Heartbreak Billionaire: He Should Never Have Let Go: Part 4 – The Unraveling of a Lie
Written by Amelia Rose | Updated on 24 March 2026
The morning after was a media firestorm. Elara’s face—her stage name “Luna” now irrevocably linked to her real name—was everywhere.
Tabloid covers screamed her story, online forums dissected every frame of her televised breakdown, and talk shows debated the morality of her “actions.”
The narrative Seraphina had so carefully crafted had taken root:
Elara was either a cruel woman using a pregnancy as a weapon, or a tragic victim driven to madness by her husband’s infidelity. Neither version was the truth.
Julian woke up to this new reality. He hadn’t slept. He had spent the night pacing the cold, empty rooms of his mansion, the headline from the show burned into his mind.Pregnancy. Termination.
The words circled him like vultures. His first instinct, the one honed by years of corporate crisis management, was to take control. He needed facts.
His first call was to Maya Khan. She answered on the second ring, her voice frigid. “I have absolutely nothing to say to you, Julian.”
“Maya, listen to me,” he said, his voice strained. “Is it true? Was she… is she pregnant?”
“That is a gross violation of my patient’s privacy,” Maya snapped, her voice dripping with contempt.
“A concept you and your kind clearly know nothing about. Do not ever call me again.” The line went dead.
Her anger, while frustrating, was also illuminating. It wasn’t the detached response of a professional; it was the fury of a protective friend. It told him there was more to the story. He hung up the phone, his mind racing.
He was a powerful man, used to getting answers. If Elara’s friends wouldn’t talk, he would find another way. He started with Seraphina.
When he arrived at her penthouse, he found her artfully arranged on a chaise lounge, looking pale and fragile, a cashmere blanket draped over her lap. A news channel, detailing the “Luna” scandal, played softly on a television in the background.
“Julian, darling,” she said, her voice a weak, breathy thing. “This is all so awful. I feel terrible for her.”
“Did you know she was pregnant?” he asked, his voice flat, cutting straight through her performance.
Seraphina’s eyes widened in feigned shock.
“Of course not! How could I? Oh, Julian, the poor thing. To think she was going through that all alone… maybe this is my fault. If I weren’t so sick, none of this would have happened.” Tears welled in her eyes, a practiced, perfect display of remorse.
Julian watched her, a sliver of ice forming in his gut. For seven years, he had seen Elara’s genuine tears. He knew what real grief looked like.
This felt… rehearsed. The thought was disloyal, and he pushed it away, but it lingered.
He remembered a detail from weeks ago, something the foreign caregiver from Crestwood Clinic had said, a name that now seemed important.
He left Seraphina’s apartment with a manufactured apology for his abruptness, his mind already turning over a new, darker possibility. He put his private security team to work.
Their task: find the caregiver who had attended to Seraphina after the hospital incident. Find out everything about Crestwood Clinic.
Elara, meanwhile, was in a place the media would never find her: Marcus Thorne’s sprawling, secluded estate in the countryside.
The property was a sanctuary of old trees, rolling hills, and quiet gardens.
For the first time in days, she could breathe.
She spent the day talking with Marcus, not about the scandal, but about her father.
He showed her old photographs, played her scratchy demo tapes of his unfinished compositions, and told her stories of their youth, of their shared dreams of changing the music world.
“Your father was on the verge of something big before he died,” Marcus said, his gaze distant. “He wasn’t just a composer; he was a sharp businessman.
He owned a significant minority stake in a media tech company that the Croft Corporation was looking to acquire.”
Elara looked up, stunned. “My father and your family… they did business together?”
“They were in negotiations,” Marcus clarified. “Your father was hesitant. He felt something was wrong with the Croft Corporation’s books.
He suspected they were artificially inflating their value to leverage the acquisition.
He told me he was gathering evidence. His ‘accident’ happened a week later. The deal went through, and the Croft family made a fortune.”
The world tilted on its axis. Her father’s death wasn’t just a tragedy; it was now shrouded in a sinister, terrifying suspicion that pointed directly at the family she had married into.
Her resolve hardened into something unbreakable. She would not withdraw from the competition. She would not hide. The finale was in one week. She would use that stage not just to sing, but to speak her truth.
“I need to get back to the city,” she told Marcus. “I have a song to write.”
Late that night, Julian’s phone rang. It was the head of his security team. “We found her,” the man said. “The caregiver. Her name is Anya Petrova. She was fired from Crestwood Clinic last week for ‘breach of confidentiality.’ She’s disgruntled, and she says she has a story to tell. For the right price.”
A cold certainty settled over Julian. He was about to pull a thread that could unravel everything he thought he knew. “Set up a meeting,” he commanded. “Tonight.”
Chapter 11: The Confession and the Composition
The meeting took place in a sterile, anonymous corporate apartment Julian kept for discreet business.
Anya Petrova, the caregiver, was a nervous woman in her late forties, her hands clutching a worn handbag in her lap. Julian sat opposite her, a confidentiality agreement and a cashier’s check for a life-changing sum of money on the table between them.
“Tell me everything,” Julian said, his voice dangerously calm. “From the beginning. Tell me about Miss Rivers’s illness.”
Anya swallowed hard, her eyes darting from the check to Julian’s impassive face. “There is no illness, Mr. Croft,” she began, her voice barely a whisper.
“Not a terminal one, anyway. Miss Rivers has a chronic stomach ulcer. It can cause her pain, yes. It can even cause bleeding if it’s severe. But it is not cancer. It will not kill her.”
Julian’s face remained a mask of stone, but inside, the foundations of his world were crumbling. “The diagnosis,” he pressed. “The six months to live.”
“A fabrication,” Anya said, growing bolder as she spoke. “Crestwood is not a real hospital. It’s a high-end private clinic that caters to… special requests.
For a price, they will create any medical record a client desires. Miss Rivers paid them to create a file diagnosing her with terminal stage-four gastric cancer.”
She then detailed the rest of the scheme with chilling clarity: the acting lessons to feign weakness, the carefully timed public appearances, the self-induced coughing fits, and, most damningly, the small, concealed bags of theatrical blood she bit down on to simulate coughing up blood during moments of high drama.
The blood bags. He remembered the scene in Seraphina’s studio, her coughing into her hand, the bright red smear. He had been horrified, consumed with pity and a desperate need to protect her.
Now, the memory replayed in his mind as a grotesque piece of theater, and he was the fool in the front row.
“Why are you telling me this now?” Julian asked, his voice hollow.
“She used me,” Anya said, a flash of resentment in her eyes. “She promised me a bonus, a permanent position. Instead, when the media attention got too intense, she and the clinic used me as a scapegoat.
They fired me to cover their tracks. She ruined my career. I have nothing left to lose.”
After Anya left, the signed NDA and her recorded, notarized statement secure in his possession, Julian sat alone in the silent apartment for over an hour.
The betrayal was absolute, a poison that seeped into every memory of the past year.
He hadn’t been a noble man comforting a dying lover.
He had been a pawn, a tool used in a sick, malicious game to destroy the one person who had ever shown him unwavering loyalty.