Framed by the Billionaire’s Son / Chapter 5: Public Shame and Betrayal
Framed by the Billionaire’s Son

Framed by the Billionaire’s Son

Author: Jennifer Gonzales


Chapter 5: Public Shame and Betrayal

I never even discharge from hospital when reporters rush in, microphone everywhere. Dem nearly break my hospital bed. If you see as microphone dey my face, you go pity me.

"Mr. Tayo, you agree with Onwudiwe family talk? You really risk person life just to keep your record?"

One woman even dey cry for back like say na her pikin die.

I shake my head, tell them the truth. My voice dey strong, but my mind dey cut. 'If una fit hear true, una for know.'

"If una fit see another diver wey go enter, una go see say na hand break that rock for the bend. And Young Master Chijioke no cooperate at all. If I let am go, na die e for die. To knock am out na last option. I don tell Mr. Onwudiwe everything."

I no fit add lie. My conscience dey clear. But who go listen?

Before I finish, Mr. Onwudiwe rush in, vex. E face red, e shirt rumpled. If to say e no be rich man, you go think say na agbero. He point me, shout,

"You dey craze? You fit touch my son like that? No wonder you ask me before you enter if you go dey responsible for accident. So na to kill am you plan!"

Na so e dey be for Naija—person wey beg you today, go insult you tomorrow. The man voice loud, security dey push people.

His chest dey rise, bodyguards dey look me with bad eye. If you see as dem stand, you go fear. Some dey carry shades for night.

I look around, see my teammate Musa, wey risk life with me. Him face dey guilty. Musa no fit look me eye to eye. I dey wonder if e dey fear or e dey pity me.

"Bros Tayo, Young Master Chijioke get luck this time. If anything happen, e for bad. You too do. If I no stop you, you for kill am."

E talk am low, but I hear every word. My heart just dey sink. That time, I understand. Na there everything clear for my mind. Na set up.

Chijioke don set me up, drag everybody join. E use him papa, use Musa, use everybody. Na me be scapegoat. I save am, he repay me with lie.

I dey look ceiling, dey count my blessings. But for this life, e be like say na only God dey judge.

Which defense remain for me? For this Nigeria, if big man talk, everybody dey follow. Who go fight for me? Na only three of us enter, now two dey accuse me. Nobody go believe my side. Musa don change. With Onwudiwe family power, I no get chance. Dem go use money bury my matter.

I just smile, talk, My smile bitter, my heart dey cry. "My conscience clear. Any investigation, I ready." If na lie, make God judge.

Mr. Onwudiwe look me hard. E eyes red, e hand dey shake. E fit slap me if not for camera.

"You dey call this clear conscience? I dash you money, you try kill my son. How you fit be diver? Your teammate dey follow you, maybe one day you go cut him throat to collect him glory. I go make sure dem seize your diving license—you no go compete or dive again."

As e dey talk, e dey spit. Even journalists dey look shocked. Na so Nigeria dey—power na everything.

Soon, police carry me go for questioning. Dem bundle me like thief. My mama begin call prayer line.

The interviews scatter everywhere online. Twitter don break. Instagram full of fake stories. People dey create memes. Everybody begin curse me.

If you see comment section: 'Tayo Adigun, ole!' 'God punish am!'

"No be him dive with student before, the student turn vegetable?" People don dey dig old story. Even my village people dey call, dey ask if na true.

"That time he talk say he save am, maybe he see say the boy dey better, set am up."

I dey read all these things, dey wonder if my life get meaning again. "So scary. My daughter learn diving from him before. Thank God nothing happen."

Dem dey tag my mama, dey insult my family. Na real wahala.

But that student break rules, dive alone, get wahala with oxygen. If I no find am, e for die. Nobody wan hear truth. Everybody believe wetin dem like.

Now I understand—Na for this Nigeria, hero today, devil tomorrow. If people say you be hero, na hero you be. If dem change mind, you no reach grass.

I dey remember my papa advice: 'No trust people wey dey clap for you, dem fit turn tomorrow.'

Coaching team come see me. I think say I don get hope, explain everything. I dey sit down dey explain, dey beg say make dem believe me. My hand dey shake, sweat full my shirt.

But head coach just sigh. E look me, e eye full of pity. 'Tayo, this life no balance.'

"You know as e be—fame dey cause wahala. All these teams for competition strong. If dem bring you down, their own chance go rise. To talk true, that Onwudiwe boy na wahala. He don chase many coaches away before. This time, he just wan prove himself. But as he shame catch am, he need person to blame."

The coach dey talk like person wey don tire for system. He tap my back, dey do like say na better thing—meanwhile, insult full im eye. 'Na God hand you dey.'

Police don question me. The case hard, dem no fit decide. I dey sleep for cell, dey pray. My mama dey fast. As coach dey talk, cold sweat dey my body. For my mind, I dey ask: 'Na so life be?'

This chapter is VIP-only. Activate membership to continue.

