: Chapter 11
Wildfire (Maple Hills 2)
AURORA IS REALLY, REALLY DRUNK, which means Iâm back to keeping my distance.
While Xander has assured me that people drank alcohol when he was here last year and nothing happened, Iâm still choosing to stay away from the chaotic drinking game that appears to be half Truth or Dare, half Never Have I Ever, depending on which side of the campfire circle you find yourself on.
Our cabin is one of eight counselor cabins that borders the lake, giving me the perfect vantage point to watch what all the other staff are doing, while also mind my business with my book.
My love for reading started when I was a kid and my dad would be in a bad mood because like most gamblers, heâs shit at gambling. Reading was the most fun I could have while making the least amount of noise, and I always wanted to avoid drawing attention to myself when he was likely to start an argument over something.
It feels full circle to be the thing keeping me out of trouble as an adult.
I know to everyone else it makes me seem boring, but so far I love being here, and aside from the obvious reasons, thatâs something else that makes me want to not be sent home. I can try not to worry about what people know or think about me, which is something I struggle to put to the back of my mind when Iâm at college. I probably wonât see half of these people again, and thatâs what I keep telling myself when Iâm trying to be myself and get involved.
Thereâs one person I might see again, though, and sheâs currently drinking directly out of a liquor bottle and laughing loudly. It doesnât feel authentic, though, but more like for show. Thatâs a recurring thought about Aurora, about how happy she portrays herself to be, with big smiles and bigger laughsâand yet sometimes it seems forced.
I felt like the worldâs biggest asshole earlier when she walked toward me, presumably to get me involved, and as soon as I saw the tequila bottle in her hand, I walked in the other direction toward my cabin and away from her. Iâve caught her looking over here a few times, but when she spots me looking back at her, she quickly focuses back on the game.
Grabbing my water bottle from the railing beside me, I stretch my legs and head to the water machines near the main lawn. Itâs weird not having to worry about accidentally falling over a dog, and I miss my little shadows when theyâre not around.
Jenna says I should feel honored to be the chosen one, and I do. I havenât ever been anyoneâs first choice, so Iâm grabbing on to it with both hands. Even if they are dogs.
Iâm walking past the empty kidsâ cabins on the side of the main lawn when I hear footsteps on the gravel path. Auroraâs cheeks are pink when she catches up to me, eyes glassy. âI freaking hate running,â she pants, supporting herself against her knees as she tries to catch her breath. âWhat are you doing?â
âIâm getting a drink. Is everything okay?â
She nods, standing up straight before immediately starting to sway. âEverythingâs great. I love my life.â She doesnât look like she loves her life; the way she says it is slurred and high pitched, unnatural and uncomfortable. I donât know what happened between work this afternoon and now, when she looks one drink away from being the drunk girl who cries.
âAre you sure youâre okaââ
âYouâre not joining in.â She stumbles forward, regaining her balance quickly and walking toward me until sheâs close enough I could touch her if I wanted to. The smell of the fire lingers around us and itâs a welcome change from being assaulted by my own memories of her shampoo. Her lower lip wobbles as she takes a sharp intake of breath. âIs it me? Did I do something wrong?â
âNo. I donât want to get into trouble by drinking,â I explain honestly. âAnd youâre really, really drunk. You should probably go to bed; we have water-safety training tomorrow and itâs late.â
Sheâs still swaying and I can practically hear the cogs in her head turning while her brain wades through the tequila sheâs tried to drown it with.
I recognize the familiar sounds of dog collars jingling and paws against gravel. Deciding not to wait to find out who theyâre with, I grab Auroraâs arm, quickly pulling her toward the darkened space between the cabins. âSomeoneâs coming,â I say when she looks up at me alarmed.
This would be a really bad time to discover some of the less cute creatures that no doubt roam this camp at night.
I move us into the shadows as quickly and quietly as I can, practically carrying Aurora as she giggles. Yes, she thinks itâs funny. âStop laughing,â I whisper. She leans forward, burying her face in my T-shirt in an attempt to smother the amused noises escaping her. Itâs not enough, and when she lets out a little snort, I put my hand over her mouth gently. âShhh.â
Fish stops at the spot Aurora and I just vacated, staring toward the darkness and, therefore, us. Iâm holding my breath, my heart hammering so hard Iâm surprised Aurora canât hear the thud, thud, thud. Iâm mentally running through all the excuses I could possibly give, realizing that being in a dark corner of the camp alone with a drunk girl is far more alarming than talking to one. Then Fish barks and I swear my heart stops beating all together.
