She reached up to touch her throbbing temple, but her arm wouldn't move right. A thick plastic tube was taped to the back of her hand. Panic flared in her chest. She tried to recall her name, her age, any face at all.
Nothing. Just an empty, terrifying void.
"You're awake."
The deep, gravelly voice cut through the steady beep of the monitor.
She snapped her head toward the sound. A man sat in a leather armchair beside her bed. He looked like he belonged on the cover of a luxury magazine, even with his expensive suit jacket tossed over a chair and his white shirt unbuttoned at the collar. His jaw was dark with a few days of stubble, and his dark eyes were bloodshot, framed by heavy shadows.
He looked completely wrecked, yet he still radiated a terrifying amount of power.
The man stood up so fast his chair scraped loudly against the floor. In two strides, he crossed the distance between them.
"Don't move," he said. He reached out, his large hands hovering just inches from her face. "The doctors said you shouldn't sit up too fast."
She scrambled backward against the pillows, her breath catching. The sudden movement made her head spin. "Who are you?"
The man froze. His hands stayed mid-air, his fingers twitching slightly. The intense worry on his face instantly hardened into something completely unreadable.
"What did you just say?" he asked. His voice dropped to a low, dangerous register.
"I asked who you are," she repeated, her voice stronger this time despite the trembling in her throat. She looked past him toward the door. "Where is the nurse? What happened to me?"
He didn't answer right away. He just stared at her, his sharp eyes scanning her face as if searching for a hidden punchline. The sheer intensity of his gaze made her skin flush. Even in her state of sheer panic, she couldn't ignore the magnetic pull he had. He was devastatingly handsome, and something about his scent, sandalwood and rain, felt strangely heavy in the air.
But the way he looked at her wasn't comforting. It was possessive and demanding.
"Cut the crap," he said, stepping closer until his thigh brushed against the edge of her mattress. "The accident was bad, yes. But the doctors said your scans were clear. You don't need to play these games with me anymore."
"Games?" She pulled the white thermal blanket up to her chest, using it like a shield. "I don't know what you're talking about. I don't know who I am. I don't know who you are."
He let out a harsh, humorless laugh. He leaned over her, his hands slamming down onto the mattress on either side of her hips. The sudden movement trapped her beneath his shadow.
"Look at me," he commanded.
She forced herself to look straight into his dark eyes, refusing to let him see how much she was trembling. "I am looking at you. You're a stranger."
A visible crack appeared in his rigid composure. His jaw clenched so tight a muscle ticked beneath his stubble. For a fraction of a second, raw, unadulterated pain flashed in his eyes before it was replaced by a cold, burning fury.
"A stranger," he whispered.
"Yes." She pressed her back harder against the headboard, wishing she could disappear through the wall. "Get away from me. If you don't call a doctor right now, I'm going to scream."
Instead of backing off, his eyes darkened further. He reached down and grabbed her bare wrist. His grip wasn't painful, but it was an iron cuff. He was completely unyielding.
The moment his skin touched hers, a jolt of pure electricity shot straight up her arm. Her breath hitched. Her heart hammered against her ribs, the heart monitor echoing her sudden spike in adrenaline.
"Let go of me," she breathed, tugging against his hold.
"No," he said. He didn't budge an inch. He brought her hand up, pressing her palm flat against his broad chest. Beneath her fingers, she could feel the heavy, rapid thumping of his own heart. "Feel that? You did that to me."
"You're crazy," she said, her voice shaking. "You're insane."
"Maybe I am," he muttered, his gaze dropping to her lips before snapping back to her eyes. "But you don't get to escape this easily. You don't get to just erase everything that happened before the car went over that guardrail."
"I told you, I don't remember!" Tears of frustration and fear finally burned the back of her eyes, but she refused to let them fall. "I don't remember a car crash! I don't remember a guardrail! I don't even know my own damn name!"
The man stared at her for a long, agonizing moment. He watched the way her chest heaved, watched the genuine terror in her eyes, and slowly, his fingers relaxed just a fraction. But he didn't let go.
"You're serious," he said, the realization hitting him like a physical blow. He leaned in even closer, his warm breath fanning across her cheek.
"Yes, I'm serious!" she yelled, her voice cracking. "Now let me go!"
His grip tightened again, pinning her hand right over his heart. His voice came out thick, rough, and completely commanding.
"You really don't remember me?" he asked, his dark eyes locking onto hers with a fierce, terrifying weight. "I'm your husband."
Husband. The word hit her like a physical blow, echoing in the sterile silence of the room. She stared at him, trying to force the word to stick to his face, to his scent, to anything at all. But before she could even find her breath to demand a name, the heavy wooden door of the hospital room swung open, and a suit-clad security detail flooded the space.