: Chapter 28
Birthday Girl
I click the mouse, moving the red six-of-hearts and everything underneath it to the black seven-of-clubs. Then I turn over the new card, clicking it twice, and watching the Ace automatically slide up to a free cell.
After nine weeks Iâve gotten pretty good at this game. Danni keeps suggesting I learn poker or blackjack or maybe even get into some online gaming with people from around the world, but Iâm not that cool. I like playing alone. Just something to keep my brain occupied. Itâs been an eventful summer vacation, too. Iâve won about three-hundred-fifty games out of four hundred, and I only lost that many, because I kept playing too late and would fall asleep, letting my battery die.
I actually feel quite pathetic when I let myself think about how Iâve spent hours and hours over this gorgeous summer. But then I just start a new game, and I stop thinking about it.
The bell on the lobby door chimes, and I look up, seeing a young man in a black pullover and jeans walk in, heading for the front desk.
I slide off my stool and stand. Iâm always nervous when we get customers this late. The motel sits on an old highway without a lot of businesses or lights. Most people stick to the Interstate, especially when itâs dark out like this, and those who donât kind of make me wonder.
But hey, itâs business.
âHi.â I smile. âWelcome to The Blue Palms.â
He steps up to the counter, and my smile falters, seeing the huge wing tattooed on his neck with the words The Devil Doesnât Sleep etched in black ink. This is a pretty conservative area. He canât be local.
âHi.â He meets my eyes but only for a second. âHow many vacant rooms do you have?â
âUmâ¦â I look in the cubbies and count the keys to make sure. âSix,â I tell him.
He nods, reaching into his back pocket for his wallet, I assume. âIâll take five. For one night, please.â
Five? I donât think weâve been this close to No Vacancies since I got here. What does he need all those rooms for?
Not that Iâm complaining, though. We need the business.
The Blue Palms, owned by my friend Danni and her family, sits on a nearly deserted road, the new interstate put in twenty years ago making business very hard to come by these days. The only people who seem to know weâre here are the townies, the relatives of townies traveling in to visit, and bikers looking for a more authentic experience by riding the old highways.
Iâm glad I came to help out, though. Danniâs been begging me for years to visit, and itâs been a throwback to spend another summer with her. She and I won scholarships to a sleepaway camp when we were twelve and have been keeping in touch long distance ever since. Iâve always wanted to match the place where so many of her quirky and sexy stories come from with my mental picture.
The customer hands me his I.D., and I take it.
âThanks,â I say, propping it up on the keyboard to register the rooms to him.
The door suddenly swings open again, the bell ringing, and I hear a demanding voice bark, âWe need food!â
I look up, seeing three women standing at the door and notice a few more outside. I donât see any other men. My eyes fall down their attire, and next to them, my sisterâs clothes at The Hook seem prudish. Hair, make-up, heelsâ¦
I shoot my eyes to the guy and see him blink long and hard, looking aggravated. He picks through the paper menus stuffed in the board on the wall and takes out a few from different places.
âDo these restaurants deliver?â he asks, setting them down and pulling a wad of bills out of his wallet.
âYeah, all of them.â
He holds up the menus with the cash, and one of the girls jogs up and snatches everything out of his hands.
âI want receipts and change,â he orders, not looking at her.
She makes a face at him behind his back and then she disappears outside with the others.
I feel compelled to warn him. This place has an unofficial code of conduct, and Danniâs pretty strict about shenanigans. Theyâve scraped by here for a long time, but the town is looking at developing this property. She doesnât want to give them an excuse to want this place gone.
âThis is a pretty quiet, family-oriented place,â I tell him, slowly typing in his name and address. âParties arenât allowed, so just an FYIâ¦â
He looks at me, his dark sandalwood eyes almost amused. âTheyâre my sisters,â he says.
I bite back my smile and focus on my work again. Sure. If those are his sisters, then Iâm his mom.
But he certainly seemed pretty annoyed by them like a brother would be, I guess.
I place the keys on the counterâwith the old-fashioned, rounded diamonds for key chainsâand print off the contract to sign.
