: Chapter 31
Wildfire (Maple Hills 2)
THERE HAVE BEEN MANY TIMES in my life when Iâve been caught doing something that I shouldnât.
When I was seven at my grandparentsâ house when I pushed Elsa into the pool for telling me I was left behind by aliens.
When I was twelve and I was supposed to be in detention for punching the kid punching other kids, but I went to hang out at the mall because it felt like an unfair punishment. That one was double bad because I wasnât allowed to go to the mall yet, either.
When I was fifteen and got high for the first time in the pool house, a very poor choice of location, especially as Mom was home and found me immediately.
When I was seventeen and the paparazzi took pictures of me stumbling out of a nightclub I was too young to be in, totally wasted, with Connor James, the son of Dadâs work nemesis.
Basically anything I did with Connor James, I shouldnât have been doing. Yacht crashing excluded, because I still maintain that one wasnât my fault.
As bad as those times were, nothing really happened. Eyes were rolled, disparaging looks and maybe a short lecture on personal safety were given, but I knew nothing would happen and thatâs why I did it and why I continued to do it.
Jennaâs eyes widen as she fills the doorway.
âOh shit,â is all Russ manages to say as he reaches for something to cover me up. When really, he should be more concerned about the huge erection pressing against his boxers.
The door handle is still in Jennaâs hand, which makes it easier for her to immediately close it again. Thereâs so much to consider as my mind rushes between panic and confusion.
âFuck fuck fuck,â Russ chants as he scrambles for our clothes. âItâs going to be okay. Donât panic.â
âIâm not panicking,â I reassure him, pulling my shorts up my legs.
âI was talking to myself.â
His hands are shaking as he tries to put his sneakers back on and I navigate him to sit on the bed. I should be in more of a rush; so far Iâve only managed to get my shorts back on, but Jenna can stew in her anger outside if it means I get to soothe Russ.
I know he hates getting in trouble because of his dad, and this situation is the one he was trying to avoid since day one. Considering Iâm the one who was having a meltdown five minutes ago, it seems all that was required to snap me out of it is for Russ to be looking at me like the worldâs ending.
âIt isnât really bad. Weâre consenting adults, there are no kids in our care right now, and we had already had sex before we got to camp, which Jenna knows.
âRuss, listen to me. The very worst-case scenario is we leave a few weeks early. Hand in hand. Nothing happens, we donât even need to tell anyone, we can hide out anywhere in the world. Doing something wrong does not make you a fuckup. Your dad is a liar; you arenât anything he says you are.â
It feels funny being the one handing out dad advice, but itâs what makes Russ so important to me. Weâre both a little bit broken, both trying to be a bit better, and both just desperately searching for someone to want them for who they are.
âWhy is she here?â
âI honestly donât know.â Stressing over that is a problem for when Iâm fully dressed.
Jenna is crouched on the porch fussing over Fish when we finally emerge from the cabin. She doesnât say anything as she stands, brushing the dog hair from her pants. Itâs like a standoff of who will go first and Iâm about to shoot, but Jenna beats me to it.
âYour parents are here,â she says.
Russ and I look at each other, confused. He clears his throat. âWhose parents?â
Jenna folds her arms and boy, does she look pissed. âBoth of you. Your dad is here, Russ, and so is your mom, Aurora. Theyâre both waiting in reception.â
Confused doesnât even cover how Iâm feeling right now as the three of us walk in silence toward our parents. The color has drained from Russâs face, and I wish I could comfort him, but I donât feel like making things worse with Jenna.
Mom is already outside the building when we get there. I donât get a look at Russâs dad. Jenna and Russ continue walking and I feel like Iâm being pulled between them.
âRuss!â I shout, causing him to stop and turn around.
Running up to him, I wrap my arms around his torso, squeezing tight. âIf heâs horrible even for a second, walk away. Iâll be waiting for you when you get back.â
He kisses the top of my head and says nothing. He continues after Jenna and I turn to my mom.
