Follow
Chapters
Share
When Love Betrays Novel Cover

When Love Betrays

Victoria Bathram has been fighting kidney failure for five long years. Through endless hospital visits, painful treatments, and nights filled with fear, she survives on one thing alone—the love of her husband, Gabriel. He is attentive, gentle, and seemingly devoted, standing by her side as she waits for the transplant that could save her life. When a matching kidney is finally found, Victoria believes her suffering is about to end. Instead, it is just beginning. By accident, Victoria overhears a conversation she was never meant to hear. Gabriel has made a choice—one that does not include her. The kidney meant to save her will be given to another patient: a young girl named Sandra. A child he calls his daughter. A child from the secret family he has been hiding all along. As Victoria’s health rapidly declines, the truth unravels. Gabriel has not only betrayed her trust but has been living a second life inside her parents’ villas—homes he kept her away from under the excuse of protecting her fragile heart. Through hidden security footage, Victoria watches her husband give his affection, loyalty, and gifts to another woman and her children, using the life she thought was hers. With only months left to live and everything she believed in stripped away, Victoria faces a devastating choice of her own: remain a silent victim of love and betrayal, or reclaim what little time she has left on her own terms.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 7

Night came quietly.

It did not announce itself with thunder or rain. It simply crept in, one minute at a time, turning the pale afternoon light into shadows that stretched across the living room floor. Gabriel noticed it only when the clock on the wall chimed softly, reminding him that hours had passed.

Victoria still wasn’t home.

He stood near the window, staring out at the empty driveway. The porch light had been on since evening, casting a lonely yellow glow over the concrete. Any second now, he told himself. She was probably tired. Maybe Aunt Mary kept her longer than expected. Maybe she fell asleep on the couch there, surrounded by old memories.

Yet his chest felt tight.

Gabriel glanced at his phone again. No missed calls. No messages.

That wasn’t like her.

Victoria always sent something—even if it was just a short text saying she was okay. Especially now, when her health was fragile and he hovered over her every movement. She never wanted him to worry.

He unlocked his phone and dialed her number.

Once.

Twice.

The number you are calling is switched off.

His brow furrowed. He tried again, slower this time, as if dialing carefully might change the outcome.

The same voice answered him.

A strange unease crept into his stomach.

“Why is your phone off?” he muttered under his breath.

He walked across the living room, then back again, his steps restless. He glanced toward the kitchen, where he’d earlier unpacked groceries she liked—fruit she could stomach, soup ingredients, herbal tea. He had planned to cook for her, make her sit at the table, watch her eat a few spoonfuls, praise her like a child for finishing.

Now the groceries sat untouched.

Gabriel wiped his palms on his trousers and scrolled through his contacts. His finger hovered for a second before he tapped another name.

Aunt Mary.

The call rang briefly, then went dead.

He frowned and tried again.

This time, it didn’t ring at all.

Disconnected.

His heart skipped.

“That’s odd…” he murmured.

Mary always answered. Even if she was busy, even if she was annoyed with him, she always answered when it came to Victoria.

A memory surfaced in his mind, sharp and sudden.

Victoria’s voice, earlier that day.

I want to go to my family house.

At the time, he’d smiled and agreed too easily, relieved she wanted something that didn’t involve questions or confrontation. He hadn’t thought much of it then.

Now, the thought lodged itself in his chest like a stone.

Her family house.

Gabriel grabbed his keys.

The drive felt wrong from the beginning.

The streets were familiar, yet everything seemed distorted, as though the city itself had shifted while he wasn’t looking. Traffic lights glowed red for too long. Cars passed him too slowly. Every second stretched, pulling at his nerves.

He drummed his fingers against the steering wheel, his mind jumping between possibilities.

Maybe she was just upset.

Maybe she wanted space.

Maybe she needed to be alone with memories of her parents.

But why turn off her phone?

And why wouldn’t Mary answer?

By the time he reached the neighborhood, his heart was pounding.

The Bathram family house stood at the end of the quiet street, just as it always had—large, dignified, its white walls muted in the darkness. Gabriel slowed the car, his eyes fixed on the gate.

Then he saw it.

The gate was locked.

Not just closed—locked tight with a thick, unfamiliar padlock that caught the light from his headlights.

His breath hitched.

He parked hurriedly and stepped out of the car, the night air cold against his skin. He walked closer, disbelief washing over him.

The padlock was new.

Heavy. Final.