âStop it, noisy girl,â Jenna chastises, clicking her tongue at the puppies to follow her. âFish, come on,â she says, and whistles. I wait until I can no longer hear the gravel before finally letting myself breath properly again.
âOw, fuck!â I snatch my hand away from Auroraâs mouth. âDid you just bite me?â
âYou forgot I was here.â Like that could happen. âYouâre good at that.â
How did I end up here when I was purposely trying to stay out of the way?
âCome on, Edward Cullen. Back on the path before something bigger and scarier than you decides to bite me.â Itâs like guiding a toddler as I hold both her arms to lead her through the dark and back into the lit-up path.
âRuss, I feel sick,â she mumbles.
âDo you need some water?â She nods, and thereâs a very real possibility sheâs about to barf on me. Leading her toward the porch steps of the cabin labeled Raccoon, I sit her down and jog toward the water station. It doesnât take me long, but sheâs paler when I get back. âI donât feel good,â she moans into her hands.
âIâm not surprised. You drink like a fish. Here,â I say, handing her my water bottle.
She looks up, her green eyes fixed on me between slow, long blinks. âI drink like a dog?â
âWhat? No, I didnât meanânever mind.â She guzzles the water, wiping the excess from the corner of her mouth with the back of her hand and offering the bottle back to me. âDo you want me to walk you to your cabin?â
Nodding, Aurora holds out her hand and I gently tug her to her feet; her fingers intertwine with mine and she begins to lead me toward her cabin, which is in a different section from mine.
Weâre halfway there when she suddenly stops, pulling me to a stop, too. âDo you want to go skinny dipping?â
Jesus Christ. âYou need to go to bed.â
âI donât want to go to bed.â Her bottom lip juts out and she reminds me of Stassie and Lola when theyâre drunk. Itâd be cute if I werenât so stressed.
âWell, you have to,â I say, dragging her along.
âMake me.â
âIâm not going to try and make you.â
âYouâve gotten me into bed before, it shouldnât be that hard for you.â
I should have stayed reading my book. âIf you donât go to sleep, youâre going to feel like death tomorrow and youâll have no one to blame but yourself.â
âMy dad is to blame for all of my problems, so thatâs not true, is it?â As drunk as she is, thereâs something clear and certain about the way she says it. Itâs a feeling I can relate to, but I think trading daddy issues is the exact opposite of what I need this summer. Itâs definitely the exact opposite of what I need right now, dealing with a drunk person. âYou donât get to tell me what to do, mister. Youâre not the boss of me.â
âBut you just told me to make you. I know Iâm not the boââ I stop talking because Iâm arguing with someone who probably isnât going to remember any of this tomorrow. âIs that why youâre so drunk? Your dadâs done something?â
âItâs his birthday.â She looks at her watch, squinting. âIs that a twelve or two? Was his birthday. I arranged for a gift to be delivered. Silly, silly Rory, always expecting too much and trusting the wrong people.â
âAnd he didnât like it?â
âHe didnât open it. I spoke to his assistant, Sandra, no, Brandy? Brenda. I spoke to Brenda because he didnât answer my calls and it was still in his office.â She shrugs and her whole demeanor changes again. Itâs like every time she talks about something that makes her unhappy, she forces herself to look happy. âHis girlfriend and her daughter took him to Disneyland as a surprise. He fucking hates Disneyland. He never went with us when my mom took me and my sister. But anything Norah and Isobel want they get, and I just have to exist in their shadow.â
âIâm sorry.â I donât know what else to say, but we reach cabin 22 and she begins to climb the steps. Thinking back to Xander and Clayâs wrong cabin accident, I keep hold of her hand. âIs this definitely yours?â
âYup.â She points to the fairy lights decorating the porch. âCabin two-two. Angel number.â
I stop on the bottom step, letting go of her hand. âAngel what?â
She spins around so quickly she almost loses balance, but the walk here, the water, and the short period without a tequila bottle in her hand has helped sober her up a tiny amount. âWhy have you stopped?â
âWe arenât allowed to go into other peopleâs cabins.â
