
100 Promises Broken: He Chose His Ex
Chapter 3
The drizzle had stopped by the time we pulled into the school parking lot, but gray clouds still hung low over Riverside Elementary like a threat. Rosie pressed her face against the passenger window, her breath fogging the glass as she searched for Beckett's car.
"I don't see Daddy's car yet," she said, her voice tight with nervous energy. "Maybe he's already inside?"
I checked my phone. One fifty-eight. The program started in two minutes, and there was no sign of him. My stomach churned as I remembered Vivienne's Instagram story from this morning—the perfectly manicured hand, the location tag, the casual way she'd tagged Beckett like he belonged to her.
"Come on, sweetheart," I said, forcing brightness into my voice. "Let's go find your classroom."
Rosie smoothed her blue dress one final time and took my hand. Her palm was damp with sweat, and I could feel the tremor in her fingers as we walked toward the school entrance. Other families streamed past us—fathers carrying homemade posters, mothers with cameras ready, siblings in tow. Normal families doing normal things.
The hallway buzzed with excitement as parents and children found their way to classrooms. Rosie's grip on my hand tightened as we approached Room 12, her steps slowing.
"What if he forgot?" she whispered.
"He won't forget," I lied, the words tasting bitter on my tongue.
We rounded the corner, and there he was. Beckett stood outside the classroom door, his familiar profile making my heart skip despite everything. Relief flooded through me so suddenly I felt dizzy.
But then I saw the rest of the picture.
Beckett's left hand was intertwined with small fingers—not Rosie's. A little girl with glossy dark hair stood beside him, wearing a pristine white dress that probably cost more than Rosie's entire wardrobe. Vivienne Chen stood on his other side, her hand resting possessively on his shoulder as she laughed at something he'd said.
"Daddy!" Rosie's voice cracked with pure joy as she dropped my hand and ran toward him. "You came! I knew you'd—"
She stopped mid-sentence, her sneakers squeaking against the linoleum floor. Her eyes moved from Beckett's face to the little girl beside him, then to Vivienne's perfectly manicured hand on his shoulder.
"Wait." Rosie's voice was small, confused. "Why is Lily here too?"
Beckett's expression flickered—just for a moment—with something that might have been guilt. But it was gone so quickly I might have imagined it, replaced by that easy smile he wore when he was trying to manage a difficult situation.
"Lily had an activity today too," he said, his tone casual, as if this explained everything. "I thought I'd come to both."
Rosie stood frozen in the middle of the hallway, her blue dress suddenly looking shabby next to Lily's pristine white one. "So you're here for me, or for Lily?"
Beckett reached out and patted her head—the same absent gesture he might use on a neighbor's dog. "I'm here for both of you, sweetheart. Come on, let's all go in together."
Vivienne stepped forward, her smile sharp and sweet. "Lily, say hello to Uncle Beckett's friend."
But Lily looked up at Beckett with adoring eyes and said, clear as a bell, "Hi, Daddy."
The word hit the crowded hallway like a bomb. Conversations stopped. Heads turned. I felt the weight of dozens of curious stares as parents tried to piece together the dynamics of our little group.
Rosie's face went white. She looked from Lily to Beckett to me, her green eyes wide with a hurt so profound it made my chest ache.
"Come on," Beckett said quickly, ushering us all toward the classroom. "Let's not keep the teacher waiting."
Inside Room 12, Mrs. Patterson had arranged small tables with art supplies. The activity was simple—parents and children would work together to create a family portrait. Around us, other families settled into their spaces, chattering and laughing as they sorted through crayons and markers.
Rosie tugged on Beckett's sleeve. "Daddy, over here! I saved us a spot by the window."
But before Beckett could respond, Lily's bottom lip began to quiver. "I'm scared," she whispered, pressing herself against Beckett's leg. "I don't want to be alone."
Beckett immediately crouched down to her level, his voice gentle and soothing. "Hey, it's okay. You're not alone. I'm right here."
