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He Promised Forever, Then Left Me Novel Cover

He Promised Forever, Then Left Me

After the crash that killed my parents and stole my voice, my childhood friend Josiah swore he would be my voice. For years, I believed him, my silent world revolving around the boy who pulled me from the wreckage. I was even relearning to speak, just for him. Then I overheard the truth. To his friends, I was just the "town tragedy girl," a burden he was tired of carrying. The cruelty didn't stop. He let his new girlfriend publicly humiliate me, and when she faked an injury, he forced me to my knees to apologize in front of everyone. The final betrayal came during a storm. He abandoned me in the woods, deaf without my hearing aids, leaving me to face the same terror that shattered my life years ago. He chose her. He broke his promise. He broke me. So I left. I found my own voice, my own strength. Three years later, I returned for my first art exhibition, and when I saw his face in the crowd, I knew he was about to hear everything he'd forced me to keep silent.
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Chapter 2

The next day, the school hall buzzed like a hive, a stark contrast to the hollow silence in my chest. The annual "Spirit Week Mural Competition" was underway, a chaotic explosion of paint and creativity. I had poured my heart into my entry, a vibrant depiction of a phoenix rising from ashes – a raw, symbolic expression of my own journey. I had spent countless hours in the art room, the canvas my only confidante, each brushstroke a silent scream, a whispered hope.

The announcement was moments away. I stood among the throng, not really seeing the other students, their excited chatter just a dull roar. My gaze was fixed on the mural, my phoenix, already feeling a strange detachment from it. It was mine, but it no longer needed to be validated by this place, or these people.

Josiah was there, of course, leaning against the wall with his usual entourage. Alexandria was draped elegantly over his arm, her perfect blonde hair catching the fluorescent lights. Her mural, a cheesy, overly-sweet landscape of the school's mascot holding a trophy, looked exactly like the one she'd copied from an online tutorial. I had seen her working on it, often laughing with Josiah, while I meticulously blended shades, creating depth and shadow in my own piece.

The art teacher, Ms. Albright, bustled to the front, beaming. "Alright, everyone! Thank you for your incredible participation!" Her voice was bright, but my blood ran cold with a familiar unease.

She held up two index cards. "It was incredibly close this year! A tie, in fact, between Grace Foster and Alexandria James!"

A gasp rippled through the crowd. My head snapped up, a flicker of surprise piercing through my carefully constructed calm. A tie? After everything, was I still to be measured against her?

"Unfortunately," Ms. Albright continued, a frown briefly marring her cheerful face, "Principal Davies, who was supposed to cast the tie-breaking vote, was called away unexpectedly this morning. Something about a district meeting."

A collective groan. I felt a strange sense of relief. A reprieve. But also, a knot of dread. This wasn't over.

"So," Ms. Albright said, trying to regain control. "We'll have to wait until tomorrow morning for his final decision. Until then, both murals will remain displayed!"

The crowd dispersed, murmuring about the tie. I watched Josiah and Alexandria. She was already pouting, clearly annoyed that she hadn't won outright. Josiah, ever the charming peacemaker, whispered something in her ear, making her giggle. He glanced in my direction, a quick, unreadable look, then turned back to her, wrapping an arm around her waist.

It was a painful echo. I used to care like that. I used to hang onto every shared glance, every fleeting touch, believing it meant something more. Now, it was just a performance, a public display for their audience.

The next morning, the tension was palpable. Students crowded the art hall, waiting. Principal Davies, a tall, imposing man, finally arrived, looking harried. Alexandria immediately detached herself from Josiah, rushing to his side. "Principal Davies! We've been waiting for you!" she chirped, a hand gently touching his arm, her smile dazzling and fake. "Hope your meeting went well."

Principal Davies gave her a tired smile. "Thank you, Alexandria. Yes, it was… productive." He patted her hand, a gesture of paternal affection.

My stomach clenched. Alexandria's parents were big donors to the school. Everyone knew it.

