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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 6

My body was a battlefield. Every muscle screamed, every bone ached. I lay there, at the bottom of the embankment, in the relentless rain, the terrifying silence my only companion. He had left me. Josiah, my protector, my voice, had abandoned me to the storm, to the echoing nightmare of my past. The betrayal was absolute, a gaping wound in my soul.

"Josiah!" I cried out again, though I heard no sound, only the raw tearing in my throat. I tried to push myself up, tried to scramble after him, but my legs wouldn't obey. My body, bruised and battered, refused to move. He was gone. A flickering shadow swallowed by the darkness and the storm.

I must have lost consciousness. The next thing I knew, blurry figures were hovering over me, their voices muffled, distant. They were speaking, but I couldn't understand. The silence was still there, a thick, impenetrable wall. Rescue workers, I later learned. They found me hypothermic, concussed, and with a severely sprained ankle. My hearing aids were nowhere to be found.

The hospital room was sterile, white, and suffocatingly quiet. Days blurred into a haze of pain medication and restless sleep. My parents, their faces etched with worry, sat by my bedside, their lips moving, their hands holding mine, their expressions a mixture of relief and profound sadness. I could tell they were talking to me, but their words were just silent shapes. My ears, my body, my very soul, were still trapped in that terrifying void.

Alexandria, I heard later through my parents' strained whispers, was fine. A little shaken, a sprained wrist, but otherwise completely unharmed. And Josiah. He tried to visit. Multiple times. My parents, their faces grim, turned him away.

"She doesn't want to see you, Josiah," my father had said, his voice cold and hard, a sound I recalled seeing many times in that silent room. "Not after what you did."

I saw him at the doorway once, his face pale, his eyes heavy with something that might have been guilt, or maybe just exhaustion. He tried to speak. His lips moved, forming silent words I couldn't understand. He gestured, pleadingly, but I simply turned my head away, my gaze fixed on the blank wall. I had nothing left to say to him, nothing left to feel. My heart, once a vibrant, beating drum for him, was now a cold, hollow cavity.

He tried again, weeks later, sending a long, rambling text message to my mother's phone, which she read aloud for me. He tried to explain. He was panicked. Alexandria was screaming. Her ankle was hurt. He thought she was in danger. He had to help her first. It was a reflex. He was coming back for me, he swore. He just got lost in the storm.

His excuses were pathetic. They were the flimsy justifications of a coward. I listened, my face devoid of emotion. He was still trying to escape accountability. Still trying to make his abandonment sound like an unfortunate accident.

I simply typed a single word on my phone: No.

My parents understood. They called his parents, politely but firmly, and explained that all contact needed to cease. I removed him from all my social media, changed my number, and asked my few remaining friends not to share any information about me. The severing was clean, surgical.

I didn't want to be Grace Foster, the mute girl, the town tragedy, the burden. Not anymore. Not in that town, in that life, haunted by the specter of his betrayal. I wanted a new life, a new identity, a new voice that belonged only to me.

My parents, seeing the fierce resolve in my eyes, supported me without question. We quietly made arrangements. College applications were filled out, not for local schools, but for prestigious art academies far away, schools that cherished individuality, where my mutism might be seen as unique, not a defect.

The paperwork was handled quickly, efficiently. My enrollment was confirmed. I was leaving. And with every step I took away from that town, away from Josiah, I felt a strange lightness, a sense of liberation I hadn't known was possible.

I was shedding the skin of my past, leaving behind the girl who had depended on someone else for her voice, for her worth. I was going to find my own.

Meanwhile, Josiah spiraled. He walked around school like a ghost, his usual boisterous energy replaced by a hollow emptiness. He sat in class, staring at my empty seat, his gaze vacant. He had tried to reach me, to apologize, to explain. He had even drafted a long letter, filled with desperate pleas for forgiveness. He imagined me reading it, imagining the tears, the eventual understanding. He was sure I would come back. I had to. We were Grace and Josiah. We were supposed to be forever. No matter what.

Every morning, he would check his phone, hoping for a message, a sign. Every afternoon, he'd walk past my house, hoping to catch a glimpse of me. He prepared elaborate speeches, rehearsing them in his head, ready to pour out his heart the moment he saw me. He convinced himself that once I understood, once I saw how truly sorry he was, how much he missed me, everything would go back to normal. He had even found a small, delicate silver bird pendant, something he knew I would love, a peace offering. He would give it to me, a symbol of my rediscovered voice, a silent apology for his cowardice. He just needed to see me. He just needed to talk to me.

He waited outside my house for hours one afternoon, the silver bird clutched in his hand, a desperate hope blooming in his chest. He saw my mother's car pull up. This was it. This was his chance. He took a deep breath, ready to face her, ready to plead his case, knowing she would bring me back to him.

Just as he stepped forward, the classroom door opened, and his history teacher, Mr. Harrison, walked in. "Josiah," he said, holding a stack of papers. "Did you hear? Grace Foster transferred. Effective immediately."

Josiah's world stopped.

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