Jealous Filipina Roommate in Doha Murders Best Friend After Discovering Her Rich Sheikh Lover !!!

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She came to Qatar with nothing but a suitcase and a promise to her mother.

Three years later, she fell from a fourth floor balcony.

But was it really a fall?

March 23rd, 2024.

A date that would shatter a family in Batangas province forever.

It began with a phone call at 4:47 in the morning.

The kind that rips you from sleep and drags you into a nightmare you can’t escape.

Rosa Delgado was already awake.

She always woke early these days, her aging body refusing the rest it desperately needed.

She was sitting in the small kitchen of her concrete house, drinking instant coffee by the light of a single bare bulb when her phone began to vibrate on the wooden table.

The number was unfamiliar.

International too many digits.

Her heart seized before her mind could catch up.

Mr.s. Delgado.

The voice was male, professional, speaking English with an accent she couldn’t place.

This is Sergeant Omar Hassan from the Doha Metropolitan Police Department.

I’m calling about your daughter, Raina Marie Delgado.

Rose’s coffee cup slipped from her fingers.

Brown liquid spread across the table like a prophecy.

There’s been an incident.

I’m very sorry to inform you that your daughter was found deceased yesterday afternoon.

We need you two.

The rest of the words dissolved into static.

Rosa Delgado, 58 years old, mother of five, laundry woman, diabetic, widow, Rosa Delgado collapsed onto the kitchen floor and screamed until her neighbors came running.

Half a world away, 14 hours earlier, in a narrow alley behind a crumbling apartment building called Elmaha Residences in Doha’s Alna district, Raina Marie Delgado lay motionless on sunbaked concrete.

The time was 2:23 in the afternoon.

The temperature was 38° C.

The sky was the particular shade of washed out blue that Qatar wears in late March, cloudless and merciless.

For floors above, a balcony door hung open, white curtains billowing in the hot breeze like flags of surrender.

Her roommate, her best friend, the woman she called sister, stood at the railing, looking down at the growing crowd with an expression that witnesses would later struggle to describe.

Some said shock, some said grief.

One elderly Pakistani man who had been smoking a cigarette in the alley when the body fell would tell investigators.

She looked relieved.

May Allah forgive me for saying it, but she looked like someone who had just finished a terrible task.

The official report would say depression.

The roommate would say heartbreak.

She would tell police that Raina had been devastated about a relationship ending, that she’d been crying for days, that she’d talked about how tired she was of struggling.

The story made sense.

Overseas worker depression was practically an epidemic in the Gulf.

Every year, Filipinos threw themselves from buildings, stepped in front of cars, swallowed bottles of pills, the crushing loneliness of separation, the impossible pressure of supporting entire families on minimum wage, the grinding dehumanization of being invisible in a country that ran on their labor.

It broke people.

It broke them all the time.

But the truth about Raina Delgado’s death wasn’t hiding in statistics about overseas worker mental health.

It was hiding in plain sight, in designer bags stuffed beneath a bed that should have held nothing but discount store purchases, in bank transfers totaling hundreds of thousands of realals from accounts linked to one of Qatar’s most powerful trading families.

And in the jealous eyes of the one person Rea trusted most in this foreign land.

Because what killed Rea wasn’t despair or loneliness or the crushing weight of sacrifice.

It was something far more human.

It was envy that had curdled into obsession.

It was a friendship that rotted from the inside.

It was the moment when one woman decided that if she couldn’t have the golden ticket herself, she would destroy the woman holding it.

This is the story of two Filipinos who left everything for a better life.

One found love in the most forbidden place imaginable.

The other found a reason to kill.

Stay with me because the deeper you go, the darker this gets.

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You won’t want to miss what’s coming next because the story is about to get much darker.

Before we dive into what happened in that cramped apartment in Doha’s Alnikil district, you need to understand who Raina Delgado really was.

Because this isn’t just a story about a victim.

This is about a young woman who carried an entire family on her shoulders, who sacrificed her youth and her dreams for people she loved, and who made one dangerous choice that would cost her everything.

Rea Marie Santos Delgado entered this world on September 8th, 1996 at exactly 3:15 in the morning in a small concrete house in Lipa City, Batangas Province.

Her mother, Rosa, would later tell people that Raina came out silent, not crying like most babies, just looking around with dark, curious eyes as if she was already trying to figure out how the world worked.

The midwife had to slap her twice before she let out her first cry.

And even then, it was more of a protest than a whale.

This one, the midwife said, this one will be strong.

She doesn’t complain.

She was the third of five children sandwiched between older brothers who would eventually find construction work in Saudi Arabia and younger sisters who depended on remittances to finish school.

The Delgato household ran on an economy of scarcity, not quite poverty, but close enough that the difference was academic.

Rice with dried fish for breakfast.

Rice with vegetables for lunch.

Rice with whatever could be afforded for dinner.

New clothes only at Christmas if then.

School supplies bought secondhand.

Shoes worn until they literally fell apart.

Her father Ricardo drove a tricycle taxi through the narrow streets of Leipa City for 28 years.

6 days a week, 12 hours a day, fing passengers for 15 pesos a ride.

He knew every pothole, every shortcut, every regular customer’s name and story.

