NovelCat

Allons Lire Le Monde

Ouvrir APP
Backfired

Backfired

Auteur: Pen Ultimate

Terminé

Billionaire

Backfired PDF Free Download

Introduction

True friendship existed between two friends like brothers, Tosin and Victor. The duo went everywhere, did everything together, and always got each other's backs. Until one day, a beautiful woman walked into their lives, Evelyn. Her presence changed everything for them forever. Tosin and Victor fell in love with her, but Victor was the lucky one who got her for himself. They got married and Tosin also married another woman. After a while, Tosin's marriage crashed, and Victor's home was plagued with poverty after his first child was born. Later on, Victor got a driving job with a wealthy woman introduced to him by Evelyn. She picked interest in him and before he knew what was happening, they started having sex. Things changed for the worse in his marriage, and when Evelyn realized that she was losing her husband to his rich boss,she fell into depression. Tosin became her shoulder to cry on, and as time went by, they began an amorous relationship. All these dirty secrets were uncovered after she fell seriously sick and confessed her infidelity to Victor before she died. Victor's rage pushed him to kill his boss because he blamed her for wrecking his home. He almost murdered Tosin too but his plans were foiled by Tosin's remorsefulness. The death of his former boss led to his arrest, and subsequently his sentence to a prolonged jail-term. Tosin lost his source of income, life's direction, and lost his purpose in life. He soon turned to a shadow of himself and relocated to South Africa to start afresh at an advanced age. Victor came out from jail at 55 years of age, and told his only son,Blessing, the story of his life. Backfired is a story of betrayal, friendship, infidelity, lust, and cheating.
Afficher▼

Chapter 1

JULY 28, 2015 - THE OYEBANJOS’

It has been two weeks since he was released from jail. Twenty years in prison is not an experience anyone would pray for, not even for one`s arch enemy.

“When are you going to tell me about my mother?” Blessing asked. He eyed Victor, who sat at the other end of the table, sipping a drink. It was sunny outside; a fine day to be inside alone. “You promised to tell me everything about her as soon as you left jail. Well, it`s been two weeks since your release. I’ve been coming here almost every day to see you, but you`ve been nonchalant about it,” Blessing complained to the man facing him, a man he was just getting to know about; his father.

Victor stared at him for a moment and then smiled. Today, yes! Today. He took another sip and set the bottle down on the table.

Blessing was a robust, handsome young man with a graceful physique. He was twenty-three, broad-shouldered, with deep-set eyes. His eyes usually bore a cheerful look accompanied by a charming smile that exudes warmth. But as he sat with his father, anguish streamed from those eyes.

Anybody who barges in would be surprised at the striking resemblance of both men. The same eyes they had, the same nose and mouth, almost the same stature, but for a few inches gap. Victor stood at 5 feet 7 inches while his son stood at almost 6 feet.

Impatience was never alien to Blessing. The more his father wasted time, the more he struggled with the element called ‘impatience’.

“Well, Dad, I’m here today. I’m waiting,” he tried to sound cool but his voice betrayed his exasperation.

Victor got up and began to pace. Where should I begin the story? He thought, sensing the eyes of his beloved son on him. Victor wished his dad would stop prolonging his exhibition of serenity.

Victor’s hair had turned grey. Although he was only fifty-five, he looked seventy. “Blessing, my son, I will tell you everything now, not omitting or adding. However, I want you to promise me that…“, he paused and sighed, “…whatever I tell you today would serve as a big lesson to you throughout your life. You should be careful not to fall into the same trap from which I just got out.”

“I promise”, Blessing said with all seriousness, accompanying it with a nod.

“Good,” Victor replied. He was ready to unveil the story of his life to his only son and friend. A story that made up his past. When he began to speak, he travelled back into the rough, thorny realm of his past. It was like a twenty-five-year-old movie shot by a camera made of translucent lens and film-roll.