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100 Promises Broken: He Chose His Ex Novel Cover

100 Promises Broken: He Chose His Ex

Sage Adler spent five years as Luna of the Silverpeak pack, standing behind an Alpha who once worshipped the ground she walked on. Then, overnight, Declan changed. He rejected their mate bond on their anniversary, paraded the sweet and beloved Omega Maren Hale as his new partner, and systematically dismantled Sage's career, reputation, and place in the pack. But Sage has a secret even she doesn't fully understand. Her crippling migraines and failing wolf spirit aren't natural — they're connected to a bloodline mystery that ties her to the very family she thought rejected her. When the pack's most powerful Elder falls ill and only Sage's rare blood constitution can provide the cure, she makes a deal that will cost her everything. As her body weakens and her wolf fades to silence, Sage watches from beyond as Declan's carefully constructed mission crumbles — and the truth emerges: he never stopped loving her. Every cruel word, every public humiliation, every cold glance was a lie to protect her from an enemy neither of them could see. But some truths arrive too late. And some bonds, once broken, can only be mourned.
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Chapter 1

The glass jar sat on the kitchen counter like a monument to broken promises. I counted them again—one hundred little folded papers, each one a commitment Beckett had made to our daughter. Promise #98 crinkled between my fingers as I watched Rosie practice her piano scales, her small hands stretching to reach the keys.

"Daddy said he'd listen to my recital piece today," she said without looking up, her voice carrying that careful hope that seven-year-olds perfect when they've been disappointed too many times.

I glanced at the clock. Six-thirty. Beckett should have been home an hour ago.

Rosie's birthday cake waited on the counter—three layers of vanilla with strawberry filling, decorated with rainbow sprinkles because she'd insisted it needed to look like "happiness." Seven candles stood ready, their wicks pristine and unlit.

"Maybe we should start without him," I suggested gently, but Rosie shook her head.

"He promised, Mom. Promise #98." She held up the green slip of paper. "'I will be home for Rosie's seventh birthday dinner. No exceptions.'"

The front door burst open, and Beckett rushed in, his hair disheveled and his shirt wrinkled. Relief flickered across Rosie's face before she saw his expression—that familiar look of distraction that meant his mind was already somewhere else.

"Daddy!" Rosie jumped up from the piano bench. "You're here! Can we have cake now? I practiced the song you wanted to hear, and—"

"Rosie, be good." His words cut through her excitement like a blade. "Lily's got a fever—I need to go. You still have plenty of promises left in the jar."

The room went silent except for the tick of the wall clock. Rosie's smile crumbled, her small hands still clutching Promise #98.

Beckett grabbed his car keys from the hook by the door, his movements sharp and urgent. "I'm sorry, sweetheart. We'll celebrate tomorrow, okay?"

But he was already gone, the door slamming behind him with a finality that echoed through our suddenly empty house.

Rosie stood frozen in the middle of the living room, staring at the closed door. She didn't cry—she'd learned not to, somewhere along the way. Instead, she looked down at the green paper in her hands, studying it as if the words might change if she read them hard enough.

Slowly, deliberately, she tore Promise #98 in half. Then in half again. And again, until the pieces were too small to tear anymore. She walked to the kitchen trash can and let the fragments fall like confetti.

"Rosie..." I started, but she was already walking back to me, her chin lifted in a gesture of defiance that broke my heart.

"Mom, why doesn't Daddy like me?" Her voice was steady, matter-of-fact. "Is it because I'm not good enough? Maybe if I practice piano more, or if I get better grades..."

I knelt down and pulled her into my arms, feeling how small and fragile she was beneath her brave facade. "You are the most wonderful little girl in the world. Daddy doesn't not like you—he's just... someone is sick and needs help."

Rosie nodded against my shoulder, but I could feel her skepticism in the way she held herself. She was too smart, too observant. She'd noticed the pattern long before I'd been ready to admit it existed.

"Come on," I said, forcing brightness into my voice. "Let's have our birthday dinner. Just us girls."

I lit the seven candles on her cake, their flames casting dancing shadows across her face. Rosie made a wish—her eyes squeezed shut tight, her lips moving silently—and blew them out in one breath.

"What did you wish for?" I asked.

"That Daddy would come back," she whispered.

As if summoned by her words, fireworks suddenly exploded outside our window. Rosie's eyes went wide, her face lighting up with pure joy.

"Mom! Look!" She pressed her nose against the glass. "Fireworks! On my birthday!"

The massive screen by the river flickered to life, and Beckett's face appeared—larger than life, his smile warm and tender in a way I hadn't seen in months.

"Today is a very special little girl's birthday," his voice boomed across the city. "Tonight, all the fireworks in the sky are just for her."

Rosie squealed and threw herself into my arms. "He remembered! Mom, he remembered my birthday! He's making the whole city celebrate with me!"

She ran to the trash can and started digging through the scraps of Promise #98. "I need to put this back together. I was wrong to tear it up. Daddy went to help someone, but he still remembered my birthday. He still loves me!"

My heart hammered against my ribs as I watched her try to piece together the torn promise, her small fingers shaking with excitement. The fireworks continued outside, brilliant bursts of gold and silver against the night sky.

At exactly midnight, the grand finale began. Fireworks spelled out words in the darkness, letters of light that hung in the air long enough for the whole city to read.

"Happy 6th Birthday Lily! Love, Daddy Beckett."

Not Rosie. Never Rosie.

The pieces of Promise #98 slipped from my daughter's fingers and scattered across the kitchen floor. She stood perfectly still, staring out the window at the message blazing across the sky—a public declaration of love for another man's child.

Without a word, Rosie walked to the glass jar on the counter. She reached inside and pulled out the remaining two promises. Promise #99. Promise #100. She tore them both into tiny pieces and let them fall like snow into the trash can.

When she turned to face me, her eyes held something I'd never seen before—not sadness, not anger, but a cold, final understanding.

"I don't want to forgive him anymore," she said, her voice eerily calm for a seven-year-old. "I'm done waiting."

She walked to her bedroom and closed the door with a soft click that sounded like the end of everything.

I found her twenty minutes later, curled up in her small bed, tear tracks dried on her cheeks. Clutched against her chest was our only family photo—the three of us at the aquarium last Christmas, back when Beckett still pretended we were enough.

I pulled out my phone and scrolled to a contact I'd saved months ago but never called. Margaret Chen, Divorce Attorney. My finger hovered over her number as fireworks continued to light up the sky outside, each burst a reminder of promises broken and love misplaced.

Tomorrow, I decided. Tomorrow I would make the call that would finally set us free.

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