Heartbreak Billionaire: He Should Never Have Let Go

Viral | Written by Amelia Rose | Updated on 23 September 2025

“Let’s get a divorce. She has stomach cancer and has only six months left to live.”

After their in**mate encounter, Julian Croft sat up and said in a detached voice.

Elara Vance, still breathing hard from the encounter, turned to him slowly, a wild look of disbelief in her eyes.

 

They had been married for a year. What did he mean by suddenly saying he wanted a divorce?

“Her final wish is to be my wife,” Julian added, almost offhandedly.

He said, lighting a ci**rette. The sm**e rose in slow spirals around his face.

Elara gawked at him, stunned. Silence spread across the room like mist.

The bedside lamp glowed faintly, casting long shadows across the wall, making them seem farther apart than they were.

Julian glanced at her and gave a faint frown.

“It’s only to comfort her,” he explained. “We’ll remarry after six months. She won’t be here long, Elara.”

His voice was steady, almost detached, like someone passing along a message that didn’t concern him.

Elara watched Julian wordlessly, her eyes fixed on his profile.

He spoke like his words were instructions, not suggestions.

Their relationship had always been one-sided. She had chased it from the start, drawn in by youthful affection.

She had stayed by his side for years, moving through each rough season without letting go.

Elara still remembered that day, under the heavy rain that soaked them both, Julian had stood between her and her stepfather, gripping a cracked stick, and said with fire in his voice, “Touch Elara again, and you’ll regret it.”

That moment had etched itself into her heart. Even when she was weak and bl**ding, she saw him–unmoving, protective, fierce.

From that point on, she was his.

She loved him without pause, met his requests with everything she had, carrying them out more flawlessly than anyone else ever could.

He would always pat her head, light and warm, and say in a low voice, “You did so well, Elara.”

But Julian’s praises never lasted, his ki**es barely stayed, and whatever affection they shared always felt just out of reach. But Elara told herself it was just how he was.

Even when others called her naive, she stayed–devoted and trusting.

She had given seven years of her life to him.

A year earlier, Julian’s grandmother, Beatrice Croft, had fallen into poor health. The family, hoping to lift her spirits, decided Julian should marry.

Perhaps the joy of a wedding would give the old woman something to hold on to.

So Julian went on to marry Elara.

She thought it was finally their moment. But after the vows, something changed. He began to pull away. Sometimes, he looked at her like she was a stranger.

“Elara, are you listening?” Julian scowled as he caught the far-off look in Elara’s eyes.

“Does it have to be like this?” she asked softly.

He didn’t answer. Instead, he said, “She’s going through so much, Elara.”

Elara’s ch**t tightened. “And what about me?”

Julian didn’t answer right away. His eyes, dark and steady, flickered with a trace of impatience.

Then, after about three seconds, he said, “Elara, she’s dying. Maybe you don’t know, but she’s in love with me. Because we were married, and she didn’t want to hurt you, she never let things go too far between us. Even when I tried to make it up to her, she never let me. She’s a good person. Please, let her have this. Don’t make me think you’re being heartless.”

His words, spoken so calmly, pierced her more than if he had shouted.

So in Julian’s eyes, a woman in love with a married man, who promised to hold back but never really let go, was a saint.

And a wife who simply wanted to keep her husband to herself was heartless.

Elara stared at his face. The same face she had fallen for–intense eyes, prominent nose, beautiful lips.

When had things started to crumble?

Maybe it was the day the woman showed up.

“Are you sure this is what you want?” Elara asked, steadying herself.

Julian said nothing, pursing his lips.

Finally, he opened his mouth to respond. “Yes, you–”

“Alright.” Elara cut him off before he could finish.

Julian looked up, clearly surprised. He frowned, studying her closely.

“Elara, you’re getting clever,” he said, a flicker of irritation in his voice. “You know I need your consent to go through with it. Are you thinking of using it to get under my skin?”

Elara didn’t answer. She just stared at the white wall, watching how their shadows stretched.

Julian put out his ci**rette andsaid no more, pulling on his clothes quickly and storming out.

He didn’t stop to consider how she felt. Nor did he pause to acknowledge how humiliating or painful his request was.

He knew she couldn’t leave him.

He was utterly sure about that.

The door slammed shut behind him.

And just like that, Elara was alone.

She sat motionless by the bed, staring at the door as if it might open again.

Her phone buzzed beside her.

