Follow
Chapters
Share
Divorced By The Billionaire Who Still Owns Me Novel Cover

Divorced By The Billionaire Who Still Owns Me

She loved him when he had nothing to lose. He discarded her when he had everything to protect. Married young to a ruthless billionaire, Elara Hayes believed love could survive power. Instead, she learned that in his world, silence is punishment, reputation is everything, and wives are disposable. When betrayal shatters their marriage, Elara signs the divorce papers and disappears carrying a secret that will cost him everything. Years later, fate drags her back into his orbit through a business deal neither of them can escape. Now powerful, untouchable, and emotionally distant, she is no longer the woman who begged him to listen. He wants redemption but she wants revenge. But when the truth of her disappearance surfaces, the billionaire who once erased her must face the one thing money cannot fix: his own emotional ruin. Some men lose love. Others lose power. He is about to lose both
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

Elara’s Pov;

Signing the divorce papers didn’t hurt the way I expected it to.

I thought it would feel final. Like a door slamming shut. Like grief crashing down all at once. Instead, it felt quiet. Too quiet. Like something had gone numb inside me and hadn’t figured out how to scream yet.

I sat on the edge of the bed with the papers spread out in front of me, my signature still fresh, black ink sinking into white space. My name looked strange without his last name attached to it. Smaller.

Lighter. Like it could be erased if someone rubbed hard enough.

I stared at it for a long time.

That’s it, I thought. That’s how a marriage ends.

Not with shouting. Not with cheating. Not with dramatic exits.

With a pen.

My phone buzzed again.

Adrian.

I didn’t open it. I didn’t want to see what kind of tone he was using now. Controlled? Annoyed? Relieved? The thought made my stomach turn.

I folded the papers carefully and slid them into the envelope like they were something fragile. Then I stood up and walked around the apartment, touching things without thinking. The back of the couch. The kitchen counter.

The doorframe where he once measured my height and laughed because I refused to believe I was shorter than him.

Everything felt like evidence.

I packed slowly. Not because I had a lot, but because every item came with a memory I didn’t ask for. A sweater he liked. A book he never finished. Earrings he bought me after one of our worst fights, like gifts could patch holes he refused to acknowledge.

I didn’t cry. That scared me more than if I had.

I paused when I reached the bathroom cabinet. My hand hovered over the shelf where the prenatal pamphlets were tucked away, still sealed, untouched since the hospital. I hadn’t told anyone. Not my friends. Not my family. Not him.

Not the man who helped create this.

I pressed my palm to my stomach again. The movement was becoming a habit. A reassurance. A question.

What am I doing?

The answer didn’t come easily. All I knew was that telling Adrian would pull me back into a version of myself I couldn’t survive again. He wouldn’t listen. He wouldn’t ask what I needed. He would decide. He always decided.

And I was tired of being managed.

I zipped my suitcase shut and left the apartment just before midnight.

I didn’t leave a note.

If he wanted explanations, he should’ve asked before sending lawyers.

I stayed in a hotel across town that night. One of those quiet ones meant for people who didn’t want to be noticed. I lay in bed staring at the ceiling, listening to unfamiliar sounds through the walls, my mind refusing to settle.

I kept thinking about the pregnancy in fragments. Not joy. Not fear. Just disbelief.

This is real….This is happening…This is mine…Mine.

The word felt strange but grounding.

The next morning, I woke up to sunlight spilling across unfamiliar sheets and a buzzing phone.

Missed calls. Messages. His name stacked one after another like proof that he still expected access to me.

I deleted none of them.

I didn’t answer.

I checked out before noon and went straight to the lawyer’s office.

She was calm. Efficient. The kind of woman who didn’t ask unnecessary questions and didn’t pretend to care more than her job required.

I appreciated that.

“You’ve already signed everything,” she said after reviewing the papers. “This will be finalized quickly.”

“Good,” I replied.

She glanced up at me then. “You’re sure?”

I nodded.

She didn’t know what I was sure about. Only that I couldn’t stay.

When I walked out, the air felt different. Lighter. Or maybe that was just shock wearing thin.

I sent one message before turning my phone off completely.

The papers are signed. Please stop contacting me.

I didn’t wait for a reply.

I drove for hours. Past city limits. Past familiar exits. I didn’t have a plan. I just knew I needed distance.

Space where his name didn’t echo everywhere I went.

By the time I stopped, the sky was turning orange and my head hurt from thinking too much. I rented a small place for the week. Nothing fancy. Just quiet

That night, I lay awake again, one hand on my stomach, the other curled into the pillow.

“I’m scared,” I whispered into the dark.

The words felt stupid without someone to hear them. But they were true. I was terrified. Of the future. Of doing this alone. Of what would happen if he found out.

But underneath the fear was something else.

Resolve.

I wasn’t weak because I was afraid. I was strong because I was still standing.

Days passed.

The divorce was finalized faster than I thought it would. Adrian’s name vanished from my life with alarming ease. No more shared accounts. No more access. No more security opening doors for me without question.

It was like I had never been there.

That realization hurt more than I expected.

I settled into a routine. Doctor appointments. Quiet mornings. Long walks where I let myself think without interruption. My body changed slowly, subtly.

I started noticing small things. Sensitivity. Fatigue. A strange protectiveness that settled into my bones.

This wasn’t just my pain anymore.

It was my responsibility.

I told myself that over and over.

One afternoon, while waiting at a café, I heard his name.

Not spoken directly. Just murmured between two women at a nearby table.

“Did you hear about Blackwood?” one asked. “The divorce?”

My chest tightened.

“Yeah. Apparently, she just left. No statement. No drama. Strange, right?”

I stared down at my cup, my hands trembling slightly.

“She must’ve messed up,” the other woman said. “Men like that don’t walk away without reason.”

