: Chapter 26
Wildfire (Maple Hills 2)
âIâVE NEVER KNOWN SOMEONE WHOâS definitely getting head today look so fucking miserable.â
I donât realize Iâve zoned out until I hear Xander say the words head and fucking miserable. âIâm not definitely getting head later, but I will try to cheer up. Sorry, man.â
After the whole food hall sang âHappy Birthdayâ to me this morning, Xander announced we were spending our day off seeing what Meadow Springs has to offer. I told him I already know the answer and itâs not a lot, but he was insistent, saying now that he and Rory have joint custody of me I couldnât not go with him when I went with her yesterday.
Itâs a nice sentiment, but thereâs only so much mini golf two men can play.
Normally, Iâd spend my day off hanging around to see Rory, but after our conversation about fame and privacy yesterday, a bit of distance for a few hours is letting me think clearly. I canât think properly when Iâm around her, and I need to start using my brain again because I havenât been recently.
Stopping at the Drunk Duck, the one bar available, Xander and I decided to grab some burgers before heading back to camp. Iâve spent the entire meal half listening, half trapped in my head.
âIâm pretty sure birthday head is in the Constitution,â he jokes, causing me to choke on my soda. âHa, got you to laugh, you miserable shit. Whatâs going on? Tell Uncle Xan.â
âDid you just call yourself Uncle Xan?â
âWell I canât call myself Daddy Xan, can I? I know how to read a room. So go on, whatâs jumped up your ass?â
My knee-jerk reaction is to turn the conversation around and make it about Xander, but I think itâd be good to get his opinion. Weâve been sharing the same space for weeks now, and heâs a genuinely good guy, so I decide to chance it. âIâm wondering if I should call it a day with Aurora.â
âYouâre fucking lying,â he says, watching for my reaction. âSay youâre joking right now.â
âWe almost got caught this week. I opened the door just as Jenna showed up. If sheâd arrived two minutes earlier sheâd have caught meâWell, it doesnât matter, but she would have caught me doing something that would get me sent home.â
âTwo people sneaking around almost get caught. Yeah, thatâs how it tends to go, bro. Itâs half the fun, and do you even care about going home anymore? Weâre almost done anyway, and your friend said you could always crash with him if you need to. Youâre too smart to think Iâd believe this is about getting caught. Whatâs the real reason?â
I have to give it to Xander, he has a point. Iâve definitely been more relaxed after my friends encouraged me to risk getting fired and JJ gave me somewhere to go if I needed it until I have the excuse of college assignments and hockey to keep me unavailable. âHave I ever told you Iâm not trying to go pro?â
He puts his burger down, wiping his hands and mouth on his napkin, and leans back against the booth, focusing on me. âNo, you havenât mentioned it. Why not? Whatâs that got to do with Rory?â
âI donât want to be famous. I donât want to have strangers potentially poking around my life or get attention in the public eye. Itâs my worst nightmare, and I donât love hockey enough to give up my privacy like that.â
âOkay, andâ¦?â
âAnd sheâs already famous. I googled her last night and thereâs so much about her family, thereâs even photos of Emilia. Itâs just a lot. I knew about her dad, but I donât really feel like I knew the full extent of it if that makes sense. Because sheâs Rory and sheâs the way she is and I forget that outside of camp she has a whole other life.â
âA whole other life that she came here to escape.â Xander takes a long sip of his beer, and itâs the most serious Iâve seen him. âI need to know if you know what youâre saying is wild and you just need my reassurance, or if you genuinely believe it. Because I can deal with a little itâs-getting-too-real crisis, but if you actually think you should break things off with her, I donât know how to help you, bro.â
âYou think Iâm being a dick, donât you?â
Xander shrugs, and itâs the yes he wants to say, but wonât, because heâs a good friend. I probably am being a dick, but I also know that things donât go well for me in life. Itâs hard not to get wrapped up in the good things, since they happen so infrequently in comparison.
