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The Bewildered Wife
The Bewildered Wife
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The Bewildered Wife

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The Bewildered Wife
Vivian Leiber

THE BRIDE HAS AMNESIA!THE BRIDE HAS AMNESIA!The woman Dean Radcliffe had hired to care for his motherless children believed she was his wife! Having lost her memory, shy Susan Graves had been transformed into an exciting, passionate woman–who wanted him to claim his husbandly rights! Had Susan been harboring a secret crush on her brooding boss all this time? And why had he never noticed how utterly captivating she was?Dean had no choice but to go along with the charade until Susan recovered her wits. But how long could he pretend to be her husband without wanting to make her his own–for real?

Table of Contents

Cover Page (#u77b61640-0dcd-5793-b947-be742defffd0)

Excerpt (#uf45bb962-fe86-5a6c-b900-b16c3cb6a003)

Dear Reader (#u74b2635c-c206-5c85-972c-0685014b12ee)

Title Page (#u4a8d5819-c8a2-5cc6-8864-5e8535ada76f)

Dedication (#ubbfb724b-b8ef-588a-824a-93b73dd0bb1d)

About the Author (#u0a64ae5d-2068-581f-aca3-4578f6dd3673)

Chapter One (#uc078bcbc-b7d0-5707-9bba-793c0a3b834f)

Chapter Two (#u7ab50cd7-bac3-52c6-aa00-733131d8ffa3)

Chapter Three (#ufdccfba7-d79f-51f0-9345-713817eeaf83)

Chapter Four (#ua73afb62-5bc7-53fd-ac81-0efeaa21537c)

Chapter Five (#litres_trial_promo)

Chapter Six (#litres_trial_promo)

Chapter Seven (#litres_trial_promo)

Chapter Eight (#litres_trial_promo)

Chapter Nine (#litres_trial_promo)

Chapter Ten (#litres_trial_promo)

Chapter Eleven (#litres_trial_promo)

Chapter Twelve (#litres_trial_promo)

Chapter Thirteen (#litres_trial_promo)

Chapter Fourteen (#litres_trial_promo)

Chapter Fifteen (#litres_trial_promo)

Copyright (#litres_trial_promo)

“Why do you have this silly idea I’m a nanny?”

Susan asked dismally.

“It’s not silly,” Dean said at last. “I’m being perfectly rational.”

“You’re always very rational. But, in this case, you’re also being silly.”

“But I’m not! Susan, think carefully. Do you remember being my wife? Do you remember anything at all?”

“I don’t remember much of anything because my head feels pretty muddled,” she said defiantly. “But the doctor said that’s perfectly understandable. It will all come back.”

“Susan, what do you remember about our marriage, about us?”

“I remember a lot, a lot that a nanny wouldn’t remember. Intimate things. Bedroom things. You and me things. Not just nanny things. You take me upstairs to that bedroom and I’ll prove to you once and for all that I’m your wife. I’ll prove to you that I remember the most important things about being your wife…”

Dear Reader (#ulink_90b187f8-808c-5aa1-b76a-cb63869624f1),

This July, Silhouette Romance cordially invites you to a month of marriage stories, based upon your favorite themes. There’s no need to RSVP; just pick up a book, start reading…and be swept away by romance.

The month kicks off with our Fabulous Fathers title, And Baby Makes Six, by talented author Pamela Dalton. Two single parents marry for convenience’ sake, only to be surprised to learn they’re expecting a baby of their own!

In Natalie Patrick’s Three Kids and a Cowboy, a woman agrees to stay married to her husband just until he adopts three adorable orphans, but soon finds herself longing to make the arrangement permanent. And the romance continues when a beautiful wedding consultant asks her sexy neighbor to pose as her fiancé in Just Say I Do by RITA Award-winning author Lauryn Chandler.

The reasons for weddings keep coming, with a warmly humorous story of amnesia in Vivian Leiber’s The Bewildered Wife; a new take on the runaway bride theme in Have Honeymoon, Need Husband by Robin Wells; and a green card wedding from debut author Elizabeth Harbison in A Groom for Maggie.

Here’s to your reading enjoyment!

Melissa Senate

Senior Editor

Silhouette Romance

Please address questions and book requests to:

Silhouette Reader Service

U.S.: 3010 Walden Ave., P.O. Box 1325, Buffalo, NY 14269

Canadian: P.O. Box 609, Fort Erie, Ont. L2A 5X3

The Bewildered Wife

Vivian Leiber

www.millsandboon.co.uk (http://www.millsandboon.co.uk)

For my husband, who taught me that lightning really

does strike twice.

VIVIAN LEIBER’s

writing talent runs in the family. Her great-grandmother wrote a popular collection of Civil War-era poetry, her grandfather Fritz was an award-winning science-fiction writer and her father still writes science fiction and fantasy today. Vivian hopes that her two sons follow the family tradition, but so far the five-year-old’s ambition is to be a construction worker and own a toy store, while her other boy wants to be a truck driver.

Chapter One (#ulink_40bde697-17fa-5cab-872a-a27ee8cbbc1e)

“Susan, make a wish,” Chelsea begged.

Susan looked around the dining room table. Chelsea, Henry and Baby Edward’s faces were lit by excitement and by the twelve candles on a chocolate cake—Chelsea had run out of both candles and patience long before she could spear the cake with all twenty-seven.

