. It swelled her chest, and her shape in the mirror looked pleasing to her. She was a good-looking woman, she knew.
Things were coming to a head. It was time to sort this out, for better or for worse.
She didn't feel guilty any-more. Well, she did feel guilty, but it was a different sort of guilt. She - and she could still barely believe it - but at least she had the consolation of encouragement from her husband, for what she was about to do. Probably.
With a sudden movement, almost shocking in the stillness of her room, she turned to face the door.
"Paul," she said in a low voice, "Are you there?"
There was no response, but she was sure this time that she heard his intake of breath, out there in the dark.
"Paul, I know you're there..." she repeated in the same low voice, "Come here."
Slowly she heard a sound, a shuffling of feet, a long exhaling of breath. He must have been about to expire.
"Come here," she said again, more insistently this time.
After a long pause, he stepped out of the shadows and edged towards the warm light of her room.
***
"So, what's worrying you?" Rachel's husband Gavin asked her as they sat at the dining table several weeks earlier.
There was just the two of them now. Paul was away at university and the house seemed very quiet. Rachel missed him more than she had anticipated. The worry and tension of the period leading up to his departure - the exams, the results, the college interviews, the decisions, the unknowns - were replaced now with a different sort of worry.
He'd always been a shy, introverted boy. Lacking in self-confidence, though God knows why - he was a good-looking intelligent young man, from a loving family.
He was bookish and studious, rarely putting himself out there, like so many of the young people she knew. He was slight, of average height, very slim, with a slightly feminine grace which seemed unusual compared to the clumsy youths she saw careering around the college where she worked. He sometimes seemed a little younger than his twenty years.
But she thought he was beautiful. That was the right word, she'd mused; beautiful. He was graceful, with fine cheek bones, unblemished skin, a mop of thick hair, red and glowing like hers in the right light, striking eyes, and an aquiline look to his face.
Of course, she was biased, but she was sure she was right about him. He could have been a model if he'd been taller and wasn't so ill at ease with himself.
She'd hoped university life would be the making of him. Away from his mother's skirts, out there on his own, an independent life would bring him out of his shell, she thought. Now though, almost a year later, she was not so sure.
During their frequent face-time conversations she'd seen the same shy boy that left home. He was chatty, clever, and she loved their conversations about his studies, about the books he was reading.
At least he'd at long last acquired a social life, but whenever she inquired delicately about his love life, he'd clam up, flush and stutter just like he did when he was sixteen.
Rachel shook the far-away look from her face and regarded her husband, Gavin.
"It's Paul, of course," she began. He sighed. She did not need to explain further.
They'd had this sort of conversation before on various occasions. He'd usually tell her not to worry, that he would grow out of it, that she was being too clingy; that she was over-analysing.
But she'd never dared to discuss her real concern, about what lay at the heart of her fears. And she'd certainly never revealed her own reciprocal feelings.
"I think, in a way, it's my fault," she began carefully.
"What do you mean?"
"His awkwardness... his shyness with girls... you know what I'm talking about."
He smiled, as if he knew what she was trying to say.
"I've probably mothered him too much. We've spent too much time together. I haven't given him a chance."
"That's rubbish," he said, quite forcibly.
She looked at him, surprised. She was only getting started.
"He's had plenty of opportunities, but he doesn't take them. He's shy. I've been thinking about this quite a lot. You're not the only one who notices you know. I reckon he needs someone to help him a little. I've seen it before..."