Authors: Jettie Woodruff
vendor of old-time candies and thought that it would make
a perfect fitment for the shop, and I of course grabbed one
of his catalogues. There were candy cigarettes, those
necklaces that you had to bite the candy off, wax lips, and
every flavor of jellybeans imaginable. I crinkled my nose
at the thought of sardine flavored jellybeans, but knew they
would sell, just because they were different.
The four of us went out for supper again at the
same restaurant. I was the one that drank a little too much
that time, but I didn’t care. I was having the time of my
life, and I don’t think I have ever laughed that much in my
entire life.
I said goodbye to Sunny, Marsha and Wendy and
headed back to the airport with the rental car the following
morning. Sunny and Wendy were staying another night.
They wanted to catch one of the shows before heading
home the next day. Marsha was flying out the same
evening. I couldn’t wait to get home and see Dawson. It
was crazy how much I missed him. If someone would have
told me two years prior that I could be in love with
someone the way I was with him, I would have deemed
them crazy.
I parked the rental car where I was supposed to. I
called Dawson just before boarding and told him that I
would see him in eight hours. I had another layover in
Chicago for an hour, but I was fine with it. I would be
going to bed in his arms that night. That was all that I
cared about. I told him that I loved him and was getting
ready to board when I realized that I had the keys to the
rental in my hand.
“How much time do I have?” I asked the lady at
the gate.
I told her that I would be right back. I had ten
minutes to board. I wished that I would have just taken the
keys and sent them in the mail.
I rushed out to the parking lot to deposit the keys in
the glove box of the car, where I was supposed to have
left them. I was just crossing the crosswalk and like an
idiot, turned when I heard someone yell.
“Morgan?”
I knew it was Derik before I ever turned my head.
Fuck…
What the hell was I supposed to do now? I
panicked and sprinted to the rental car, started it and
backed out of the parking space, trying to get out of there
in the ridiculous traffic. I would catch the next flight. I
knew they would track down every name on that plane if I
would have gotten on it. I wasn’t chancing that. Every
thought possible was going through my mind. What if he
caught me? What would Drew do to me? I couldn’t go
back there, and for the first time since I had met Dawson, I
wished I would have given him his name or even mine
before I became Riley Murphy. He had no way to find me.
He thought that I was on a plane heading toward Chicago.
I kept a close eye on my rearview mirror. Derik
was one car behind me. I could see him on his cellphone
and knew exactly who he was talking to. I could hear
Drew’s voice on the other end, telling him not to lose me.
I felt like my world was crashing in on me. Everything that
I had worked so hard for, for the past two years was
hanging by a thread, all because I was stupid. I should
have never chanced being there in the first place.
I was finally out of the airport traffic and into even
more traffic darting in and out of lanes, trying to lose him.
I had no idea where I was or where I was going. I wanted
to call Dawson. I had to call Dawson. He had to be able to
find me if I was caught. I reached into my purse to retrieve
my phone and looked up just in time to keep from hitting
the stopped bus. My purse and all of its contents landed on
the passenger floor.
This could not be happening. It was like one of
those movies that kept you on the end of your seat, waiting
to see what happened. I went around the bus, and Derik
was now right behind me. I shot back in front of the bus
and took the next street to the right. I kept darting in and
out of traffic, up and down different streets with Derik
right on my tail.
I finally got out of the city enough to get some
speed, still passing cars, illegally. I didn’t care. I would
have loved for the cops to see me and stop me. They
didn’t, and I was left to fend for myself. I was a few cars
ahead of him when I came up on a sports car with the top
down, full of young girls. They were yelling and having
the time of their life, but they were driving too slowly. I
knew I shouldn’t try it. I couldn’t see if anything was
coming from the little knoll.
I darted around them, and I was right. I shouldn’t
have done it. Neither I nor the city bus driver had time to
react before my car was under his bumper. I don’t
remember much after that. I could vaguely recall sirens,
voices and the sound of a saw. I was hot. I was so hot, and
I could smell smoke. Was the car on fire? Was I being cut
out of the car? I didn’t know. I was drifting away. I felt my
body becoming lighter and lighter as I floated into the
dark.
I’m sorry, Dawson…
***
I didn’t know how long I had been there. I coughed
and didn’t like the tube in my throat. The lights were
bright, and I was confused. I gagged on the tube inserted
into my throat as I tried to move my head.
The tube was being pulled out. That was why it
was gagging me. I managed to get my eyes opened and saw
a doctor, a nurse and a man that looked familiar, but I just
couldn’t put my finger on who he was just yet.
“Mrs. Kelley, can you hear me?” the doctor asked.
Mrs. Kelley? Mrs. Kelley? I repeated over in my
head unable to speak. That didn’t sound right. Was that my
name?
I let my eyes close again and drifted back into the
darkness. I don’t think I was out very long. I think the
doctor had continued to call my name or somebody’s
name. None of it made any since. I had no recollection of
anything.
“Mrs. Kelley, can you tell me your name?” the
doctor spoke.
