Heartbreak Billionaire: He Should Never Have Let Go: Part 3 – The Weapon and the Weakness

Written by Amelia Rose | Updated on 24 March 2026

In her lavish, penthouse apartment, surrounded by towering arrangements of white orchids that filled the air with a cloyingly sweet fragrance, Seraphina Rivers watched the clip of Luna’s performance on her tablet.

She replayed it three times, a sneer of contempt twisting her beautiful lips. The raw, undeniable talent was a personal affront. The public’s overwhelmingly positive reaction was infuriating.

“She’s more resilient than I gave her credit for,” Seraphina muttered to her caregiver, who was silently polishing a silver tray in the corner. “This quiet, mousy act is just that—an act. She’s playing the victim, and they’re eating it up.”

She tossed the tablet onto the silk settee. The public sympathy she had so carefully cultivated with her “dying cancer patient” narrative was being threatened by this mysterious, soulful singer.

She needed to reassert control, to remind everyone who the real protagonist of this drama was.

Just then, her private phone, the one she used for more delicate matters, buzzed on the marble coffee table. It was her private investigator, a former tabloid journalist with no discernible scruples.

“I have the information you wanted,” the man’s oily voice said on the other end. “It took some digging, and a rather generous ‘donation’ to a records clerk, but I found out about Elara Vance’s visit to Sterling Medical Center.”

Seraphina sat up straighter, her full attention captured. “And?”

“She didn’t visit a friend. She didn’t have a check-up. Her appointment was with Dr. Maya Khan. Head of the obstetrics and gynecology wing.”

Seraphina went completely still. The words hung in the air. OB-GYN.

The implications hit her not like a bolt of lightning, but like the slow, satisfying click of a tumbler falling into place in a complex lock.

Pregnancy. A baby. Julian’s baby.

This was a complication she hadn’t anticipated, but it was also, she realized with a dizzying rush of excitement, the most powerful weapon she could ever have hoped for. A triumphant, exquisitely cruel smile spread across her face.

“Is there more?” she purred, her mind already racing, connecting dots, formulating a strategy.

“Yes,” the investigator continued. “Dr. Khan’s private schedule was… accessible. There’s a follow-up appointment for Mrs. Croft-Vance in two days. It’s coded as a ‘surgical procedure.’ Given the department, there are only a few things that could mean.”

“She’s getting rid of it,” Seraphina whispered, the words tasting like victory. “Oh, this is perfect. How deliciously, wonderfully tragic.”

She now held the ultimate trump card. A secret pregnancy was leverage. But a secretterminatedpregnancy? That was a character assassination tool of the highest order.

She wouldn’t use it yet. The timing had to be perfect. She would wait until Luna, until Elara, was at her highest point.

She would let her believe she was winning, that she had escaped. And then, she would bring her crashing down in the most public, most humiliating way imaginable.

Julian, meanwhile, was finding his own perfectly ordered world beginning to fray at the edges.

His business life, the realm where he was king, remained pristine. Deals were closed, profits soared. But his personal life, the domain Elara had managed with silent, invisible efficiency, was descending into a state of low-grade chaos.

This morning, he’d spent ten minutes searching for a matching pair of cufflinks, an item she always laid out for him beside his watch.

At a crucial board meeting, he’d been unable to find a specific market analysis file on his laptop, a file she would have not only prepared but also flagged for his attention.

He’d snapped at his assistant, a young, competent woman who looked at him with wide, fearful eyes, and immediately felt a pang of… something. Not guilt, precisely, but a deep-seated irritation at his own incompetence in these trivial domestic matters.

These were small things, insignificant annoyances, but they were cracks in the flawless facade of his life, and they were growing.

He was beginning to feel her absence not as a missing person, but as a missing limb, an essential part of his own functionality that he had taken for granted until it was gone.

He still told himself it was a tantrum, a phase. But the seed of a terrifying thought had been planted: what if it wasn’t?

Later that evening, Elara’s phone rang. It was an unknown number, a local landline. She almost ignored it, but something compelled her to answer.

“Hello?”

“Elara, dear? Is that you? It’s Beatrice.”

