Several problems come immediately to mind.
There isn't a clear statement of a goal. Your question is a meandering through your own confusion about what you should be doing. This makes the question subjective and open ended. Being in that situation is fine, but pouring that situation out into an SO question typically makes for a poor post on this site.
On a related but more specific note, you have this rather confusing statement in the middle of your question:
...many of them long-running CPU-bound operations (because the API blocks on the database IO).
My first reaction to this is to question if you know what you're talking about at all. Database IO is not a CPU bound operation; blocking on IO and being CPU bindingbound are mutually exclusive (for a single operation). Perhaps this is just poorly worded, but as a reader trying to understand what you're asking, I have no idea what you're talking about there and think maybe you're confused about what those concepts mean. If you are, this is something you should have looked into and understood a bit more before posting, which would have reusltedresulted in a clearer post.
The underlying goal is completely design oriented. It's not about the code as much as it is about the principles of the technology you're using. This is readily apparent just looking at the end of your question:
Is this an example where it's preferable to break the "no async wrapper for sync code" rule?
The answer probably won't (or at least doesn't need to) involve code. You could ask the same question about a number of other languages without even involving C#. This immediately suggests it'd probably be a much better fit for Software Engineering, where well-asked questions about design principles and norms find a home.
You've included far too many details.
In an attempt to narrow it down, you've included a lot of unnecessary details (like you have a "business logic layer into which services are injected as dependencies" and a "data repository service that performs CRUD"). Your question is about an overall design. The real design question is getting lost in this overload of details.
As a result of all that specificity and those code sample, your question has morphed into something approaching a "Here is my entire code base; you figure it out," question. These are awful to try to read through as an answerer.
Furthermore, the enormous amount of detail has reduced the usefulness to future readers. It is so detailed that even if you get a good answer, future readers are going to have trouble figuring out whether the advice applies to their situation or not. It's gotten pretty close to falling into the old "too localized" close reason.
To fix it, make your question about the principles and the overall design and ask on SoftwareEngineering.SE instead. This will probably allow you to omit an enormous amount of irrelevant detail and the code samples and instead craft a question that focuses on only the specific elements of your design needed to address the issue of having an asynchronous wrapper. A TL;DR section isn't going to fix this.