I looked at the man who felt familiar, and he
looked worried. Was he worried about me? Who was he?
“Where am I?” I asked.
“You’re in the hospital, baby,” the man who
seemed to know me said. I pulled my hand away from him.
I didn’t know who he was.
“What’s wrong with me?”
“You were in a bad car accident, but you’re going
to be okay,” the man that thought he knew me replied.
“How long have I been here?”
“We have had you in an induced coma for five
weeks now. You suffered a ruptured spleen, broken pelvis
and a serious head injury. Your brain had swollen
severely, so we put you into an induced coma so it could
recover.”
“Five weeks?” I asked. I wasn’t sure why it
mattered. I couldn’t even remember my name.
“Mrs. Kelley, can you tell me what your name is?”
“Who are you?” I asked, turning to the man who
seemed to care about me.
“It’s me, Morgan, Drew. I’m your husband.”
What the fuck??? I don’t think so…
“I don’t think that is right,” I assured him.
“You might suffer some memory loss from your
head injury, but I am highly optimistic that you will have a
full recover. Memory loss is a common side-effect of
serious head injuries. It is highly likely it will return in
time,” the doctor explained.
I drifted back off. That was enough. I couldn’t take
anymore. Maybe the next time I woke it would be over.
Maybe it was just a bad dream. Yeah, that’s what it was. I
will wake to my real life the next time.
I think I was out for a long time. The room was
dark, and the same man that was there earlier was sitting
in the chair. He jumped up when he saw that I was awake.
“Hey,” he softly spoke. I pulled my hand out of his
again. It took every bit of strength that I had. My arm felt
so heavy.
“You should leave. I don’t know who you are,” I
demanded.
“I’m your husband, Morgan. We’ve been married
for almost eight years.”
“I don’t believe you.”
He got my purse and showed me my Nevada
driver’s license. The picture looked familiar but was it
me? That didn’t prove anything.
Every time I woke this man was sitting there. Why
wouldn’t he leave?
I don’t know how many more days I was there
drifting in and out of consciousness, but every time I woke
this man was there. He was there when I was moved to the
rehabilitation center as well.
I was starting to come around and was awake more
and more. This guy who claimed to be my husband was
always there, always telling me how much how much he
missed me being home with him.
Evidently I had just gotten home when I had my
accident. Apparently I had been studying English
Literature in France, and hadn’t even made it home yet or
so I was told. I didn’t remember being in France either. I
was scared, and I felt like my whole life had been erased.
Why couldn’t I remember something? Anything? It was so
frustrating. I felt a massive void, and despite the things this
Drew character had begun telling me about my past, it was
all alien. He said that we were getting ready to start a
family, we lived in a beautiful mansion and that I loved
books. It all sounded so superficial, and for some reason I
didn’t believe him.
Each morning, I'd wake up hoping it would be the
day everything would come flooding back. It was
frightening and frustrating because each day was as
strange as the one before. No matter how hard I tried, I
had absolutely no idea who Drew was or how much we
meant to one another. He seemed to care about me a lot
more than I cared about him. He was always there.
I did start seeing less of him because he said that
he had to work. I didn’t care if he went to work. I didn’t
want him there. He still came every night, but sometimes it
was a few days because he had to go out of town. He
could have stayed out of town.
I spent three weeks in the rehabilitation center
learning to walk and regaining my strength. Had I known
that the doctor was going to release me to that man I would
have contrived injured longer.
“Where are my parents?” I had asked when the
doctor talked to me about going home.
“Honey, both your parents are gone,” Drew
explained.
“Gone where?” I wanted to know. I knew that I
was only twenty six. My Nevada driver’s license said so.
Why didn’t I have parents?”
“Your dad passed away a few years back, and you
never really knew your mom. She left when you were just
a little girl?” Drew explained. He sounded sincere. I guess
I didn’t have a reason not to believe him.
“What about brothers or sisters? Don’t I have any
family?”
“Not really, Morgan. You and I were getting ready
to start our own family, remember?”
No. you fucking idiot, I don’t remember.
Another familiar face picked us up from the
hospital. I was wheeled out, and Drew helped me into the
back seat. I was doing much better and could walk on my
own, but moving into the car hurt.
Drew sat right beside me in the backseat. I wished
that he would move over, and every time he tried to take
my hand, I pulled it away. It just didn’t feel right to me.
I know that my eyes had to be wide open when we
pulled into the long drive with a security gate. I read the
sign above the gate.
‘Callaway Estates.’
Wow, was this where I lived? None of it looked
familiar. The house was a mansion. I mean big enough to
get lost in. This didn’t seem right either. I didn’t think that
I had really lived there at all.
“What the fuck is he doing here, Derik?” Drew
asked the driver, and then looked to me like he was afraid
of scaring me or something.
“I don’t know, but I’m sure he has a right to be
here whenever he wants,” the driver stated, and I
wondered what that meant. Who were they talking about?
I saw the frail older man in his wheelchair
waiting. Was he waiting for me? I didn’t know him either.
There were three nurses with him. Was he sick?
Drew helped me out of the car, and the older