She huffs, her hands landing on her hips like somehow Iâm the one in the wrong here. âNobody cares about those rules. Nobody cares enough to punish me.â
âI care about them, Rory. And youâd understand that if you werenât so drunk.â
She drags me up the steps, and I reluctantly follow. âCome in, please.â
âIâll stand in the doorway,â I say firmly, which is a waste of breath, because she pulls me over the threshold anyway. âAurora, I canât be in here. I need this job.â
âI liked it when you called me Rory.â
âRory, get into bed, please. Lie on your side in case youâre sick.â To my surprise, she kicks off her shoes and throws herself down onto her bed. âGood girl. Okay, good night.â
âWait!â she shouts as I turn to leave. âIâm hungry.â
It really is like being with Stassie and Lola. âI canât do anything about that right now. Iâll get you breakfast in the morning.â
âNo, you wonât.â She wiggles under a blanket, and while her sleeping fully clothed isnât ideal, it is not something Iâm prepared to tackle. âTomorrow youâll go back to hating me.â
My mouth opens and closes, but no words come out at first. âI do not hate you.â
She yawns and begins to lose the fight to keep her eyes open. âWill you wait until I fall asleep, please? It wonât take long.â
Iâm still stunned she thinks I hate her, even though itâs probably drunk babble. âSure, why?â
âBecause itâs easier to wake up and youâre not here than it is to watch you leave me.â
I sit on the edge of her bed, mulling over her words, scrambling for a plan to untangle the mess Iâve created for myself starting tomorrow. It doesnât take long for her to fall asleep and Iâm instantly jealous, because I know Iâm going to be up all night wondering if it would have been easier to watch her leave after we hooked up. Or was it easier to find her gone?
BREAKFAST IS QUIETER THAN NORMAL with Aurora missing, and I hate it.
Sheâs practically a Honey Acres expert, after coming here as a camper for so many years, and she spends so much time during meals when weâre all sitting together answering questions about what it will be like when the kids are here.
Emilia sits down with her food and gives a vague answer about Aurora feeling sick and not wanting breakfast, not revealing that sheâs definitely hungover.
I wait until everyone is deep in conversation about the pros and cons of semester-abroad programs before slipping away and setting off toward cabin 22 with a bottle of orange juice and some granola bars.
Aurora is already standing on the porch when I get there, and the way her face drops when she sees me stings. I hover at the bottom of the steps. âHey. I brought you breakfast like I promised.â
She accepts reluctantly, looking at my offering like Iâm a cat that just dropped a dead mouse at her feet. âThanks.â
âI wanted to see how youâre feeling. Emilia said youâre feeling siââ
âRuss, what are you doing?â she asks, cutting me off.
âI said Iâd bring you breakfast last night. You probably donât remember, you were pretty drunk.â
âNo, I mean here. Now.â She shakes her head, dragging her hand through her hair. âYouâre either super nice to me or you avoid me. And now youâre here, being sweet, and I donât know if youâll be like this all day, and Iâm tired of wondering what Iâve done to make you not like me.â
âI do like you. Iâm sorry, Aurora. I do like you.â
She sits on the top step, setting her breakfast beside her. I can sense her frustration growing. âYouâre nice all the time, but itâs with everyone but me, Russ. Everyone. Iâm so tired of being treated like that when Iâm at homeââ
The guilt fucking sucks. The last thing I want to do is make things harder for her, especially when sheâs totally right. I have made an effort with everyone but her. The first thing I should have done after my call with JJ yesterday was apologize to her. Instead, I sort of hoped itâd just blow over and we could both ignore it. I should have known it wouldnât work like that. Spending all your time with a group of people in an isolated place makes everything feel bigger and more intense, even after only a short time, and I know thatâs only going to increase as time goes on.
I know I need to be honest with her, so she realizes Iâm the problem not her, but the words just wonât come because Iâm a coward.
