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Broken Vows, Unbreakable Me Novel Cover

Broken Vows, Unbreakable Me

Emma discovers her husband Noah has secretly drafted 47 emails to his ex, Grace, calling Emma his “safety school” and marriage a mistake begun before their wedding. While he showers, she screenshots the draft, emails it to herself, deletes her tracks, and pretends nothing happened. Next day she researches Massachusetts divorce law, learns she can recover assets wasted on an affair, and hires ex-cop Marcus Kane to surveil Noah. She pays Kane’s $4,000 retainer—her savings—and signs papers authorizing GPS tracking of Noah’s Tesla, financial forensics, and photo evidence. That evening Noah lies about a “work call” and a faculty-lounge meal; Emma notes the deceit. She now waits for Kane’s team to deliver proof of infidelity and financial misconduct so she can file a fault divorce and reclaim what Noah spends on his “Harvard” woman.
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Chapter 1

The sharp buzz of Noah's work phone cut through the silence of our bedroom like a knife. I squinted at the digital clock on my nightstand—1:17 AM—and groaned as the phone continued its insistent vibration against the hardwood floor where he'd carelessly tossed it before heading to the shower.

I reached across the cold expanse of our king-sized bed, my fingers still tingling from the chill. Noah's side was empty, the sheets rumpled but already losing his warmth. The bathroom door was ajar, steam seeping out in ghostly tendrils as the sound of water drummed against porcelain.

"Emma?" Noah called over the shower spray. "Can you grab my laptop? I need to check something real quick."

I didn't answer immediately, my throat tight with sleep. Outside our third-floor apartment window, the Back Bay was quiet except for the occasional taxi crawling down Commonwealth Avenue like a yellow beetle in the darkness.

"Emma?" he tried again, louder this time.

"Got it," I finally managed, swinging my legs over the edge of the bed. My bare feet hit the floor with a soft thud, and I winced as the cold hardwood sent a jolt up my spine.

Noah's laptop sat open on our kitchen counter, its screen casting a blue-white glow across the marble surface. He'd left it there after making a late-night cup of chamomile tea—something he claimed helped him sleep but never seemed to work. The Harvard Business School mug sat beside it, still half-full, steam rising in lazy spirals.

"I'll be right out," he shouted from the bathroom. "Just need to look at tomorrow's lecture notes."

I approached the laptop cautiously. Noah was meticulous about his digital privacy—a habit from his years advising hedge funds before joining the Harvard faculty. He'd never left his email open before, and something about this small breach of his usual caution made my stomach twist.

My fingers hovered over the keyboard. I should just close it and leave it on the counter. That would be the respectful thing to do. The Emma he married would have done exactly that.

But something stopped me—perhaps the way the screen seemed to pulse with secrets, or maybe just the quiet voice inside me that had been whispering doubts for months.

"Just close it," I murmured to myself.

Instead, my eyes caught on the Gmail tab. Noah's inbox was open, dozens of unread messages from students and colleagues stacked neatly in reverse chronological order. Nothing unusual there.

Then I noticed the Drafts folder.

(47)

Forty-seven drafts. That couldn't be right. Noah was a man of action, not procrastination. He never let emails linger in his drafts folder for more than a few hours.

My hand moved almost of its own accord, clicking on the folder before I could stop myself.

The drafts loaded in a cascade of subject lines—most mundane, some related to his upcoming book on zero-sum game theory, a few addressed to colleagues about lecture schedules.

And then I saw it.

"Re: Still You"

The subject line sat there innocently enough, but something about it made my breath catch. I clicked, and the draft expanded to fill the screen.

"Grace," it began simply.

My heart stuttered. Grace Sinclair. Noah's college girlfriend. His "intellectual equal" as he'd once called her, back when we first met and he'd drunkenly reminisced about his Harvard days. The woman he'd described as "brilliant but impossible."

The draft continued:

"Every day I compare her to you. Emma is my safety school; you were Harvard. She was the backup plan I never needed to implement—until now."

The words blurred as tears welled in my eyes. I blinked them back furiously, forcing myself to keep reading.

"If you give me another chance, I'll fix this."

The email had been revised forty-seven times. I scrolled to the bottom where Gmail helpfully displayed the revision history.

The first draft was dated two weeks before our wedding.

My hands trembled as I clicked through the revisions. Each one was a small adjustment, a refinement of his betrayal. The most recent revision was dated just three days ago.

"Grace, I made a mistake choosing stability over passion. Emma was supposed to be temporary—a placeholder until you were ready."

Temporary. Placeholder. Backup plan.

I felt physically ill, my stomach lurching as if I'd been punched. The bathroom water continued its steady rhythm, oblivious to the earthquake happening in our living room.

I should have closed the laptop then. Should have pretended I'd never seen it. That would have been the path of least resistance—the Emma thing to do.

Instead, I reached for my phone.

My fingers moved with surprising steadiness as I took screenshots of the email, capturing every damning word. Then I clicked the "Export to PDF" button, watching as the document converted.

The shower water shut off with a decisive click.

I created a new email in my ProtonMail account—the encrypted email service I'd set up years ago when I'd first started teaching and needed a secure way to communicate with students about grades.

"To: emmahoffman@protonmail.com"

"Subject: Backup"

I attached the PDF and hit send, watching as the message disappeared into the encrypted void.

"Emma?" Noah called again, his voice closer now. The bathroom door opened, and I could hear the padding of his feet on the tile floor.

With three quick clicks, I deleted my browsing history, closed the laptop, and stepped away from the counter just as Noah appeared in the hallway, a towel wrapped around his waist.

"Did you find it?" he asked, water droplets still clinging to his chest.

I nodded, unable to trust my voice.

"Thanks," he said, passing me on his way to the kitchen. "Couldn't sleep without checking tomorrow's schedule."

He flipped open the laptop, typed in his password, and I watched his face carefully. There was no flicker of suspicion, no indication that he knew what I'd just discovered.

"Everything okay?" he asked, eyes on the screen.

"Fine," I managed, the lie bitter on my tongue. "Just tired."

He nodded absently, already immersed in his work email. "We should get some sleep. Big day tomorrow."

Big day tomorrow. As if tomorrow would be any different from today. As if tomorrow wouldn't be built on the same foundation of lies that today was.

I followed him back to bed, my mind racing with the implications of what I'd found. As Noah settled beside me, his breathing already growing deeper as sleep claimed him, I stared at the ceiling and wondered how long I'd been living as someone's backup plan.

The answer, it seemed, was at least as long as our marriage.

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