Carides's Forgotten Wife

Carides's Forgotten Wife by Maisey Yates

Book: Carides's Forgotten Wife by Maisey Yates Read Free Book Online
Authors: Maisey Yates
stood for myself, as well. I think you expected I might go out and find a lover. But you are my husband, Leon, and I couldn’t—”
    Of course she couldn’t. Rose was too sweet. So young, so innocent. He was older, harder. And he had no idea why he was the way he was. All he knew was that with everything a blank slate inside of him, without the built-in excuses, without the baggage, he was disgusted with himself.
    He had been given this gift. This woman. This wife. And he had treated her with nothing but neglect.
    “I want to do better,” he said finally.
    “What?”
    “I want to do better for you. Better for us. We have a chance to change things, to make a new start.” He shook his head then, his words tasting wrong in his mouth. “I suppose I have that chance. You remember everything. You know exactly who I am. You know exactly what I’ve done to you. And it seems the simplest thing in the world to ask for forgiveness when you can’t remember your sins. I don’t deserve it.”
    “Leon, I should’ve told you from the beginning about our marriage. But... It didn’t seem...” She was blinking back tears now, and he hated that he was making her cry. He had a feeling he had done so more than once. “I think I didn’t want you to know because I was hoping this would happen. But that was manipulative of me.”
    “I’m not angry. Not at you. I married you to get this house, to get your father’s company and to placate him, and what did you get?”
    “Well, if we divorced after five years, I got the house.” She swallowed. “But I imagine you would have wanted us to stay married so that everything would stay with you, too. Marriage is different when you aren’t exactly living as a married couple. I think for you that’s never been an issue.”
    “It is an issue to me now. And I’m not angry with you. How old am I, Rose?”
    “Thirty-three,” she said.
    “Ten years older than you.”
    “That doesn’t—”
    “And answer me this—when you married me what did you expect would happen?”
    Color flooded her cheeks and she turned away from him. “Well, frankly, I imagined that something much like tonight might happen on our wedding night.”
    “So I did not tell you that I intended to live my life as a single man until after you had already made vows to me.”
    “Yes,” she said.
    “Then I feel you have only been trying to claim what you rightfully are owed. And I think that we need to try and fix this. Together.”
    “What about when you remember? What about when things... What about when they go back to the way they were?”
    “I won’t lose these memories just because I gain the old ones. I can’t imagine anything on earth changing what is between us now.” He reached out, brushing his thumb over her cheek, over her impossibly soft skin. “How can I ever go back to living in the same space as you without wanting to touch you all the time? How could I possibly return to other women’s beds when yours is the only one I want to be in?”
    And then he leaned in and kissed her, and they did not speak for the rest of the night.
    * * *
    Leon appreciated the fact that his doctor had ordered him to sit out in the sun a few hours a day so he didn’t end up with vitamin deficiencies, but he would much rather be in the house than sitting out on the terrace.
    In the house with Rose, naked in his arms as he brought her pleasure again and again.
    He was insatiable for his wife. For this woman he’d never touched before his accident. A woman he’d married and left a virgin.
    He frowned. He could not understand why he’d done that. And the questions... It was concerning. Because at this point he could not imagine holding her at a distance. He wanted to hold her right up against him, skin to skin, at all times.
    He was obsessed with her.
    He looked out at the view of the lush grounds of the estate. He had this home. He had Rose. And yet he was never here. He had never touched her.
    Instead he had gone

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