He was the kind of man who gave free rides to pregnant women and elderly people who looked like they couldn’t afford the fair.

He was also the kind of man who coughed blood into handkerchiefs he thought no one noticed, who ignored the pain in his lower back because a hospital visit cost money that could feed his children for a month.

In 2015, Ricardo Delgado’s kidneys finally gave out.

He was 54 years old.

The funeral cost 45,000 pesos that the family didn’t have.

They borrowed from relatives, from neighbors, from a lone shark who charged 20% monthly interest.

It took 3 years to pay off that debt.

Rosa, Raina’s mother, never recovered from the loss.

Not emotionally and not physically.

The diabetes that had been manageable became aggressive.

Her vision blurred.

Her feet swelled.

Some days she couldn’t stand long enough to finish a basket of laundry.

But she kept working because stopping meant her daughters wouldn’t eat, wouldn’t finish school, wouldn’t have a chance at the better life Ricardo had always talked about.

Rea watched all of this.

She absorbed it like water into dry soil.

She was 14 when her father died, 18 when she graduated high school as validictorian, 21 when she finished her commerce degree at Batanga State University.

Magna comedy, top of her class, the pride of a family that had sacrificed everything for her education.

And then she discovered what that education was worth in the Philippine job market.

6 months of applications, 47 rejection letters, 12 interviews that led nowhere.

A degree that should have opened doors turned out to be worth less than a personal connection to someone who knew someone who could get you hired.

Rea worked part-time at a grocery store for 280 pesos a day, barely enough to cover transportation and lunch.

She watched her mother’s health deteriorate.

She watched her younger sisters eat less so there would be more for everyone.

She watched opportunity pass her family by like jeepnes that never stopped at their corner.

And she made the decision that millions of Filipinos make every year.

She would go abroad.

The tearful goodbye at Nino Aino International Airport happened on March 15th, 2021 at exactly 6:30 in the evening.

Rosa Delgado stood at the departure gate in her best dress.

A faded floral thing she wore to church, clutching her daughter like she might never let go.

Her hands were rough and cracked from decades of lie soap.

Her eyes were already clouded from diabetes, but she pressed a wooden rosary into Raina’s palm and made her promise.

You come home, huh?

You work hard, you save money, and you come home to us.

Rea was crying too hard to speak properly.

But she managed the words that would haunt her family after her death.

N I will send money every month.

I will pay for your medicines.

I will build you a real house with a real bathroom and a real kitchen.

Just wait for me.

Give me 5 years.

I’m going to save us all.

That rosary was still around Rea’s neck when they found her body at the bottom of the alley behind Elmah residence.

The medical examiner noted it in his report.

Personal effects include wooden bead necklace with crucifix believed to be of religious significance.

She landed in Doha on March 16th, 2021 at 5:47 in the morning local time.

She had 3,000 pesos in her pocket, about 250 reals, a 2-year work visa, and a contract to sell cosmetics at Crescent Mall for 2,800 realals per month.

That was roughly 42,000 Philippine pesos, more than she could have made in 3 months back home.

It seemed like a fortune.

It wasn’t.

The work was brutal in ways she hadn’t anticipated.

12-hour shifts, 6 days a week, standing on marble floors in heels the company required.

Smiling at customers who looked through her like she was furniture.

Meeting sales quotas that seemed designed to be impossible.

miss your target three months in a row and you were sent back to the Philippines with a broken contract and a damaged reputation.

The other sales girls taught her the tricks of survival, how to identify buyers from browsers, how to upsell without seeming desperate, how to handle male customers who thought a Filipina sales girl’s job description included tolerating their comments about her body.

But Raina never complained.

She sent 1,800 realals home every single month without fail, without excuse.

She kept 1,000 for herself, 400 for her half of rent, 200 for transportation, 400 for everything else.

Everything else meant food, toiletries, phone credit, and occasional desperate prayers that nothing would break down or run out before the next payday.

She ate one full meal a day, usually dinner, usually rice with whatever canned goods were on sale at the Indian grocery store near her apartment.

Breakfast was instant coffee.

Lunch was whatever free samples she could discreetly take from the mall food court.

She lost 15 pounds in her first six months and she shared a cramped apartment with another Filipina to split the rent.

That roommate’s name was Joy Marsean.

And here’s where the story gets complicated.

Joy in Corpus Margan was born March 15th, 1995 in Angela City, Pampanga Province, exactly 1 year and 6 months before Raina in a city known for its proximity to the former American military bases and the particular kind of poverty that proximity creates.

Her story was Rea’s story with different details, different setting, same desperation.

Her father left when she was seven, just walked out one morning to buy cigarettes and never came back.

Her mother, Erlanda, raised three children alone on a seamstress’s wages, 600 pesos on good days, nothing on bad ones.

Joy learned early that men couldn’t be trusted, that money was the only security, that love was a luxury poor women couldn’t afford.

She was smart enough for scholarships, but not connected enough for opportunities.

She finished a 2-year vocational course in business administration, the most her family could afford, and joined the same exodus that had claimed Rea.

She arrived in Doha in January 2020, 14 months before Raina, and took a job at a different cosmetics counter in the same mall.