âAre we going to talk about why youâre here unannounced?â
Mom hates the outdoors and sheâs dressed like sheâs going on a shopping trip in Saint-Tropez, not whatever she plans to do here.
âItâs visiting day. I thought we could go for a walk,â she says casually.
Iâm immediately suspicious. âYou came all the way here from Malibu unannounced because you want to go for a walk with me?â
âThatâs what I said, Aurora.â
Whatâs the worst that could happen? âOkay then.â
Our choice of walking route is limited because Mom decided to wear Louboutin pumps instead of sneakers, so I take her down to the lake where she can walk barefoot in the sand. Mom makes small talk with me for the first twenty-five minutes, and Iâm growing more tired and frustrated. My mom is not a walk-in-the-woods mom; sheâs more a letâs-go-buy-your-first-Birkin mom. Minute thirty passes and my suspicion and confusion have reached their max capacity. I stop at two deck chairs that have been left out and sit down.
âI need to know why youâre here because you pretending to like walking is stressing me out.â
âI love walking on the beach. Itâs one of my favorite things,â she says defensively.
âYeah, at home. Or maybe the Caribbean. Not dodging sticks and God knows what else.â
âYouâre always so suspicious of peopleâs intentions. You definitely get that from your father. He was always the same.â
The lightbulb practically illuminates above my head.
âYou know, donât you?â I say as she sits beside me staring out at the lake. âThatâs why youâre here. When he asked when Iâm home, he told you heâs engaged, didnât he?â
In the whirlwind that has been the past hour, Iâd forgotten why I was so upset in the first place. She threads her fingers through mine. âI thought you might be upset. I wanted to be here for you. I didnât want to leave it to Emilia.â
âYou knew what he was going to say to me?â
âNo, but I assumed there would probably be something.â Her thumb rubs against my hand gently. âYour dad is an asshole, Aurora, and itâs a well-earned title. The chances of him saying something cruel were higher than me arriving and you being on cloud nine.â
Dad has always been a thorn in the side of our relationship. I question if itâs frustrating for Mom to watch me fight for the attention of someone she dislikes so much. He isnât something we ever really talk about at length, and to her credit, she only tries to be horrible to his face. âWhy doesnât he like me, Mom? He doesnât treat me like a daughter.â
âYour father is⦠I donât know, darling. When you marry someone, you believe you know everything about them, but people change. Your dad changed. Small things at firstâhow he talked about certain topics, how he spoke to other people. Then Elsa was born and he went back to being the man I married. He was wonderful with her and she idolized him for it.â
Iâm itching to start packing my suitcase again. âMust be nice.â
âIt didnât last long and he went back to being the man who was rude to everyone, picked fights over nothing, and came home late with no reason. Our marriage was strained and I was tired of feeling like I was constantly at war.â She shuffles in her seat and I squeeze her hand to urge her to continue. Sheâs never been this candid about her relationship with Dad and Iâm desperate to hear everything. âYou know this part, but we left Elsa with your grandma and took our trip to see the northern lights, finally disconnected from the outside world, and we were happy again. A few weeks later I found out I was pregnant with you and he was so happy.â
âOh, so there was a time when he was happy I existed. Prebirth.â
âYou were like a tiny little doll when you were born. You were absolute perfection. You never cried, you slept constantly, and you just loved being held. I was obsessed with you. But Fenrir was taking up all of your dadâs time and I didnât want to travel while you were so small, so we were apart a lot. As you grew, you didnât look like any of the Roberts family and your father became even more distant.â
âDistant? Why?â
âIt was subtle at first. Heâd comment on how blond your hair was getting when Elsaâs was dark brown, your eyes started to turn green. Everyone in that family looks alike and you were the exception. You looked exactly like me.â
I feel sick and it all starts to make sense. âHe thinks Iâm not his daughter.â
âHe didnât outright say it, but for a while I was convinced that was the answer. I pushed it aside at first because I thought when you got older, youâd be able to bond and bridge that gap heâd created.â Mom brushes her cheek with the back of her hand. âI wish that had been the answer. I could have fixed that with a DNA test and a hefty round of couples counseling. But then he started to treat your sister the same way and I realized I was searching for answers that would make sense to me, something I could work with, when the reality is the problem was him the entire time.