“Victoria?” he called, his voice echoing down the empty street.

Nothing answered him.

He moved closer, gripping the iron bars of the gate.

“Victoria!” he called again, louder this time.

His voice bounced back, hollow and lonely.

The house was dark. No lights in the windows. No movement. No sign that anyone had been there recently.

Panic surged.

“Victoria, please!” His hands shook as he rattled the gate. “I’m here. Open the gate!”

Silence.

The realization hit him all at once.

She wasn’t here.

She hadn’t just come to visit.

She had left.

Gabriel’s knees weakened, and before he could stop himself, he slid down against the gate, his back hitting the cold metal. His breath came in broken gasps as tears spilled from his eyes.

“No… no, no…” he whispered.

His chest heaved as sobs tore out of him, raw and unfiltered.

“Please,” he murmured, his forehead pressed against the bars. “Please come back to me.”

The words poured out, desperate and disjointed.

“Victoria, I’m sorry… whatever I did, I’m sorry. Just come back. Please.”

He stayed there like that, crying into the night, his voice hoarse from calling her name. Cars passed occasionally, their headlights sweeping over him, but no one stopped. No one asked.

Time lost meaning.

Eventually, the tears slowed, leaving behind a hollow ache that felt worse than the sobbing.

Gabriel forced himself to stand.

His legs felt numb as he walked back to the car. He looked over his shoulder at the locked house one last time, dread curling tightly around his heart.

On the drive home, he tried calling her again.

Still switched off.

He tried Mary once more.

Nothing.

Fear settled in fully now, cold and suffocating.

What if she was sick?

What if she’d collapsed somewhere?

What if she’d found out everything?

The thought made his chest ache unbearably.

By the time he reached home, his hands were trembling.

Prisca noticed something was wrong the moment he stepped inside.

She had been pacing the living room, phone in hand, her excitement bubbling just beneath the surface. Victoria had been gone all day. The house had been quiet. Too quiet.

She smiled when she saw Gabriel—until she saw his face.

“What happened?” she asked, feigning concern.

He didn’t answer right away. He ran a hand through his hair, his movements frantic.

“She’s gone,” he said finally, his voice rough. “Victoria is gone.”

Prisca’s heart leaped—but she forced her face into a frown.

“Gone where?”

“I don’t know,” Gabriel snapped. “Her phone is off. Mary isn’t answering. The house—her parents’ house—it’s locked.”

Something flickered in Prisca’s eyes.

Relief.

Victory.

She quickly masked it, stepping closer. “Maybe she’s just upset. You know how emotional she gets.”

He rounded on her. “This isn’t normal.”

But Prisca barely heard him.

Inside, she was celebrating too soon.

Victoria disappearing meant fewer obstacles. Fewer complications. It meant the path she’d been waiting for was finally clearing.

“She’ll come back,” Prisca said softly. “She always does.”

Gabriel didn’t respond.

For the first time, he wasn’t so sure.