A message lit up the screen.

She picked up the phone.

It was from a familiar number. “He came to see me again.”

The text came with a photo. Julian’s face was captured in the reflection of a glass door, a soft smile playing on his lips, eyes warm in a way Elara had never seen.

She froze. Then, slowly, she scrolled upward through the previous messages. “He said he has feelings for me.”

“Rainy nights aren’t lonely for me because he’s here with me. What about you?”

“The one who isn’t loved is truly the other woman. Elara, you were never his first choice; you were just the one he settled for. He sees beauty the way I do, shares my taste in things, and he loves me.”

The messages continued that way, proving Julian’s betrayal.

The man who had always treated her with distance these past seven years had apparently mastered tenderness for someone else.

Elara kept scrolling until she reached the very first message. “You should know who I am. Do you like the flowers in your living room today? I sent them. He said they were beautiful.”

Of course, Elara knew who it was.

Seraphina Rivers, the famous floral designer known for filling her wealthy clients’ grand villas and lavish parties with carefully and beautifully arranged blooms.

Elara had shown Julian the messages before. He’d brushed them off and said there was no proof they were from Seraphina.

He had even said maybe Elara sent them herself just to stir trouble. Most of the messages didn’t have pictures, and the few that did were vague–taken from afar, hard to pin down.

But not today’s. Today’s was clear.

Elara thought about showing him the photo. Then her eyes drifted toward the bedside drawer. She reached down and pulled it open.

There it was. The pr**nancy test result she’d gotten earlier that day.

She was pr**nant with Julian’s child. At the worst possible moment.

Her tears fell, soaking the paper and smudging the ink.

But what did it matter anymore? Julian’s heart had been gone for a long time.

Elara wiped her face dry and picked up the lighter he’d left behind. Flames flickered as she held the test result to the fire.

Julian had no idea that saying yes to the divorce would be the final thing she’d ever do for him.

She had given him back what she owed–not in money, but in seven full years of her life.

She would never love him again.

Chapter 2: Terminate The Pregnancy

The next day, parked just outside the courthouse, Julian sat in his Maybach, quietly tapping the steering wheel with his left hand.

“Julian, you and Elara have been married for a year now. Don’t you think it’s time to start planning for a baby?” An elderly voice drifted from the phone’s speaker.

Julian’s face softened, a trace of frustration flickering through, but his patience didn’t waver.

“Grandma, we’re still young. There’s no need to rush. You should focus on staying healthy.”

“What do you mean by ‘There’s no need to rush’?” The elderly voice of his grandmother, Beatrice Croft, rose in annoyance.

“Your condition might have improved, but we’re not getting any younger. We don’t know how much time we’ve got left.”

“Grandma…”

“Don’t give me that! I’ve heard things, Julian. Whatever’s going on, be good to Elara.”

Silence fell over the line for a few seconds.

“Julian, did you hear me?” the elder asked.

Julian rubbed his forehead in frustration. “I understand, Grandma.”

They exchanged a few more words before he ended the call.

Julian resumed tapping the steering wheel with his fingers, this time slower, more distracted. He stared through the windshield toward the courthouse.

He clenched his jaw. Then, he opened the messaging app on his phone.

His thumb hovered over a familiar profile picture–a simple floral image, tagged “My Love.” He skipped past it and opened the thread with Elara.

The last message he’d sent her simply reminded her of the time and place to meet for the divorce.

She still hadn’t shown up.

With a scowl, Julian sent a new message. “Where are you?”

A knock on the window followed almost instantly. He turned to see Elara standing outside, her face a little pale.

She opened the door and slipped into the passenger seat, giving him a blank look.

He hadn’t changed out of yesterday’s clothes–the same ones she had picked out for him.

Through the years, it had always been her–choosing his ties, picking his cologne, arranging every detail down to the fit of his tailored shirts and suits.

“Why are you late?” Julian asked.

Elara looked away.

“I’m not late,” she said quietly.

She was simply no longer the girl who would always arrive early and wait for him without thinking.

Julian’s fingers stilled against the wheel. His eyes narrowed slightly as he studied her.

Elara looked a little pale, maybe from a sleepless night after he mentioned the divorce last night.

Still, she looked fine.

“My grandma called earlier,” Julian muttered, looking away. “Don’t tell them about the divorce. They’re too old to handle something like that.”

Elara didn’t respond right away. Instead, she asked, “What did your grandma say?”

