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Heartbreak Billionaire - Heartbreak Billionaire: He should never have let go - Chapter 72

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It wasn’t dramatic. But it lingered. Soft, then sharp, and then gone—like smoke. Yet it stayed with you.

Brandon’s eyes narrowed as he looked closer. The woman on stage was dressed in a rose-red outfit that flared like flames. Her figure and styling were all wrong for Millie. She couldn’t be Millie.

As the performance moved on, the soft hum rose, curling upward into a swelling crescendo until Millie’s voice broke through—clear, fierce, shattering the quiet and carrying the song to its peak.

The lights flared. Fire burst around the stage. Then everything went dark.

A single spotlight switched on. Millie stood in its center, holding a violin. Petals fell from above, drifting around her like snow.

Then came the music. Not soft. Not sweet. It tore through the room—aching and beautiful. She played in her red dress.

The spotlight shifted, revealing her arms, her collarbone, her shoulders—bruises. Barely covered with makeup, they revealed themselves under the light. They marked her skin, more visible near her joints, rough patches that told the story of deep wounds.

Together, the music and the image struck something in the audience. The flames that surrounded her weren’t just for effect. This was a return. She was a woman reborn. A phoenix rising from the ashes.

Millie stood beneath the lights, dressed in deep red, the violin pressed against her shoulder. Each note she drew carved through the air. The music built, sharp and unyielding, and not a single gaze turned away.

To those watching, she was now more than a performer—she was someone who had walked through fire and come out shining.

Even after the last note faded and the flames slipped into silence, the audience remained still, caught in the weight of what they had just witnessed.

Millie lowered her violin slowly, her gaze lifting just in time to see Brandon nearby. Their eyes met. Brandon’s brow furrowed slightly.

His heart thudded harder than it should have. Maybe it was the intensity of the performance. Or maybe it was something else. There was something about her. Dangerous. Distant. But impossible to look away from.

Then the applause began—loud, rising like a wave, swallowing the silence. Surrounded by claps and cheers that filled the air, it was Brandon who looked away first, quietly turning his back on her.

“Thank you,” Millie said softly from the stage, her voice steady, almost too calm for what had just happened.

Brandon glanced over at Charles, who looked thrilled. But all Brandon could think about were her bruises. What kind of man let his woman suffer like that and seemed more focused on the song than on her pain?

Still, he reminded himself—it was none of his business. She wasn’t his woman. Without another glance, Brandon turned and left.

On stage, Millie gave a deep bow to the audience and followed the staff’s cue to exit.

Offstage, Barbara rushed over, nearly bouncing. “Serena, that was incredible! I mean it—I got chills!” she said, clutching Millie’s hand.

Millie flinched a little but still gave her a small smile. “Thank you.”

She had only rested for three days. It wasn’t enough. Before, she had remained seated as much as she could. But up there on stage, she hadn’t held back. Now, her body was catching up to her.