âFine.â He shrugs and begins to walk away from me.
I was hoping for a few words from him, heâs okay with advice sometimes. âWait!â I call and he turns around. âYouâre not going to ask me what it was?â
âYou just said you donât want to talk about it,â he replies.
âYeah, but I . . . well.â I donât know what to say, and heâs looking at me like Iâve grown two heads.
âDo you want me to ask you?â He looks pleased, but thankfully heâs not being too much of an asshole about it.
âIâm the reason . . .â I begin, but just then I see Karen and my dad starting to walk up the driveway.
âThe reason what?â Landon asks, looking back at them.
âNothing, never mind.â I sigh, running my fingers through my damp hair in frustration.
âHey, Hardin! Whereâs Tessa?â Karen asks.
Why does everyone always ask me that as if I canât be more than five feet away from her?
The building ache in my chest reminds me of just that: I canât.
âSheâs inside, sleeping,â I lie and turn to Landon. âIâm going for a walk, can you make sure sheâs okay?â He nods.
âWhere are you going?â my fatherâs voice calls as I walk past them.
âOut,â I snap and walk faster.
BY THE TIME I reach a stop sign a few roads over, I realize I have no fucking idea where Iâm going or even how to get back to where I came from. I just know Iâve been walking for a while, and that all of these roads are deceptively windy.
I officially hate this place.
It didnât seem so bad while I was watching Tessaâs hair blow lightly in the wind, her eyes focused on the shining water, her lips turned up in a small, satisfied smile. She looked so relaxed, like the calm waves far from the shore, steady and undisturbed until our boat intruded on their peace. Now behind us, the water roars, whipping up onto the sides of our boat in an angry way. Soon theyâll go back to their resting state, until another boat comes along to disturb their ease.
A girlâs voice interrupts the image of Tessaâs sun-kissed skin. âAre you lost or something?â
When I turn around, Iâm surprised to find a girl, around my age, I think. Her brown hair is as long as Tessaâs. Sheâs alone out here at night. I look around us. Thereâs nothing, only an empty gravel road and forest.
âAre you?â I reply, taking notice of her long skirt.
She smiles at me and walks closer. She must be lacking brain cells to be out here in the middle of nowhere asking a complete stranger that looks like me if heâs lost.
âNo. Iâm escaping,â she says, tucking her hair behind her ear.
âYouâre running away? At, like, age twenty?â She better keep her ass moving down this street, then. The last thing I need is some angry father looking for his overdressed teenage daughter.
âNo.â She laughs. âIâm home from college visiting my parents, and they were boring me to death.â
âOh, good for you. I hope your freedom trail finds you at Shangri-la,â I reply and begin to walk away from her.
âYouâre going the wrong way,â she calls out.
âDonât care,â I say.
And then I groan when I hear her footsteps crunching against the gravel behind me.
Chapter twenty-eight
TESSA
Iâm so exhausted, just plain tired of dealing with fight after fight with Hardin. Iâm not sure what to do now, where to go from here. Iâve been following him down the path weâve been on for months now, and Iâm not sure weâre actually going anywhere. Weâre both just as lost as we were at the start.
âTessa?â Landonâs voice carries through the room and out to the balcony.
âOut here,â I reply, thankful that I put on a pair of shorts and a sweatshirt. Hardin always teases me when I do that, but itâs comfortable at times like this, not too hot but not too cold.
âHey,â he says, coming out and sitting in the chair next to mine.
âHey.â I glance over at him before staring back at the water.
âAre you okay?â
I take a moment to think over his question: Am I okay? No. Will I be? Yes.
âYeah, this time I think I am.â I bring my knees to my chest and wrap my arms around them.
âDo you want to talk about it?â
âNo. I donât want to ruin the trip with all my drama. Iâm fine, really.â
âOkay, just know if you want to talk, Iâll listen.â
âI know.â I look over at him, and he gives me a reassuring smile. I donât know what Iâm going to do without him.
His eyes go wide, and he points over at something. âAre those . . . ?â
I look over to where heâs staring.
âOh God!â I jump from my seat and grab the red panties that are floating in the hot tub and shove them into the front pocket of my sweatshirt.
Landon bites down on his bottom lip to stifle his laugh, but I canât keep mine in. We both burst into laughterâhis genuine, mine out of humiliation. But Iâll take this laughter with Landon over my usual postfight crying with Hardin any day.
Chapter twenty-nine
HARDIN
Iâm growing more and more sick of seeing nothing but gravel and trees while roaming around this small town. The strange girl is still following behind me, and my fight with Tess is still weighing down on me.
âAre you going to follow me around this entire town?â I ask the pestering girl.
âNo, Iâm going back to my parentsâ cabin.â