Betray, and you shall be more beautiful
The novel tells the story of **Abdullah**, a noble man who concealed his wife **Rowan’s** infidelity and endured her betrayal for years, only to end up alone in exile, battling heart disease and social injustice, eventually dying of **"pure heartbreak"** while keeping her secret until his last breath.
The "infection of despair" spreads to his friend **Abdulrahman**, who, devastated by Abdullah's death and the revelations in his diary, loses faith in values and plunges into a life of sin and forbidden affairs, adopting the cynical motto: **"Be a traitor, and you shall be more beautiful"** as a way to avenge himself against women and his innocent wife.
The turning point arrives when Abdulrahman discovers Rowan’s tragic fate; divine justice struck her with a series of calamities, starting with infertility, then paralysis, and ending with her **burning to death**, which reignites the fear of God in his heart and makes him realize that divine justice may delay, but it never forgets.
The journey ends with a repentant and remorseful Abdulrahman trying to win back the wife he wronged, only to face a wall of rejection; he is left to live the rest of his life alone, haunted by his sins, while immortalizing the memory of his loyal friend who died as a **"Maker of Good Deeds."**
The essence of the story is a warning to anyone who exploits the "veil of protection" to practice betrayal, confirming that while **"blind love"** may kill its owner, betrayal is a fire that consumes the traitor in this world before the next, no matter how long they hide behind masks of purity and virtue.