You may also like

I Born Twins for Billionaire Family
I Born Twins for Billionaire Family
4.9
Amaka’s sharp wit and unstoppable fertility land her in the middle of the Okoye family’s desperate search for an heir—thirty million per child, but a mother-in-law with eye like fire and a husband chained by secrets. Every pregnancy means more cash, more drama, and a risk that love—or heartbreak—could cost her everything.
My Brother, The Future Billionaire Wahala
My Brother, The Future Billionaire Wahala
4.7
After our parents die, I swear to protect my stubborn little brother—even as poverty and betrayal chase us from Makurdi to the market stalls. But everyone calls him 'wahala boy,' and the streets say he’ll bite me last last. What nobody knows is the quiet fire in him: one day, this same boy will rise from hunger and heartbreak to shake the whole city, and maybe even turn against me for love and power.
Used By The Billionaire’s Daughter
Used By The Billionaire’s Daughter
4.8
For three years, Lawal loved Amara, believing she was a struggling orphan—never knowing she was the billionaire heiress of Okezie Holdings, undercover in his life for a cruel game of revenge. When her secret is exposed and she dumps him by text, Lawal’s heartbreak turns to humiliation as Lagos social media erupts in scandal. But as Amara and her powerful family chase new love and headlines, Lawal must decide: will he beg for closure, or rise from the ashes and reclaim his pride in a city where loyalty is always for sale?
Bought the Chief’s Son as My Slave
Bought the Chief’s Son as My Slave
4.8
As the stubborn daughter of a pig butcher, I bought a broken, proud man from the slave market—only to discover he’s the missing heir to Palm Grove’s richest family. Now, every night, I fight for control in my own home, while jealous rivals plot my ruin and WhatsApp gossips call for my disgrace. If I lose this battle, I’ll be dragged through the mud as the wicked woman who dared chain the chief’s son—but if I win, even the gods will fear my name.
I Snatched My Rival’s Billionaire Man
I Snatched My Rival’s Billionaire Man
4.9
Tolu is stuck at the bottom of Abuja’s entertainment ladder—until a scandalous photo ties her to the city’s hottest billionaire. As the internet explodes with gossip, she must outwit a superstar rival, jealous boyfriend, and a vicious online mob to claim her truth and her love. If she fails, she loses both her reputation and her man to the biggest clout-chaser in Nollywood.
Adopted by the Billionaire, Betrayed by Blood
Adopted by the Billionaire, Betrayed by Blood
4.8
Twice, fate forced Amara and Chisom to choose between riches and love. In their new lives, tables turn: Amara enters the Adeyemi mansion, only to face cruel betrayal from her own sister, while Chisom schemes to steal everything Amara once had. But in Lagos, true family is a mask—and only the strongest heart will survive the war between money and blood.
Fake Heiress, Billionaire’s Revenge
Fake Heiress, Billionaire’s Revenge
4.9
After being exposed as a fake heiress and thrown out by her own family, sharp-tongued Ifeoma is kidnapped by her ex’s powerful uncle, the infamous Obinna. Trapped in his luxury mansion, she’s forced to confront old secrets, forbidden attraction, and a plot that could destroy them both. With her pride, freedom, and heart at stake, Ifeoma must outwit Lagos society and the villain boss before she loses everything.
Framed by My Lover, Crowned by My Blood
Framed by My Lover, Crowned by My Blood
4.8
After my boyfriend and his new 'angel' frame me for plagiarism, the whole country drags my name through mud. But they don't know my real family is old money, and the pain they used to destroy me is the same pain they can't fake on the page. Now, as my enemies scramble to keep up their lies, I return home—ready to reclaim my power and expose the truth that will ruin them all.
Married to Aba’s Broken Billionaire
Married to Aba’s Broken Billionaire
4.8
I was forced to marry Obinna, Aba’s most coveted heir, after a crash left his mind childlike—but his body still tempts every woman in town. His grandfather promised me three hundred million naira if I give them an heir, but seducing a man who’d rather play with plastic toys than touch his wife is war. Tonight, if I must wrestle a Power Ranger for my destiny, so be it—before his senses return and my jackpot disappears.
Side Chick Billionaire Wahala
Side Chick Billionaire Wahala
4.9
Morenike, a rich girl forever stuck in the background, battles for love and respect in a world ruled by main characters and family expectations. Torn between saving her father's business and her own pride, she finds herself entangled with Musa, a broke but dignified student. Betrayal, jealousy, and heartbreak threaten her every move—if she loses, her family and heart might shatter forever.
His Mistress or Ten Million Naira Wife?
His Mistress or Ten Million Naira Wife?
4.8
For seven years, Halima used her wit and charm to live soft on Auwalu’s money, until he offered her a cold ultimatum: become his side chick or walk away with a fortune. Now, years later and trapped between a reckless billionaire’s son and a powerless husband, she must beg her old lover for protection—knowing the price may be her marriage and her dignity. In a world where love, loyalty, and survival clash, Halima must choose: pride or the promise that once saved her life.
I Married My Ex’s Billionaire Bride
I Married My Ex’s Billionaire Bride
4.9
Morayo thought she found true love with Ifeanyi, a man who pretended to be broke for years—only to discover he was the hidden heir to a fortune. Betrayed and forced to choose between family survival and romantic dreams, Morayo marries for security, but fate throws her into the spotlight when her ex resurfaces as the groom at her client’s high-society wedding. Now, surrounded by gossip and old wounds, she must reclaim her dignity and prove that peace of mind is worth more than any billionaire’s ring.