
Divorced By The Billionaire Who Still Owns Me
Chapter 2
Elara’s Pov;
I didn’t call the hospital back right away.
That wasn’t courage. It wasn’t denial either. It was more like my brain refusing to take on one more thing at the same time. Divorce papers. Adrian’s face.
The way he said complications was like I was a spreadsheet problem. My body still felt wrong, unsettled, like it had been for days.
I started the car and drove without checking where I was going.
Traffic moved slowly. A bus cut in front of me. Someone honked. None of it registered properly. I kept replaying the voicemail in my head, the calm voice, the way she said test results like it was routine. Hospitals always sounded calm. That was their job.
They didn’t scream even when lives were changing.
My phone buzzed again.
Adrian.
I glanced at the screen, then dropped the phone into the cup holder, as it might burn me.
Of course, he was calling now.
He hadn’t called when the lawyers sent the papers. He hadn’t called after I walked out of his office. But now that I wasn’t answering, now that I wasn’t available on his terms, suddenly it mattered.
The call went unanswered.
Then another.
Then a text.
Where are you?
I laughed, but there was no humor in it. He didn’t ask if I was okay. He didn’t ask if we needed to talk. Just location. Control. Access.
I didn’t respond.
I pulled into a grocery store parking lot and turned off the engine. My hands were shaking again, worse than before. I sat there gripping the steering wheel until the tremor eased a little.
You’re fine, I told myself. You’re just overwhelmed.
But the nausea rolled through me again, slow and heavy this time. I leaned forward and rested my forehead against the wheel.
“Get it together,” I muttered.
Eventually, I picked up my phone and called the hospital.
It rang twice before someone answered.
“Mercy General Hospital, how may I help you?”
My throat felt tight. “This is Elara Hayes. I missed a call earlier.”
There was a pause. Typing. Then her tone shifted, just slightly. Still professional. Just softer.
“Yes, Ms. Hayes. Thank you for calling back. We’d like you to come in today if possible.”
That was enough.
“Is something wrong?” I asked.
“We prefer to discuss results in person.”
That was not reassuring.
I told her I’d be there within the hour and ended the call before she could say anything else.
The drive to the hospital felt longer than it should have. I kept thinking about last night. About how normal everything had seemed then. About how I’d gone to bed married and woken up… not.
Life didn’t give warnings. It just stacked things on top of each other and waited to see what would break.
The hospital smelled like disinfectant and old coffee. I checked in at the front desk, took a seat, and waited. The waiting room was full of people pretending not to watch each other. A woman across from me held a man’s hand too tightly.
Another stared at her phone like she was afraid to look up.
I wondered what they were waiting for.
When my name was called, my legs felt heavy as I stood up.
The doctor was young. Calm. Efficient. She asked me a few questions I barely heard. When she sat down across from me, I knew before she spoke that something had changed.
“Your bloodwork came back,” she said. “You’re pregnant.”
The word landed wrong.
Pregnant.
I blinked at her. “That’s not possible.”
She gave a small smile. “It’s very possible.”
My mouth opened, but nothing came out. My head felt light, like I’d stood up too fast.
“How far along?” I finally asked.
“Early,” she said. “But definite.”
Pregnant.
Adrian’s face flashed through my mind. His office. His silence. His lawyers.
The timing felt cruel.
I nodded through the rest of the appointment without really hearing it. Vitamins. Follow-up visits. Basic instructions.
I accepted pamphlets I didn’t look at and scheduled another appointment because it seemed expected of me.
When I left the hospital, the sun felt too bright.
I sat in my car again, staring straight ahead.
Pregnant.
I pressed my hand against my stomach, unsure what I was even looking for.
“I can’t do this,” I whispered.
My phone buzzed again.
Adrian.
This time I answered.
“Where are you?” he asked immediately.
“At the hospital,” I said.
There was a pause. “Why?”
“For something you don’t get to manage,” I replied.
“Elara, don’t do this,” he said. “We need to talk.”
“We talked,” I said. “You sent lawyers.”
“That wasn’t personal.”
“It was my marriage.”
Silence.
Then, “Are you sick?”
“No,” I said.
I didn’t know why I said it like that. Flat. Closed.
“Then come home,” he said. “We’ll discuss this properly.”
I laughed, sharp and bitter. “There is no home.”
He exhaled hard. “Stop being dramatic.”
That did it.
“I’m pregnant,” I said.
The line went dead quiet.
“What?” he asked.
“I said I’m pregnant.”
Another pause. Longer this time.
“You’re sure?” he asked.
“Yes.”
His voice changed then. Not softer. Calculating. “When did you find out?”
“Today.”
“That timing is convenient.”
I closed my eyes. “You think I planned this?”
“I’m saying”
“You’re saying it’s a complication,” I finished for him.
He didn’t deny it.
“Come back,” he said. “We need to handle this.”
Handle.
The same word again.
“No,” I said.
“Elara, this isn’t something you get to decide alone.”
I laughed again, but my chest hurt this time. “You decided alone when you divorced me.”
“You’re overreacting.”
“I’m protecting myself.”
“And what about the child?” he asked.
I swallowed. “That’s my responsibility.”
“Legally”
“I’ll sign the papers,” I cut in. “You’ll get your divorce. And you won’t get anything else.”
“You can’t shut me out.”
“I already have.”
I ended the call before he could respond.
My hands shook so badly I had to set the phone down.
Pregnant….Divorced....Alone.
I drove home in silence.
That night, I spread the divorce papers across the table. I read them again, slower this time. The clauses felt colder now. More dangerous.
I picked up a pen and stared at the signature line.
If I signed, I would disappear from his life.
If I didn’t, he would control what came next.
I thought about Adrian’s voice on the phone. The way it changed when he realized there was something at stake.
I signed.
When the pen lifted from the paper, my chest felt tight, but steady.
I wasn’t doing this to hurt him.
I was doing this to survive.
And whatever happened next, he would not own it.
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