A woman who lured a 13-year-old boy into her home and forced him to have sex with her has been jailed.
Nicola Fox, 33, pinned down the crying boy, who was a virgin at the time.
Fox lured the youngster into her home by saying she wanted a "chat".
But, when he tried to leave, she closed the curtains and pulled him onto her bed in the room that also served as her living room, the Hull Daily Mail reported.
The boy stood to leave again, but she sexually assaulted him, "slammed" the door then put a table up against it, Hull Crown Court heard.
Claire Holmes, prosecuting said: "She pinned him down to the bed using her weight. She was touching his chest and she removed her trousers and lower clothing."
Fox then held the boy's hands over his head and forced him to have sex.
Miss Holmes said: "He was clear that he didn't want her to do this. He was telling her to stop, to get off.
"He was crying at one point. Her response was to tell him to stop crying, and she said that in an annoyed and aggressive tone. He felt annoyed, upset and embarrassed."
The boy estimated the incident, which happened earlier this summer, lasted five to ten minutes. He went home, showered, and did not report the incident immediately.
Fox told him if he did tell anyone she would say he consented. She also sent him a message on social media saying if he told anyone "she would say that he wanted it".
Despite his anguish, the victim had treated Fox with "dignity" during the incident because of her gender, the court heard.
Miss Holmes said: "[He] said although he tried to fight her off, he was conscious of the fact he was being assaulted by a female and he didn't want to cause her any harm."
Fox sat in the dock shaking her head at this and other points.
In a victim the statement, the boy, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, said he was grateful for the support of his family, but had not been able to confide in all his relatives. He had lost confidence and become socially isolated.
Miss Holmes said: "He can't think about future relationships because the thought scares him. He feels angry because this defendant has taken all of his first experiences away from him, which is something he won't get back."
Fox, of Boulevard, west Hull, declined to answer questions in police interview. She later admitted sexual activity with a child. She has no previous convictions.
Dale Brook, mitigating, said: "It is difficult to understand or believe that her first conviction can be for such a serious offence in the terms as outlined by my learned friend. Perhaps the only obvious explanation for it is contained in the pre-sentence report, and it is clear that she was suffering from profound mental health problems at the time."
Fox had been hearing "multiple voices" around the time of the attack.
"She's not saying the voices told her to do this?" said Recorder Richard Woolfall.
"That's not in the report, no," said Mr Brook.
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