Something sharp lodged in my throat.

I paid quickly and left before they could say anything else.

That was the moment I understood something important.

If I stayed close to his world, his story would become mine again.

And I refused to let that happen.

That night, I made the decision that changed everything.

I would disappear.

Not dramatically. Not with fake names or secret flights. Just quietly. Legally. Completely.

I changed my number. I cut off contact with anyone who might feel obligated to update him. I took a job that didn’t carry his shadow. I built walls that weren’t made of anger, but of necessity.

Weeks turned into months.

My body changed more. My emotions sharpened. Fear mixed with hope in ways I didn’t know how to name.

Sometimes I cried for no reason. Sometimes I laughed at nothing. Sometimes I missed him so badly it hurt to breathe.

Other times, I felt relief so strong it scared me.

I talked to my stomach when no one was around. Told it about the life I wanted to build. I promised it was safe. I promised it was love.

I promised I would never let anyone make us feel disposable.

And still, late at night, I wondered.

What will happen when he finds out?

Because men like Adrian Blackwood always found out.

The only question was when.

And what he would do when he realized the truth was already growing beyond his control.

You may also like

After Mom Divorced, Love Found Her Again Novel Cover
9.1
Dad sacrificed Mom’s Best Actress award just to please his old flame, Sutton. The industry mocked Mom, saying she was just a plaything. Heartbroken, Mom attempted suicide by slitting her wrists. All she received from Dad was a dismissive, “It’s pathetic to attempt suicide over an award.” That night, Mom’s eyes were swollen from crying. Exhausted, she said, “I’m tired. Adelyn, why don’t we leave all this behind together?” As she spoke, a message from my fiancé, Creed, appeared on my phone. “It’s just a pretend marriage. Can’t you stop taking it so seriously?” I replied with a simple “okay” and immediately arranged for a staged disappearance. On our wedding day, Mom and I vanished in a country house fire. *** When I reached the hospital, Mom lay quietly on the bed.
Choosing Austin's True Love Novel Cover
8.8
The crystal glasses gleamed under the chandelier light as I carefully arranged them on the silver tray. Each one had to be perfectly positioned—not too close, not too far apart. Mr. Wallace was particular about these things. Tonight was his birthday, and everything had to be flawless. I smoothed down my plain black dress, the fabric worn thin at the elbows from years of scrubbing and cleaning. It was the nicest one I owned, though it paled in comparison to what the other guests would be wearing. "The napkins should be folded like this, Kenna," I whispered to myself, demonstrating the intricate fold Mr. Wallace preferred. "Not like that." Three years.
Escaping The Grasp Of My Billionaire Novel Cover
8.7
Five years ago, I was the invisible scholarship charity case at an elite Manhattan prep school, trying to survive in a sea of trust-fund babies. Arlo Hammond, the untouchable billionaire heir, made sure to completely dismantle my soul. When his wealthy friends asked if he noticed me, his mocking laughter echoed down the hallway. "Are you out of your mind? You seriously think I'd be interested in a boring little nerd like her?" But the moment we were alone, he would corner me in dark alleys, pinning my wrists against brick walls with terrifying, possessive jealousy if my phone even buzzed. He played his twisted games until I was left standing in the rain with my shattered dignity. Now, I am an Assistant District Attorney. I spent years burying those memories under mountains of legal files. But tonight, he returned. When we crossed paths at an exclusive club, he looked at me with the cool detachment he'd give a piece of furniture. In front of a crowd of elites, he coldly declared: "We have absolutely nothing to do with each other anymore." Then he walked away to pick up a supermodel, leaving me trembling from the sheer humiliation. I didn't understand. If I was so worthless to him, why did he still have my birthday tattooed in dark ink on his wrist? Why did he look at me with such raw, painful vulnerability in the shadows? I stared at my pale reflection in the mirror and made a silent vow. I am not that pathetic seventeen-year-old anymore, and I will prove to him that I am completely, entirely over him.
Flash Marriage To The Vengeful CEO Novel Cover
8.9
Debora went to prison to protect the man she loved, only to end up a paroled convict living under the roof of her abusive foster parents. When they found her positive pregnancy test from a one-night stand, they threatened to kick her out and send her straight back to a cell. Just as they were about to report her, the stranger from that dark hotel room suddenly appeared. He paid her foster parents one million dollars to marry her and take her away. Debora thought she was finally safe. But the moment they were alone, he looked at her with pure, venomous hatred. He didn't want a wife; he wanted a prisoner. He believed Debora was the ruthless murderer who had destroyed his life in a car crash, and he planned to make her suffocate in her own despair. He didn't know she was just a scapegoat. To survive and protect her baby, Debora found a job at a bridal shop, only to run into the real culprit—the man who actually drove the car and framed her. He was now happily engaged to a wealthy heiress. They deliberately ruined a priceless wedding gown and blamed it on her. "Kneel on this floor and apologize, or I'm calling the police to revoke your parole!" Why did she have to rot in hell for his sins, while the man she married wanted to destroy her? Just as her trembling knees were about to touch the cold marble floor, the heavy glass doors were violently shoved open. Her billionaire husband strode in like a force of nature, his eyes locked onto the wealthy couple with a terrifying, destructive rage.
Forbidden but Fated: The Billionaire's Illegitimate Wife Novel Cover
8.0
Fraser is the billionaire heir to a bloodless empire. Bellamy is the illegitimate daughter his stepmother abandoned. A deal bound them together. Six years of obsession, silence, and need. She thought she could walk away. He made sure she couldn't. But when enemies tear them apart - She loses her sight. He loses his memory. Their love is erased. Until his soul remembers what his mind forgot. And she dares to love him again - Even if she has to fight the world to do it.