: Chapter 30
Wildfire (Maple Hills 2)
WHATâS THE WORD FOR WHEN you find yourself exactly where youâre supposed to be?
I feel at peace with myself and my life for the first time, and thereâs nothing that can derail that. Today is finally visiting day. A lot of families leave camp for the day and only come back for the evening barbecue and games; some families donât visit at all.
I hated visiting day when I was a camper. Some years my parents didnât come because Elsa wanted to visit our grandparents, so theyâd use the child-free opportunity to take a vacation and try and save their unsavable marriage. Other years only Mom came. The worst year was when Mom, Dad, and Elsa came and they made me so miserable Jenna gave me an extra bowl of ice cream when they all left.
All our kids are expected to be taken off-site today, meaning weâve all got the easiest day ahead. Emilia forgot about the camera Poppy bought her to document the summer and has therefore documented nothing, so today is our do-over day.
âDo you think we need outfit changes as well?â Emilia asks as I throw different hair accessories into a purse with my cell phone, headphones, and a paperback about a princess and her hot bodyguard.
âI love you and I love Pops, but I am not stripping behind a tree for either of you. Itâs a uniform and it has a bear on it; why would we ever want to wear anything else?â
Iâm not saying Iâm an expert at candid shots, but I am. We set up camp at a picnic bench not far from our cabin and I give Emilia my best work, changing my hairstyle so the photos look like different days. While Iâm pretending to laugh at Xander, whose back thankfully is to the camera, we realize this isnât going to be easy.
The dogs are more photogenic than the guys, which is no exaggeration.
âRuss, stop grimacing,â Emilia yells at him. She stomps over, showing me the camera, and he honestly looks like heâs sitting on a waspsâ nest.
âYouâre too pretty to be this bad at being photographed,â I say, flicking through the pictures. I hand the camera back to Emilia and ask her to go back to where she was so I can try something.
âAnd what about me?â Xander asks, picking Salmon up to cuddle.
âPut the dog down!â we all say at the same time, which is met with a grunt and an eye roll.
âYouâre pretty, Xan,â Russ says, flinching as I try to force his face into a more relaxed position with my hands. âWhat are you doing?â
âIâm relaxing you.â
âThis is not relaxing, Aurora.â
Looking around, I check that there isnât anyone hanging around near us before leaning in and kissing Russ. I wasnât expecting him to respond so enthusiastically, but his hand grabs the back of my neck, keeping me in place.
Xander loudly heaves, which is when Russ lets me go. âItâs kinda selfish for you guys to do that when I havenât had sex for two months. Just saying.â
I wish I could bottle the way I feel after Russ kisses me. I reluctantly drag my eyes from Russ to scowl at our friend. âYou saw Clay naked, surely that counts for something?â
âYou two are disgusting,â Emilia says as she approaches us, handing over her camera again. âI miss my girlfriend.â
I lean over so Russ can see them as well, starting with his grimace ones, clicking all the way through our kiss to the ones from a few seconds ago. I never understood the phrase âMy heart skips a beatâ until right now, when I see how Russ looks at me when he thinks Iâm not watching.
Russ kisses my shoulder and goose bumps travel down my arm. âYouâre so beautiful,â he whispers.
This is what being wanted and valued feels like.
This is the feeling I want forever.
Emilia is taking pictures of the guys throwing a football, something they both protested, but much to the delight of the dogs. Emilia snapped that there was no way for her to combine basketball and hockey into a sport she could photograph and to get over it.
Iâm flicking through my book when my cell phone starts vibrating in my purse. I donât know where the noise is coming from at first; I brought it out as a photo prop and Iâve kind of forgotten it exists after so many weeks hardly touching it.
Reaching into my purse to retrieve it, I almost drop it on the ground when I see the Man Who Pays the Rent staring back at me.
âHello, Dadâ I say, fully anticipating he may have butt-dialed me.
âIâve been trying to reach you for more than twenty-four hours.â
Thereâs that Roberts charm I love so much. âSorry, Dad. Iâm at camp, the service here is terrible.â
He huffs, like somehow my inability to control whatever makes cell service a thing is inconveniencing him. âI need to share some news with you. I proposed to Norah over the weekend and she said yes.â
âThatâsâ¦â not a surprise, âincredible, Dad. Congratulations to you both.â
Maybe thatâs why heâs so frustrated about not being able to reach me. He was worried Iâd find out from someone else. Dad has had tons of girlfriends over the years, but as soon as he started letting Norah post about him online, I knew it wouldnât be long until there was a wedding.
Iâm not Norahâs biggest fan out of principle. But if heâs going to marry someone, Iâm at least glad heâs marrying someone closer to his own age and not dating the women closer to my and Elsaâs ages, like he was doing for a while.
