Authors: Jettie Woodruff
smiled a warm smile. “I’m just trying to show you what
your routine was before the accident. Dr. Tharp says that
getting you back into your normal element should help
with your memory. You never dressed this way, Morgan.”
I pulled my hand away. “Can I use your computer
now?” I asked. I knew he was just trying to help me regain
my memory, but it was still frustrating as hell. I still
couldn’t believe that I dressed in the fashions that hung in
my closet on a daily basis.
“Sure,” he said, patted my leg and walked over to
close out of what he had been doing.
I sat in Drew’s chair and tapped traumatic brain
injuries on the keyboard. I looked back at Drew who was
watching me. “How is it that I know how to type on a
keyboard, but I can’t remember learning it?”
“I have faith. You’re going to remember every
little thing that you’ve ever done,” he said with a cold
face. I still couldn’t believe that I was married to this man.
I mean, shouldn’t I feel something?
After about twenty minutes of reading things that
Dr. Tharp had already told me, I leaned back, took an
exasperated breath and rubbed my temples. My finger
traced the L shaped scar from my injury, reminding me that
I had no idea who I was.
Drew rubbed my shoulders from behind. Hmm, it
felt good. I didn’t realize how tense I was.
“Just give it some time, Morgan,” Drew said.
“What about the pictures? Do we have any of
those?” I asked, tilting my head for him to hit the crook of
my neck with his magic hands.
“That’s kind of your fault. I have told you and told
you that you needed to print the hundreds of pictures on
your digital camera. You never would. It burned in your
car.”
“What about our wedding pictures? Do we have
those?”
“I wish you could remember this stuff. I feel like
the bad guy here. You didn’t want a wedding. We ran
away and got married.”
“How long did we know each other?”
Drew laughed, and I knew it was going to be bad.
“We got married after spending three weekends together.”
I turned to look at him dumbfounded. What the hell
was wrong with me? Maybe I didn’t want to remember
who I was. She sounded pretty stupid.
Drew kissed the top of my head. “You were
married to me for almost eight years. I think you would
have left had we not been right for each other.”
“I was away taking classes in France, how long
was I there?”
“That was all you too. I didn’t want you to go, but
you insisted. You were there not quite two years, but came
home often, and I would fly there to be with you when I
could.”
“Why is my purse the only thing that survived the
crash?” I didn’t understand that either. My camera, my
laptop and all of my clothes had burned in the car, but my
purse came out unharmed.
“It was on your lap. They assumed that you were
digging for something in it. That’s why you hit the bus.
You weren’t paying attention.”
I still didn’t understand it. I mean the scar above
my eye along with the bigger one on the side of my head
had to have bled. Why was my purse free of blood?
I sat up straight when I had an idea. I rested my
fingers on the correct letters of the keyboard.
“Where did I grow up?” I asked. Maybe if I could
find some pictures or my school or something it would jog
my memory.
“I think that’s enough for one day,” Drew decided,
spinning me away from the computer.
“Did I always let you decide what was best for
me?” I asked, standing up. He didn’t move. We were
inches apart.
“Always,” he whispered, and moved close to my
lips.
I placed my hand on his muscular chest to stop
him, although I have to admit I was staring right at his lips.
“Drew, I don’t think I am ready for you to kiss me,” I said
in a low tone.
He placed his hand over mine on his chest and
smiled. “I’ll see you at dinner,” he replied and let me step
around him.
“I want to see our bedroom, the one that we
shared,” I said, turning to him before leaving.
“Okay, but it’s kind of empty right now. I moved
my things into another room when I had yours moved. I
couldn’t stand the thought of you not being in our bed with
me.”
Well that was sweet. It made me feel guilty for
being such a pain to him. I never once thought about how
hard this was for him. I smiled, and he walked out with
me.
Nothing. I didn’t recognize that room any more
than any other one in the house. It was just another fancy
room with expensive furnishings.
“Anything?” Drew asked, looking down at me.
I shook my head lightly.
“Don’t worry about it. Maybe you should just stop
trying to remember and let it come when it’s ready.”
“Maybe,” I replied. “Drew why did you move my
things to the second floor, knowing I have a broken
pelvic.”
“Awe, shit Morgan. I never thought about that. That
was your favorite bedroom in the house. I just thought you
would feel better being in there. You said it was the best
view in the house. You used to go in there and read a lot.”
he explained with a sincere response.
I smiled. “It’s okay. My therapist made me climb
steps at the rehabilitation center. It’s probably good for
me.”
“Do you want to go rest before dinner?” he asked,
placing his hand on the small of my back as we closed our
shared suite.
“I think so, but I would rather just lie on the couch,
I think,” I replied.
“The couch?”
I looked up to him. “I didn’t do that either, right?”
He smiled. “No, but if you want to do that, I will
close the doors and make sure that you are not disturbed.”
“Thank you,” I smiled. I didn’t want to be in that
room for some reason. It didn’t feel like my favorite room
in the house at all.
Drew brought me a pillow and a blanket. “Do you
want the television on?” he asked.
“No, I don’t think so. I kind of just want the quiet
for a while,” I answered, snuggling under the soft blanket.
