Oliver waited impatiently for Tori to finish her pasta. At least one thing hadnât changed since heâd seen her last, she was still miles slower at eating than him. Heâd finished his meal a good ten minutes ago and she was still going.
Heâd tried to make light conversation, but everything so far had been stilted and awkward. Forced even. Too much anger was still pouring through his blood at Toriâs brush with danger. If he hadnât gotten there when he hadâ¦
Oliver didnât even want to think about that. He clenched his fists under the table. He should have followed her back to her motel on Monday. At least then he would have learned that she was staying at The Duck Motel.
The place wasnât safe. It was dangerous during the day. At night, it was a damn death trap, particularly for women. The scum of the town stayed there.
Oliver could have killed the men in her room. Easily. He could have torn them apart and not batted an eyelid. They were not good people and wouldnât be missed.
Heâd only just stopped himself.
When Toriâs bowl was finally empty, Oliver cleared the table. Five minutes later and he was taking Toriâs small hand in his and leading her to the sofa.
He cut right to the chase. âWhatâs going on, Tori?â
She wet her lips. âI donât rememberââ
Oliver exhaled loudly, and she immediately stopped. He didnât want to hear this same line again. As avoidance tactics went, it wasnât a great one.
Tori leaned forward and touched his arm. âNo, OliverâI donât remember anything. Not you. Not us. Maybe one or two childhood memoriesâ¦but thatâs it. I donât even know who I am.â
Oliver studied her face, shocked.
She couldnât be telling the truthâ¦could she?
She was.
The woman hadnât just forgotten his name. Sheâd forgotten almost every detail of her life. How the hell was that possible? âDuring our self-defense classââ
âMy body reacted on autopilot, just like it did tonight when the first guy grabbed me.â Oliverâs jaw clenched. âI must have taken some self-defense classes or karate or something to know how to do that.â
Sheâd definitely learned it somewhere. âWhat do you remember?â
She rubbed her temple. âInconsequential moments that contain no detail of my family or where I live or anything important.â She lowered her hand and shook her head. The woman looked beyond frustrated. âThe doctors call it retrograde amnesia. It affects memories before the incident. They were optimistic the memory loss is temporary. That was the only good news.â
Amnesia? How had she acquired amnesia between when heâd seen her last and now?
Tori answered the question without him needing to voice it. âDamage was caused to the memory-storage area of my brain when I was shot.â
Oliverâs entire body flinched. âShot?â
Her mouth opened and shut, but she didnât say anything.
Oliver leaned forward and touched her arm. âTori, did someone shoot you?â
She swallowed, and when she didnât speak for another beat, Oliver thought he might lose his mind. Then she reached for her hair. Oliver was confused about what the hell she was doing. Until he saw it.
A wound. It wasnât huge, but it was big enough to have required stitches.
âThe bullet grazed your head.â He breathed as he gently touched her hair around the edges.
Heâd seen bullet grazes before. As far as this one went, it wasnât the worst. But the fact that sheâd been shot at allâ¦
Why?
She nodded. âHikers found me floating in the Colorado River.â
A sick feeling hit his gut hard. He didnât want to picture the woman in front of him floating unconscious in a river. Shot. Left for dead.
He had so many questions. Questions she would no longer be able to answer. More than that, he hated that sheâd been hurt.
âHow did you find me?â
Tori looked down at the couch as she fiddled with the edge of her shirt. âWhen I woke up in the hospital, all I had were my clothes. Inside my pockets, I hadââ
She stopped mid-sentence.
âWhat was in your pockets, Tori?â
She sighed before looking up. âTen thousand dollars and a note from you. Thatâs why Iâm here. Itâs how I know my name is Tori.â
If the note was in her pocket, either sheâd kept it there since her last visit to Marble Falls, orâ¦
âWhat day were you shot?â
Her nose wrinkled, like she was trying to piece her timeline together. âNext Tuesday marks four weeks since I woke up. Doctors told me Iâd been unconscious for a couple of nights.â
Oliverâs heart pounded loud and hard in his chest. Sunday. Sheâd arrived unconscious at the hospital on a Sunday.
The same Sunday heâd said goodbye to her.
For a moment, he couldnât speak.
Had his enemies tried to kill her because of him? Because sheâd met him? Spent time with him?
Or maybe sheâd already been connected to his enemies. Maybe their meeting wasnât as random as heâd assumed.
âWhat is it, Oliver?â
His blood roared loudly in his ears, but he pushed it down. He pushed it all down.
