
Billionaire Loses Love Forever
Chapter 1
I stood at the fringe of the Metropolitan Museum ballroom, champagne flute untouched in my hand, watching my husband bask in his triumph. Nathan Sterling—tech visionary, Wall Street darling, and the man I once loved enough to sacrifice everything for—was having his moment. His company's IPO had just valued at over a billion dollars, and the room swelled with Silicon Valley elites eager to orbit his success.
The chandelier light caught the diamond cufflinks I'd given him for our tenth anniversary. He wore them tonight, not for me, but because they matched the narrative: the self-made billionaire with impeccable taste. His smile never reached his eyes anymore—not when he looked at me.
"Mrs. Sterling, would you like me to refresh your drink?" A server appeared at my elbow.
"No, thank you," I murmured, the weight of my married name suddenly unbearable.
Across the room, Nathan laughed at something Rebecca Walsh whispered in his ear. His executive assistant. His mistress. Her hand rested on his forearm with practiced familiarity, her red dress a deliberate contrast to my understated black gown.
I felt the familiar ache spread through my bones—not jealousy anymore, just the cancer that had been quietly consuming me for months. The cancer nobody knew about. Not even Nathan.
"Ladies and gentlemen!" The event coordinator's voice rang out. "It's time for the ceremonial cutting of the cake to celebrate Sterling Tech's historic IPO!"
The crowd parted like the Red Sea as Nathan made his way to the elaborate cake decorated with the company logo. I moved forward automatically, muscle memory from a thousand events where I'd played the role of supportive wife.
The knife gleamed under the lights as Nathan gripped it, his smile radiant for the cameras. This was the moment when, by tradition and basic human decency, he would cut the first slice and offer it to his wife.
"The first piece," he announced, his voice carrying across the suddenly hushed room, "goes to the person who truly made this success possible."
For one disorienting second, I thought he might actually acknowledge me—the woman who had worked three jobs to support him when his first startup failed, who had suffered a miscarriage after drinking herself sick to help him land his first major investor.
Instead, he turned and extended the plate to Rebecca.
"To my right hand," he said, the double meaning unmistakable.
The room filled with uncomfortable murmurs and darting glances. I felt hundreds of eyes shift to me, gauging my reaction, hungry for the drama of public humiliation.
Something inside me—something that had been bending for years—finally broke clean.
I set my untouched champagne on a passing tray and walked deliberately to the edge of the ballroom floor. My fingers found my wedding ring—platinum, with diamonds that had replaced the twisted wire ring he'd made me when we were poor and in love. When we shared meals from food trucks and dreamed of a future together.
I slipped it off, feeling lighter with each millimeter it traveled past my knuckle.
Nathan's eyes found mine across the room, a warning in them. He thought this was another power struggle he would win. He always won.
I approached him with calm I didn't know I possessed. The room quieted again, anticipating a scene.
"I want a divorce," I said, my voice soft but clear enough for those nearby to hear.
His face hardened, eyes narrowing to calculate his next move in this game he thought we were playing.
"Don't be dramatic, Allison," he hissed, his smile never faltering for the benefit of onlookers.
"I'm not being dramatic. I'm being final." I placed the ring on the table beside the cake.
He laughed, the sound brittle and cold. "You'll never leave me. I'll bet ten million dollars on it."
My phone vibrated in my clutch. I stepped away from him and checked the message, my heart steadying as I read the confirmation from the Swiss clinic:
*Your appointment for medical-assisted death has been confirmed for May 15th at 10:00 AM. Please arrive 30 minutes early to complete final documentation.*
Thirteen days. That was all I had left.
I looked back at Nathan, who watched me with the smug certainty of a man who had never faced consequences.
"You just lost that bet," I said, and turned away from him for the last time.
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