
“She thought she had all of him… until the will arrived.”
Carrie Bradshaw believed she had lived every heartbreak possible with Mr. Big — until his final testament unearthed a betrayal she could never have imagined. Hidden within the polished words of his lawyer was a name she had never heard before, tied to a bloodline she couldn’t deny. A secret heir. A double life. And now, a fight for the man’s legacy that could erase the love story she built her life around.
As HBO prepares for another season of And Just Like That, insiders whisper that this shocking storyline will drag Carrie — and viewers — into a storm of betrayal, grief, and unsettling revelations. Mr. Big may have died in the previous season, but Chris Noth is set to return through gut-wrenching flashbacks. This time, it won’t just be about romance — it will be about tearing down the myth of their so-called “forever love.”
The chain of events begins with an envelope. Inside, Big’s will — and the cruel twist that Carrie isn’t his main heir. The majority of his wealth, including a hidden Paris apartment and a fortune in investments, is instead left to a young French woman claiming to be his daughter. The revelation shakes Carrie’s entire foundation: had she only been living in the shadow of a life he had carefully concealed?
One insider revealed, “Carrie will face the deepest crisis of her life. It’s not just grief anymore — it’s the discovery that Big may have been a stranger all along.”
The flashbacks promise to unravel a new image of Big — sometimes gentle, sometimes distant, and always haunted by what he never confessed. In one heartbreaking scene, during their last dinner together, Big utters: “There are truths I couldn’t give you… but one day, maybe you’ll see why.”
HBO remains silent, but fan communities are exploding with theories. Some think this twist is redemption for Big, others believe it will destroy his legacy forever. But one thing is certain: this season will push the story of Carrie and Big to its breaking point — where love collides with secrets, and memory becomes more dangerous than truth.