Jake Foster POV:
Days bled into a week. Audrey was still gone. Her car, found abandoned by the roadside, offered no clues. His security teams were useless, reporting nothing but dead ends. He tried to focus on his work, on Jada, on anything but the gnawing guilt that threatened to consume him. But it was no use. Every moment was a torment. He saw her face everywhere, heard her choked screams. The little dove.
The need to find her, to understand, to somehow fix what he had so monstrously broken, became an obsession. He booked the first flight to Italy. He had to go back to that villa, to the place where his memories began and ended. He had to find the truth, even if it shattered him completely.
He stepped off the private jet onto the sun-drenched tarmac of a small Italian airport. The warm air, the scent of olive groves, it all felt… familiar. Disorienting.
"Jake! My old friend! You finally came back!" A man, tall and tanned, with a booming laugh and eyes that crinkled at the corners, rushed towards him, embracing him in a bear hug. "It's been too long, caro! Where is Audrey? Is she with you? You two finally got married, yes? The whole village was betting on it!"
Jake froze. The man was familiar. The face, the voice. A flicker of recognition, but no name. No context. Just a painful echo. "I… I'm sorry," Jake stammered, pulling back slightly. "I don't think I know you."
The man's smile faltered. "Don't know me? It's Lorenzo! Your best friend here! And Audrey's! We were like a trio! You used to say I was your and Audrey's biggest fan!" He clapped Jake on the shoulder. "What's wrong with you, my friend? You look like you've seen a ghost."
Audrey. The name, spoken with such casual affection, hit Jake like a physical blow. He felt a sharp pang in his chest. "Audrey," he repeated, his voice barely a whisper. "Did… did I know her well?"
Lorenzo burst out laughing. "Know her well? You two were inseparable! The most passionate, most beautiful couple this village had ever seen! Everyone here adored you both. You were like a fairytale! You even bought her that little villa overlooking the sea, you said it was your love nest!" He paused, noticing the blank look on Jake's face. His laughter died. "What's going on, Jake? Are you playing a cruel joke?"
"No," Jake said, his voice strained. "I… I don't remember any of it. I had an accident. Five years ago. Amnesia."
Lorenzo's eyes widened in shock. "Amnesia? That's… that's not possible. You were so in love. You were meant to be together forever!" He looked at Jake, a creeping horror dawning on his face. "You mean… you don't remember Audrey at all?"
Jake shook his head, a desperate plea in his eyes. "Tell me. Everything. Please."
Lorenzo grabbed his arm. "Come. You need to see. You need to remember." He led Jake to his car. "I have a friend. A hypnotherapist. Maybe he can help."
They drove in silence, the weight of Jake's forgotten past pressing down on them. Lorenzo pulled a tattered newspaper from his glove compartment. "Look," he said, handing it to Jake. "Seven years ago. The local paper. Your engagement announcement."
Jake took the paper. The headline screamed in Italian, but the photos were universally understood. A beaming Audrey, her hand in his. A picture of them cutting a cake. Another of them dancing, his face filled with an adoration that was shocking in its intensity.
His heart thundered. He had seen these photos. Audrey had shown him similar ones, years ago, in a desperate attempt to jog his memory. He had called them fake. A cheap trick. He had accused her of Photoshopping them, of trying to manipulate him. He had torn them up.
The shame, the crushing, soul-sickening shame, threatened to suffocate him. He had accused her of faking their love. He had punished her for trying to show him the truth.
"Lorenzo," Jake choked out, grabbing his arm so hard his knuckles turned white. "The hypnotherapist. Now. Please."
Lorenzo nodded, his face grim. He fumbled for his phone.
Just then, Jake's own phone rang. Jada. Her voice, cloying and sweet, instantly filled the silent car. "Jakey, darling! Where are you? The baby is still so distressed. And the paparazzi are everywhere! You need to come home and deal with this mess!"
Lorenzo's hand, which had been reaching for his phone, dropped. His face darkened. He looked at Jake, his eyes narrowed in disgust. "You… you married someone else? You cast Audrey aside?" His voice was cold, accusing. "She loved you, Jake. She loved you with a fire I've never seen. She gave up everything for you. And you just… forgot her and replaced her?"
"No! I had amnesia!" Jake pleaded, desperation rising in his voice. "I didn't know! You have to believe me!"
"I believe you were sick," Lorenzo said, his voice flat. "But you married another woman. And she's calling you. Your past is dead, Jake. Audrey is gone. She deserves better than a man who can't even remember her name." He opened his car door. "Get out. I can't help you."
"Lorenzo, please! Just the number! Give me the hypnotherapist's number!" Jake begged, stumbling out of the car.
But Lorenzo just pushed him away, slamming the door shut. Jake stood there, alone on the dusty roadside, watching Lorenzo's car disappear into the distance.
He stayed there for three days, sleeping on Lorenzo's doorstep, begging, explaining, pleading. Lorenzo would sometimes open the door, only to throw a bucket of cold water on him. But Jake wouldn't leave. He couldn't. Not until he remembered.
Finally, on the fifth day, Lorenzo opened the door, his face weary. "Fine," he sighed, handing Jake a crumpled piece of paper. "Here's the number. But understand this, Jake. Even if you get your memories back… Audrey is not the woman you left behind. She has a new life. A new love. You can't go back."
Lorenzo's words were a cold, hard truth. Jake felt a pang in his chest. His eyes burned with unshed tears. "She… she'll understand," he choked out, his voice thick with emotion. "When I remember, she'll forgive me. She wouldn't abandon me, Lorenzo. Not Audrey." His belief, a fragile, desperate thing, was all he had left.





