Oh No!! Victor Threatens Sally and Billy’s Unborn Child | Young and the Restless Spoilers
Victor Targets Sally’s Unborn Baby as Billy Faces the Most Terrifying Newman Threat Yet
🚨 GENOA CITY JUST WATCHED VICTOR NEWMAN CROSS A LINE THAT EVEN BILLY ABBOTT NEVER SAW COMING! 😱 Billy was still trying to process the life-changing news that Sally is pregnant, caught between fear, joy, and the fragile hope of building a real family — but Victor’s next move turns that happiness into a nightmare. 💔 Instead of attacking Billy head-on, Victor goes after the one thing Billy cannot ignore: his unborn child. Now Billy is trapped in a brutal psychological war, forced to choose between surrendering to Victor’s demands or fighting back and risking the safety of Sally and the baby. This is no longer business. This is personal. And Victor may have just awakened the most dangerous version of Billy Abbott yet. 🔥
Key Takeaways
- Billy is overwhelmed but happy after learning Sally is pregnant.
- Victor uses the pregnancy as leverage instead of attacking Billy directly.
- The threat against Sally’s unborn baby becomes psychological warfare.
- Billy is horrified that Victor would stoop this low.
- Victor’s goal may be to force Billy into submission before the legal war explodes.
- Billy must choose between protecting Sally and the baby or standing up to Victor.
- Sally may become furious if Billy hides the threat from her.
- Victoria may be shaken if she learns Victor targeted Billy’s unborn child.
- Billy could make a dangerous deal with Victor to keep his family safe.
- This threat may push Billy to fight Victor harder than ever before.
Billy Abbott thought he was standing at the beginning of a new chapter.
For once, his life was not only defined by mistakes, revenge, and the endless Abbott-Newman war. Sally Spectra is pregnant, and that news changes everything. It gives Billy something fragile, terrifying, and beautiful to protect. A future. A family. A reason to stop playing reckless games and start thinking about tomorrow.
But in Genoa City, happiness rarely arrives without a shadow behind it.
And this time, the shadow is Victor Newman.
Billy is already overwhelmed by Sally’s pregnancy. He is excited, but also afraid. He knows becoming a father again means responsibility. He knows Sally will need him steady, present, and strong. He knows this baby could be the thing that finally forces him to grow beyond the chaos that has followed him for years.
Then Victor steps in.
And the dream turns into a threat.
What makes Victor’s move so chilling is that he does not come after Billy in the usual way. He does not simply threaten his job, his reputation, his company, or his freedom. Those would be expected. Billy knows how Victor plays those games. He has fought those battles before.
This time, Victor aims lower.
He targets the unborn child.
That is what makes the threat so horrifying. Victor knows Billy can ignore attacks against himself. Billy can laugh off insults, fight back against legal pressure, and take a punch when it is only his own future on the line. But Sally’s baby is different. That child is innocent. That child has not even been born yet. And by involving the baby, Victor makes sure Billy cannot simply walk away.
This is not strategy anymore.
It is psychological warfare.
Victor understands exactly where Billy is vulnerable. He knows that Billy’s love for Sally and fear for the baby will make him hesitate. He knows Billy’s anger can be used against him. He knows that threatening a child creates panic, and panic makes people easier to control.
That is the real purpose of the move.
Control.
Victor may want Billy to back down from the fake evidence fight. He may want him to stop helping Phyllis and Cane. He may want him to stay quiet about Newman corruption. He may want him to accept the criminal charges without dragging Victor’s name into the light. Or maybe Victor wants something even darker — a complete surrender from Billy Abbott before Billy becomes too dangerous to contain.
Whatever Victor wants, the message is clear.
Billy’s future family is now part of the battlefield.
Billy’s reaction is immediate and explosive. Shock comes first, because even after everything Victor has done, this feels different. Then comes rage. The idea that Victor would use Sally’s pregnancy as leverage crosses a line Billy did not expect, even from the man who has spent decades destroying enemies and calling it family protection.
But anger alone will not save him.
That is the trap.
If Billy lashes out too quickly, Victor may tighten his grip. If Billy exposes the threat without a plan, Victor may deny everything and make Billy look unstable. If Billy tries to fight alone, he could accidentally put Sally under even more pressure.
And if Billy says nothing?
He may be walking straight into Victor’s cage.
