Her Last Night of Innocence Read Online Free Page B

Her Last Night of Innocence
Book: Her Last Night of Innocence Read Online Free
Author: India Grey
Tags: Fiction, General, Romance, Contemporary, Contemporary Women
Pages:
Go to
Grand Prix season starts in six weeks.’ Thrusting a hand through his hair, he gave a ragged, bitter laugh. ‘Suki’s invited every sports journalist and team sponsor on the planet to this ridiculous event tonight to celebrate my return to the circuit. Silvio has rediscovered religion thanks to the miracle of my recovery.’
    Dr Fournier’s voice was deliberately soothing. ‘Have you talked to the people you were with that night? Sometimes you just need a trigger for the memory to return…’
    Cristiano gave an impatient shake of his head. ‘I was alone. The last thing I remember is getting into the car for qualifying.’ He had been over it time and time again. He remembered the click of the harness as he’d got into the car, and after that nothing. Sometimes, just as he was drifting off to sleep or waking up again, he thought he caught the echo of something that was a memory rather than a dream, and desperately tried to hold onto it, but the harder he tried the more elusive it was. ‘Suki tells me I did an interview with someone from Clearspring Water, but that can’t have taken long. After that I must have gone home.’
    Leaning against the windowsill, he dropped his head into his hands for a moment as despair and self-disgust overwhelmed him. Against the odds he had survived a crash that should have killed him, come round from ten days in a coma and dragged himself from an Intensive Care bed back to the cockpit of a racing car. He had built up his strength, and driven himself ruthlessly and relentlessly to regain fitness, harnessing the same determination and focus that had made him so successful before.
    Now everything he had worked for was slipping through his fingers. And there was nothing he could do about it—becausewhile he could control his body and work harder, train longer, push himself further, his brain still let him down.
    ‘Don’t forget that you are lucky to have survived, Cristiano.’
    He raised his head and looked at the doctor with an expression of infinite despair. ‘If I can’t race again, I might as well not have.’
    Dr Fournier tapped her finger thoughtfully against her compressed lips. ‘When was the last time you had a holiday?’
    He shrugged. ‘Relaxing has never really been my thing.’
    ‘Maybe you should try it. You’ve pushed yourself as far as you possibly can physically, so maybe now it’s time to give yourself a rest. Take some time out to think.’
    ‘No thanks.’
    He had spent his life trying to avoid having time to think. Escaping from introspection had always been one of the driving forces behind everything he did.
    Dr Fournier shrugged one cashmere shoulder. ‘It’s the best shot you’ve got of getting your memory back. Since you left hospital you haven’t stopped pushing yourself—almost as if you have to prove to yourself that you’re not just as fit as you were before the accident, but fitter, stronger, better. You’ve done it, Cristiano—congratulations. Physically, you’re in peak condition. However, mentally…’
    ‘Thank you, Doctor.’ He gave her a glacial smile. ‘You don’t need to remind me about my mental failings.’
    ‘Needing time to get over a trauma like you’ve had isn’t a failing—and I’m not saying this as your doctor; I’m saying it as your friend. I have a chalet in the Alps, near Courchevel. It’s pretty isolated, but a housekeeper keeps it stocked up with the essentials and the skiing is great.’ She opened the top drawer of her desk and took out a set of keys. They gave a silvery jangle as she held them out to him across the desk, looking at him steadily. ‘It’s yours for as long as you want it.’
    And, because he had run out of options, because he was desperate, because it was the only glimmer of hope left on anincreasingly dark horizon, Cristiano found himself leaning forward and taking them from her.
    ‘Go, Cristiano,’ she said gravely. ‘Go soon.’

Chapter Two
    ‘O MIGOD —you will never guess
Go to

Readers choose

A. Alfred Taubman

Charles Sheffield

Susan Kaye Quinn

Anna Abraham

Elizabeth Daly

Terri Reid

Iva Kenaz

Diane Craver

Luca Veste