: Chapter 17
Wildfire (Maple Hills 2)
I WOKE UP THIS MORNING and told myself to forget Russ Callaghan. That he was just another man whose attention Iâd become fixated on and he wasnât the guy I was turning him into in my head. Emilia says I get attached too easily, or not at all, and that I donât do the happy medium like most people.
I have to really question if someone is worth it when their actions make me call my mom just to hear her tell me how much she misses me.
Iâd made my choice and I was sticking to it, which worked until he strolled back into camp and stopped in front of me. Itâs hard to be mad at someone when they look like total shit. Itâs hard to know that if heâd walked in smiling and looking his usual, beautiful self, I wouldâve had the same reaction.
I was heading to grab some stuff for my hike when I overshared all my feelings with the man I constantly force my bullshit onto. I donât know what it isâthe softness of his face or the way his eyes make me melt when heâs giving me his full attention, or those freaking dimplesâthat makes me want to word-vomit my insecurities all over him.
He must be totally exhausted being stuck around me.
Not exhausted enough to make me carry my backpack, though.
Now freshly showered, Russ is matching each of my steps up the steepening trail path and making it look easy. âI can carry my own backpack,â I repeat for the millionth time through strained breath. I really need to start exercising more. âI feel like youâre one of those little donkeys in Greece.â
âI like helping,â he says, not even a hint of panting. âAnd Iâm used to carrying shit around. Not used to being called a donkey, though; thanks for that one.â
âHow are you not even breaking a sweat? You can carry me if you want, my legs hurt.â
I donât even have time to say Iâm kidding before my ass is in the air and my nose gets buried in my backpack. Russâs hand grips the back of my thigh, keeping me in place over his shoulder as he continues, not even breaking his stride.
This was not what I was asking for.
âAurora, every time you wriggle, you rub your ass against my face,â he says casually.
Give me strength. âI didnât really mean carry me. I was being dramatic for sympathy!â
His fingers dig into my thigh, and a part of me that has been severely neglected starts to throb. How thick my thigh is versus how much of his hand can cover it is not something I should be obsessing over right now.
âThis is my version of being sympathetic,â he teases. âWeâre nearly at the top anyway. Definitely feel like a donkey now, though.â
âI take it back. Youâre Shrek and Iâm Princess Fiona.â
He laughs and I jiggle as his shoulders shake. âWell, green is my favorite color.â
âWhat type of green? Ogre green?â
âWhatever shade your eyes are.â He starts to lower me to the ground again, but my legs are jelly. âHoly shit, this is nice.â
Iâm too busy reeling from what he said about my eyes to realize weâve reached my favorite spot. Iâm not sure what the official name for the type of water source this is, but the water is crystal clear and warm and weâre far enough from anyone else to ever be disturbed. The rocks lining the edge were my favorite when I came here as a kid, but now I appreciate how quiet it is. Russ helps me spread the picnic blanket out on the grass next to the water and I unpack our water bottles and energy bars.
âThis is the first time weâve been totally alone since we got here. Not one person to disturb us,â I say, kicking off my sneakers. He watches me, eyes dancing across my skin as I start to pull down my shorts.
He copies me, undressing slowly, watching me pull my T-shirt over my head as he does the same. Iâm giddy with anticipation, my heart rate speeds up, and I canât keep the smile from my face.
He throws his socks onto the growing pile of our clothes. âSo, weâre doing this?â
I nod, counting down from three. The nervous energy rattles through me, and when I say go, my body takes on a mind of its own as I sprint away from Russ toward the rocks.
Sprinting in a bikini is possibly the worst idea Iâve ever hadâand Iâve had so many terrible ideas. If I get a concussion from being hit in the face by my own breasts, Iâll never recover from the embarrassment.
The rocks are hot under my feet as I climb to the top. Itâs not hard or high, but Iâm very aware of the man behind me, the one I suspect slowed down to let me win and who definitely has my ass in his face for the second time today.