They met in September 2021 during a lunch break in the mall’s basement food court.

Both women were eating packed lunches from home.

Cold rice with dried fish for Raina.

Cold rice with scrambled eggs for Joy.

The universal sign of an overseas worker counting every real.

Joy noticed Raina’s food first.

I that smells exactly like my nan’s den.

Rea looked up surprised to hear Tagalog.

You’re Filipina Pampanga you batangas.

Joyy’s face broke into a genuine smile.

The first real smile Raina had seen since leaving home.

Capit Teo neighbors not literally but close enough.

Same region, same struggles, same reasons for being 6,000 m from everything they loved.

They talked until their lunch breaks ended.

They exchanged phone numbers.

They started eating together everyday.

Within weeks, the friendship had become something deeper.

The kind of instant intimacy that happens when two people recognize their own loneliness reflected in someone else’s eyes.

We should get an apartment together, Joy suggested in early November.

Split the rent, save money.

I’m so tired of living with strangers who steal my shampoo.

Raina agreed immediately.

living alone in a shared dormatory with eight other women had been slowly driving her insane.

The noise, the lack of privacy, the petty theft, the constant negotiations over bathroom time.

Anything would be better than that.

They found unit 4B at Elmaha residences on November 15th, 2021.

The address that would eventually appear in police reports and international headlines.

450 square feet of peeling paint and cracked tiles carved into a bedroom barely large enough for two single beds pushed against opposite walls and a kitchen the size of a closet that doubled as their living room.

The bathroom faucet dripped constantly.

The air conditioning wheezed and rattled and sometimes stopped working entirely in the middle of August when temperatures hit 48° and the walls felt like they were breathing heat.

The narrow balcony overlooking the back alley, the same balcony that would later become a crime scene, was just wide enough for one person to stand and smoke or for two people to squeeze together and watch the sunset if they didn’t mind being pressed shoulderto-shoulder.

The rent was 800 realals a month, split in half, that was 400 each, a savings of 200 real from what Rea had been paying at the dormatory.

200 reals meant an extra 3,000 pesos she could send home.

It meant her mother’s insulin.

It meant her sister’s school supplies.

It meant survival.

And for almost two years, that’s what the apartment represented.

Joy would later tell investigators, “We weren’t roommates.

We were sisters, just born to different mothers”.

For 23 months from November 2021 to October 2023.

That statement was absolutely true.

They decorated their cramped space with photos from home and cheap curtains from the discount store.

They cooked adobo and sineigang on a hot plate that threatened to burn the building down.

They video called their families together on Sunday mornings, passing the phone back and forth, laughing at siblings jokes, crying at mother’s prayers.

They were equals in struggle.

Two women earning nearly identical salaries.

Rea’s 2,800 reals versus Joyy’s 2,600.

Sending nearly identical amounts home.

Dr.eaming nearly identical dreams of someday returning to the Philippines with enough money to show for their sacrifice.

The difference between them was negligible.

They both scraped by.

They both counted their coins.

They both understood that this life was temporary suffering for permanent salvation.

But equality is a fragile thing.

It only takes one golden ticket to shatter it forever.

And in June 2023, Raina Delgado found hers.

She just didn’t know it would cost her life.

June 14th, 2023, 3:47 in the afternoon.

A date and time that would redirect the entire trajectory of Raina Delgado’s life, though she had no way of knowing it as she stood behind the Estee Lauder counter in Crescent Mall’s premium wing, feet aching inside Regulation heels, smile plastered across her face like armor, silently calculating whether today’s commission would cover her bus fair home.

It had been a brutal day.

The air conditioning in the premium wing was set to arctic temperatures, a luxury for customers, a punishment for workers who stood motionless for hours in thin blouses.

Raina’s back achd from standing since 9:00 am.

Her smile muscles were threatening to cramp, and her sales log showed only 340 reals in purchases, which translated to maybe 35 reals in commission.

Not enough for a decent meal, barely enough for transport.

She was mentally debating whether to skip dinner entirely when she noticed him approaching.

He moved differently than most customers.

There was no hurried pace, no distracted phone scrolling, no air of someone killing time between meetings.

He walked like a man who had never been rushed in his entire life, who had never needed to be, who had never even considered that time might be something that could run out.

tall at least six feet with graying temples that suggested mid-40s and posture that spoke of either military training or old money.

His th was pristine white, starched so perfectly it seemed to glow under the mall’s fluorescent lights.

The watch on his wrist, she noticed it because noticing details was her job, was understated and elegant, the kind of thing that cost more because it didn’t need to prove anything.

Everything about him whispered wealth so quietly that it thundered.

Good afternoon, sir.

Welcome to Estee Lauder.

How may I assist you today?

He looked at her, actually looked, not through her the way most customers did, and smiled.

Not the dismissive half smile she usually received from wealthy men.

The expression that said, “You exist only to serve me”.

This was something warmer, something that acknowledged her humanity.

“I need something for my wife’s birthday,” he said.

His English was precise, accented with the particular rhythms of someone who had learned it from British tutors.

something elegant but not overpowering.

She prefers subtlety.

For the next 15 minutes, Raina walked him through the fragrance collection with practiced expertise.