âThat Sunday you were taken to the hospital is the day you left my house. I kissed you goodbye at eight oâclock that morning, and last Monday was the next time I saw you.â
Her eyes widened. âSo theyâre probably connected? Me leaving here andâ¦someone shooting at me? Thatâs what youâre saying, isnât it?â
It was possible. So possible, his insides hurt. But he didnât want to say that out loud. He couldnât. She didnât know his past. She didnât know the enemy he and his team fought.
Or maybe she didâ¦but she didnât remember.
Oliver avoided answering her question by asking his own. âPolice never found the person who shot you, or uncovered your identity?â
She shook her head. âThey searched the bank of the river, but the person was long gone. There was no evidence to track him or her. They also did a search for anyone named Tori in the area and found nothing.â
From the outside, Oliver didnât react to what she said at all. Internally, his mind was reeling.
Maybe they hadnât found her because her name wasnât Tori. It was possible the woman had given him a fake name the first time they met.
He was usually good at reading people. He damn well prided himself on it. He hadnât suspected she was an enemy for a second. Thereâd been too much kindness in her eyes. Too much light.
Had he been wrong?
Oliver scrubbed a hand over his face. Jesus, he was confused. Heâd spent a night with her. She hadnât tried to hurt him, threaten him, anything.
Tori lowered her head as she continued. âWhen I woke up, the doctors were sure that someone would come and claim me. A parent. Friend. Someone who discovered I was missing. Once I was released, I stayed in a motel near the hospital. Waiting. Hoping someone would come. No one ever did.â Tori frowned, searching his face. âSo you donât know? Who I am?â
Oliver wished he did. âWe bumped into each other at Joanâs Diner. There were no tables left and you asked if you could sit with me. We talked over our coffees. When we finished, we went for a walk. You told me you were passing through town for work, that you hadnât been to Marble Falls before, so I offered to show you around. Ended up spending the day together. You stayed here that night.â
He didnât want to think about that night right now. Heâd felt like heâd connected with the woman. Over one nightâ¦how crazy was that? Now he was questioning everything.
A number of emotions scattered over her face. âWhat did I say I did for work?â
âWhenever I asked, you changed the subject.â
Damn, he was a fool. Heâd let her distract him. Light touches to his arm. Leaning close and wreaking havoc on his system. Heâd assumed heâd never see her again, so he hadnât pushed. Right now, he could kick his own ass for that.
âMaybe I was unemployed and too embarrassed to tell you? No boss has come forward to say I didnât show up for work.â
The uncertainty in her voice had him wanting to believe that. He knew she was telling the truth about her amnesia, and sheâd clearly been through a traumatic experience.
But he needed to protect himself and his brothers first.
âMaybe. I have a friend whoâs good at finding information. He might be able to help.â
Oliver had two friends who were good, actually. Both Wyatt and Evie were great at hacking systems that most couldnât. Locating information they shouldnât.
Tori didnât look so convinced. âYou think they might be able to find out who I am with just a first name?â
Oliver had no idea. âHe might be able to use facial recognition. Or there might have been a missing personâs report filed that you donât know about.â
She looked down. âI donât know that the latter will do anything. Like I said, no employer came forwardâ¦and neither did any family.â
More vulnerability. More of his instincts wanting to trust the woman, though he shouldnât.
When she blinked away the moisture in her eyes, Oliver couldnât stop himself. Reaching over, he placed his fingers under her chin, tilting her head up. He waited for her gaze to meet his. âSomeone is missing you. You have touched at least one personâs life in this world. Probably a hell of a lot more. I donât have to know thatâ¦to know that.â
Some of her uncertainty lifted.
Like his hand had a mind of its own, it shifted from her chin to her cheek. Holding her. Cherishing her.
Tori leaned her face into his palm. His thumb swiped across her cheek. So damn soft.
Why did touching her feel so right? And why did he feel the need to soothe this woman, who was basically a stranger to him, when he knew damn well that she could be connected to Hylar?
âI wish I remembered you.â Tori spoke the words quietly. Like she was speaking to herself.
He almost wished he could forget their time together. The way her body fit so perfectly against his. The soft moans that had escaped her lipsâ¦
At the sudden tightening of his body, Oliver dropped his hand and leaned back.
He couldnât touch her. She could be dangerous. Hell, she was dangerous. Just look at him. He was a mess around her.
Disappointment flashed over her face.
âIâll make up the spare bed for you.â
She nodded. âThank you.â
He stood before he touched her again. Because another five minutes in her company and he knew he wouldnât be able to stop himself.
Yeah. She was definitely dangerous.