Did You Say...Wife?. Judith McWilliams

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Did You Say...Wife? - Judith  McWilliams

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you and skidded on the ice. He pinned you between the cars.” Her voice thinned with remembered terror.

      To his intense frustration, her recounting of the accident meant nothing to him. She could have been telling him something that had happened to a complete stranger. Nor did he want to keep pushing her for details, because talking about the accident was clearly upsetting her.

      Not only that but his pounding head was making rational thought difficult. And the drugs they’d insisted on giving him tended to make the world distinctly fuzzy around the edges.

      “I love you.” He tentatively tried out the words and found to his relief that they sounded exactly right. “I love you, Jocelyn Forester. I love you, Mrs. Lucas Forester.” His voice gained strength as he tried out different variants of her name. Whether he could remember her or not, he was sure he loved her. Nothing that felt so right to say could be a lie.

      Jocelyn swallowed, feeling suffocated by guilt. When events had propelled her into her impersonation, she hadn’t thought about how Lucas would react to being told he was married to her.

      “It’s your turn,” Lucas said watching her intently.

      She’d just have to live with her guilt, she told herself. She couldn’t back out now. Lucas needed her. Needed her to give him enough space to heal. It was the only personal thing she would ever be able to do for him, and she had no intention of failing him.

      “I…I love you, Lucas,” she blurted out.

      “What do I do?” To her intense relief, he changed the subject.

      “You are the sole owner of a medium-size company that makes component parts for lots of things. You inherited the company when your father died five years ago and have since doubled it in size,” she answered promptly.

      “Do I have any other family?” Lucas asked.

      “Your mother has been dead since you were four, and your father remarried not long after. You have a stepmother and a half brother.”

      She studied Lucas narrowly, trying to see if the mention of Bill had caused him to remember anything.

      He sighed, having no trouble interpreting her look.

      Sorry, I don’t remember a thing about either my family or any kind of widget. Do I like doing whatever it is I do?”

      “Yes,” Jocelyn said honestly. You were determined to be the biggest and best of your kind.”

      Had his concentration on work taken its toll on his marriage? he suddenly wondered. Was that what was causing the odd vibes he kept picking up from her whenever the conversation got personal?

      Yet another question he didn’t have an answer for. But this was hardly the time to move any personal problems they might have to center stage. Not when he couldn’t remember them. Far better to leave them buried for the time being, he decided.

      “So who’s running the company while I’m lying here?” he asked. “You?”

      “Not me.” She gave him a rueful smile. “I’ve been pacing up and down the hall outside while the doctor rearranged the inside of your head to his liking.”

      Lucas grimaced. “It feels like he’s still in there.”

      Jocelyn eyed him uncertainly. Was he paler now than when she’d arrived? She wasn’t sure. But she was sure that the lines beside his mouth were deeper.

      “Do you need something for the pain?”

      “No! No,” he moderated his voice as her eyes widened. “I don’t want any more of their drugs.”

      Jocelyn shrugged. “It’s your head and your choice. I just want you to get better.”

      “If you aren’t minding the store, then who is?” he asked, returning to the subject of his business.

      “Richard has agreed to look after things until you’re well.”

      An elderly face with a thatch of white hair and a neatly trimmed white beard flashed through his mind, followed by a feeling of intense relief. The doctor hadn’t been lying. He was going to regain his memory. It was all there. It was just a matter of giving his memories time to work their way to the surface.

      “I’ve been thinking about where you can recuperate in peace,” she said slowly. It was a problem to which she’d given a great deal of thought. It had to be somewhere where they wouldn’t run into anyone who knew either of them and would know they weren’t married, and it also had to be someplace away from Bill. Because if Bill were to find out that Lucas had lost his memory…

      “And did you reach any conclusions?” Lucas asked.

      “Yes, your ski lodge seems our best bet.”

      He frowned slightly as he tried to pull an image out of his mind and failed.

      “Where is it?” he asked

      “In Vermont, near Stowe. A great-uncle on your mother’s side of the family gave it to you when you graduated from college,” she added at his blank look.

      “Since the doctor is very emphatic about not wanting you to get overtired, I thought we’d just fly directly to Vermont from the hospital. We can buy any clothes we need up there.”

      “All right,” Lucas agreed. He didn’t really care where they went as long as she was with him.

      Chapter Three

      “How do you feel?” Jocelyn took her eyes off the empty road leading to Lucas’s ski lodge to give him a quick sideways glance, her gaze lingering for a fraction of a second on the scar which started at his temple and ended in his thick hair. It was a bright red at the moment, but the surgeon had assured her it would fade in time.

      Lucas’s cheeks appeared slightly leaner than they had been before the accident. As if he’d lost weight during his stay in the hospital. And the lines around the corners of his eyes were more deeply scored. As if the pain he’d endured had widened his normal laugh lines.

      “I’m fine,” Lucas said.

      “Does your head hurt?” she persisted.

      “Nothing an aspirin can’t handle.”

      “I hardly think aspirin will work,” Jocelyn said.

      “Don’t fuss, woman,” Lucas said. “Haven’t you heard that aspirin is a wonder drug?”

      “The wonder is that you’ve come out of this in one piece.”

      She shuddered as the memory of his crumpled body lying on the pavement flashed through her mind.

      “Except for the minor fact that I can’t remember anything,” he said dryly.

      “Your memory will come back.” The surgeon had assured them of it when he’d released Lucas from the hospital that morning.

      “It’d

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