She explained notes and compositions, the difference between Oda Perfirm and Odlet, which sense worked best in Qatar’s climate.

He listened attentively, genuinely listened, asking thoughtful questions, seeming actually interested in her opinions rather than just waiting for her to finish talking so he could make his decision.

He settled on Lai Vi estate bell 800 reals a good sale her best of the week.

As she processed the purchase carefully wrapping the bottle in tissue paper and placing it in the signature blue bag, he glanced at her name tag.

Raina, he said, trying out the syllables.

That means queen in your language, doesn’t it?

She felt heat rise to her cheeks despite the aggressive air conditioning.

Yes, sir.

From the Spanish Rea, though I’m very far from royalty.

She laughed self-consciously, gesturing at her sales girl uniform.

He took the bag from her with something like gentleness.

Sometimes queens are found in unexpected places.

Thank you for your help, Raina.

You’ve been very kind.

And then he was gone, swallowed by the marble corridors and designer storefronts.

Just another wealthy customer buying expensive gifts for a wife he probably barely touched.

Rea thought nothing of it.

She went back to her post, back to counting the hours until 9:00 pm.

closing, back to calculating whether she could afford instant noodles or would have to settle for plain rice again.

She didn’t expect to see him again.

Men like that didn’t return to the same sales girl twice.

They had people to buy things for them.

3 days later, he proved her wrong.

June 17th, 3:52 in the afternoon.

same counter, same time of day, same pristine throw a different energy, more relaxed, more present, as if he’d been waiting for this moment.

The perfume was perfect, he said by way of greeting.

My wife loved it.

She said it was the best gift I’ve given her in years.

A pause, a small smile.

I thought I’d get her the matching body lotion.

Keep the success going.

Rea helped him select the companion product, a 400 realal purchase.

And this time their conversation stretched beyond the professional minimum.

Where was she from?

How long had she been in Doha?

Did she enjoy her work?

What did she miss most about the Philippines?

She found herself answering honestly, which surprised her.

Usually, she gave customers the sanitized version.

Yes, she loved Katar.

Yes, the mall was wonderful.

Yes, she was so grateful for the opportunity.

But something about his attention, his genuine curiosity made her say things she normally kept private.

I miss the food, she admitted.

Not just the taste, but the way we eat at home.

Everyone sharing from the same dishes.

Here I eat alone most nights.

It makes the food taste different.

He nodded as if he understood.

Loneliness changes everything, even the simple pleasures.

When she rang up his purchase, he handed her a 200 realal tip.

Her entire day’s commission in a single gesture.

Sir, this is too much.

Please.

He pressed the bills into her hand.

You’ve been very helpful and very honest.

That’s rare here.

She took the money.

What choice did she have?

200 reals was 2 days of food.

It was phone credit to call her mother.

It was the difference between making rent and begging her landlord for patience.

The pattern established itself quickly after that.

June 21st, he returned to buy a skincare set.

Tip: 150 reals.

June 28th, a makeup palette for his teenage daughter.

Tip: 200 reals.

July 4th, he came with nothing to buy at all.

“I was just passing by,” he said, though the premium wing was nowhere near any logical path to anywhere.

They talked for 20 minutes about her family, her dreams, her favorite places back home.

He told her about his travels, London, Paris, Singapore, New York, cities she had only seen in movies.

He described them like he was painting pictures just for her.

Before he left, he handed her a business card.

Heavy stock, minimal text, just a name, a phone number, and email address.

No flashy titles, no corporate logos.

In case you ever need anything, he said, “Not as a customer, just as someone who might like to talk”.

The name on the card read bin Rashid Almensur.

She didn’t call.

Not at first.

She wasn’t naive.

She knew what men like him wanted from women like her.

She’d heard the stories.

Filipinos who got involved with wealthy Arabs and ended up pregnant, abandoned, deported, domestic workers who disappeared into private households and were never seen again.

Qatar was not kind to women who forgot their place, who imagined that attention from powerful men meant anything other than the obvious.

But the card stayed in her wallet, tucked behind her national ID, and sometimes at night, she would take it out and trace the embossed letters with her fingernail.

Shik Roomi bin Rashid Al-Manssour.

She Googled him once carefully on the mall’s public Wi-Fi.

The Al-Mansour trading group was one of Qatar’s oldest family businesses, shipping, real estate, import export.

The family’s estimated net worth ran into the hundreds of millions.

Roomie was the second son, the one who ran the real estate division, married in 2008 to a woman from another prominent family.

Two children, a son, 14, and a daughter, 11, a wife, children, a life that had nothing to do with hers.

And yet, on July 12th at exactly 9:15 in the evening, her phone rang.

International number, her heart hammered before she could think.

Raina.

His voice was warm, like he’d been waiting to say her name.

This is Roomie.

We met at the mall.

I hope this isn’t too forward.

She should have hung up.

She should have been cold, professional, distant, but she found herself saying, “How did you get my number”?

The mall directory.

A slight pause.

I may have made a donation to their charitable foundation.

She laughed despite herself.

Is that what you call bribery?

I prefer creative problem solving.

He laughed too.

I was calling to ask if you might have dinner with me, somewhere quiet, somewhere we could actually talk without me having to pretend I need more skinincare products.