Julian’s grandmother. Elara’s heart did a painful clench. Of all the Crofts, Beatrice had always been the one who sawher, not just the convenient wife for her grandson.

She had treated Elara with a genuine warmth and affection that had been a balm on many lonely days.

“Grandma Bea,” Elara said, her voice soft with an emotion she couldn’t hide. “How are you?”

“I’m old and stubborn, same as always,” the old woman’s voice crackled with a familiar, wry humor. But then it turned serious.

“I know Julian told you not to tell us about… whatever this mess is. But I’m not a fool, child. I see the papers, I hear the whispers. Things are not right with you two.”

“I called the house, and the housekeeper said you haven’t been there in days. Are you alright, dear? That boy… he is proud and he is foolish, and he doesn’t know how lucky he is to have you.”

Tears, hot and unexpected, welled in Elara’s eyes. She had been so focused on the fight, on her own survival, that she hadn’t allowed herself to feel the grief of losing this part of her life.

“I’m okay, Grandma,” she managed to say, her voice thick. “I promise, I’m taking care of myself.”

“Good,” Beatrice said firmly. “You do that. You were always too good for him, you know. You have a light in you, Elara. Don’t let him, or anyone else, put it out.”

“Whatever happens between you and my grandson, you will always be my granddaughter. Don’t you ever forget that.”

After the call ended, Elara sat in the deepening twilight of her apartment, the city lights beginning to twinkle outside her window. She didn’t move for a long time.

Beatrice’s unconditional kindness, her words of support, felt like both a blessing and a burden.

The thought of the termination surgery, now just two days away, felt like a heavy, cold stone in her stomach.

Beatrice’s voice echoed in her mind:You will always be my granddaughter. A grandchild. A great-grandchild.

Suddenly, the decision was no longer a simple, surgical severing of ties with Julian. It was tangled up in love, in family, in a future she hadn’t allowed herself to imagine.

The sterile clarity of her decision was gone, replaced by a messy, heartbreaking, and profoundly human conflict.

Chapter 8: The Confrontation

Julian’s frustration had simmered for days, slowly building to a boil.

Elara’s continued silence was a defiance he had never before encountered from her. The house, once his sanctuary, now felt like a sterile mausoleum echoing with her absence.

His well-ordered life was full of jarring little dissonances—the wrong brand of coffee, a poorly ironed shirt, the crushing silence where her soft humming used to be.

Then came her audacious performance on “A-Side.” He’d watched the clip online, his jaw tightening with every note she sang.

The vulnerability, the raw talent, the way the audience and judges reacted to her—it was galling.

She was creating a new identity, a new life, right before his eyes, a life that had absolutely nothing to do with him. It was a public declaration of independence, and he took it as a personal insult.

This wasn’t part of their deal. The deal was for her to wait quietly in the wings for six months. Not to become… Luna.

The final straw was the call from his grandmother. Beatrice had been curt, her voice laced with a disappointment so profound it felt like a physical blow. “You let her go, didn’t you, Julian? You foolish, foolish boy. You let go of the only real thing you had.”

He slammed the phone down, his carefully maintained composure shattering. This had gone on long enough.

He was going to put an end to this charade, right now. After making a single, angry phone call to a very reluctant Maya Khan, he had Elara’s new address.

He found her walking out of her apartment building, carrying a canvas tote bag filled with groceries.

She looked different. Thinner, perhaps, and paler than he remembered, but there was a new steel in her posture, a resolute set to her jaw that was entirely unfamiliar.

She stopped when she saw him standing there, his black Maybach parked haphazardly by the curb, a gleaming predator in the quiet, tree-lined street.

“Elara,” he said, his voice clipped and cold as he blocked her path. “This game is over. Get in the car. What in the world do you think you’re doing?”

She looked at him, and her eyes were the biggest shock of all. They were clear, calm, and utterly devoid of the soft, adoring light he was so accustomed to seeing there.

It was like looking at a polite, distant stranger.

“I’m living my life, Julian,” she said, her voice even. “I suggest you go and do the same with yours.”

He let out a short, incredulous laugh. The arrogance, the absolute certainty of his position, was his armor. “My life includes you. Our deal was for six months.”

