Follow
Chapters
Share
After Her Betrayal, Our Family Was Ruined Novel Cover

After Her Betrayal, Our Family Was Ruined

The call came on a rainy Tuesday afternoon. "Nala, you need to come to Washington General Hospital immediately." Ian's voice cracked through the phone, and something in my chest tightened before he even finished speaking. "What happened?" I asked, though part of me already knew. The Patterson family had been riding high for years—Ian's political star ascending, our four children thriving. We weren't due for tragedy. "It's Jason. There's been an accident." I remember the rain pounding against the windshield as I drove to the hospital, my knuckles white against the steering wheel. Jason, our eldest, had just finished his freshman year at Georgetown. He was supposed to come home that weekend with stories about his classes, his girlfriends, his plans for summer internships. Instead, I found him lying motionless in a hospital bed, tubes snaking from his arms, his face pale beneath the harsh fluorescent lights.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

The first time I saw Gemma Cole, she was standing in Ian's office doorway, a slender figure silhouetted against the afternoon light. I'd come to bring him lunch—a habit from our early days when he worked late nights and forgot to eat—but stopped short when I heard her voice.

"Ian, we need to talk about what happened that night."

I pushed the door open wider, clutching the lunch bag tighter. "Ian? Who's this?"

He looked up from his desk, his expression unreadable. "Nala, this is Gemma Cole. She says she... helped me once, a long time ago."

Gemma turned toward me, her smile perfectly composed. "You must be Nala. I've heard so much about you."

Her eyes were cold despite her warm words, and something in my chest tightened. I'd seen that look before—calculating, assessing, dangerous.

"I don't understand," I said, setting down the lunch bag. "What night?"

Ian stood slowly, his movements stiff. "Gemma says she was there the night I was attacked, before you found me. She says she's the one who called for help."

My breath caught. The story of how I'd found Ian bleeding in an alley, a homeless veteran with nothing but his military jacket and shattered dreams—it was the foundation of our love story. The beginning of everything we'd built together.

"That's impossible," I said, my voice barely above a whisper. "I was alone that night."

Gemma's smile never wavered. She reached into her purse and pulled out a photograph—faded, creased, but clear enough to show a younger Ian on a stretcher, and a woman's hand holding his.

"This was taken by the paramedics," she said softly, handing it to Ian. "I kept it all these years."

Ian stared at the photo, his fingers trembling slightly. I watched his face change as he studied it—confusion giving way to something like recognition.

"I remember this jacket," he murmured, touching the image. "But I thought..."

"You thought Nala was there," Gemma finished for him, her voice gentle with false sympathy. "It's understandable. Memory plays tricks when we're traumatized."

---

Over the next few weeks, Gemma became a fixture in our lives. She'd show up at political events, volunteer at Ian's campaign headquarters, even bring him lunch sometimes—taking over the role I'd once played.

But it was the day she came to our home that everything changed.

"I need to speak with Ian alone," she said when I opened the door, her tone leaving no room for argument.

I watched from the hallway as she spread photographs across our dining table—images of me with men I'd never met, in places I'd never been.

"These are from your wife's phone," she told Ian, her voice low but carrying to where I stood frozen. "And these—" she pulled out documents with official-looking seals—"are paternity tests."

Ian's face drained of color. "What are you saying?"

"I'm saying your children might not be yours," Gemma whispered, her eyes glittering with malice. "Think about it, Ian. The timing of each pregnancy, the way she insisted on handling all the legal matters..."

"That's a lie!" I burst into the room, my heart pounding so hard I thought it might shatter my ribs. "Those photos are fake! Those documents are forged!"

But Ian was already staring at the papers in his hands, his expression hardening. I recognized that look—the politician's mask sliding into place, hiding whatever real emotion lay beneath.

"Nala," he said finally, his voice cold and distant. "How could you?"

"I didn't do anything!" Desperation clawed at my throat. "Ian, you know me. You know our children are yours!"

Gemma watched from the corner of the room, her satisfaction barely concealed. "The evidence speaks for itself," she murmured.

---

That night, Ian came to our bedroom late. I was already in bed, tears dried on my cheeks, when he opened the door.

"We need to talk," he said, standing at the foot of the bed rather than coming to his side.

I sat up, pulling the covers around me like armor. "About what Gemma showed you? Those lies?"

"They're not lies, Nala." His voice was flat, emotionless. "I've had time to think about everything—the way you've always controlled our finances, the way you insisted on handling the children's birth certificates..."

"Because I'm their mother!" My voice broke. "I've always taken care of our family!"

"And now I'm wondering what else you've been taking care of." He turned toward the doorway, where Gemma stood watching, her silhouette dark against the hallway light.

