: Chapter 6
Wildfire (Maple Hills 2)
NOTHING ON THIS EARTH INSPIRES the same pure, unadulterated despair as having to spend any prolonged length of time with my parents in the same location.
It sounds dramatic, but honestly, Chuck and Sarah Roberts are the poster couple for âsometimes divorce is a blessing.â Thereâs just something about them being within six feet of each other that turns them both into monsters.
With that in mind, I should probably count myself lucky that Dad hasnât shown up to the good-bye breakfast he promised heâd be at before I head to Honey Acres sleepaway camp to work for the summer with Emilia.
The most annoying part isnât being consistently let down by a man who is supposed to be one of the stable pillars in my life; itâs the effect his absent-parent bullshit has on Mom, who, if anything, I could cope with being a little more absent.
âWhy donât you try him again?â She watches me over her orange juice with a sad pout. âHave you tried his assistant? Or Elsa? Your sister can always seem to reach him.â
âHeâs not going to answer; itâs fine.â It is fine, because you canât be disappointed by someone you have zero faith in. âOur plans clearly werenât his important ones. What were you saying?â
Reaching for my glass, I gulp down my water and free the metaphorical brick lodged in my throat. The one that gets slightly bigger every single time I say the words itâs and fine in the same sentence.
âI was about to ask if you thought any more about moving home when you get back.â Give me strength. âDonât look at me like that, Aurora. I literally made you.â
Youâd think after twenty years Iâd be used to the incessant probing and the not very discreet attempts to remind me that sheâs the reason I exist, and yetâhere we are. âI, uh, Mom, you know weâve signed the lease for next year already. Dad already paid the full year upfrontâ¦â Whatâs a polite way to say, âHell will freeze over before I voluntarily live with you againâ? âYou canât expect me to commute from Malibu every day when I have a perfectly nice home right next to college⦠Iâd spend half my day sitting in traffic.â
âThere are children in other cultures who live with their parents forever,â she says in a hushed tone. âYour sister is in London. You take three days to return my calls. Donât act like Iâm the unreasonable one for wanting to see my daughters regularly. Itâs not even far.â
God forbid Sarah Roberts ever be accused of being the unreasonable one.
âI think my parentsâ worst nightmare would be me moving home,â Emilia interjects, forcing a chuckle to lighten the increasing tension.
Emilia Bennett is the perfect roommate, best friend, and occasional human guilt shield. Two years studying public relations and six years playing emotional babysitter to my mom and her turbulent moods has turned her into my own personal crisis manager.
âIâm sure they would love it if you moved home, Emilia,â Mom sighs dramatically. âIâm sure their house feels huge and lonely without you.â
The only reason Momâs house feels huge and lonely is because she sold my childhood home and used the divorce settlement to buy a huge âfuck youâ house on the beach.
Her eyes land on me and itâs a look that I recognize: expectancy.
She expects me to want to be home as much as she wants me to be home, and she canât understand why Iâd rather work all summer than spend it with her. It was never a problem when I was the one sent to camp; the problem started when she realized I was much happier there than with her.
We traveled around a lot when I was a kid, moving from country to country depending on where Fenrir, the Formula 1 team my dad owns, was racing that month. Following the team around the world was always Dadâs top priority, never stability for his daughters and wife.
Elsa and I have always joked that Fenrir is the only thing heâs ever helped create that he actually loves.
I love my sister, but even with the same complex web of mommy and daddy issues, our six-year age difference was too big to overcome for two kids looking for connection. I was acting out worse than ever, and thatâs why my parents started sending me to camp every year when I was seven.
It was everything I didnât know I needed. I had routine, I was able to spend time with kids my age, and I could begin to build the foundations of who I was without constantly being surrounded by adults and a moody older sister.
Honey Acres was the first place that ever felt like home. Even when my parents eventually split up and Mom moved us back to America full time and enrolled me in school, I still insisted on going to Honey Acres every summer. I loved how happy the staff was to see me every year, and itâs my first real memory of feeling wanted.
I want to get those feelings back, which Iâm hoping to do by rebuilding the foundations Iâve broken. I love college and the experiences Iâve had there in the past two years, but I feel lost. I make choices I donât understand in the moments where my feelings get too big, and because thereâs nobody there to tell me to stop, the little voice in my head tells me, âFuck it.â Iâm becoming someone I donât recognize and I need a factory reset. I want to feel at home again. I want to feel at peace.
Emiliaâs foot making contact with my shin drags me from my train of thought, and even after I apparently zoned out, Mom still has that look on her face.
If I wish hard enough, do you think I can summon my dad for a distraction?
Unsurprisingly, my father doesnât materialize, but thankfully the server arrives with our breakfast and interrupts the growing tension slowly building beneath the surface of Momâs sadness. It feels like a cruel twist of fate to have one parent who doesnât give a shit and one parent who cares far too much.
I canât remember a time when she wasnât like this, which means I canât decide if this is who she is as a person, or if this is the result of her spending her life feeling like she has to love me twice as much.
I say love and not parent because sheâs never parented me. For every inch my dad has pushed me away and favored his job, sheâs tried to pull me closer twice as much. For every time heâs let me down, sheâs made allowances because itâs easier to blame him for my behavior than it is to risk driving me away. Sheâs never cared about anything Iâve done unless it directly affected her.