That is why Billy’s choice is so impossible. If he gives in, he may protect Sally and the baby in the short term, but he loses himself. He lets Victor dictate his future. He allows a threat against an unborn child to become a successful weapon. And once Victor knows that tactic works, Billy may never truly be free again.
But if Billy fights back, he risks provoking Victor further.
That is the nightmare.
Billy could decide that enough is enough and go directly after Victor’s empire. He could expose the fake evidence. He could team up with Michael, Phyllis, Cane, Lily, and anyone else Victor has targeted. He could turn Victor’s own brutality into the proof that Newman power has become dangerous and corrupt.
But every move could bring retaliation.
And Sally would be caught in the middle.
Sally’s role in this story may become heartbreaking. She is pregnant, hopeful, and trying to believe that she and Billy can build something real. If Billy hides Victor’s threat from her, thinking he is protecting her, she may feel betrayed when the truth comes out. Sally is not weak. She will not want Billy making decisions about her life and her baby without telling her.
But if Billy tells her everything, Sally may be terrified.
She knows what Victor Newman is capable of. She knows powerful families can crush people who do not have protection. She may tell Billy not to surrender, but she may also fear what standing up to Victor could cost them.
That could create painful tension between them.
Billy may want to shield her.
Sally may demand to stand beside him.
And Victor may be counting on that fear to split them apart.
Victoria could also become a major emotional wildcard. If she learns Victor threatened Billy through Sally’s unborn child, even she may be shaken. Victoria has already been helping Victor push pressure onto Billy, but this is different. Billy is the father of Johnny and Katie. Sally’s baby would be connected to the extended emotional world Victoria cannot fully escape.
Targeting Billy legally is one thing.
Using an unborn child as leverage is something else.
Victoria may be forced to ask herself whether Victor’s revenge has become too ugly even for her. And if she still chooses to stand beside him after this, Billy may never forgive her. Johnny and Katie may not either if the truth ever reaches them.
That is how Victor’s move could backfire.
He may think he is weakening Billy, but he may actually be creating a united front against himself. Billy has enemies, but he also has people who will not tolerate Victor threatening a baby. Sally will fight. Phyllis will use the scandal. Michael may see the legal implications. Lily may connect it to Cane’s arrest and Malcolm’s crisis. Nikki may be disgusted. Claire may question the grandfather she has already seen too much darkness from.
Even Adam might understand the danger of Victor going this far.
Because once an unborn child becomes a weapon, no one in the Newman family can pretend the war is clean.
Billy’s greatest challenge now is controlling himself. Victor wants him emotional. Victor wants him reckless. Victor wants him to make a mistake that can be used against him. That means Billy has to do the one thing Victor may not expect.
He has to be strategic.
He cannot simply explode.
He has to document the threat. He has to protect Sally. He has to warn the right people without creating panic. He has to build a case. And most importantly, he has to decide whether saving his family means making a temporary deal with Victor or destroying Victor’s leverage completely.
A deal may be tempting.
Billy could agree to back off, stay silent, or stop pushing against the fake evidence if Victor promises to leave Sally and the baby alone. But a deal with Victor Newman is never safe. Victor can twist words. Victor can move goalposts. Victor can promise one thing and punish in another direction.
If Billy bends once, Victor may demand more.
That is why standing up may be the only real path.
But standing up could cost him everything.
This is exactly the kind of pressure that either breaks Billy Abbott or transforms him. For years, people have accused Billy of being impulsive, self-destructive, and too emotional to win against someone like Victor. But now Billy has something stronger than pride.
He has a family to protect.
That could make him more dangerous than ever.
Victor may believe he has found Billy’s weakness, but he may have actually found his purpose. The unborn baby may not make Billy surrender. It may give him the clarity he has been missing. It may force him to stop reacting like a wounded enemy and start moving like a father who has no intention of letting Victor Newman control his child’s future.
The coming battle may become one of the most personal wars Genoa City has seen.
Victor wants submission.
Billy wants safety.
Sally wants truth.
Victoria may face guilt.
And the unborn baby, innocent and unseen, has already become the center of a power struggle that could destroy families before it even begins.
Victor Newman may think threatening Billy’s child will make Billy fold.
But he may have forgotten something important.
A man with nothing to lose is dangerous.
But a father with everything to protect can be even worse.





