LOVE AFTER BETRAYAL, HER SECOND CHANCE
EPISODE 3 — THE MAN WHO FELT TOO SAFE
I didn’t plan to let Julian into my life.
He simply kept showing up — quietly, consistently — until his presence felt like part of the town itself. Like the church bell that rang every morning. Like the wind that brushed past my window at night.
Julian never asked personal questions. Never pushed. Never tried to fix me.
And somehow, that made him the most dangerous person I’d met since the betrayal.
I learned things about him slowly.
He had a daughter — Lily. She was seven, bright-eyed, curious, and unafraid of the world in a way that made my chest ache. She laughed too loudly, spoke too honestly, and trusted too easily. Watching her cling to her father’s hand stirred something painful inside me.
Once, while she twirled in one of the restored dresses I was working on, she asked me,
“Do people stop loving forever?”
I froze.
Julian’s eyes met mine across the room.
“No,” he said gently. “Sometimes love just gets lost.”
That night, I cried myself to sleep.
Julian prayed before meals. Short prayers. Careful prayers. As if he didn’t want to ask God for anything too big — afraid disappointment might answer instead. I noticed how his voice sometimes cracked when he said amen.
We started talking after church, then after work, then late into the night when sleep refused to come. Conversations that began with weather and chores drifted into loss, disappointment, and faith that felt mocked by reality.
“I used to believe love healed people,” Julian admitted one evening as we sat on the church steps. “Now I think it just exposes wounds.”
The words lodged themselves inside me.
Because I felt the same.
I wanted to tell him everything.
About Nathan. About Serena. About how betrayal hollowed me out so deeply I sometimes forgot who I used to be.
But silence felt safer.
Betrayal teaches you that words can be weapons.
One evening, the power went out during a storm. Rain battered the windows, thunder shaking the walls. Julian lit a small lamp. Shadows danced across his face.
For the first time, I noticed how tired he looked.
“How do you survive it?” I asked quietly. “The fear of being hurt again?”
Julian didn’t answer immediately.
“I don’t,” he said finally. “I just wake up and choose not to let fear decide everything.”
Something inside me trembled.
Because I was doing the opposite.
That night, as I lay in bed listening to the rain, a terrifying truth settled in my chest:
I was starting to feel safe.
And safety had once destroyed me.
....... If feeling safe again meant risking your heart… would you still choose it?
To be continued...
✨ Written by Ayodele Victoria
© 2025 #TalesbyVicky #Fiction #OriginalStory #AyodeleVictoria #CreativeMind✨
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EPISODE 3 — THE MAN WHO FELT TOO SAFE
I didn’t plan to let Julian into my life.
He simply kept showing up — quietly, consistently — until his presence felt like part of the town itself. Like the church bell that rang every morning. Like the wind that brushed past my window at night.
Julian never asked personal questions. Never pushed. Never tried to fix me.
And somehow, that made him the most dangerous person I’d met since the betrayal.
I learned things about him slowly.
He had a daughter — Lily. She was seven, bright-eyed, curious, and unafraid of the world in a way that made my chest ache. She laughed too loudly, spoke too honestly, and trusted too easily. Watching her cling to her father’s hand stirred something painful inside me.
Once, while she twirled in one of the restored dresses I was working on, she asked me,
“Do people stop loving forever?”
I froze.
Julian’s eyes met mine across the room.
“No,” he said gently. “Sometimes love just gets lost.”
That night, I cried myself to sleep.
Julian prayed before meals. Short prayers. Careful prayers. As if he didn’t want to ask God for anything too big — afraid disappointment might answer instead. I noticed how his voice sometimes cracked when he said amen.
We started talking after church, then after work, then late into the night when sleep refused to come. Conversations that began with weather and chores drifted into loss, disappointment, and faith that felt mocked by reality.
“I used to believe love healed people,” Julian admitted one evening as we sat on the church steps. “Now I think it just exposes wounds.”
The words lodged themselves inside me.
Because I felt the same.
I wanted to tell him everything.
About Nathan. About Serena. About how betrayal hollowed me out so deeply I sometimes forgot who I used to be.
But silence felt safer.
Betrayal teaches you that words can be weapons.
One evening, the power went out during a storm. Rain battered the windows, thunder shaking the walls. Julian lit a small lamp. Shadows danced across his face.
For the first time, I noticed how tired he looked.
“How do you survive it?” I asked quietly. “The fear of being hurt again?”
Julian didn’t answer immediately.
“I don’t,” he said finally. “I just wake up and choose not to let fear decide everything.”
Something inside me trembled.
Because I was doing the opposite.
That night, as I lay in bed listening to the rain, a terrifying truth settled in my chest:
I was starting to feel safe.
And safety had once destroyed me.
....... If feeling safe again meant risking your heart… would you still choose it?
To be continued...
✨ Written by Ayodele Victoria
© 2025 #TalesbyVicky #Fiction #OriginalStory #AyodeleVictoria #CreativeMind✨
Like Tales by Vicky and Share this story for more interesting and captivating stories 💚