Xander sighs and I feel it in my bones. âI think youâre finding an issue where there doesnât need to be one. Think of any famous person with a nonfamous girlfriend, boyfriend, best friend, whatever. Tell me something outrageous about them. Think of their deepest, darkest secret, the one thing in the world they wanted nobody to know but came out anyway.â Iâm totally blank. âYou canât, because people donât give a shit. You thought about dropping your friends that just went pro? Your now-famous friends?â
Iâd never want to cut out Nate or JJ. âNever even crossed my mind.â
âIsnât your brother in a band, too? What happens when he gets mega famous? Youâll be Aurora-less and in the exact same situation. You clearly really like her and she stares at you like you hung the fucking moon. So just be together and donât stress for once.â
Itâs like being doused in cold water. Iâd never want to give up the way she looks at me. âYouâre right, man. I dunno. I think Iâm just in my feelings.â
âThatâs okay. Feelings are good.â He pulls out his cell phone, glancing at the screen briefly and immediately putting it back into his pocket. âNothing good comes from bottling shit up. For the record, I think youâre being a fool because your chemistry is wild. Sheâs great. Youâre great. I bet the seââ
âWatch itâ¦â
âSo protective, jeez. But my point stands. What could you possibly do or have done thatâs so bad youâd give up someone who makes you happy. Itâs not like youâre getting married, but I get it, itâs not something thatâs going to go away in the future. But when did she stop being worth the risk?â
âI never said she wasnât worth the risk. I want her. I like her so fucking much and I canât work out how the hell this happened. But just because I want her doesnât mean I deserve to have her. Iâm just⦠I donât know. I donât know what Iâm saying.â
Xander downs the rest of his beer and I sip on my soda, feeling irritated with myself. âDo you think youâre good enough for her?â
âWhat?â
âYou heard me,â he says, resting his elbow on the table and leaning against his hand. âSomethingâs got you into this funk because you just said deserve. Is that what youâre worried about? You two get serious in the future and thereâs an international debate to try to decide if you deserve her?â
âWell, I wasnât even thinking about that until right now, Jesus Christ.â Another thing to now worry about.
Xander rolls his eyes. âAnswer my question, dude. Do you think youâre good enough for Aurora?â
Wanting her, having her, and feeling like I deserve her are three very different things. âNo, I donât. Iâm a fuckup.â
âThatâs your problem; youâre such a fucking pessimist. Let me tell you right now, Callaghan, no bullshit, no protecting your feelingsâyou are good enough. The sooner you start believing that, the sooner we get to pretend this little crisis youâre experiencing never happened.
âYou gotta trust the universe to let you be happy, man. But if youâre not and youâre going to let Aurora down when shit gets too scary for you, then yeah, you should bow out now while itâs just starting. She doesnât deserve to have that happen to her.â
âAnd if I fuck everything up first?â
He rolls his eyes again. âI swear you just enjoy punishing yourself, bro. Youâre not a fuckup. Youâre twenty-one and youâre one of the nicest, most levelheaded guys I know. Weâre friends, so you get to be in your head right now and I wonât hold it against you, but she will if you call it a day and change your mind when you realize you fumbled the bag.â
Well shit. I rub at my jaw nervously, feeling like more of a dick than I did before this conversation started. âDid they put a birthday lecture in the Constitution, too?â
âStop acting like a goof and Iâll stop hitting you with my wisdom. Come on, birthday boy, drink up. The woman whoâs obsessed with you texted to tell me to get our asses back to camp.â
I down the rest of my drink. âI didnât know Fish could text.â
I MULL OVER XANDERâS WORDS as we drive back to Honey Acres with the radio loud enough that we donât have to chat.
After we sign back in at reception, Xander starts telling me about one of the lifeguardsâwho heâs 75 percent sure checks him out when we take the kids on the lakeâas we head toward the entertainment area where the evening activities take place. He keeps up a steady stream of anecdotes, which isnât necessarily unusual for Xander, but this is different and it makes me stop suddenly.
âThereâs a cake, isnât there?â Xander stops, too, a sheepish look on his face as he shrugs.
âWhy would there be a cake? Maybe thereâs cake, maybe thereâs not cake. I donât know! Iâm just here to keep the kids safe; I donât know about kitchen operations.â He blows out a breath, putting his hands on his hips. âThere might be a cake.â
âThanks for being so clear and concise, buddy.â
Weâre almost there when he throws an arm around my shoulders. âShe gives you the puppy eyes. You donât know how scary she can be to the rest of us when she chooses to be.â
I can cope with a cake on my birthday if it makes Aurora happy. Having a birthday during summer break has always meant people are busy, and my momâs attempt at a birthday celebration always turned into some kind of drama, so I stopped making an effort.