I watched Rosie's face crumble as Beckett guided Lily to a table on the opposite side of the room. She stood there for a moment, her small hands clenched at her sides, before slowly walking to the table she'd claimed for them.
I sat down beside her, my heart breaking as she arranged the art supplies with mechanical precision. Around us, other children chattered excitedly with their parents, but Rosie worked in silence.
"Your dad's just helping Lily get settled," I said quietly. "He'll be over in a minute."
But minutes passed, and Beckett remained at Lily's table. Every time Rosie looked up hopefully, he was bent over Lily's paper, helping her draw or praising her work. When Lily needed a different color crayon, he jumped up to get it. When she spilled water on her paper, he was there with paper towels and reassuring words.
A boy at the table next to us looked around curiously. "Where's your dad?" he asked Rosie.
Rosie's crayon stilled on the paper. She glanced across the room where Beckett was now holding Lily's hand, helping her draw what looked like a house.
"He's helping someone else," she said quietly.
The words hit me like a physical blow. I pressed my lips together to keep from crying, watching my daughter color alone while her father played house with another man's child.
Twenty minutes later, Mrs. Patterson called for everyone's attention. "Let's have each family share their artwork!"
One by one, families stood up to display their collaborative masterpieces. Fathers lifted their children onto their shoulders. Mothers beamed with pride. The room filled with applause and laughter.
When it was our turn, I stood up with Rosie's picture—a crayon drawing of two figures holding hands under a rainbow. "This is Rosie's beautiful family portrait," I said, my voice steady despite the tears threatening to spill.
Rosie remained seated, staring at her hands. Across the room, Beckett was helping Lily hold up their picture—a house with three stick figures standing in front of it.
As the program ended and families began to mill around in the hallway, I could feel the curious stares and whispered conversations. The dynamics of our strange little group hadn't gone unnoticed.
That's when eight-year-old Marcus Thompson, known throughout the school for his lack of filter, piped up in a voice that carried across the entire hallway.
"Hey, Rosie! How come you call your dad Uncle Beckett? He is your dad, right?"
The hallway went dead silent. Every conversation stopped. Every eye turned to our little group.
Rosie's face flushed red, tears gathering in her eyes. But instead of shrinking away, she lifted her chin with a defiance that reminded me painfully of myself at her age.
"He IS my daddy!" she declared, her voice ringing off the walls. She pointed directly at Beckett. "He's MY daddy!"
Lily immediately stepped forward, her small hands on her hips. "No, he's not! He's MY daddy! You're just pretending!"
The two little girls faced off in the middle of the hallway while dozens of parents watched in stunned silence. Beckett stood frozen between them, his face pale.
Then he moved.
He stepped toward Lily, placing his hands on her shoulders protectively. When he spoke, his voice was gentle but firm.
"Rosie, don't make a scene. Just... just call me Uncle Beckett, okay? It's easier that way."
The words hung in the air like poison. I watched my daughter's face as they sank in—watched the exact moment her heart broke completely.
But Rosie didn't cry. She didn't scream or throw a tantrum like most seven-year-olds would. Instead, she reached into her dress pocket and pulled out a small, crumpled piece of green paper covered in clear tape.
Promise #98. The one she'd tried so desperately to repair.
With everyone watching, she held it up so Beckett could see it clearly. Then, slowly and deliberately, she began to tear it apart. The tape gave way with tiny ripping sounds that seemed to echo in the silent hallway.
She tore it into smaller and smaller pieces until there was nothing left but confetti in her small palms. The fragments fell like snow onto the polished linoleum floor, each piece a broken promise, a shattered hope.
Then she walked over to me and took my hand, her grip surprisingly strong and steady.
"Mommy," she said, her voice clear and calm. "Let's go home."
I looked up at Beckett one last time. His face was a mask of shock, his mouth slightly open as if he wanted to say something but couldn't find the words. Vivienne's hand was still on his shoulder, and Lily pressed close to his side.
Without another word, I let my daughter lead me out of that hallway, stepping carefully around the scattered pieces of her last broken promise.
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