from leaving if I chose to, you’re wrong. I’m resourceful.”
“If you weren’t, you wouldn’t have made it to that alleyway alive. We’re going to a formal political event tonight. I’ll make sure you have what you need. Be ready for the party by eight.” Then he disappears into the bathroom, his footsteps quickly fading, the bedroom door opening and closing, to seal me inside his world, not out, so much so that he’s taking me to this event. At least for now.
I press my palms to the wall for much-needed stability, stunned by what just happened—but one thing is crystal clear. I have looked into his eyes and seen inside his soul, and I am deeply, passionately in love with him. But to have that matter, I can’t just say the words. I have to show him. I have to fight with him and for him.
I can’t speed up that process, but I can remove an obstacle. My amnesia. I hurry to the stool again and sit down, pulling my phone from my purse. Tabbing through the numbers, I pull up Nathan’s number and dial the man who is not only my doctor but my hope right now.
“Ella,” he says two rings later.
“Can I see you? Or can you come here?”
“Is everything okay? Is your head bothering you again?”
“I’m fine. The concussion seems to be gone. I just . . . I need to talk. About my amnesia.”
“Kayden told me you might. And yes. I can come there and I will, but I’m at the hospital. It’s nearly noon now; I’ll be there in a couple of hours if I can. I’ll meet you in the store.”
“Great. Thank you, Nathan.”
He hesitates. “I should warn you up front that that I might not have the answers you want.”
“I want you to make me remember.”
He laughs. “That’s about as reasonable as you asking me to lose ten pounds in twenty-four hours. Some things take time.”
“Is that what you told Kayden? That my memory will take time?”
“Let’s talk when I get there.”
“Avoidance is a four-letter word.”
“You can teach me some new ones when I get there.” He ends the call.
I grimace, setting the phone in my lap. I might not have the answers you want. That’s already not the answer I want, and I now know why Kayden didn’t directly respond when I asked him what Nathan had told him. Nathan didn’t give him the answer he wanted, either. And suddenly I wonder if he’s told Kayden that I’m unstable or unreliable. He might have even told him not to trust me.
Frustrated that I’m doing this to myself, I shove my phone back into my purse and zip it up. Standing, I slip the strap over my head and chest, keeping my phone and Charlie close at hand. My gaze travels down the closet, seeing the rows of Kayden’s clothes on one side, my limited wardrobe on the other.
This place, this man, is home to me now. I’m not letting it go. I need the trigger I was after when I came in here a short while ago, and my attention lands on the pink ballet slippers sitting on a wall of shelves. An image of my mother, my first dance instructor, with a huge smile on her face. I smile, too, but abruptly the feelings and the moment in time shift. Now there is pain, loss, heartbreak. Now my mother is lying in a hospital bed, and by her side is some man I do not like. She is close to death, and I don’t want to live this heartbreak again. I most definitely don’t want to know the man standing by her bedside, but I have to face those things. I have to face all things.
Marching forward, I pick up the slippers, steeling myself for the pain to follow and shutting my eyes. And I wait. And wait, and I will something to come to me, but I have nothing. Frustrated, I remember my lunch with Giada, and set the slippers down. Dancing for my memories will have to wait. And I wonder, not for the first time, what can be so horrific that I refuse to remember it? I have to talk to Nathan about controlled triggers. There has to be a way to drive my progress.
Leaving the closet, I walk into the bedroom, glancing at the clock, which reads twelve fifteen. I have forty-five minutes to kill before my lunch with Giada, and I pull my journal from my