Mom called it his midlife crisis.
âYou being at camp has made it difficult to organize a bridesmaid dress. Your mother told me youâre home on the fifteenth, correct?â
I donât know which thing to follow first. The fact Iâm wanted as a bridesmaid or the fact my mom and dad have talked. Norah has her own kids, so I wouldnât have expected to be included in the wedding party, and I canât imagine Dad advocating for my involvement. âYeah, Dad, the fifteenth.â
âIâll have Brenda change your flight home; email her the details along with your current measurements. Youâll need to fly straight to Palm Springs for this to work out.â
Palm Springs? âFor what to work out?â
I hear him sigh. âThe wedding, Aurora. Are you listening properly? We would like a short honeymoon before summer break ends and I have to go to Europe for the Dutch Grand Prix.â
My words catch in my throat. âYouâre getting married so soon?â
âYes, Aurora. And I need you in Palm Springs. Do you understand?â
His snippy tone should hurt me more than it does, but my brain is scrambling as I realize heâs waiting for me to be free instead of just doing it without me. Jesus Christ, the bar really is on the floor. âI understand, Dad. Iâm excited to see what dress Norah picks for me. Thanks, um, thank you for letting me be a part of it.â
âOf course youâre a part of it, Aurora. Youâre my daughter.â Iâm stunned to silence. Itâs such a basic statement from a parent. Itâs not even something particularly kind, but from my dad itâs major. Weirdly, I feel like my recent happiness caused this. Put good energy into the universe and get it back. Silly, but comforting all the same.
I want to tell him how much that small statement means to me. How itâs everything Iâve ever needed and how I desperately want to have a good relationship with him, but I donât get a chance to, because he starts talking again. âAnd itâd look strange in the photos if youâre not there. Iâm not having Norahâs moment stolen by the mediaâs obsession with giving you and your sister attention.â
My heart sinks. âSo you only want me there for the photographs?â
âIs there something wrong with you today? What arenât you understanding?â he snaps impatiently. âNorah has arranged a magazine exclusive. Yes, you need to be there for the photographs. Iâm not having our day overshadowed by rumors of a family divide because of you.â
I feel numb. âOkay. Do I get a plus-one?â
âDo you need a plus-one? Who is it? Emily?â
âEmilia,â I correct him. âBut no, not her. I met someone. Heâs calââ
âMet someone where, exactly?â
I donât know why my hands are sweating, but they are. âAt camp. Heâs calââ
âDonât be ridiculous, Aurora. Iâm not letting you bring a stranger to a private family occasion.â He interrupts me again and I can feel my heart pounding as my frustration grows. âYou wonât even remember who he is after you stop playing make-believe at that farm. Be realistic for once, for Christâs sake. Itâs my wedding, not a childrenâs birthday party.â
My throat is completely dry, but I force the words out anyway. âHeâs important to me, Dad. Iâd like to bring him. We go to the same college, it is realistic, we like each other.â
He sighs, and I feel it all the way in my bones. Itâs like acid. âIâm sure your fling is very important and special, but I said no. Can I trust you to be there alone, Aurora? Yes or no?â
Fling. âYes.â
âGood. Iâll see you in a few weeks. Bye.â
The call disconnects before I can say bye back and I sit in the same spot frozen, trying to process how my day was bulldozed by a three-minute phone call.
I donât know what I thought would happen when I answered his call. I could have stopped talking at âyouâre my daughterâ and been blissfully unaware. Iâd have spent the rest of the day floating around feeling untouchable. But I went too far, asked too much.
If I wasnât so desperate for something Iâm clearly never going to get, or if I grew up and stopped being pathetic about the fact he doesnât care, maybe I wouldnât feel like Iâm being run over when I talk to him.
I need to get away from here, and thatâs the thing I repeat over and over as I somehow get myself from the picnic table to my cabin. Sitting on my bed, I lean against the wall while I replay the conversation.
I think about what I said and how he responded, then what I could have said instead and how he might have responded to that. I keep going and going and going, until thereâs an endless stream of dialogue spinning around my head and I canât do anything to get the outcome I want.
The outcome where he changes and I feel like he wants me in his life for more than just media purposes.
My hands are shaking as I pull my suitcase from the wardrobe and open it on my bed. I love Honey Acres, but pretending itâs my home when itâs not is silly. Dadâs right, itâs all make-believe. Theyâre just people who were paid to look after me and probably took pity on me.
I donât know why I brought so many things with me, knowing Iâd hardly wear any of them. Itâs just making it harder to get out of here quickly. I donât know why I believed Iâd last the summer. My shorts wonât fold. Jenna knew deep down I wouldnât last. No matter what angle I twist and turn my clothes in, they look messy and uneven in my suitcase. I wonder if Emilia thought Iâd fail, too. Russ is great at folding my clothes.