Josiah, now alone, caught my eye. He gave me a small, almost imperceptible nod, a ghost of an old reassurance. My heart, against my will, fluttered. A foolish, dying ember of hope. He wouldn't let them take this from me. Would he? He knew how much my art meant. He knew.

"All right, students," Principal Davies announced, clearing his throat. "After careful consideration, and a very difficult decision, I've made my choice for the Spirit Week Mural Competition winner." He paused, scanning the faces. My breath caught in my throat.

He looked at Alexandria, then at her mural. His gaze lingered for a moment. Then, he turned to my phoenix, a flash of something unreadable in his eyes.

"The winner is… Alexandria James!"

The hall erupted in cheers, mostly from Alexandria's friends. My world seemed to tilt again. A slow, sickening lurch.

Alexandria squealed, throwing her arms around Principal Davies. "Oh my god! Thank you, thank you, thank you!"

Josiah clapped, a slow, deliberate sound. He was smiling. Not a forced smile, but a genuine, proud grin directed at Alexandria.

"Alexandria's mural," Principal Davies continued, over the fading applause, "truly captures the spirit of our school. It's bright, it's cheerful, it's… uplifting. A perfect representation of our community values." He beamed at her. "Grace's work, while technically proficient, was perhaps a little… intense for our high school setting."

Intense. That's what my pain was. Too much for their cheerful, superficial world.

Alexandria, glowing, turned to Josiah, who gave her a quick, triumphant kiss on the cheek. She then looked at me, a smirk playing on her lips. "I told you, Jos," she mouthed, her eyes sparkling with malicious glee.

A bitter, dry laugh escaped me. It was a sound I hadn't made in years, a rusty, broken noise. It startled even me. But it was real. So real.

My gaze swept over the scene. Josiah, arm around Alexandria, basking in her reflected glory. Principal Davies, patting the donor's daughter on the back. The indifferent faces of the crowd. I was an outsider, an inconvenient truth in their perfect narrative.

Alexandria, seeing my reaction, detached herself from Josiah and approached me. Her voice, usually perfectly modulated, was now a little louder, a little too saccharine. "Oh, Grace, I'm so sorry! It was so close! But you know, Principal Davies just loved my cheerful colors. He said yours was a little… dark. Maybe next time, try something a bit less… you know." She gestured vaguely at my mural. "Less… you."

She paused, then lowered her voice, though I could still hear every word. "And honestly, you trying to compete with me? For Josiah's attention? It's pathetic. He's with me, Grace. Get it through your thick skull. He's tired of being your little puppy dog."

My mouth opened, but no words came. My chest heaved.

"It's just… a little awkward," she continued, leaning in conspiratorially, her breath sweet with mint. "You can't talk, can you? It's hard for him. So he needs someone who can. Someone who can actually communicate." She patted my shoulder, a condescending gesture. "Don't worry, though. He'll still be nice to you. He's just too good a person to completely abandon the mute girl."

I finally found my voice, a raspy whisper, barely audible. "He chose," I managed to croak, the words raw and painful. "He chose you."

Alexandria's smile faltered for a second, surprised I spoke. Then it returned, wider. "Yes, he did, didn't he? And he'll keep choosing me. Because I can actually be a girlfriend. You're just… a project."

Josiah, who had been watching us, suddenly looked uncomfortable. He cleared his throat. "Alex, that's enough." His words were weak, a mere whisper against her sharp cruelty.

I looked at him, really looked at him. The boy who promised to be my voice. The boy who was now letting another girl tear me down, defending her with a pathetic, half-hearted plea. My last shred of hope shriveled and died. It wasn't just Alex. It was him. He was complicit.

A strange calm settled over me. The quiet, empty calm of absolute loss. I turned away from Alexandria, from Josiah, from the scene that was ripping me apart. I didn't need their pity, their fake apologies, or their weak excuses. I just needed to leave. I pushed through the crowd, my phoenix mural blurring behind me. It was intense, yes. And it was mine.

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