

They treat her like family and try to help her heal. Thankfully, she has a compassionate doctor with a daughter for a nurse and a sheriff for a husband who take her under their wing. That’s exactly what happened to our ‘Jane Doe’. Then you find out the extent of your horrific injuries.

You have no idea where how you got there, or even who you are. What would it be like to wake up in a hospital bed. The top-selling, beloved indie author of Ten Tiny Breaths returns with a new romance about a young woman who loses her memory-and the man who knows that the only way to protect her is to stay away.īurying Water is nothing like the last KA Tucker book I read (Five Ways to Fall), but it was equally as wonderful of a story. The trouble is, water always seems to find its way to the surface. Because getting too close could flood her with realities better left buried. And that’s why, as hard as it is, he needs to keep his distance. He knows that she’ll stay so much safer-and happier-that way. For her sake, Jesse hopes the answer is never. Twenty-four-year-old Jesse Welles doesn’t know how long it will be before Water gets her memory back. But as she attempts to piece together the fleeting slivers of her memory, more questions emerge: Who is the next-door neighbor, quietly toiling under the hood of his Barracuda? Why won’t Ginny let him step foot on her property? And why does Water feel she recognizes him? Taken in by old Ginny Fitzgerald, a crotchety but kind lady living on a nearby horse farm, Water slowly begins building a new life. Refusing to answer to “Jane Doe” for another day, the woman renames herself “Water” for the tiny, hidden marking on her body-the only clue to her past. Left for dead in the fields of rural Oregon, a young woman defies all odds and survives-but she awakens with no idea who she is, or what happened to her.