“Come on, make a wish,” Henry demanded. He was dressed in Batman pajama bottoms, but had decided to wrap the matching top around his head like a turban. A tube that had been used to mail architectural drawings to his father was shoved into his waistband—ready to draw, to strike, at the first sign of trouble.

Susan took a deep breath.

I wish…I wish all this were mine, she thought.

And then immediately chastised herself.

It wasn’t hers, could never be hers, and it was very selfish to want it.

But it wasn’t the Radcliffe mansion, the fortyacre grounds, the luxury cars or the Radcliffe collection of late-nineteenth-century American painters she longed for. She didn’t pine for the jewels locked away in a safe behind a panel in the upstairs library. She wouldn’t even want the heavy Queen Anne furniture, the soft Aubusson rugs or the ornate silver flatware that lay dusty and tarnished in the beveled-glass cabinets of the butler’s pantry.

No, she wasn’t wishing for any of the expensive and elegant things that made the Radcliffe family one of the wealthiest in the country.

It was other things she wished for, intangible things that couldn’t be measured by an accountant or valued on a bank statement

Things that she hesitated to name, even in silence, even before her birthday cake, which glittered more brightly than gold on the dining room table.

It was out of the question that her wishes would be granted, presumptuous even to blow out the candles with these thoughts on her mind.

Out of reach for a nanny who was paid well above minimum wage but still not enough to afford even a single fork on the table before her. Out of reach for a woman who, at twenty-seven, had no husband or child or even a home to call her own.

Still, Susan took a deep breath.

There was nothing wrong with a wish, right?

She wished to call her own the three little faces glowing with pride—pride at a cake they had frosted themselves, although Susan had been the one to make the iced flowers.

To claim Chelsea, at seven, already starting to take over some of Susan’s sewing work on designing clothes for her multitude of Barbie dolls.

And Henry, at six already a gentleman. Or a knight. Or a superhero. Or just a boy with a cowlick that couldn’t be tamed and hands that looked dirty bare seconds after a scrubbing.

And, of course, Baby Edward, who was two and a half and not really a baby anymore. But Henry and Chelsea kept raising the age limit on the word baby, like a reverse limbo bar. He’d be Baby Edward when he was fifteen.

Baby Edward stared at the cake and Susan knew exactly what he’d wish for.

Toys.

She reached out to touch his soft cheek and her attention was caught by the wedding band on her left hand. All that she had left of her own family, it looked like—but wasn’t—a symbol of marital status. Instead, it was a reminder of her mother, left to her when she was just a child.

The ring brought to her mind the final, most secret, most selfish, most impossible wish that skittered across her mind as a wild mosaic of images: a vision of white, of tulle, of roses and real wedding rings, and passionate kisses on a bed covered with silk. It was what her parents had had, and their parents before them. It was what Susan wanted for herself.

She shook her head at her own silliness in wishing for…him. Wishing for him to hers.

And so, Susan having grown up to be realistic, maybe even a little too pragmatic, decided to wish only this: that this private moment at one end of the Radcliffe dining room table would last just a little longer.

“What are you going to wish for?” Chelsea asked.

“She won’t get it if she tells,” Henry said knowingly.

“Toys?” Baby Edward asked.

Susan smiled and kissed him on his forehead, inhaling his sweet baby smell. She touched the macaroni necklace that she wore—Chelsea’s present. Henry and Baby Edward had drawn pictures that she had already folded carefully into her wallet for safekeeping.

Stretching out her moment…

“I won’t tell you what I wish for,” Susan said. “But, Baby Edward, you’ll always have toys.”

She took a deep breath, holding it long enough for the kids to take theirs. And then she blew. And they blew. Very hard, but still the candles fluttered as delicately as the wings of doves.

The dining room was thrown into complete black for a brief moment until Henry switched on the chandelier to its blazing glory.

It was amazing how quickly you forgot that the dining room was the size of a basketball court, Susan thought as she looked around the Louis-the-Fifteenth-inspired room.

“You’ll get your wish!” Chelsea exclaimed, clapping her hands. “You got all the candles. You’ll definitely get your wish.”

“I already have,” Susan replied.

Baby Edward reached out to steal a taste of icing, but Susan firmly pushed his hand away.

“Now how about we let Baby Edward have the piece with the red icing flower?” she asked.

She had placed the three flowers on the cake with extreme care, knowing that the pieces must be cut with precision. Baby Edward liked red things—fire trucks, valentines and red icing flowers. Chelsea liked yellow—the sun, lemonade and the yellow flowers. And Henry liked purple, the color of royalty, and Susan carefully cut the cake so each child got their favorite colored flower.

The cake had turned out pretty good on such short notice. Their father, Dean Radcliffe, had said only this morning he was coming home for the small family party to celebrate Susan’s birthday.

Chelsea had invited him as the children sat planning Susan’s party at the breakfast table.

“I’ll be here with a cake and a special present for the birthday girl,” he had promised.

“In time for dinner?” Henry had challenged.

Susan had felt a red, hot blush sweep over her, but luckily Dean Radcliffe didn’t choose this moment to actually notice her.

He merely smiled at Henry.

“In time for dinner,” he repeated.