SYNOPSIS:
Kate Pendleton has a good life- a loving husband, a loyal best friend, and a house in the suburbs. But after a memory-shattering accident, she is forced to figure out how much of her life and her past is real, how much is a figment of her imagination, and whether any of it was put into her mind by someone else.
Chapter One β The Accident
Sunday was chore day, and Kate was on a tear.
She'd bounded out of bed at the crack of dawn, as usual, and by mid-morning had already conquered the dirty laundry, the dishes, and the leaves in the yard. She returned the rake to the shed and skipped across the grass to the back entrance, where James was still working on the dog door. It had been his first task of the day, and the way things were going, it would probably turn out to be his
only
task of the day.
She gave him a playful shove. "That door's not gonna install itself, buddy. Hop to it. Chop chop!"
He shot her a dirty look. "This is a critical operation. One false move and the whole house comes down. It's really hard to concentrate with you standing there looking like a model from a
Home and Garden
issue."
"Ooh, the sexy issue, I hope. Do garden magazines have swimsuit issues? If not, I'm calling up and cancelling." She grinned. "Hey, don't blame me because
somebody
chose to stay up all night drinking with his friends instead of tucking into bed early like a proper suburbanite."
He frowned, and turned back to the doggie flap. "Yes, mistress. Whatever mistress commands. I am but a humble servant boy, sent to fix this door."
Her auburn hair glowed in the warm October sunshine. "Mistress commands you to work on this door while I go and change that lightbulb in the front hall. It's starting to get dark in the evenings, and I nearly killed myself on Thursday trying to grope my way down the stairs. So! Off I go."
James reached out and grabbed her by the ankle. "Hun, that ladder isn't safe. I keep meaning to go buy a new one. It's too wobbly when you get up on the top step. I'll go do the light bulb once I get done with this. You could get hurt."
"I could get hurt?" She wiggled her foot until he released his grip. "I'm not the one with a hangover, bub. Maybe some of that wobbling is from the booze." She bent down and gently kissed his forehead. "It's okay, really, I'll be extra careful. It's just one light bulb." She walked into the kitchen.
He called after her. "And the one upstairs!"
"Shut uuuuuup! Door! Now!"
James turned back to the stubborn doggie door, which was supposed to snap into place, but was refusing to do so without falling right back out again. He'd tried using shims, only for those to fall out as well. He pondered how far he could push super glue in this situation as he listened to his wife haul the heavy, clunky old aluminum ladder into the front hall.
Clank, clank, clank.
"Okay!" Kate called out. "I'm heading up! This is... whoa shit! James, this ladder is brooooken!"
"I told you!" He rose to his feet and wiped his hands. "Look, at least let me hold the ladder while you're up there."
"No, I got it! I got... whoa shit... whoooaaa SHIT!"
James jumped at the sound of her scream. In an instant he was in the front hall. The ladder had toppled over onto its side. Kate lay a foot away, not moving, eyes closed, the box of light bulbs still in her hand.
He dropped to the ground. "Kate. Kate! KATE!" He shook her shoulders, then pulled back, afraid to move her too much. He tried to remember what he could about head and spinal injuries. Already, he could see an ugly purple bruise forming on Kate's forehead. "Kate, baby, hey, hey, it's James. Wake up, Katie-bear. Come on, it's okay. Hey. Hey."
Her eyes slowly eased open. She gave him a dim, unfocused stare, and he noted that her pupils weren't dilated. He breathed a sigh of relief. "Hey, Kate, are you okay? Talk to me. You fell. How do you feel? How's your head?"
Kate rubbed her face. "Ugh. James? What?"
"Shh. It's okay. You fell. I'm gonna go get you some water. Just stay here."
He rushed back into the kitchen and threw open a cabinet, blindly reaching for a glass and nearly bringing an entire shelf of them down on himself. He set one next to the tap and waited for the water to cool a bit before filling it. From behind him, he heard a soft moan. Spinning on his heels, he found Kate clutching the doorframe with one hand and cradling her face with the other.
He held up his hands. "Hey, don't move. It's okay. Just try to stay still."
She looked at him again with a mixture of bewilderment and fear.
"James, what am I doing in your house?"
* * *
"Okay, now just lean back and... there you go. Plenty of pillows. I emptied out the closet. Good thing you did laundry earlier." James draped a bedsheet over Kate's petite body, pulling the edge up to her neck. "There, just relax now. You hit your head pretty hard."
Kate looked up at him. "Thank you, James. I feel... I mean, I'm okay. My head hurts, but... well duh, right? No broken bones or anything."
He sat down on the far end of the sofa, near her feet. "I'm so sorry, hun. It's my fault. I should have replaced that ladder weeks ago. I should have been up there changing that light bulb, not you. Look, I promise, I'm going to go buy a new ladder after work tomorrow. Promise. Cross my heart and hope to die. Scout's honor. I willβ"
"Alright! Alright!" She drew her hand out from under the bedsheet and reached out to him, taking his hand as her reached over to her in turn. "Look, if it wasn't me it would have been you, and then I would have been tending to you while you lay here on the... on the... huh." She pulled her hand back to her chest.
"Kate? Are you sure you're okay? We really should go to the emergency room. I mean, head trauma shows up in weird places at weird times. You should at least get a scan or something."
She blinked, and looked at him. "No, no, James. It'll be fine. I think... I'm just going to lie down here for a second. I just hit my head, that's all. Happens to football players every day."