âWe fought and fought over it. I couldnât stand that Iâd started a family with a man who could treat his children like they were an inconvenience to him. I felt like I was grieving the loss of my husband, but he hadnât died. He just wasnât the man I knew. You noticed; even when you were very little, you knew things werenât right. Elsa started acting out to get his attention, which would work, so you copied. I thought it would get better when we traveled together, but if anything, it made you both worse.â
I sit in silence, scared to say anything and interrupt all the answers Iâm finally getting.
âIt was harmless at first. âDaddy watch me do this,â and youâd wait expectantly, but the less it worked the more you did. And I couldnât even reprimand you, scare either of you into behaving, because it wasnât your fault. You were little girls who didnât know what theyâd done wrong. Who didnât understandââ Her voice cracks. âIâm so sorry, Aurora. Iâm so sorry you feel the way you do about yourself because we werenât better parents. I left him when I realized heâd never change, but it was too late. The damage was done.â
âSo the answer to my questions is something that I already know? That he isnât a good person.â
âIâve never claimed to be the perfect mother. I know we have our differences, but I love you enough for both me and Chuck.â She stands, brushing off invisible dust from her pantsuit, her pumps in her hand looking wholly out of place. âYouâre an adult, Aurora. I cannot tell you what to do and you wouldnât listen to me even if I did but, legally your father has to pay for your education and living costs until you have access to your trust. It doesnât mean you have to see him. Do with that information what you will.â
I feel like Iâve had a lifetimeâs worth of information in such a short time and Iâm exhausted.
Like Mom, Iâve been searching for a reason. Desperately looking for answers that might explain things, give me something I can cling to and fix. I donât think I can fix a serious character flaw.
I stand, too, following Momâs lead back toward the main path, helping her step back into her pumps when we reach the gravel. âAre you going to stay for a little while? Emilia will be around here somewhere.â
âI canât, darling. I need to get home for Cat. Heâll be wondering where I am.â
I forgot about the damn cat. âIs this cat real? Or is it some kind of ploy to get me to come over?â
She rolls her eyes as she reaches into her bag to pull out her cell phone and there, on her phone background, is a picture of a scruffy black cat lying in a sea of pillows onââWhy is he on my bed?â
âYou have your own place, Aurora. You canât claim every bed you sleep in forever.â
âAre you kidding me? You were asking me to move home two minutes ago!â
She huffs as she stuffs her phone back into her purse. âIâm sure if you bring some smoked salmon with you on your next visit he will consider sharing with you.â
IâVE LEFT MOM WITH EMILIA and Xander is under strict instructions that heâs not allowed to hit on her. Xander made some jokes about becoming my stepdad as soon as he realized my mom just looks like an older version of me, and Iâm taking no chances. I gave Emilia permission that if Clay even looks in Momâs direction, sheâs allowed to beat him.
I know as I approach Jennaâs office that Iâm going to hate every second of this conversation.
Honey Acres has been part of my life for longer than it hasnât been, and I know that being fired means Iâll never be welcomed back here. Really, I should have considered that before I started things with Russ. I canât lie, Iâve never truly believed that the fraternization rule was enforced, but after being given the cold shoulder earlier, Iâm not as confident.
But some risks are worth it, and given the time again, I wouldnât change it. Russ told me he wouldnât change anything in the past because he wouldnât risk not meeting me, so if getting fired from the place I love most in the world is how it goes for me, at least I get to keep the butterflies.
