
Love Lost to Memory Loss
Chapter 1
The fluorescent lights of the hospital corridor buzzed overhead like angry wasps, casting harsh shadows that seemed to mirror the chaos in my chest. Three weeks had passed since the accident—three weeks of sitting beside Luca's hospital bed, holding his hand while he slept, whispering stories of our life together, hoping something would spark recognition in those beautiful brown eyes I'd fallen in love with years ago.
But when he finally woke up fully, when the doctors declared his physical recovery miraculous, the man who looked back at me was a stranger wearing my fiancé's face.
"I'm sorry," Luca said, his voice clinical and distant as he adjusted his hospital gown. The same hands that had traced my face with such tenderness now fidgeted with the blanket edge, avoiding any contact with mine. "I know you've been here, and I appreciate that, but I need you to understand—I don't remember us. I don't remember... whatever we had."
The words hit me like physical blows. Whatever we had. As if five years of love, laughter, and dreams could be reduced to something so dismissive, so insignificant.
"The wedding is off," he continued, each word precise and final. "I've already called the venue, the caterer. Everything's been canceled."
My engagement ring suddenly felt like it weighed a thousand pounds. "Luca, please. The doctors said memory loss is common with head trauma. It could come back—"
"It won't." His interruption was sharp, cutting through my desperate hope like a blade. "I've been thinking about this for days. Even if some memories return, I can't marry someone who feels like a stranger to me. It wouldn't be fair to either of us."
Fair. The word tasted bitter in my mouth. Nothing about this was fair.
I stumbled out of that hospital room feeling like I'd been hollowed out, my entire future erased as completely as Luca's memories of us. The drive home was a blur of tears and traffic lights, my hands shaking so badly I could barely grip the steering wheel.
Two days later, I found myself standing outside Rebecca Martinez's office, clutching a hastily written leave application. My supervisor looked up from her computer with barely concealed irritation as I knocked on her open door.
"Thea. What can I do for you?"
I stepped inside, my professional composure hanging by a thread. "I need to request extended leave. Personal circumstances—"
"Extended leave?" Rebecca's eyebrows shot up. "You just took three weeks for your fiancé's accident. We're in the middle of the Morrison acquisition, and frankly, your recent absences haven't gone unnoticed by upper management."
The dismissive tone in her voice lit something dangerous inside me. Three weeks of watching the man I loved look at me like I was nothing, three weeks of canceled wedding plans and shattered dreams, and now this.
I slammed the application down on her desk harder than necessary, the sound echoing in the small office. "I'm not asking, Rebecca. I'm telling you. I need maternity leave."
The words tumbled out before I could stop them, before I could process what I was saying. Rebecca's face shifted from irritation to shock, her mouth forming a small 'o' of surprise.
"Maternity leave? Thea, you can't just—"
"Can't what? Can't be pregnant? Can't need time to figure out how to raise a child alone because the father doesn't even remember that we were engaged?" My voice was rising, professional boundaries crumbling like paper in rain. "Can't request the leave that's legally guaranteed to me?"
Rebecca's expression hardened. "Given your recent performance issues and the critical nature of your current projects, I'm afraid I can't approve this request. You'll need to provide medical documentation and—"
"Medical documentation?" The laugh that escaped me was sharp and humorless. "You want proof?"
I pulled out my phone with trembling fingers, scrolling to the photo I'd taken that morning—two pink lines on a pregnancy test, clear as day. The same test I'd planned to show Luca before his world, and mine, had shattered completely.
Rebecca glanced at the screen, her face paling slightly. "Thea, I... I didn't realize..."
But I was already backing toward the door, the full weight of my situation crashing down on me like a tsunami. Pregnant. Alone. With a man who'd erased me from his life as easily as deleting a text message.
"Consider this my formal notice," I managed, my voice barely above a whisper. "I'll be taking the leave whether you approve it or not."
I fled her office before she could respond, before the tears threatening to spill could betray just how completely my world had collapsed. In the span of three weeks, I'd lost my fiancé, my wedding, and now potentially my job.
But growing inside me was a tiny life that would need me to be stronger than I'd ever been before.
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