Our race was for the first person into the water, but now that Iâm up here it feels higher than it did when I was younger. Russ doesnât give me the chance to spiral as he reaches the top, scoops me up into his arms, and throws us both into the water.
The cool water is relief against the hot sun, but it does nothing to make Russ look less hot. He pushes back his wet hair, his biceps peeking above the water, and floats backward soaking up the sun. He looks brighter than he did earlier somehow; Iâm glad I brought him here. This is the most peaceful place I know and I feel like he needs it.
Maybe I should have sent him alone with directions, because the silence is making me itch, but Iâm doing my best to not fill it like I normally do.
âHow did you discover this place?â Russ asks, eyes closed, still floating on his back and, my God, the relief to be able to talk again.
I float closer to him, like somehow if Iâm too loud itâll ruin things. âOne year we had a counselor who wasnât really into team sports, so he would organize walks all over the land that Orla and her family own. This was my favorite spot.â
âItâs beautiful.â
âIt is.â
âChance of sharks?â
âSlim.â
His eyes open and he smiles right at me, making my heart race. âWhat a relief.â
âYou look better already,â I say cautiously. I want him to tell me why he had to suddenly leave, but Iâm trying not to bulldoze into his life and make him uncomfortable after he told me he didnât want to talk about it.
God, itâs exhausting trying to think about what you do before you do it.
âI feel better. Thank you for bringing me here.â
âIf you⦠Do you, umâ¦â Great start, Rory. âIf you change your mind and do want to talk about anything to do with where youâve been, that would be okay with me. We could try and find that middle ground.â
âI donât want to burden you with my baggage.â
âI donât mind. It isnât a burden. You just carried my actual baggage and me up a hill. I can take whatever you throw at me, Callaghan.â
âIt is. You have enough of your own, you donât need other peopleâs.â
I hate me and my big mouth. I said that weeks ago when we first started working here, when someone asked me why I donât have a boyfriend. I didnât know how to say, âLittle to no trust in men, especially when Iâm a train wreck,â in a nice way to the people Iâd just met, including Russ. So I said the first thing that came to mind, which unfortunately happened to be about not wanting other peopleâs baggage.
âI want your baggage.â
âAurora,â he says more firmly this time. âI promise you, you donât.â
He isnât listening to me and Iâm growing frustrated, but I know Iâm just dealing with the result of my own words. I can feel myself becoming flustered as I struggle to verbalize my thoughts. âI do. I want it all. Pretend Iâm the airport. Give me everything.â
I should be gagged, truly.
Russâs eyebrows pinch together, showing heâs as confused as I am. âWhat are you talking about?â
âAirports? Baggage? I have no idea. I have no idea what Iâm doing or saying most of the time, but I meant what I said earlier, Russ. I can take it.â
Iâm in such unfamiliar territory and I hate it. He reaches out and tucks my wet hair behind my ear, his hand lingering a little longer than necessary, and my entire body hums happily. âWe should probably get out before we start to prune.â
I scream internally.
He doesnât say anything as he helps me climb out of the water and we walk back toward the blanket. I throw myself onto the soft fabric, feeling a little defeated, and lie back to dry off.
I block out the sun with my hand, watching Russ awkwardly shuffle around, trying to get comfortable. âPut your head on my stomach.â
âIâll be okay, I just need to fiââ
âYouâll be comfortable, I promise.â
Reluctantly, he maneuvers himself, leaning back and gently settling on my stomach. âIf it becomes uncomfââ
âEmilia uses me as a pillow all the time. Youâre gentler than she is. Iâm good, I swear.â
Iâm not sure when I finally become comfortable with the silence between us. But without the noise of my babbling, I get to listen to the sound of his breathing. Fifteen minutes of quiet passes before he starts talking.
âMy dad was hit by a drunk driver.â I freeze as the relief and panic that heâs finally sharing both hit me at once. âI donât see or speak to my family very often becauseâ¦â He pauses and I wait, stroking the top of his head gently so he knows Iâm listening. âWell, because my dad doesnât make me feel very good about myself. He was my hero when I was really young. Never missed a hockey game, school fair, parent-teacher conference. By the time I graduated high school we barely talked.â
âWhat changed?â I ask softly.