âThe pool closes at ten,â I tell him. âThe ice and vending machines are between the two buildings, and thereâs a laundromat across the way there.â I glance at him and point behind him, outside. âFront desk is open twenty-four hours. Let us know if you need anything. And thatâll be two-hundred-eight-dollars-and-forty-two cents, please.â
But as I place a pen on top of the contract and wait for his response, I see that heâs not even listening to me. Heâs staring at the neon sign on the wall to his right and the quote written in scriptâ¦
Well, theyâre nothing like Billy and meâ¦
His stern expression breaks into a small smile all of a sudden as he stares at the sign, a mixed look of wonder and confusion on his face as if a memory is playing in his head. I glance at the sign again, Danniâs obsession with 90âs music the bane of my existence all summer. Itâs a quote from a Sheryl Crow song, and I never asked her if it meant anything, because then sheâd play the song, and Iâd suffer.
âSir?â I say.
He blinks, turning to me, still seeming disoriented for a moment.
âAre you okay?â
He shakes it off and opens his wallet again. âHow much is it?â
âTwo-oh-eight-forty-two,â I tell him.
He hands me three-hundred-dollar bills, and thereâs a sign that says we donât take bills larger than fifty, but seeing the unnerving pile of cash in his wallet, I donât feel like ruffling his feathers. I take the money and get his change.
He taps on the counter as he waits, and I realize heâs matching the rhythm of The Distance by Cake that Danni has playing on the speakers in the lobby.
âOh, donât do that,â I joke, handing him his change. âYouâll encourage the owner. Iâm trying to convince her the playlist is driving away customers.â
He takes the money and shoots me a look. âNineties music is the best. Itâs when people told the truth.â
I curl the corner of my mouth, not arguing further. He clearly drank the same Kool-Aid as she did.
âThanks,â he says, swiping up the keys.
I hand him back his I.D. and watch him leave. Outside, he doles out the room keys to all the ladies, and after a moment, they all make their way to their rooms. Iâm half-tempted to go to the window and see if he goes in with one of them. Or five of them. Very curious.
âWas that a customer?â Danni says behind me, and I glance back, seeing her walk into the office. Her apartment, where she resides with her grandmother, sits behind the office, so itâs easy to run and check on her when she needs.
âYeah,â I tell her. âHe got five rooms for the night, and heâs traveling with at least half a dozen women, so have fun on the night shift.â
She snorts and walks up, picking up the contract. âTyler Durden?â she reads his name, squinting through her glasses.
I nod, pulling a stray brown hair off her flannel shirt. She even dresses 90s.
âDidnât you get I.D.?â She makes a face at me. âItâs a fake name.â
âHis I.D. said Tyler Durden,â I shoot back. âWhy do you think itâs a fake name?â
âTyler Durden is a lead character in Fight Club,â she spits out like Iâm an idiot. âThe best movie of the 90s, and one of the best books ever. Itâs disturbing that you donât know that, Jordan.â
I laugh, shaking my head. She might only be a year older than me, but weâre worlds apart in interests.
Fight Club.
My smile falls, and I drop my eyes, turning back to the computer. Iâve seen the movie, but the name didnât register. And Iâve seen it recently, too, with Pikeâ¦
I swallow, my chest growing tight. Dammit. Iâve done really well the last few weeks, turning my attention elsewhere, so I donât think about him. It was hard at first, but not seeing him every day made it easier. It was right to leave like I did.
But every once in a while, heâll pop up in my head when I make taco dip for Danni during a long Saturday shift or hear a song or when I see my raincoat and the splatters of mud still on it from him and me playing around. I havenât even lit any candles, because I donât know what to wish for when I have to blow them out.
To wish to feel like I did with him gives him power over me again, but deep down, thatâs all I still really want.
To feel that good again.
Itâll just have to be with someone else now.
âSoâ¦â Danni pulls up another stool. âDonât your fall classes start up soon?â
I click off the Free Cell game, avoiding her gaze. âYeah.â
She waits for me to say more, but Iâm not really sure what to say. My financial aid came in, so classes are paid for, and I have enough to get an apartment back home, but it almost feels like taking a step backward. He called when I first left, but after a few days it stopped, and thereâs been nothing since.