I don’t think that’s a good idea, sir.

Please don’t call me, sir.

And I understand your hesitation.

I know how this must look.

I’m not asking for anything you don’t want to give.

I’m asking for conversation, company, the chance to know you better.

She was quiet for so long that he spoke again.

I’ll be honest with you because you seem like someone who values honesty.

My marriage is functional.

Arranged when I was 22 to unite two families.

My wife is a good woman and a good mother, but we are strangers who share a house.

I’m not looking for a mistress.

I’m looking for a friend, someone who sees me as a person instead of a business opportunity.

Rea closed her eyes.

I need to think about it.

Of course, take all the time you need.

She thought about it for 6 days.

She thought about it while selling perfume to women who never looked at her face.

She thought about it while eating alone in her cramped apartment, listening to Joy snore in the bed 3 ft away.

She thought about it while video calling her mother and watching the older woman’s clouded eyes squint at the screen.

On July 18th at 9:30 in the evening, Raina Delgado put on her best dress, a modest blue thing she’d bought for a friend’s wedding 2 years earlier and took a taxi to the Pearl Grand Hotel.

The suite was bigger than her family’s entire house back in Batangas.

She stood in the doorway for a full 30 seconds, overwhelmed by the silk drapes, the crystal chandeliers, the furniture that looked like it belonged in a museum.

A private dinner had been set up on the balcony.

white tablecloth, silver cutlery, candles that flickered in the evening breeze.

Roomie rose to greet her, dressed casually for the first time she’d seen polo shirt, pressed slacks, no th looked younger without the formal attire.

More human.

Thank you for coming, he said.

I know it wasn’t easy.

They talked for 4 hours about her family, her mother’s diabetes, her father’s death, her promise to save them all.

About his life, the weight of expectations, the suffocation of a marriage built on contracts instead of connection, the particular loneliness of being surrounded by people who wanted things from you, about dreams and disappointments, and the strange ways life took you to places you never expected.

At 1:30 in the morning, as she gathered her things to leave, he handed her an envelope.

inside 5,000 reals in cash almost two months of her salary.

For your time, he said, for your honesty, for making me feel like a person instead of a name.

She stared at the money.

I can’t accept this.

Why not?

Because it makes this into something else, something transactional.

He was quiet for a moment.

Then everything in life is transactional.

Raina, time, attention, care, they all have value.

I’m not buying you.

I’m acknowledging that your time has worth, that your presence matters, that you gave me something tonight that I can’t get from anyone in my official life.

She took the money and she came back again and again over the following months.

She came back.

What grew between Raina and Roomie defied simple categories.

It wasn’t prostitution.

He never once pressured her for physical intimacy.

Not in the first month, not in the third, not until she initiated it herself in November.

because somewhere along the way she had stopped dreading their meetings and started counting the hours until the next one.

It wasn’t a traditional affair.

There were no stolen moments in his marital bed.

No sneaking around his family home.

No pretending she was something other than what she was.

It wasn’t love exactly.

She wasn’t foolish enough to believe he would leave his wife, his children, his empire for a sales girl from Batangas.

But it was something that filled a hollow inside her that she hadn’t even known existed.

For the first time in her life, someone was asking what she wanted instead of what she could give.

Someone was looking at her like she mattered as a person, not as a daughter who owed her family salvation.

Not as a worker who owed her employer productivity, not as a brown-skinned immigrant who owed Qatar her grateful silence.

By August, the gifts had escalated beyond cash.

A designer watch she couldn’t wear publicly.

She kept it in its box, took it out sometimes just to feel its weight in her palm.

By September, a Louisis Vuitton bag that cost more than her annual salary back home, hidden under her bed because how would she ever explain it to Joy?

By October, gold jewelry stored in a locked box beneath the loose floorboard by her bed.

By November, a new iPhone that she told Joy she’d won in a mall raffle, a lie that sat heavy in her stomach, but felt necessary.

The money kept coming.

15,000 reals in August, 18,000 in September, 20,000 in October, 25,000 in November, plus that iPhone, 30,000 in December, along with an offer that made her cry.

Let me pay for your mother’s treatment, all of it.

Insulin, checkups, whatever she needs.

By February 2024, Raina Delgado had received nearly 200,000 realals from Shik Roomi bin Rashid al-Mansur.

roughly $54,000 American dollars, more money than her family had seen in three generations.

Her mother’s medical bills were paid off, years of accumulated debt erased with a single wire transfer.

Her youngest sister was enrolled in a proper university instead of the vocational school they’d originally budgeted for.

A down payment had been made on a modest house in Lipa City, a real house with a real bathroom with a real kitchen, just like she’d promised at the airport 3 years ago.

She was saving her family, just not in the way she’d imagined.

But secrets have a cost.

And in the cramped confines of unit 4B, Almaha residences, a cost was accumulating that Raina hadn’t noticed.

Because someone was watching, someone who shared her meals and her bathroom and her memories of home, someone who was slowly drowning in debt while Rea mysteriously flourished.

Joy had noticed the new phone.

She’d found the Louisis Vuitton bag hidden under the bed while looking for a dropped earring.