âHe did. It wasnât an overnight change. It was little things, gradually getting more and more frequent over time, making him harder and harder to talk to. He got meaner and meaner, and now I canât stand to talk to him.â
âThat really sucks. And Iâm sorry about the crash, too. Thatâs a lot to process on its own. Was your dad okay when you got there?â
âHeâll make a full recovery. Iâve had to visit him in the hospital a few times and itâs always been his fault. This one wasnât technically his fault, but I still feel like heâs to blame, yâknow?â My hand is still moving through his hair and Iâm scared if I stop, heâll stop. âLike if he wasnât doing what he was doing, he wouldnât have been where he was and then the car wouldnât have hit him.â
âYeah, I understand.â
âI didnât want to go, but my brother told me heâd come here and drag me back to Maple Hills if I didnât go voluntarily. I didnât want to bring my home drama here; I came here to escape it. Turns out Ethan lied and isnât even on this side of the country. Smart, really. He knows Iâd have ignored his threat if I thought he was far away.â
âYou guys arenât close?â
âEthan is mad at the world and I donât understand why. My anger is because I feel like I canât escape. He escaped years ago, so what does he have to complain about? Makes it hard to bond when it seems like heâs constantly yelling at me about something. He reminds me of Dad sometimes. I should tell him that the next time heâs shouting at me. We just handle things differently, I suppose. He thinks Iâm selfish for stuff and I think heâs selfish for stuff and, well, it isnât a great foundation for a good relationship.â
âIâm not close with my sister. We handle things in pretty similar ways, actually, not exactly a compliment to either of us, but we live very different lives. So I sort of get it.â
âI was honest about how I feel for the first time yesterday. It felt good to finally say what I needed to say. It feels good to tell you this stuff, so thank you for being patient with me.â
âYouâre really brave, Russ.â
âIâm the opposite of brave. Heâs told me that enough times for it to be imprinted on my brain.â
Word by word, who Russ is gets clearer and clearer to me and I feel honored that the man who shares so little is sharing with me.
âYou are brave. We live in a society that tells us our parents are the greatest thing we will ever have and will ever lose, and you justâI donât even know. Youâre putting yourself first anyway. Thatâs brave.â
âI learned a long time ago that if I didnât put myself first, nobody else was going to. Forgiving people who repeatedly let you down is like sticking your hand in a fire over and over and expecting it to not keep burning you.â
âSounds like me and my dad. Except Iâm singed to a crisp.â
âWhatâs the deal with you two?â
âElsa thinks he hates us because weâre both terrible drivers, but I think itâs because I look like my mom and he really hates my mom.â
He moves onto his elbows and looks at me over his shoulder. âHold up, your sister is called Elsa? Are your parents Disney adults?â
I canât count the number of times Iâve been asked something similar. âShut up. Iâm named after the northern lights. Could have gone my whole life thinking I was named after a princess, but my mom decided to traumatize me by sharing where I was conceived instead.â
Heâs laughing as he lies back against my stomach. âAnd Elsa?â
âPredates Frozen. Itâs a really popular name in parts of Europe. My dad likes to pretend he backpacked around Scandinavia when he was younger, but in reality he stayed in fancy hotels and ate in fancier restaurants every nightânot a hostel or backpack in sight.â Mom loves laughing at that one. âHe owns a Formula 1 team called Fenrir, which is from Norse mythology, so there is a theme. Elsa used to tell people we had a brother called Thor.â
âWould it help you to know that I am named after a dog my mom had when she was a kid?â
âYes. I feel silly telling you about my dad after your dad has been so cruel to you. My dad isnât cruel. He doesnât outright say horrible things to me; he just makes me feel like his life would be easier if I wasnât around. Heâs always put work first, which I get because heâs got a lot of responsibility on his shoulders, and because of it, Iâve had opportunities and been to places that people would kill for.â
âNice things donât make the bad stuff acceptable, though,â Russ says.