I havenât checked if anyone has tried to reach me today to wish me happy birthday, but last night when I used it to google the Roberts familyâwhich feels embarrassing to admit nowâI had no missed calls or messages from my family. I havenât heard from anyone since Dad was in the hospital, and even though I made it clear I didnât want to be contacted, Iâm still surprised they listened. I donât even have any money requests from my dad, which is more suspicious than surprising.
Xander clears his throat, dragging me out of my head. âListen, I need to blindfold you, and I really need you not to punch me.â
âPlease tell me youâre joking. Why could I possibly need a blindfold?â
âDoes this feel like the kind of thing Iâd joke about? Maybe Clayâs going to jump out of your cake and strip, I donât fucking know.â He pulls one of the blindfolds we use for the kidsâ games from his pocket. âIâm not tough enough to fight you, big guy. Letâs not make this difficult. She was very clear that you need a blindfold.â
He places the material over my eyes as I huff. âYou knew this was coming and you still let me moan about my feelings?â
âTold you, youâre a fool.â Letting Xander navigate me while blindfolded is now my personal hell. Itâs totally silent as we come to a stop, and part of me worries heâs about to push me into the lake or something. âIâm taking the blindfold off. Remember to act surprised about your cake,â he whispers as he unties the material at the back of my head.
I squint beneath the sunlight as my eyes readjust and everyone shouts happy birthday all at once. Iâm immediately piled on by multiple bodies, and itâs not until they free me from their clutches and step back that I realize whoâs in front of me.
Henryâs pushing Nate away from his personal space, while Robbie maneuvers himself out of Krisâs and Bobbyâs way. JJâs arm lands on my shoulder, and my jaw still feels like itâs on the floor. âHappy birthday, kiddo.â
âThe girls and Joe send their love,â Robbie says. âWe wanted to video call them, but you werenât joking about the service here.â
âWhat the fuck is happening right now?â
Two of my campers, Sadia and Leon, push their way through my friends and hold out a huge handmade birthday card. Sadia frowns. âYou canât say curse words in front of us.â
Crouching down, I try to drag myself back into work mode as I gratefully accept the card. âYouâre right. Iâm sorry, Iâm just very, very surprised.â Thereâs a painting on the front, but I canât tell what it is. It looks like it lost a fight with a paint gun. âGive me a clue, guys.â
Leon points to blue blobs. âItâs you crying about Kevinâs turd.â
âYour friends are really noisy,â Sadia says, looking around at them. They are being noisy, cheering and shouting as they try to control their excitement. Each of them has a yellow lanyard around their neck with the word Visitor printed on it.
âBeing slandered by an eight-year-old,â Mattie says quietly to Robbie.
âI slander you all the time, Liu,â Nate snorts.
Theyâre not quiet enough, because Sadia hears everything. âItâs not slander if itâs trueâmy momâs a lawyer.â
âOkay, legal eagle,â Jenna says, making her way through the people crowding around me. âWeâve had Russ to ourselves for lots of weeks. Why donât we let him have one more minute with his college friends and then we can start his party.â
âParty?â I repeat, swallowing.
âYou really thought she was going to let you get away with not celebrating?â Jenna says. Thereâs something in her tone. Something that tells me maybe she knows what I donât want her to know, and, weirdly, it makes me feel better, because she hasnât fired me. âFat chance of that. She got everyone here in under twenty-four hours. She goes all out for people she cares about.â
Looking over the shoulders of my friends, I spot her talking to Emilia near the stage. I donât know why sheâs hanging back, when all I want to do is wrap my arms around her. âIâll be back in one minute,â I say to the guys, immediately heading toward her.
Her face lights up as I approach, and it takes every fiber of my restraint to hug Emilia first, so it doesnât look suspicious. I let Emilia go and hold out my arms to Rory until she wraps her arms around my waist and I bury my head into her hair.
Aurora is glowing as she leans back and smiles up at me. âHappy birthday, Callaghan.â
âYouâre incredible.â
âHappy birthday, Russ,â Emilia says, slapping me on the arm, as she leaves Aurora and me alone.