I hate to admit it, but I wonder far too often what heâs doing, if heâs seeing anyone, if he misses meâ¦
If I go home, I may run into him. What will that be like?
Iâm proud of myself that Iâve stayed away, but I still feel ashamed that heâs there in my head, lingering all the time. Iâm not over him, and until I can blow out a candle and have something better to wish for, I donât think my head is in the right place to go back yet. Iâm scared.
âYou know you can stay forever,â Danni goes on. âSeriously. My college isnât bad at all. You can transfer.â
âThanks,â I tell her. âBut I need to go back. I know I do. Iâve just been putting off thinking about it.â
âYou donât want to see him.â
I meet her eyes, her black-rimmed glasses falling down her nose again.
âI donât want to be who I was when I left,â I clarify.
âYouâre not.â She leans an elbow on the counter, resting her chin in her hand. âYouâre allowed to hurt. But you didnât allow it to keep you down,â she points out. âThatâs what makes us strong. You havenât called him, and we had some fun. He didnât ruin your summer, because you didnât let him.â
Yeah. We got drunk at the pond, rocked out to bad music as we raced around town in her â92 Pontiac Sunbird convertible, and had some pool parties here. I laughed a little.
âAnd itâs not like he tracked me down, either, soâ¦â I tell her. âI guess we both knew it was borrowed time. It was just a fling. He was right.â
A fling.
A cool story Iâll have fun looking back on when I no longer love him, and I can appreciate it for the sex it was.
I feel her eyes on me, because she knows Iâm lying to myself, but like a friend, she lets me dive into my delusion. We need lies to survive sometimes, because the truth hurts too much.
Maybe a transfer would be a good idea, after all.
I stand up. âThe printer needs paper,â I tell her.
And without looking at her, I walk into the back office, blinking away the burn in my eyes before she sees. Iâm not going to cry. I canât hide here forever, after all. Northridge is my home, my family is there, and I have to go back at some point. I can do it.
âHi.â I hear Danni sing-song. âWelcome to The Blue Palms.â
I laugh to myself. The Blue Palms are a set of neon palm trees outside that arenât real and certainly arenât native to Virginia. But I like the tropical colors of this place, the retro pinks and blues, and the old-style, beachy charm. It might not have the amenities of the larger hotels, but itâs private, clean, and nostalgic. It has character.
âUh, thanks,â a male voice says. âUmâ¦â
I open the cabinet, grabbing a ream of paper, their muffled voices carrying on in the lobby. I hope he only needs one room, because for once, weâre about sold out.
âJordan Hadley?â Danni says more loudly as if repeating him.
I halt with the paper in my arm and the cabinet still open.
âYeah,â the man says, and I inch closer to the doorway to better hear. âIâm sorry to bug you. Does she work here? I was told she worked at a motel in the area, and Iâve been almost everywhere.â
The vein in my neck throbs, and I can only manage short, shallow breaths.
âAnd you are?â Danni probes.
âPike Lawson,â he answers. âA friend.â
My arms give way, and I nearly drop the package of paper.
âPikeâ¦â she repeats. âLike in Buffy the Vampire Slayer?â
âHuh?â
â1992 cult classic?â Danni explains. âLuke Perry? His name is Pike in the movie?â
Normally I would laugh at her verbal diarrhea, but my head is swimming and my stomach is doing somersaults. Heâs here? Heâs really here?
Thereâs silence for a moment, and then Pike asks, âSo, does Jordan work here? I really need to see her.â
He sounds vulnerable, his voice making me realize I missed him even more than I thought I did.
But somewhere inside, my strength grows, and I steel my spine, ready to show him Iâm not going to hide from him. I donât know why heâs here, but if he tries to make demands again like when I tried to move back with my dad, I donât feel like it will be hard for me to stand up and stay defiant. He wonât tell me what to do.
No matter how hard he tries.
Stepping out from behind the corner, I enter the lobby, seeing Pike standing on the other side of the counter. His gaze immediately locks on me.
He inhales a breath and just stares, his body rigid.
I take in his black T-shirt and deeper tan, like heâs had a full summer working outdoors, and my heart flutters at the sight of those piercing and warm hazel eyes and big hands that have picked me up and carried me half a dozen times. He looks taller, but I know he hasnât grown, of course.