“She wants us to have a baby,” Julian said flatly, a flicker of irritation slipping into his voice.

Silence settled in the car.

After a while, Elara let out a small soft laugh.

Julian curled his hand into a fist and turned his face to the window.

There were moments when he used to imagine what their child might look like.

He remembered holding her from behind, pressing a hand gently over her belly, whispering, “Elara, when will you give me a baby?”

But it hadn’t happened.

Anyway, they could always remarry in six months and start planning for a baby. There would still be enough time.

Seraphina, however, only had six months left.

Outside, passers-by came and went.

Then Elara spoke up. “Just once more, Julian. Are you completely sure you want to go through with the divorce?”

“Having second thoughts?” Julian barked, looking genuinely upset.

Seraphina was still waiting for him at the studio.
After confirming once more, Elara didn’t say another word. She reached into her bag, pulled out a document, and handed it to Julian.

He took it with a frown, flipping through the pages. It was a property division agreement.

“If we’re getting divorced,” she said, “we should make everything clear. I’ll only take what I’m entitled to from the Croft family. And from this moment on, anything either of us earns belongs to us individually.”

Then Elara pulled out a pen and placed it beside him.

“If that’s okay with you, just sign it.”

Julian’s eyes stayed on the document, but his frown deepened as he read.

The agreement was too simple. She really wasn’t asking for much. And her signature was already there.

He didn’t get it.

What was she trying to do? It was basically just a fake divorce.

Seraphina only had six months left. He planned to spend those months by her side. After that, he’d return to Elara–no one else needed to know the divorce ever happened.

To him, Elara had always seemed blindly loyal.

Julian had never thought of her as someone with pride or boundaries.

There was a time he’d grown bored of her, pushing her into things that chipped away at her pride on purpose.

But Elara never declined.

She’d still return with a soft smile, holding out the results like a trophy. “Julian, look–I did it. Isn’t it great?”

She was a good wife. Meek. Obedient. For seven years, he’d seen it play out over and over.

If it weren’t for Seraphina, their marriage probably would have gone on like that.

But…

A flash of memory–Seraphina, weak and coughing bl**d, still trying to smile–stabbed at his ch**t. The pain was raw and unshakable.

Julian looked outside the car window again.

Elara’s reflection stared back at him–blank, expressionless.

Was this her way of threatening him?

After all, she had once faked messages to frame Seraphina.

She hated Seraphina.

Chuckling dryly, Julian picked up the pen and signed his name.

No one could force his hand. Not even her.

There were two copies of the agreement.

Elara calmly took her copy after he signed both.

They both stepped out of the car and headed into the courthouse. Together, they filed for divorce.

Next time they came back here, they would finalize everything and collect the official decree.

Once all the formalities were done, the two of them stepped out of the courthouse together.

The sun was already blazing, and the warmth settled on Elara’s skin.

Julian scanned the people moving about.

It wasn’t hard to tell the couples getting married from those getting divorced. Some people chose to have their weddings at the courthouse.

A couple walked by, hand in hand.

The woman’s smile triggered something in Julian. He remembered that same look on Elara’s face a year ago, when they first got married.

Julian glanced over at Elara, but her face was blank.

“I’ll keep transferring money to your account during the next six months,” he said. “And don’t say anything to my grandparents.”

He didn’t wait for a reply. Just turned and walked off.

Elara stood there quietly, watching his car disappear around the corner.

Her cab arrived not long after.

And then, the two cars went opposite directions.

One turned toward Seraphina Floral Design.

The other headed for Crobert Hospital.

Julian walked into Seraphina’s studio, where she greeted him with a gentle smile.

He told her, “It’s done. She didn’t make a scene.”

Meanwhile, Elara stepped into the ob-gyn wing and quietly sat opposite the doctor.

The doctor reached over and pulled the curtain

“Elara… are you sure you want to terminate the pr**nancy?” Her best friend and doctor, Maya Khan, looked at her with concern.

“You were so determined to have a baby. You even worked so hard to get yourself ready for co**eption…”

Elara reached into her bag and placed the divorce filing receipt on the side table.

“Yes,” she replied calmly. “Let’s terminate it. I don’t want it anymore.”

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About the Author

Amelia Rose

Amelia Rose is an author dedicated to untangling complex subjects with a steady hand. Her work champions integrity, exploring narratives from everyday life where ethical conduct and fundamental fairness ultimately prevail.