She’d heard Raina whispering on late night phone calls, laughing softly at things that weren’t funny, saying, “I miss you, too”.

to someone who wasn’t family and enjoys mind, trapped in her own spiral of debt and desperation, watching her mother’s cancer grow while her savings stayed flat.

A question had started to fester like an infected wound.

Why her?

Why did Raina get a golden ticket while Joy got nothing?

and what would it take to make things fair.

Joy Marsegan first noticed something was wrong on September 23rd, 2023 at approximately 11:47 in the evening.

She had come home early from a double shift, her feet were swollen, her back was screaming, and the mall supervisor had taken pity on her after she’d nearly fainted near the perfume samples.

The apartment was dark when she unlocked the door, which was strange.

Rea should have been home by 9:30.

Her shift ended at 9:00.

Joy flipped on the light and saw that Raina’s bed was empty, not slept and empty, made up empty.

The sheets tucked tight like she hadn’t been home at all.

The bathroom was silent.

The kitchen showed no signs of dinner being prepared.

She checked her phone.

No messages from Raina.

No explanation.

At 12:15 am.

, Joy heard the apartment door open.

Rea slipped inside like a ghost, shoes in her hand, trying to be quiet.

She froze when she saw Joy sitting on her bed, wide awake, watching.

Where were you?

Raina’s face cycled through several expressions.

Surprise, guilt, calculation, before settling on something that was almost a smile.

I went out with some friends from work.

Sorry, I should have texted.

What friends?

You don’t have friends from work.

Neither of us do.

New friends from the other wing.

We got dinner.

Joy wanted to believe her.

sisters trusted each other.

But something in Raina’s eyes, something evasive, something she’d never seen before, made her stomach turn.

“You’re wearing makeup,” Joy said quietly.

“You never wear makeup outside of work”.

Raina touched her face reflexively.

“I didn’t take it off after my shift.

I was tired.

It was a small lie, the kind that shouldn’t have mattered”.

But Joy lay awake that night, listening to Raina breathe in the bed 3 ft away.

And she knew.

She knew with the certainty of someone who had shared every meal and every secret for two years that her sister was hiding something.

The knowing would eat her alive over the next 6 months.

To understand what happened to Joy Maran, you need to understand what was happening in Pampanga Province while Rea was collecting designer bags and cash envelopes.

Erlanda Maraan, Joyy’s mother, 61 years old, former seamstress, had been diagnosed with stage 2 breast cancer in March 2022.

The diagnosis came from a free screening clinic at the provincial hospital delivered by a doctor who couldn’t look Erlanda in the eye when he explained what the shadow on the mammogram meant.

Stage two operable survivable with proper treatment.

The word proper was doing a lot of heavy lifting in that sentence.

Proper treatment meant a mastctomy 180,000 pesos.

Proper treatment meant chemotherapy 45,000 pesos per session eight sessions recommended.

Proper treatment meant radiation, 120,000 pesos for the full course.

Proper treatment meant medication, follow-up appointments, CT scans, blood work, an endless cascade of expenses that added up to approximately 850,000 pesos.

That was the number in March 2022.

By October 2023, the cancer had progressed to stage 3.

It had spread to the lymph nodes.

The new treatment estimate was 1.

2 2 million pesos, roughly 21,000 American, and the timeline had shrunk from within a year to within 6 months, or we can’t guarantee anything.

Joy had been sending money home since she arrived in Qatar in January 2020.

Every month, like clockwork, 1,600 realals, sometimes 1,800 if she could swing a few extra shifts.

In 4 years, she had accumulated approximately 180,000 pesos in her mother’s treatment fund.

The gap between what she had and what she needed was over a million pesos.

At her current saving rate, it would take her seven more years to close that gap.

Her mother didn’t have 7 years.

Her mother might not have 7 months.

Joy started working double shifts in October 2023.

6 days a week, 14 hours a day.

She would leave the apartment at 7:00 am.

and return at 11 pm.

Feet so swollen she had to soak them in warm water before she could sleep.

She ate one meal a day to save money.

Usually the cheapest thing from the food court, a 12 real shawarma that sat in her stomach like cement.

Her body started breaking down.

Chronic headaches, back pain that never fully went away, a persistent cough from the mall’s aggressive air conditioning.

Her hair started thinning from stress.

She lost weight she couldn’t afford to lose.

And through all of this, she watched Raina.

She watched Rea come home late three nights a week with no explanation.

She watched Raina buy a new phone, an iPhone 15 Pro Max, the expensive one, and claimed she’d won it in a raffle that Joy had never heard announced.

She watched Rea’s remittance’s home suddenly double, then triple.

She watched her roommate, her sister, transform from a fellow survivor into someone with a secret life.

Joy started keeping a journal on November 1st, 2023.

Not a diary, something more clinical evidence maybe, though she didn’t know for what.

The journal would later be recovered by investigators from a locked drawer in Joyy’s bedside table.

The entries paint a portrait of a woman descending slowly into obsession.

November 3rd, 2023.

Raina came home at midnight again.

Said she was working late, but I checked her schedule on the breakroom board.

She was off at 6:00 pm.

Where was she for 6 hours?

She’s hiding something.

I know she’s hiding something.