Danni hops off her stool. âIâll justâ¦go check on my grandma,â she says and quietly walks past me, to her apartment.
Pike stands between the front door and desk, fisting his hands at his sides and looking like heâs about to move forward but doesnât.
I walk to the desk and set the paper down. âWhat?â I ask.
But again, he just stands there like heâs in a trance.
The back of my neck breaks out in a sweat, and Iâm getting nervous. Why is he just standing there, staring at me? âWhat do you want?â I press, my tone curt.
He opens his mouth but then closes it swallowing.
âPike, Jesusââ
âThe day you left,â he blurts out, and I stop.
I wait, listening as a look of fear crosses his eyes.
âThe house was so empty,â he continues. âLike a quiet that was never there before. I couldnât hear your footsteps upstairs or your hairdryer or anticipate you walking into a room. You were gone. Everything wasâ¦â he drops his eyes, âgone.â
A ball lodges in my throat, and I feel tears threaten, but I tense my jaw, refusing to let it out.
âBut I could still feel you,â he whispers. âYou were still everywhere. The container of cookies in the fridge, the backsplash you picked out, the way you put all my pictures back in the wrong spot after you dusted my bookshelves.â He smiles to himself. âBut I couldnât rearrange them, because you were the last to touch them, and I wanted everything the way you had it.â
My chin trembles, and I fold my arms over my chest, hiding my balled fists under my arms.
He pauses and then goes on. âNothing would ever go back to the way it was before you came into my house. I didnât want it to.â He shakes his head. âI went to work, and I came home, and I stayed there every night and all weekend, every weekend, because thatâs where we were together. Thatâs where I could still feel you.â He steps closer, dropping his voice. âThatâs where I could wrap myself up in you and hang on to every last thread in that house that proved you were mine for just a little while.â
His tone grows thick, and I see his eyes water.
âI really thought I was doing what was best,â he says, knitting his brow. âI thought I was taking advantage of you, because youâre young and beautiful and so happy and hopeful despite everything youâd been through. You made me feel like the world was a big place again.â
My breathing shakes, and I donât know what to do. I hate that heâs here. I hate that I love that heâs here. I hate him.
âI couldnât steal your life from you and keep you to myself, you know?â he explains. âBut then I realized that youâre not happy or hopeful or making me feel good because youâre young. You are those things and youâre capable of those things, because youâre a good person. Itâs who you are.â
A tear spills over, gliding down my cheek.
âBaby,â he whispers, his hands shaking. âI hope you love me, because I love you like crazy, and Iâm going to want you the rest of my life. I tried to stay away, because I thought it was the right thing, but I fucking canât. I need you, and I love you. This doesnât happen twice, and Iâm not going to be stupid again. I promise.â
My chin trembles, and something lodges in my throat, and I try to hold it in, but I canât. My face cracks, and I break down, turning away from him. The tears come like a goddamn waterfall, and I hate him. I fucking hate him.
His arms are around me in a second, and he hugs me from behind, burying his face in my neck.
âIâm sorry I took so long,â he whispers in my ear.
âYou did,â I cry. âYou took so long.â
âIâll make it up to you.â He turns me around and clutches my face, pressing his lips to my ear. âI promise.â
He holds me for a while, and my pride tells me not to give in. Not to let anyone in and no more second chances.
But Iâm not completely certain I wouldnât do the same thing if I were in his shoes. Cole, Lindsay, Shel, my sister, Dutch, the whole neighborhoodâ¦theyâll talk. Some will judge him for this. His fear is justified.
But they donât know. They donât know how lucky we are and how good it is.
I love him.
I pull away and wipe at my tear drops on his T-shirt. âAnd I didnât put the picture frames back in the wrong spot,â I tell him. âThatâs where they belong.â
He laughs, wiping away the tears on my face, and brings me in, kissing me. Everything floods backâhis mouth, soft but strong, and his tasteâand kiss him back, rising up on my tiptoes to deepen it.
âNeed a room?â someone chimes in. âYou came to the right place.â
I pull away again, and Pike clears his throat as Danni walks in and sits back on the stool.
