Reborn to Lose My Husband to Another / Chapter 4: Past Life, Present Pain
Reborn to Lose My Husband to Another

Reborn to Lose My Husband to Another

Author: Isha Singh


Chapter 4: Past Life, Present Pain

The female lead of "Basant Ki Raat" should have been me. This was not only my debut, but the signature role of my life.

I feel both bewildered and uneasy.

A bead of sweat slips down my neck. I try to steady my breath, my hands gripping the armrest so tightly my knuckles turn white. Could my rebirth have caused some kind of butterfly effect? Where did things go wrong?

In my previous life, Arjun told me that the moment he saw my audition, he knew the female lead had to be me.

"Meera, you were born for movies."

His words—so direct, so sure—had always been my secret talisman.

"You were only nineteen when you auditioned for 'Basant Ki Raat,' and hadn’t played a lead before, but I immediately knew your future as an actress was limitless."

Those words, whispered by Arjun, made me shy and happy all at once.

I used to tease him, "Accha, so you’re saying I owe you my career?" And he would laugh, tugging my braid, "Of course! But you made me famous too, don’t forget."

But why did he choose someone else now?

My mind is a whirlwind of questions. I clench my palm, fingertips trembling with unease.

Without "Basant Ki Raat," how will Arjun and I cross paths in this life?

A shiver passes through me, despite the heat of the set lights. The idea of not meeting Arjun, of missing my destiny, gnaws at my insides.

In the previous life, it was during the filming of "Basant Ki Raat" that Arjun and I grew close.

We shared tiffin on set, laughed over late-night editing, and became partners and friends. But because of our seven-year age gap, we didn’t rush into romance.

I remember the makeup didi teasing—"Arrey, Meera, your director is looking at you again!" I’d just roll my eyes and blush.

What truly brought us together was—

The failure of "Basant Ki Raat."

No one saw it coming. The trade magazines were brutal, posters came down faster than they went up. That art film, which Arjun poured his heart into, bombed at the box office after release.

Audiences complained about its slow pace, confusing plot, even questioned Arjun’s skills, calling him pretentious and clueless about cinema.

The news tickers, WhatsApp groups, colony aunties—all had something to say. Arjun retreated into himself, while I watched, helpless, aching to shield him from the world’s cruelty.

Yet, this failed "Basant Ki Raat" made me a star.

Because in the movie, Arjun made me look so, so beautiful.

A top review said the heroine under his camera was like the moon hanging high in the sky—fragile yet stubborn, lonely yet free.

I cut out that review, kept it folded in my wallet for years. Amma would show it to every visitor—"Dekho, my Meera! Moon in the sky!"

After that, I gained a huge fanbase for my looks and acting, while Arjun faced a storm of criticism.

Some even said his bad movie wasted my beauty and talent.

It hurt, more than I let on. I felt extremely guilty about this.

So I often comforted him on WhatsApp, encouraged him, and affirmed his talent.

I’d send him silly memes, long voice notes at midnight, little hearts and coffee emojis. He’d reply with his own dry humour—"Thanks for the free therapy, doctor."

We started talking more and more—about movies, about life, about dreams.

Our conversations drifted from cinema to poetry, from Irani chai to philosophy. I felt seen, truly seen, for the first time.

Later, we’d go out together to relax.

We’d escape to Marine Drive, sit on the promenade, eating roasted corn, watching the sea swallow our troubles.

Finally, on a starry night, he held my hand.

The city lights twinkled around us. He cleared his throat, voice low—"Meera, I don’t want to wait anymore. If you like me too, I..."

I tiptoed and kissed him. "Let’s be together."

I felt bold and shy, all at once. In that moment, our future seemed certain, written in the stars above.

And so, we loved each other for a lifetime.