I could go to Bora Bora and turn off my cell phone.
I donât even need a cell phone. Fuck, I might just throw it into the trash.
Why wonât these shorts fucking fold properly?
I need to tell someone to make sure Freya remembers to put on her bug spray and that Michael doesnât eat anything with sugar after 6 p.m. Iâll miss the talent show, but Emilia can make it work without me. Everyone will be fine. Opening the drawer in my bedside table to empty it, I spot the origami dove Russ made for me next to my collection of friendship bracelets from the kids.
I sink to the floor beside my bed as my chest constricts, and years of hurt that Iâve buried beneath reckless actions and self-deprecating jokes finally race to the surface as a sob. Itâs like the dam breaks and I just let the tears fall because thereâs nothing else to do and no one else who can fix it.
Iâm not sure how long Iâm sitting here before I hear his footsteps. âRor?â
The cabin door opens and I can only imagine how chaotic it looks in here. Suits me, though, I suppose. Russ sinks to the floor in front of me, immediately reaching for my face to wipe away the tears. âGoing somewhere, Roberts?â he asks softly.
âI have to go. I need to leave.â
âOkay, let me pack my bag, too. Iâll come with you.â
My breathing is uneven, and my eyes begin to sting. âYou canât. You have to stay here. You need this job. And you need to make sure they pass the cabin inspection and check Sadiaâs bunk for spiders. Xander doesnât do it properly. I havenât changed; Iâll just disappoint you, Russ. I donât want to disappoint you.â
He crosses his legs and picks me up, nestling me in his lap. Everything about feeling him touching me makes me feel better. After kissing each of my eyelids, then each of my cheeks, he kisses both of my ears and my breathing begins to fall into a rhythm with his.
âYou could never disappoint me, Aurora, and you donât need to be anybody but yourself. I know youâre hurting and I want to make it better, but if you want me to stay and check for spiders, you need to stay, too, because if you go, I go. We all need you and we all want you here.â
âMy dad is getting married,â I whisper, almost choking on the words. âAnd he only wants me there for the magazine exclusive, so we donât look like weâre a family at war.â
âFuck your dad.â His hands cup my face as he leans back to look right at me. âYou donât have to let him keep burning you, sweetheart.â
My bottom lip wobbles. âI just want to be wanted.â
âYou are. Letâs both stay. Let me show you how wanted you are.â
âI like who I am when Iâm with you, but what if you leave, too? Who am I going to be then?â
âDo you trust me?â he asks, still cupping my face gently.
Even with the tears still running down my face, I nod. I do trust him. Iâm also scared.
âIâm not going anywhere, but you donât need me, Aurora. Youâre strong and sweet and funny. Youâre smart and affectionate and youâre all those things without me. You donât need anyone but yourself, but you can have me anyway. I worry Iâm going to fuck this up, too, but we have to trust ourselves as much as we trust each other.â
âI canât fold my shorts like you can.â
âExactly,â he says, resting his forehead against mine. âSo donât go. Donât run away from the place that makes you feel at home. From the family you chose.â
Russâs lips meet mine, soft and gentle, like I might break if heâs too rough with me. His fingers dance up my spine, and bit by bit, the tension eases out of my body. I wrap my arms around his neck, sinking into him, rolling my hips against where weâre joined.
âPlease show me how much you want me,â I whisper. âI need to replace all the bad feelings. You make me feel good.â
If I wasnât so distracted by my crumbling life, Iâd have more time to be impressed by how easily Russ stands from the floor with me around him. My suitcase crashes against the floor as he knocks it off the bed, lowering me carefully onto the mattress, climbing on top of me.
The weight of his body on mine does more to kill the anxiety rolling through me like waves than anything else. He tugs off his T-shirt and waits while I run my hands down his chest, feeling his heartbeat beneath my palms. Mine comes off next, followed by my shorts and his. There are layers of fabric between us, but the pressure of him between my legs makes goose bumps spread down my body.
He kisses my forehead. âI want everything about you, Aurora.â My nose is next. âI want your smiles.â Then my jaw. âYour laughs.â My collarbone. âI want the way you ramble when youâre nervous.â The top of my breast. âI want your big reactions and your little ones.â The center of my stomach. âI want to watch you get frustrated at origami but carry on anyway because it makes you so happy.â My navel. âI want to protect you from possums and sharks and, sometimes, when you need it, yourself.â Finally, my hip bone. âAnd I want to want you because youâre worth it, sweetheart. And you make me feel good, too.â
He sits up when I do, letting me smash my mouth into his, pouring as much into it as I can. His hands grip my neck, keeping me in place.
And thatâs when Jenna shouts my name from outside of my cabin.
And the door begins to open before I can shout wait.