âPike, this is Danni,â I say. âDanni, Pike.â
âNice to meet you,â she says.
âYeah, you, too.â He holds out his hand, and they shake.
âSo, do you guys want a room?â she asks again. âOn the house?â
She pulls the last room key out of the cubbie and holds it out.
He leans over, taking it. âThank you. Really. Thatâd be great.â
She shifts her gaze to me, and I can tell sheâs looking for confirmation that everything is okay. I nod, assuring her.
âWell, have a good night,â she tells us. âIâll see you in the morning.â
Pike takes my hand, and we walk outside, the humid August air already damp on my arms. He clutches me like heâs going to lose me as we walk to his truck and retrieve his duffel bag and a little package. I laugh, seeing mud still all over his door and the tires.
Walking to the room, I pass the five I doled out to âTylerâ and his ladies, and I can hear music, chatter, and laughing from inside several of them. We pass another room with curtains drawn, but light from the TV pierces the fabric.
Up the sidewalk, one of the regulars, Peter, walks to the Coke machine with a sword strapped to his naked back and wearing his usual black leather pants.
âWhat the hell is that?â Pike mumbles to me, looking at him.
âThatâs Peter,â I say, admiring the black hair that drapes damn-near down to his waist. âHeâs here every weekend, LARPing.â
Pike pinches his brows together and looks at me.
âLive Action Role Playing,â I explain. âSometimes he brings a beautiful Elvish princess and they get kinky. You can hear it through the walls.â
He snorts as we reach our room, and he unlocks the door. I step inside and walk over to the night stand, turning on the lamp as he shuts and locks the door.
âCan I take you home tomorrow?â he asks. âIâm anxious.â
I peer up at him. âAnxious for what?â
He just quirks a smile. âEverything, I guess.â
He tosses a little box at me, and I reach up, catching it.
âWhatâs this?â I ask.
âOpen it.â
I walk to the sink and face the mirror, tearing off the tape. Ripping open the box, I dig out three cassette tapes, and immediately start grinning.
âI found some 80âs music for you I can stand,â he says, coming up behind me as I inspect the new additions to my collection.
âAC/DC,â I read the labels. âMetallicaâ¦Beastie Boys.â
I look up at him, and he dips down kissing me. I close my eyes, feeling like Iâm dizzy. I wonder how much trouble he went through to find these. I hope it was a lot.
I flick his tongue with mine, the kiss turning heated and strong, and I reach around, clasping the back of his neck, not letting him go.
He sucks in air through his teeth, and I can feel him harden through his jeans.
âBaby, Iâve been all over fucking Virginia,â he pants. âI need a shower.â
âWeâll take one after,â I say, reminiscing about our kitchen table foray two months ago when he wanted a shower first then, too.
I drop the tapes to the counter and press my back into him, moaning.
He kisses me and pulls back just a hair to look into my eyes. âThere hasnât been anyone else since you left,â he tells me.
I blink up at him. âI know. I canât say the same, though.â
His face falls, and his jaw tenses.
I pin him with regretful eyes. âI missed you, so I had a few drinks on the Fourth of July and had a little tryst with the desk corner in room 108,â I tell him. âIt was pretty hot.â
He breaks into a laugh, his body shaking behind me.
I actually didnât do that, but I felt tempted a few times. When I close my eyes, though, I only see him, and it felt pathetic to masturbate to a guy whom I thought didnât want me.
So, Iâve been chaste, and now Iâm ready to go wild.
Turning me around, he picks me up, and I wrap my legs around his waist as he carries me to the bed. Letting me fall back, he pulls his shirt over his head and stares down at me as he unfastens his belt.
All of sudden, though, a very loud and fast pounding hits the wall behind our bed, and shrill moans and whimpers pierce the walls. We both stop and listen as Peter and his princess go at it in the next room, banging their headboard against ours and sending it bobbing back and forth.
His eyes go wide. âOh, they are loud.â
Yup.
Then he looks down at me, an air of mischief in his eyes. âWe can take âem.â And then he grabs the back of my knees, yanking me down to the end of the bed, and I squeal as he comes down on top of me.