Drew kissed me just in front of my ear.
“Have a nice nap,” he whispered hot words to my
skin.
I drifted of staring at the beautiful portrait of Drew
and me. I was wearing a beautiful evening gown and he
was in a tuxedo. We looked happy. He was smiling down
at me as I stared up to him.
Chapter 14
Dawson never gave up looking for me, but I left
him with very little to go by. He knew about my father
selling me to a man named Drew. He knew that my name
had been Morgan Willow. He knew that I had been in
Indiana since then, and nothing more. He had gone to my
father, and my father told him what I was sure he was to
tell anyone looking for me. That I married a very nice man,
and he hadn’t seen me since.
Dawson tried to use his law authority, but it didn’t
work. My father still said he didn’t know anything. He had
done so much research trying to find someone that was in
the software business by the name of Drew, nothing but a
brick wall. He couldn’t even find a marriage between
Morgan Willow and Drew somebody. I’m sure trying to
find wedding records with no last name was next to
impossible, especially when you were looking in the
wrong state.
Lauren and Star helped as much as they could, but
came up with nothing. I didn’t leave them much to go on.
Dawson knew that Drew had me, he just couldn’t find me.
He assumed that he had found out about me somehow and
had taken me from the layover in Chicago. He was at his
wits end, and didn’t know what else to do.
Our wedding day came and went and he was still
clueless, hurt, and alone. He was even beginning to think
that I had left on my own accord, and the whole wedding
thing scared me off. He thought that was easier for him
than thinking that I was back with Drew, and what he was
doing to me.
The truth was, Drew never did anything. He was
always the perfect gentleman. There were times that I did
question looks that he would give me when I would say
things that he thought were out of line or when I would just
burst into his office. But for the most part he was unusually
attentive and caring toward me. I still didn’t like his
copilot Derik but didn’t really have a reason. I just didn’t
like him. He gave me the creeps when he was around
which was a lot.
I still defied Drew’s wishes about wearing the
designer clothes around the house. It just seemed so
artificial to me, and I was more comfortable in my sweats
and flannels. I did do some online shopping one afternoon
with Drew peering over my shoulder one day. I heard a
few groans when I ordered a few pairs of jeans, shorts, t-
shirts and sneakers. Who didn’t own a pair of sneakers? I
related it to who I was before Drew, and although I may
have dressed the way he wanted, to impress him at one
time, I didn’t want to do that. I wasn’t going to do that.
I had been back at the mansion with Drew for
almost a month. The one nurse, Melissa, was gone, but
Terri was still there and she and I had become pretty good
friends. Drew didn’t like that either and pointed it out to
me one afternoon. Terri had just left for the day and wasn’t
spending the nights anymore. She came and did therapy
with me and went home in the afternoon.
I really didn’t need her anymore, but I was starting
to go stir crazy being in the house all the time. No wonder
I chose to go to school. I liked having Terri there to talk
to. Drew didn’t, and a week later, he explained that it
really wasn’t proper for me to associate with the help the
way that I did, she was gone. I was furious. He could have
at least told me that her assignment was up so that I could
say goodbye to her.
I still couldn’t remember anything about anything.
It was like my conscious was erased. I didn’t dream about
my past. Nothing was becoming more familiar, and I was
beginning to wonder if I ever would.
Drew took me out shopping for a new dress for a
dinner party that Mr. Callaway was holding on Saturday
night. I came down to go, and he smiled. I had decided to
appease him and leave the jeans in the closet. I wore a
satin white top with no sleeves, tucked into a pair of
designer black dress slacks with a large silver buckle. I
was surprised by the heels. I thought for sure that I would
hate them, but I wore them like a pro which was
expectable, I guessed. I did dress like that for a good many
years, or so I was told anyway.
I tried on three different dresses in the expensive
store while Drew gave his opinion. He didn’t like the first
two and would tell the two women who were making a
tremendous fuss over me, no. They would leave and bring
me something else. When I walked out in the short,
flowing, black sequenced dress he instantly said no way.
I spun around looking in the mirror. I thought that it
made me look extremely sexy, and it made my legs look
longer and my breasts look bigger.
“I’ll take this one,” I told the two ladies. They
looked to Drew like they were asking his permission.
What the fuck?
“Whatever Mrs. Kelley wants,” he offered,
surrendering with his hands in the air.
I smiled at him, and he smiled back. We were
absolutely flirting.
He took me to a nice restaurant for dinner where
not only he, but I also continued to flirt. I even let him hold
my hand on the way back to the car. I was sure we hadn’t
had sex in a while, and I was a woman after all. I couldn’t
help it that things were stirring that hadn’t been stirred in a
while.
I said goodnight to Drew, and walked upstairs to
my suite where I soaked in the glorious hot tub. I pulled on
a pair of stretch shorts and a solid light pink shirt with a V
cut neck. I’m not sure why I did it, but I opened the night
stand drawer, and pulled out the e-reader.
Hmm, I thought, pulling myself up on the bed. I
didn’t turn down the cover. I had told Drew it was his
fault that I walked around in sweats or flannels because he
kept it so cold in there, he had adjusted the temperature,