A voice note of Frank Edoho pouring out his heart over his wife’s affair with singer, Chike, is making rounds online.
In a voice note between him and media personality Titilope Faith, he accused his wife of having an affinity for the singer. He said he approached Chike to confront him about the affair, calling him that stupīd boy, and said the singer was shaking like a leaf when he confronted him.
Edoho added that Chike was even with a girlfriend named Precious at the time and told him that if his wife, Sandra, were still asleep, important to him as she was when he married her, he would have shot Chike, and he would be confined to a wheélchair.
“This issue started in December 2022 and lasted until January of last year. I approached that stup!d boy(Chike) when I saw him one day, and he was shaking like a leaf. I asked him if he knew me, and he said yes. Then I asked him what he was doing with my wife. He was with his girlfriend that day and ignored the crap he said about him liking older women. His girlfriend, Precious, to whom he was engaged, is young. I told him that ‘if my wife is stup!d enough to want to cheat on her husband, why would you encourage her?’. He said, ‘Is that what she told you?’ and I said, ‘dude, I have all your recordings. If she were worth anything to me, like when I married her, I would have sh*t you, and you would be confined to a whéelchair, but she is really not worth anything to me now. She repeatedly had affairs with you.
Despite confronting that boy, they continued their relationship. I told him to leave my wife alone so that we could raise the two boys she had for me, but they didn’t stop their relationship. I don’t know what I did to deserve that. I was the one who sent her to school in 2010 when we met. After school, she said she wanted to start a business, and I supported her. When she started dating the boy, I left the house for three months and stayed in a hotel. She was crying everywhere and looking for me. She found me, and we settled. Two weeks later, she went back to the boy”.