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

You may also like

Abandoned by My Son, Reborn for Revenge
Abandoned by My Son, Reborn for Revenge
4.9
Eighteen years of sacrifice, and on his birthday, my only son wished for my divorce and exile. Betrayed by my husband and in-laws, left to die alone in a Mumbai flat, I was reborn on the very day my family destroyed me. This time, I will not beg—I will reclaim my dignity, tear apart their plans, and show them the true cost of a mother’s love betrayed.
Rejected by My Reborn Lover
Rejected by My Reborn Lover
4.8
Priya is reborn with memories of a perfect love, only to be humiliated when Arjun, her childhood sweetheart, rejects her public marriage proposal. The pain cuts deeper when he returns—not to claim her, but to turn their love into a sibling bond, shattering her dreams and reputation. As her world crumbles and society whispers, a new suitor appears, forcing Priya to choose: bend to tradition, or fight for a life—and love—on her own terms.
Reborn to Watch Him Love Another
Reborn to Watch Him Love Another
4.8
Ananya waited lifetimes for Rohan, the man who once cherished her above all—only to be reborn and find herself invisible in his new world. As he rises to power and gives his heart to the Chief Minister’s daughter, Ananya endures humiliation, betrayal, and heartbreak, forced to watch from the shadows as her past life’s love slips away. But when fate’s cruel game pushes her to the brink, will she finally break free from the chains of destiny—or be destroyed by the very love she cannot forget?
Reborn as the Family’s Scapegoat
Reborn as the Family’s Scapegoat
4.8
After being betrayed by his own cousin and blamed for a tragedy he tried to prevent, Rohan dies—only to wake up before the disaster, memories of every wound still fresh. Now, with his fiancée’s life on the line and his family ready to sacrifice him again, Rohan must choose: save himself and the woman he loves, or become the villain they always wanted. In a world where duty is a curse and blood is never enough, will he finally break free—or lose everything, twice?
Reborn as the Villain’s Scapegoat Bride
Reborn as the Villain’s Scapegoat Bride
4.9
On farewell night, I was framed and shamed as the campus villainess, forced into a loveless marriage with my childhood friend who only had eyes for the college queen. Betrayed, unloved, and killed in a tragic accident, I wake up back in my final year—armed with memories of every heartbreak and secret. This time, I’ll rewrite my fate, expose the real schemer, and rescue the bad boy who always called my name, even if it means tearing my own heart apart.
Reborn to Be His Second Choice
Reborn to Be His Second Choice
4.8
Priya wakes up after a fatal accident, only to find herself seventeen again—trapped in the same life where she’s always compared to perfect Neha, and forever the shadow in Rohan’s heart. He remembers everything too, and their bitter love-hate war is about to start all over again. Can Priya finally escape Neha’s ghost, or is she doomed to be Rohan’s stand-in bride for eternity?
Rejected by My Husband, Branded by His Mother
Rejected by My Husband, Branded by His Mother
4.8
Reborn to her youth, Ananya faces public humiliation as her powerful mother-in-law destroys her engagement with cruel lies, branding her impure and forcing her to marry the village cripple. The husband she once served for a lifetime turns his back, chasing the elusive dream of a son. But as scandal threatens to ruin her family, Ananya must decide: will she surrender to shame, or seize her second chance and carve out a destiny no one expected?
Reborn to Save My Sister’s Honor
Reborn to Save My Sister’s Honor
4.7
I died watching my innocent sister’s dignity destroyed by the very people she trusted most. But fate gave me one more chance—this time, I’ll outwit her traitorous best friend and the wolves in disguise, even if I have to burn every tradition to the ground. In a town where every ritual hides a nightmare, can I rewrite our fate before dawn breaks again?
Divorcing My Husband, the Hero
Divorcing My Husband, the Hero
4.8
For five years, Meera believed her marriage to Arjun was unbreakable—until she discovered she was nothing more than the villain in someone else's love story. Betrayed, pregnant, and haunted by strangers' cruel comments only she can see, Meera refuses to be cast aside for the 'heroine.' With her world collapsing, she must choose: fight for her place, or walk away and reclaim her destiny.
Divorced at the Reunion: My Wife Chose Her Ex
Divorced at the Reunion: My Wife Chose Her Ex
4.8
Rohan came to his wife's college reunion to play the dutiful husband, but one shocking night turned into public humiliation and betrayal. With his mother dying at home and Ananya basking in the spotlight of her first love's dramatic return, Rohan must choose: grovel for her love, or walk away forever. When the crowd demands his dignity as the price for his mother's life, will Ananya finally reveal her true heart—or is this marriage already dead?
Betraying My Pregnant Wife for My Ex
Betraying My Pregnant Wife for My Ex
4.7
Arjun thought marrying into wealth would finally heal his wounds, but Meera’s pregnancy turned his love to disgust and drove him into the arms of his ambitious ex, Ritika. When fate throws Ritika—now fallen from grace—back into his life, Arjun risks everything for a second chance, only to be humiliated and blocked all over again. Torn between a loyal wife he resents and a lost love who rejects him, Arjun’s double life spirals out of control—until one WhatsApp message threatens to expose it all.
Reborn: The Bride Who Set Me on Fire
Reborn: The Bride Who Set Me on Fire
4.8
On my wedding night, my childhood sweetheart Ananya set our bridal suite ablaze, blaming me for the death of her forbidden lover. But when the flames took me, I woke up as a schoolboy again—right before she fell for the wrong boy and destroyed us all. This time, I know her secrets and her rage, but will changing fate only make the tragedy worse?