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

Accidental Seduction: The Priceless Pregnant Prey Novel Cover
9.5
My adoptive sister drugged me and sent me to a hotel for a fake audition, where a powerful stranger assaulted me in the pitch-black suite. When I escaped home, my fiancé, Ethan, and my entire family ambushed me. They threw staged photos in my face, accusing me of selling my body to a sleazy director. They called me a whore, stripped me of my trust fund, and threw me onto the street. But Ethan refused to let me go. He had me blacklisted from every job and even froze my only friend's bank accounts, trying to break me completely. Forced into a corner, I had no choice but to attend a high-society party as his date, where he and my sister made sure everyone in New York saw me as worthless trash. I couldn't understand the depths of their cruelty. Why would the very family who took me from an orphanage orchestrate such an elaborate plot to ruin me? But during a sudden blackout at the party, I ran straight into the arms of my attacker. When the lights came back on, I finally saw his face. He wasn't a director—he was Abraham Bush, the most ruthless billionaire in the country. And just as my ex-fiancé is about to strike me after discovering I'm pregnant, Abraham's men have surrounded the house.
Claimed By The Three Hockey Alphas Novel Cover
9.3
"You think you can hide behind that mask, Fireheart?" Logan snarled, his breath hot against my throat. Sabastain's hand pinned my wrists above my head, while Zane leaned in close enough that I could feel his pulse match mine. "We know what you are. And we’ll never let you go." Their bodies cage me against the cold locker room wall, heat radiating off them like wildfire. They should terrify me. They should repulse me. But they don’t. Because the truth is, I was born to burn for them. And they were born to tame me. I only wanted one thing—to play hockey. But in a world where girls aren’t allowed on the ice, my dream was shattered the night I rejected Alpha Marcus Blackwood’s obsessive claim—and was banished with my family. Now, with my hair cut short and my identity hidden, I enrolled at Crescent Moon Academy as “Frederick Sterling,” just another boy chasing glory on the legendary Wolves hockey team. But three powerful alphas are about to complicate everything. They’re not just teammates. They’re predators. And they’re bound to me. The question is—will they tame my fire, or will I burn them all?
Fifty Dollar Bet, Million Dollar Revenge Novel Cover
8.0
For fifty dollars, I sold a piece of my dignity to the school's golden boy. I was eighteen, starving, and desperate enough to take his bet. That single photo destroyed my life. I became "Fifty-Dollar Ella," the school slut, haunted by whispers and scorn. My stepmother and stepsister reveled in my public humiliation, ensuring my life was a living hell. I spent the next decade clawing my way to the top of Wall Street, but I died alone, filled with the bitter regret of a stolen youth. Until the end, I never understood why they all hated me so much. Then, I opened my eyes. I was eighteen again, back in that classroom, moments before the bet that ruined me. A shadow fell over my desk. It was him. "Meet me after school," Javier Mack whispered, a smug look on his face. But this time, the scared, hungry girl was gone. In her place was a shark. And I was ready to play.
His Accidental Cure: The Runaway Contract Wife Novel Cover
8.4
I was drugged and sent to a hotel room to be compromised, but I ended up in the presidential suite with a stranger. I didn't know the man I clung to in my hallucinogenic haze was my own husband, Devaughn Winters, a man I hadn't spoken to in a year. When I woke up the next morning, the terror of what I’d done hit me like a physical blow. I fled, leaving behind nothing but a shredded dress and a lingering sense of dread. I thought I’d finally escaped the cold, suffocating contract of our marriage when I signed the divorce papers, but I was wrong. My mother-in-law arrived at my apartment, freezing my sick mother’s medical funds and threatening to ruin me for the "infidelity" she claimed I’d committed. She dragged my secrets into the light, leaving me with no choice but to fight back with a knife in my hand and a 911 call on speaker. But just as I thought I was free, the man I’d spent the night with—the man who was supposed to be my stranger—tore up our divorce papers and declared that I was his to keep. I was a pawn in a game I didn't understand, trapped between a ruthless father who wanted to sell me for corporate secrets and a husband who demanded I belong to him in life and in death. How did he not know who I was that night, and why is he suddenly claiming me as his own? I’m done being a victim, and if he thinks he can own me, he’s about to find out exactly what happens when a cornered woman decides to burn it all down.
Husband's Virtual Affair Unraveled Novel Cover
9.2
I stared at the screen, my fingers frozen over the keyboard. This couldn't be happening. Not to me. Not to us. The private message thread between my husband Trace and someone named "RainySouthern" stretched endlessly before my eyes, months of conversations I was never meant to see. I'd only logged into our shared gaming account to check on a rare item we'd been saving for, but what I found instead was the digital evidence of my husband's double life. "I miss you when you're not online," RainySouthern had written just yesterday. "Can't wait to hold you again tomorrow." Trace's response made my stomach turn: "Miss you more, babe. Our little virtual family is the highlight of my day." Virtual family? I scrolled up, my heart pounding against my ribs.
Losing Ryker: The Billionaire's Second Chance  Novel Cover
8.4
“Let's divorce now and get this over with. We've both gotten what we wanted for this arrangement.” A tear fell out of Zerah’s eye, unnoticed. “Is that so?” Two years before, Zerah saved his life and they'd fallen in love with a promise to return as he'd left. Now, a year after their reunion, he was no longer the man she knew. Compelled to sign a contract marriage for the sake of her mother's health, she thought she could regain his love but only received humiliation and heartbreak in return. As he put the divorce papers in front of her, she'd resigned herself to let go of her love, leaving with the secret growing inside her. Yet fate still brings them together? As the bond of her sons forces her back into his life, now engaged to the childhood friend he'd never failed to humiliate her for, secrets are revealed and she is forced to bear it. What will happen when he recovers his memories and realizes that he'd chosen the wrong woman? Will he be able to win her heart? Will she accept him or choose a different path? Or will the forces against her take her before she can choose?