ââand I came here to escape those feelings and work on myself. I donât know what Iâm doing, but whatever it is Iâm doing a totally shitty job so far, so I donât need you making it worse by blowing hot and cold for the rest of the summer. If you only want to try to be my friend some of the time, Iâd prefer you to just, I donât know, just donât try. Ignore me all the time; itâll be easier to cope with.â
Taking a deep breath, I force myself to start talking. âRory, I messed up. Iâm sorry. When you walked out and didnât leave your number or say bye, I thought that was your way of telling me you didnât want to hear from me again,â I say calmly, trying to suppress the feelings of embarrassment. âThen we were dropped into this situation together and I didnât want to make you uncomfortable. I get that I shouldnât have assumed and I didnât mean to hurt your feelings.â
Her jaw is hanging open as she looks at me from the step. âI know Iâm hungover, but did I just hallucinate and hear you say the reason youâve been like this since we got here is because I left? When you wanted me to leave?â
âI didnât want you to leave. What are you talking about?â
She stands quickly, the steps making us about the same height, giving me the perfect view of how confused her face is right now. âYou were in the bathroom for so long. You were waiting for me to go. I heard you talking to someone so I left.â
âI was talking to myself, Rory. I was hyping myself up to ask you out, which is something I hoped to never have to admit out loud to you. But Iâd rather embarrass myself than have you think Iâm the type of guy who would wait in a bathroom for you to leave.â
âOh my God.â
âI never do the one-night stand thing and I thought we had fun. I wanted to see you again, but youâre so out of my league andââ
âOh my God.â She drops back to the step and this time I crouch down in front of her as she hides her face in her hands. âMiscommunication. Russ, we did the miscommunication thing. You made me a miscommunicator!â
This conversation is too much to process. âA what?â
âWe could have just had a conversation. This is not the kind of main character moment Iâm looking for in my life!â She groans loudly, peeking at me between her fingers.
Reaching forward, I wrestle her hands away from her face so she has to look at me. Her head tilts to the side as she takes me in, her expression falling somewhere between frustration and relief. âIâm sorry, Rory. I always fuck everything up. I mean it when I say I didnât mean to hurt your feelings.â
âIf you hadnât avoided me last night, drunk me would have probably asked why you were acting weird during Truth or Dare, loudly and with an audience, so weâd have gotten to the bottom of it one way or another.â Her left hand is still holding mine, but her right is drawing patterns across my palm. I know I should stand up and leave now that weâre both on the same page, but lack of self-control is clearly a Callaghan trait.
âDrunk you nearly got us caught by Jenna last night.â I sigh. âI canât promise Iâm going to be around when youâre being reckless, Aurora. I really need this job and I canât risk being fired, so if it happens again, please donât think Iâm avoiding you.â
She groans again, this time accompanied by a dramatic eye roll, but her fingers keep dancing across my skin. âI donât think Iâm going to drink anymore anyway. But nobody ever actually gets fired, Russ. People break all kind of rules while theyâre here and nothing ever happens.â
The memory of how soft Aurora felt beneath me invades my brain.
Think with your head, not your dick, Callaghan. âI donât want to test that theory.â
âBut testing the theory is the fun part.â She smiles at me, a real one that makes a little line appear at the corner of her eyes. âAnd the trick is to not get caught.â
Her eyes burn into me and I should look away, but I canât. They travel down to my lips, then back to my eyes, her teeth sinking into her lip.
I want to kiss her.
She looks like she wants to be kissed.
It takes every shred of restraint not to lean in, especially when sheâs looking at me like that. Sighing, I force myself to remember why Iâm here and what Iâm avoiding. âI just want to peacefully coexist with you and stay out of trouble, Aurora.â
She shrugs, dropping her hands into her lap as I stand. âThatâs fine. Iâm supposed to be working on myself or something anyway. It was really clear in my head, now itâs kind of fuzzy. I should probably get back to doing that.â
âI need to go before someone comes looking for me. I donât want them to think itâs weird weâre here alone. Iâm sorry again, Iâm glad weâve cleared this up.â Itâs an oddly formal response to a personal revelation, but the longer Iâm around her the easier it becomes to want to test her theory.
Thankfully she doesnât call me out. I watch as she unscrews the orange juice and holds it up to me. âTo our peaceful coexistence.â