“This… this television nonsense, this little apartment… it’s a cute tantrum, but it’s over now. You’re my wife. You will come home.” He reached for her arm, expecting her to yield as she always did.

She took a step back, pulling her arm away from his grasp. The movement was not sharp or angry; it was simple, decisive, and utterly final.

“No,” she said, her voice still quiet but as unyielding as granite. “I won’t. I signed the divorce papers, Julian. I gave you exactly what you asked for.”

“This is not a game. There is no ‘us’ in six months. There is no ‘us’ at all.”

For the first time since this ordeal began, he saw it. The unwavering finality in her eyes. The truth of her words crashed through his armor of arrogance and struck him with the force of a physical blow.

This wasn’t a strategy to make him jealous. This wasn’t a play for more money in the divorce. She was actually leaving him.

The foundational certainty that had underpinned his entire world for seven years—that Elara was his, that she would always be there, that shecouldn’tleave him—cracked and then shattered into a thousand pieces.

A feeling he couldn’t name, a terrifying mix of disbelief and raw panic, clawed its way up his throat. He was Julian Croft. People didn’t leavehim. Especially not her.

“You wouldn’t dare,” he whispered, and the sound of his own voice, thin and laced with a tremor of real fear, shocked him.

Elara looked at the man she had loved for so long, the man who was now a stranger filled with a panicked rage.

There was no victory in this moment, only a deep, profound sadness for what they had lost, for what they had never truly had.

“I already have,” she said softly.

She stepped around him, her shoulder barely brushing his, and walked down the pavement towards her apartment building, her steps even and sure.

She didn’t look back. She didn’t need to.

She left him standing alone on the pavement, the setting sun casting his long, solitary shadow behind him, utterly, completely stunned.

Chapter 9: The Unveiling

It was the night of the “A-Side” semi-finals. The air in the studio crackled with an almost unbearable tension.

Elara, as Luna, was no longer just a mysterious contestant; she was the dark horse, the breakout star, the soulful enigma who had captivated a nation.

The media frenzy around her was relentless. Who was Luna? Where did she come from? Her refusal to reveal her identity only fueled the public’s fascination.

Backstage, Elara felt a strange sense of calm descend upon her. The online hate campaign was still raging, but it felt distant now, like the buzzing of a fly in another room.

On stage, under the lights, none of it could touch her. There, she wasn’t Julian’s wife or Seraphina’s rival. She was Luna, and her only truth was the music.

Her conversation with Beatrice and the terrifying finality of her confrontation with Julian had solidified something within her. The next morning, she had called Maya.

“Cancel the procedure,” she had said, her voice shaking but firm. “I’m keeping the baby.”

The decision had settled in her heart not with joy, but with a quiet, fierce sense of purpose. She wasn’t just fighting for herself anymore.

Tonight’s song was new, one she had written in a single, feverish flurry of inspiration over the last week. It was called “Unchained.”

It was not a ballad of heartbreak, but a powerful, soaring anthem of self-reclamation, of breaking chains, of finding one’s own worth after being told you have none. It was her declaration.

When she walked onto the stage, the applause was deafening. She smiled, a genuine, radiant smile that reached her eyes, and the audience roared louder.

She saw Marcus Thorne in the judges’ panel give her a subtle, encouraging nod. He had become her silent champion, defending her artistry against the other judges’ push for more “commercial” songs.

She sat at the piano and began to play. The music was stronger this time, the chords bold and resonant. And when she sang, her voice was different.

The vulnerability was still there, but it was underpinned by an undeniable strength, a fire that had been forged in the crucible of her pain.

“You took the air, you took the light, you told me wrong was always right,”she sang, her voice rising with each line.“But a gilded cage is still a cage, it’s time for me to turn the page!”

She poured every ounce of her pain, her anger, her grief, and her fierce, newfound hope into the performance.

For the final chorus, she stood up from the piano, clutching the microphone, her eyes blazing with conviction.“This melody is mine alone, I’m standing on a brand new stone! And I’m unchained, I’m unchained, in the fire and the rain, I am finally, finally unchained!”

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