November 8th, 2023.

found an envelope in Raina’s drawer.

I wasn’t snooping.

I was looking for the scissors we share.

There was at least 5,000 reals inside, maybe more cash.

Who has that much cash?

Our salaries are almost the same.

Where is this money coming from?

November 15th, 2023.

N called crying.

The pain is getting worse.

Doctor says the cancer is spreading faster than expected.

We need to start treatment within 4 months or he can’t promise anything.

I have 190,000 pesos saved.

I need over a million.

Where am I supposed to find a million pesos?

God, please help me.

Please.

November 22nd, 2023.

Raina sent 8,000 reals home this month.

8,000.

I saw the remittance receipt on her phone when she left it unlocked.

Her salary is 2,800.

She can’t send more than she makes.

The math doesn’t work.

Unless there’s money I don’t know about.

Unless she has a source she’s not telling me.

December 3rd, 2023.

I found it under her bed.

A Louis Vuitton bag.

Not fake.

I’ve worked in malls long enough to know the difference.

This bag costs at least 8,000 reals, maybe more.

She’s been hiding it.

She’s been hiding everything.

What else don’t I know?

December 10th, 2023.

Confronted her about the bag.

She said it was a gift from a friend.

I asked what friend.

She said I didn’t know them.

I asked when she made friends who could afford Louisis Vuitton.

She changed the subject.

She’s lying to me.

We were supposed to be sisters.

Sisters don’t lie.

December 28th, 2023.

I heard her on the phone last night.

She was in the bathroom with the water running, but I could still hear her.

She was laughing, whispering.

She said, “I miss you, too”.

She said, “I can’t wait to see you.

This isn’t a friend.

This is a man.

She has a man.

That’s where the money is coming from.

That’s where all of it is coming from”.

January 2024 was when Joyy’s curiosity hardened into something darker.

The realization didn’t come all at once.

It built slowly, like water behind a dam.

Each new discovery adding pressure until the structure couldn’t hold anymore.

She started paying closer attention, noting when Raina left.

when she returned, what she wore, how she smelled.

On January 8th, Raina came home with a new gold bracelet she tried to hide under her sleeve.

On January 15th, Joy found a second envelope of cash.

This one containing what looked like 10,000 reals.

On January 23rd, she overheard another phone conversation.

This time catching fragments, Roomie and Tomorrow night, and the usual place, Roomie, an Arab name, a man’s name.

Joy Googled it on her phone that night, searching room Doha and Elmansuri and wealthy Qatari’s Doha.

She didn’t find anything definitive, but she didn’t need to.

The picture was clear enough.

Rea had found a sponsor, a sugar daddy, a wealthy Qatari man who was paying her for what?

Companionship, sex.

Did it matter?

What mattered was this.

Rea had a golden ticket.

Rea was being showered with money and gifts while Joy worked herself half to death for scraps.

Rea’s family was being saved while Joyy’s mother rotted from the inside out.

The unfairness of it was suffocating.

January 28th, 2024.

Journal entry.

I’ve done the math.

Rea has probably received 150,000 reals in the past 6 months.

Maybe more.

That’s almost 2.

5 million pesos.

More than enough for N’s treatment.

more than enough for everything.

And she’s spending it on her family while I watch mine die.

We started in the same place.

We came here together.

We were supposed to struggle together.

Why does she get to escape while I’m still drowning?

February 5th, 2024.

I can’t stop thinking about it.

I can’t sleep.

I can’t eat.

I look at Raina and I don’t see my sister anymore.

I see someone who got lucky while I got nothing.

I see someone who found a shortcut while I’m still grinding myself to dust on the long road.

This not fair.

This not fair.

This not fair.

February 10th, 2024.

I know what I have to do.

The research started that same night.

Joyy’s browser history recovered later by digital forensics.

Tells the story of a woman transitioning from jealousy to calculation.

February 10th.

Sugar daddy relationships Middle East.

February 11th.

What happens if affair exposed Qatar?

February 12th, blackmail laws Qatar.

February 14th, how much to pay for silence rich man affair.

February 18th, wealthy Qatari scandal exposure, what happens.

February 22nd, taking photos without someone knowing.

February 28th, how to prove a fair evidence pictures.

March 5th, hidden camera apps best 2024.

March 12th, can you get deported for blackmail?

The plan formed piece by piece, search by search.

Joy couldn’t get a golden ticket of her own.

She wasn’t pretty enough, wasn’t charming enough, wasn’t lucky enough, but she could tax Rea’s ticket.

She could demand a share.

All she needed was evidence.

If you’re following this story and seeing where it’s headed, take a moment to subscribe and hit that notification bell.

What happens next will test everything you think you know about friendship, desperation, and the terrible mathematics of survival.

Stay with me.

March 15th, 2024.

The opportunity revealed itself.

Joy was pretending to sleep when Raina made the phone call.

It was 11:30 at night and Rea was sitting on her bed, phone pressed to her ear, speaking in that soft, intimate voice Joy had come to despise.

Yes, Friday works around 2:00 pm.

Joy has a double shift that day.

She won’t be back until late.

Yes, I’ll text you the address.

I want you to see it, even though it’s nothing like your world.

I want you to see where I really live.