I donât want to let go, but I know I have to. She knows, too, which is why she takes a step backward. âYou didnât give me any time to get you a birthday present.â She grabs a small paper gift bag from behind her. âSo it isnât very good, but please know it caused me a lot of stress and took so freaking long to do because Iâm out of practice.â
Reaching into the bag, I pull out my present: a yellow origami dog. âOh my God, is it Fish?â She leans over to peek into the bag, reaching in and pulling out two smaller yellow dogs, placing them on my palm, too. âThis is incredible.â
âI tried to make possums, but nobody could tell what they were supposed to be.â I let her hold the origami as I pull out something else from the bag. âOkay, so I canât lie, I stole this one from the old library that nobody uses and itâs older than both of us combined.â
I read from the cover. âLearn all thirty-seven presidents: for ages six to ten.â
âI know how much you love naming presidents.â She gives me a look that makes me want to say fuck the party. âThereâs one more present, itâs probably at the bottom.â
Digging in the bag, I pull out the final present. Itâs a piece of pink card the size of a hockey ticket. When I flip it over, itâs unsurprisingly nothing to do with hockey.
âYou donât have to decide what you want now,â she says softly. âIâm sure youâre overwhelmed. I know I went a little overboardâ¦â I look around at the banners, balloons, streamers that I didnât even notice before. âBut you deserve to have nice things.â
âI wish I could kiss you.â
âGive me your coupon and we can make that wish come true. I mean, weâll cause camp-wide outrage, which isnât very birthday celebration-y, but a deal is a deal.â
I wish I could go back to earlier and slap that Russ. I wouldnât have spent the day worrying about whether weâre a good idea.
Aurora Roberts will always be a good idea.
Handing her the coupon, I watch her eyes widen in surprise. âI want to take you on a date. Thatâs what my birthday wish is.â
âA date?â she says.
âYes. A real date.â
âWith me?â
âWith you.â
âEven though I gave you origami golden retrievers and an old moth-eaten book on presidents for your birthday?â
âEspecially because of those things.â
The hardest part of being on everyoneâs radar is going to be having no opportunity to sneak off tonight. She takes the coupon from my outstretched hand, her green eyes sparkling, and nods. âConsider your wish granted.â
BEING THE CENTER OF ATTENTION is exhausting, and Iâm ready for it to be over.
I pick at the frosting of my second piece of cake, soaking in the quiet now that all the campers have been taken to bed. Well, as quiet as it can be with my friends around. As soon as the cake was cut, presents were handed over, and âHappy Birthdayâ was sung, I finally got the rundown of how my birthday party came to fruition.
Before we headed to Meadow Springs yesterday, Aurora got JJâs number from Emilia, and between them they coordinated this very last-minute surprise. They set off this morning, arriving just in time to make the friendship bracelets now decorating my arms.
Henry said Honey Acres is worse than he thought it would be, and Bobby is upset Jenna is both uninterested and unable to remember him, while JJ is just happy to be reunited.
Orla agreed to the guys visiting on the condition they wear the visitor lanyards and theyâre not left unattended anywhere on site.
âShould I be expecting you to move her in?â Robbie says, sitting beside the fire with me and Nate. âThat room alters brain chemistry, clearly.â
âWhy are you acting like Lola doesnât sleep in your bed five nights a week?â Nate snaps back.
âYou try telling Lola what to do,â Robbie argues back. âSee what happens.â
Aurora has made herself scarce this evening, keeping herself busy making sure everyone is having a good time. I wish I could sit her beside me and let the guys get to know her, but itâd look suspicious, and I think if she wanted to do that, she would. A few of them have caught her on her own for individual chats, but I have no idea what theyâve said to her.
âSheâs not moving in, donât worry. We havenât labeled it, so I suppose weâre technically friends who like each other.â The words feel weird coming out of my mouth, but what else am I supposed to call her? âSheâs great, though. I really like her.â
They both start laughing at the same time. Nate smirks as he leans back in his chair. âI remember thinking Stas was my friend.â
âShe actively disliked you and then she got Stockholm syndrome,â Robbie snorts. âShe was never your friend.â
âStill got the girl, didnât I?â Nate shrugs. âYâknow, Aurora offered to pay for everyoneâs flights if it got us here. She was ready to hire a private driver. Either sheâs about to be the best friend youâve ever had, or youâre about to be the relationship Henry complains about living next to.â
Forcing away all the insecure feelings from earlier, I answer honestly. âI want both.â
The pair of them laugh, and Iâve never noticed before now how similar the two are, like an old couple who mirror each otherâs mannerisms. Robbie sips his hot chocolate and Nate does the same, and they both give me identical smug grins. âYoung love.â