Rapping my knuckles against the door, I know from the Mamma Mia soundtrack blasting that Jennaâs in there. Iâve never knocked before entering Jennaâs office, so I donât know why Iâm starting today. Maybe itâs because I know not pissing her off further will help my cause. I knock again a little harder and she finally shouts for me to come in.
Her expression when she realizes itâs me practically cuts me open. I can tell sheâs not angry, sheâs disappointed.
âJenna, Iâm sorry.â
âDonât tell me youâre sorry when youâre not, Rory. You knew exactly what you were doing when you broke the rules, and youâve knowingly put me in a difficult position.â
âPlease donât fire him, Jen,â I say desperately, sitting on the other side of the desk. âHe doesnât deserve to lose his job because I convinced him to break the rules.â
âYouâre both adults and youâre both responsible for your actions.â Shit. âWhen did it start?â
I want to lie. Like maybe if I tell her it was today because I was sad itâll make it easier for her to process and she wonât be as harsh. But Jenna means a lot to me and I donât want to betray her even more than I have. âWhen we had the storm.â
She shakes her head as she leans against her hands. âYou fucking horny so-called adults are driving me up the wall. I canât wait for you all to go back to college and be someone elseâs problem. Iâm so annoyed with you, Aurora.â
âIâm so sorry, Jenna. I will leave with no drama, I swear. But please donât fire Russ. He will be crushed if he loses this job. He doesnât deserve it, I promise.â
âCan you stop with the pity party, please? Youâre giving me a headache and my head already hurts after seeing a half-naked man crawling all over you today and then having to look your mother in the eyes.â
âIâm soââ
âStop apologizing and go do your job, please. No, bring me a lemonade. Then go do your job.â My eyebrows raise in surprise. She huffs, folding her arms across her chest and leaning back in her chair. âWhat? You think youâre special? If we had to fire every member of staff who fooled around together, weâd have no staff.â
âBut I thoughtâ¦â
âI saw him the night of the storm, Aurora. I knew youâd be scared, so I went back to your cabin. I watched him hover around the steps to your cabin in the rain, presumably arguing with himself, until he finally knocked. Thatâs when I knew.â
âKnew what?â
âI knew he cared about you.â She sighs. âAnd I realized you werenât just doing it to give your middle finger to the rules.â
âI care about him, too.â
âWeâre your family, Rory. You will always have a home here, even if you do things that make me want to strangle you. Iâm not going to report it like Iâm supposed to, but that doesnât give you a free pass to do what you want until you leave, all right? Keep sneaking around until you are out of my hair. I donât wanna hear a peep out of either of you.â
Family. âI love you, Jen.â
âAnd I love you. People donât always let you get away with things because they donât care. I let you get away with things because you deserve to be happy. You deserve to feel and believe you are wanted, and enjoy being loved, because so many people love you, Ror.â
âI had a really great heart-to-heart with my mom today. A lot of things make sense now, especially about my dad.â
She stands and walks over to me, wrapping her arms around me. âDad is a word. It doesnât mean anything unless there is action and intention behind it. Heâs really just an asshole who you happen to share DNA with. Thatâs it. We donât need him. You donât do fine without him, you do better.â
Jenna kisses the top of my head before moving back to sit at her desk. âOkay, heart-to-heart is over. Scram. And so you know, youâre mucking out the horses for the rest of the week. Take lover boy. Youâre both pains in my ass.â
This is not at all how I would have predicted this going, and Iâm walking out of here feeling totally confused, but thankfully Iâm not leaving and neither is Russ. If I have to deal with some horse crap but Jenna isnât truly mad at me, Iâll definitely cope. Pulling the office door open, I have one last question before I head out and prepare for the end of visiting day. âWait, who else has been hooking up?â
She runs her fingers across her lips, zipping them shut. âYouâve lost your gossip privileges. Should have kept your panties on.â
As much as sheâs right, Iâm glad I didnât.