She didn't speak, but her presence said everything.

"Nala," Ian continued, his voice suddenly weary. "I don't trust you anymore."

The words hit me like physical blows. Ten years of marriage, four children, countless sacrifices—all reduced to this moment of betrayal.

"You believe her," I whispered, staring at the woman who had systematically destroyed everything I loved. "After everything we've been through together."

Gemma's smile was small but victorious as she stepped closer to Ian, her hand brushing his arm in a gesture that seemed almost possessive.

And in that moment, I realized our marriage was crumbling beneath the weight of lies—and there was nothing I could do to stop it.

You may also like

After Meeting His Ex, I Knew He’d Never Love Me Novel Cover
8.0
The music in the ballroom was too loud. The champagne was too dry. I just wanted to take off my heels and go home. My feet throbbed badly. I had spent six hours in the dance studio that morning. I stood near a melting ice sculpture, trying to hide in the shadows. That’s when Marcus Hale found me. He was an entertainment executive with too much cologne and a reputation for wandering hands. He boxed me in against the cocktail table. “Waverly,” he purred.
After My Husband Left Me for His Paris Mistress Novel Cover
9.5
The coq au vin had developed a skin, a dull, gelatinous film that mocked the three hours I’d spent prepping it. Ten years. A decade of marriage to Logan King, and the silence in our Upper East Side penthouse was loud enough to rattle the crystal flutes on the table. The bubbles in the vintage Dom Pérignon had long since died, leaving the golden liquid flat and stagnant. At 10:45 PM, the elevator chimed. I didn’t stand up. I just smoothed the silk of my dress, my fingers trembling slightly against the fabric. Logan walked in, but he didn’t look at me. He didn’t look at the dinner. He was checking his watch, his thumb swiping across the screen of his phone with a frantic energy I hadn’t seen in years.
Branded a Slut, All Because of My Stepsister’s Scheme Novel Cover
8.4
Betrayed by family and branded at school, Emily Carter’s world collapses after one reckless night spirals into scandal. When her manipulative stepsister Vanessa steals not only her father’s love but also the man Emily thought she could trust, Emily is left cornered, humiliated, and alone. But survival has a way of sharpening edges. Caught between lies, obsession, and the fragile hope of redemption, Emily must decide: will she let her sister destroy her, or will she rise from the ashes and fight for her own future?
Fake Amnesia, Real Betrayal: I Left, He Crawled Back Novel Cover
8.3
In the fifth year of Irene Shaw's marriage to Ethan Hart, he was involved in a car accident and lost his memory. No matter how she tried to prove that they had once loved each other, Ethan still insisted on a divorce. His reasoning was hard to refute. "If I really loved you as much as you claim, how could I forget you?" The childhood sweetheart who had once cut him off without hesitation had now become his sole emotional anchor. He looked at Irene coldly. "Since you know this is a mistake, why not end it cleanly?" The hands that had once refused to let her go now recoiled from even her lightest touch. Disheartened and exhausted, Irene signed her name and pushed him completely out of her life. Not long after, Ethan stopped her in the rain, his eyes red from crying. "Irene, don't leave me. You said I'd never lose you." As the car window slid shut, the arm around her waist tightened instinctively, and someone spoke before she could. "Drive on. Irene said she doesn't know him." She lowered her gaze, feeling a serene detachment, "I really don't know him."
In Love With A Police Officer Novel Cover
7.5
River Lockhart, the son of an infamous billionaire, gets a speeding ticket from the new police officer of the city, Officer Damian Reid. "Trust me, officer. You don't want to do that." "Why? Are you the Prime Minister's son?" "What if I am?" "It doesn't matter." River is to follow his father, Mr Lockhart's footsteps in the future. It has been his dream to copy his father's image one day. But the timing is so wrong. He's interested in a guardian of the law, yet he is to become a devil against the law. Can illegal shadows and emergency sirens mingle together? Is it a good match?
My Last Breath, His Last Drive to Her Novel Cover
9.6
On the morning I planned to end my life, I discovered the truth. My husband James was supposed to be my forever—his touch electric, his promises like scripture. But when I found the hidden phone in his suit, my world collapsed. Messages to "Darling" spilled across the screen—flirty, intimate, sent minutes before his fatal car crash. He wasn’t heading to work. He was racing to her. Now, grief twists into rage. Who was she? How long had he lied? And why does my best friend Sarah flinch every time I mention James’s name? The deeper I dig, the uglier the truth becomes. Because some secrets aren’t just buried—they’re alive. And they’re waiting for me. Would you unravel the lies, even if it destroyed you?