Joyy’s eyes snapped open in the darkness.

He was coming here.

The wealthy sponsor, the source of all that money, he was coming to their apartment.

While Joy was supposed to be at work, this was it.

This was her chance.

For the next week, Joy refined her plan.

She would leave for work as normal on Friday morning.

She would come back around 2:30 after they’d had time to settle in.

She would take photos, as many as she could get, before they noticed her.

Then she would confront them, demand payment, 200,000 reals.

That was her price.

Enough for her mother’s treatment.

Enough to save her family the way Raina was saving hers.

She practiced what she would say.

She rehearsed expressions in the bathroom mirror.

Calm, business-like, unflinching.

She wasn’t going to be emotional about this.

This was a transaction.

Rea had something Joy needed, and Joy had leverage to get it.

in her journal the night before the confrontation.

March 21st, 2024.

Tomorrow it happens.

I thought about this for weeks.

I planned every detail.

This isn’t wrong.

This is fair.

Raina stumbled into money she didn’t earn while I’ve broken my body for nothing.

She could have shared.

She could have helped me.

Instead, she hid everything and let me suffer.

She doesn’t deserve all that luck.

She doesn’t deserve to save her family while mine dies.

Tomorrow I’m going to even the scales.

And if she doesn’t like it, she should have thought about that before she lied to me for 8 months.

N I’m coming.

I’m going to save you.

March 22nd, 2024.

The day that would end one life and destroy another.

6:15 am.

The alarm on Joyy’s phone shattered the silence of unit 4B.

Both women stirred in their beds, performing the morning rituals they’d shared for 2 and 1/2 years.

But today, nothing was the same.

Today, both of them were acting.

Raina was nervous, her stomach tight with anticipation.

Roomie was coming to her home, to the cramped apartment.

She’d been embarrassed to describe the life she’d been afraid to show him.

Part of her was excited.

This felt like a step forward, like he was accepting all of her, not just the version she presented in hotel suites.

Part of her was terrified of what he would think.

Joy was calm in a way that frightened her.

She’d barely slept, but her mind was clear, her hands steady.

She had rehearsed today a h 100 times in her imagination.

She knew exactly what she would do, what she would say, how she would finally take control of a situation that had made her feel powerless for months.

6:45 am.

Breakfast together.

Instant coffee and pandestle that Joy had bought the day before.

They sat at the tiny table in the kitchen, eating in silence that felt different than usual.

Heavier, charged.

“Double shift today,” Joy said casually, not looking up from her bread.

“Won’t be back until 11 at least”.

“That’s brutal,” Raina replied.

“You’ve been working so much lately.

Money doesn’t earn itself”.

The words came out sharper than Joy intended.

She softened her voice.

“I’m trying to save for Na’s treatment.

You know how it is.

Did Raina flinch?

Joy thought she saw something cross her roommate’s face.

Guilt, maybe, or discomfort.

But Raina just nodded and said, “You’re a good daughter”.

The words were acid in Joyy’s ears.

“A good daughter”?

as if working yourself to death while your mother slowly died was the same as finding a rich sponsor who could solve all your problems with a few envelopes of cash.

“I’ll probably just rest today,” Rea said, her voice carefully casual.

“Maybe clean the apartment, lies”.

Both of them lying to each other across a table the size of a school desk in an apartment smaller than the hotel suites where Raina met her sponsor in a life that had become unbearable for Joy to share.

7:30 am.

Joy left first.

She hugged Raina at the door, a habit from better days, from when they really were sisters and said, “Take care of yourself, T.

You too.

Don’t work too hard”.

Joy walked to the elevator, pressed the button, and waited.

She didn’t look back.

If she looked back, she might lose her nerve.

7:47 am.

Joy arrived at the metro station, but didn’t board a train toward the mall.

Instead, she walked three blocks east to a coffee shop called Morning Star Cafe, a place she’d scouted earlier in the week.

It was far enough from Elmaha residences to avoid being seen by neighbors, close enough to return quickly when the time came.

She ordered the cheapest item on the menu, a six real black coffee, and found a seat in the corner.

She had over 6 hours to wait, 6 hours to think, to plan, to keep her nerve from failing.

The coffee grew cold.

She ordered another.

The hours crawled.

12:30 pm.

Joy walked to a mobile accessory store two blocks away and purchased a cheap phone stand for 15 reals.

Her hands were steady as she paid.

The stand would hold her phone at the right angle while she photographed whatever was happening in the apartment.

Evidence, proof, leverage.

1:15 pm.

She returned to the coffee shop and watched the clock.

45 more minutes.

She imagined Raina preparing, cleaning, changing sheets, putting on makeup for her wealthy lover.

The thought made her sick and furious in equal measure.

1:45 pm.

Joy left the coffee shop and began walking back toward Elmaha Residences.

Her heart was pounding, but her steps were measured.

Calm.

She was going to be calm.

Meanwhile, in unit 4B, Raina Delgado was anything but calm.

10:00 am.

She cleaned obsessively, scrubbed the bathroom until the tiles gleamed, mopped the kitchen floor twice, changed the sheets on her bed, not because anything would happen there, but because she wanted everything perfect.

11:30 am.

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