âIâd give all that up to feel like he loves me. Weâve been stuck in this cycle where he ignores me, so I do something silly to get his attention. When I was a teen I shoplifted, knowing Iâd get caught. I got a fake ID and went to places I was too young for. Pissed off my teachers. Posted a picture of myself on race day wearing the merch of his main rival, Elysium. The F1 pages reposted the shit out of it.â
âJesus, Rory.â
âAnd it works, but only for a short time because heâs annoyed; but at least he calls and sees me. Nothing ever happens. Iâm not punished, he doesnât try to understand. My mom justifies it because of course Iâm like this, itâs his fault. Then his anger wears off and he goes back to pretending that I donât exist. And every time, Iâm, like, this is going to be the time where he proves he caresâbut I just end up hurting my own feelings.â I know Iâm rambling. I know Iâm oversharing, but when I think about stopping he reaches up and squeezes the hand I have resting in his hair, urging me to continue.
âI repeat the cycle. He has a girlfriend named Norah, and she has a daughter, whoâs our age, called Isobel. Norah posts about Dad like theyâre the happiest of families. But Iâll never be part of it, and it makes me sad and it makes me do things like drink excessive amounts of tequila and ask you to skinny-dip with me.â
âThat feels like a million years ago.â
âThatâs why I loved this place so much growing up. It was a couple of months where I felt wanted and valued. I didnât have to worry about what was going on at home. I knew coming back here was the only thing that would break the cycle. So thatâs my trauma dump. How fun. Weâre quite the pair, arenât we?â
âA walking advertisement for daddy issues.â
âDo you hate them? I donât hate my parents, even though theyâre definitely the root of all my problems.â He doesnât say anything, so neither do I. I might have pushed him too far, so I keep twirling the ends of his hair around my fingers and pressing them gently into his scalp. âIâm sorry, you donât have to share anything you donât want to. I didnât mean to go too far.â
âYou havenât. I told my dad I hated him yesterday, but I was hurt. Iâm not sure I do, though. I think I hate the way he makes me feel. If he stopped doing the things he knows he shouldnât and started acting like the person he was when I was a kid, then I could have him in my life.â
âWhat about your mom?â
He hums, long and low. âI love my mom. Iâve just always been mad at her for enabling my dad. After talking to her yesterday, I think sheâs realized she doesnât know everything. So yeah, thatâs my trauma dump.â
Knowing the type of difficult relationships heâs dealing with makes me understand him so much better and Iâm giddy that heâs trusted me with something clearly so raw. âThank you for sharing with me.â
âThank you for comparing yourself to an airport.â
I try to stop the laugh so I donât give him motion sickness, but I canât help it. I cover my face with my hands, like thatâll block out the embarrassment. âI swear Iâm not this much of a disaster normally. You make me nervous, I think. It comes out and I canât even stop it. Sometimes I lie in bed awake at night cringing. Emilia has done nothing but bully me about it since we got here.â
âI love it, Aurora.â He rolls onto his stomach, resting his chin in the palm of his hand. I peek at him through my fingers. âYou make it easier for me to be myself because youâre so⦠you. I overthink everything I say and do and you justââ
âDonât think before I speak?â
ââyou say whatâs in your head.â He brushes my hands away from my face, so I have nowhere to hide. âItâs great. Youâre great.â
âYou really know how to make a girl feel special, Callaghan.â I might be about to combust. âRemember, you enabled me next time I start rambling.â
He laughs, shaking his head as he lies back down, this time placing his cheek on my bare stomach. âIs this okay?â he asks cautiously.
âYup.â My hand settles against the nape of his neck, drawing patterns and trailing my fingers up and down the hard muscles of his shoulders. âIs this okay?â
âYup.â
And Iâm not sure exactly which animal Iâm doodling against his skin when it happens, but somewhere between a hippo and a penguin, he falls asleep. So I keep doodling, until eventually my hand slows and I fall asleep, too.