When I was younger, I always strived to be the best, to know the most, like somehow the validation of being the perfect daughter would give me the type of attention from my parents I craved so desperately, but it never came.
So I stopped striving for the best. I achieved validation and attention through other means and became my own person, but somewhere along the way Iâve found myself in this limbo of happily doing whatever I want because people donât care, and then being hurt that I can do whatever I want because people donât care.
I worked my ass off to get into Maple Hills because I wanted to prove to my teachers I was more than the girl who cut class and didnât pay attention. Instead of my achievement, all Mom saw was my impending departure. When I got my acceptance letter she acted like I was going to war, not a college in our state, and she didnât talk to me for three days. It didnât matter that Iâd stayed close by, unlike my sister who moved to our dadâs place in London when she graduated high school.
The balance between being the perfect daughter and my own person is like walking a tightrope.
Except thereâs a hurricane.
And the rope is on fire.
Iâve fallen down more times than I can count and Iâm really fucking exhausted.
âYou can visit us at camp if you want to, Mom.â I push a strawberry around my plate, waiting for her response, because with a mother like mine, whose self-worth is so heavily intertwined with the title of mother that it becomes exhausting, every word is a chess move. âVisiting day is in July. I can text you the date.â
âYou clearly donât want me to visit, Aurora.â
Iâve never been very good at chess. âMomââ
âMs. Roberts, did I tell you about the camera Poppy bought me to take pictures at camp?â Emilia interrupts, reaching for her purse. âAs you know, I didnât get to go to sleepaway camp when I was younger, and I was so happy when Aurora finally gave in to me begging her to be a camp counselor with me. She says you picked the best camp, so Iâm really excited.â
I begged Emilia to be a counselor with me, not the other way around, but my mom doesnât need to know that. Sheâll be too distracted by the praise.
Like mother, like daughter.
âAurora has always had the best. Not that youâve ever appreciated it, have you, darling? Youâd have been happy rolling around a pig farm when you were younger. You just wanted to play somewhere there werenât any tires.â
Emilia grabs the camera from her purse and hands it to my mother. Momâs face lights up as she clicks through the pictures, murmuring about what a beautiful couple Poppy and Emilia are and how great Emilia looks wearing blue.
âAnd where were you when the girls were hiking?â
I was sitting on a basketball playerâs face. âStudying.â
âYou were studying? After your finals?â
âYeah.â Shit. âI was studying ropes and stuff for camp.â I was tied to a bed. âPlus theyâre a couple, Mom. They donât want me third-wheeling on their date.â
âThatâs true. Will you not miss her, Emilia? Ten weeks is such a long time.â Sheâs talking to Emilia, but I can feel her eyes on me, waiting for me to react to her subtle dig. âTrust me, it feels like forever.â
âIâll miss Poppy, but itâs fine, weâll both be super busy. Sheâs in Europe with her mom until school restarts.â
Emilia knows what she accidentally did before I even have time to flinch. Her big brown eyes meet mine and she gives me a look that says, âIâll fire myself, donât worry.â
Crisis manager, my ass.
Momâs lips pull into a tight line as she focuses on neatly folding the napkin from her lap and placing it on the table. âPoppy must really love her mother to want to spend the whole summer with her, isnât that nice. Excuse me, girls, Iâm going to use the restroom.â
Itâs amazing how one woman can suck all the oxygen from the room with one sentence.
âOw,â Emilia cries, placing her hand on her forehead over the spot I flicked as soon as the door to the restroom closed behind Mom. âI deserved that. It just came out!â
âYou could have said anything.â
âIâm sorry! God, I wish your dad was here. Heâs better at being in the firing line than me. Maybe I need to change majors; Iâm terrible at this.â
âYou really are.â
âI wonder if Elsaâs friends were ever put through the Emotion Olympics with your mother,â she muses, mopping up the last of her syrup with a piece of French toast.
âLike Elsa would ever agree to breakfast. Or have real friends.â
âThatâs true. When do you think we can politely say peace and leave?â
I canât help but snort. âShe might keep us here until we miss our flight.â
âAre you good? Sheâs been even more intense than normal this morning.â
âSheâs just spiraling because Dadâs girlfriend and Elsa are competing to see who can spend the most time in the tabloids and Iâm leaving. Itâs fine.â
âYour dadâs girlfriend the florist?â
âNo, he broke up with her, remember? Iâm talking about Norah. The ex-weather woman. Or was she a Real Housewife of somewhere?â I shake my head as I mentally try to recap my fatherâs long dating history. âI canât remember. Anyway, whatever she did she loves a photo op.â
I hear Momâs heels hitting the tiles, which gives me enough time to force a smile back onto my face. Her hand gently brushes over my hair as she passes and she twirls the end around her fingers. She always says it looks like hers when she was twenty and how happy she is that Iâm all her. Same light blond hair and green eyes, same freckles that appear after too long in the sun, same everything. Unlike my sister, who is a carbon copy of my dad, with me thereâs not a Chuck Roberts gene in sight.
Taking a seat across from me again, she sighs. âIâm going to miss you girls. Should I get the check? Iâm sure you want to get to the airport with plenty of time.â
âThatâd be good. Thanks, Mom.â
Itâs funny how the moment Mom acts reasonable I start to feel bad about leaving when she so clearly would love me to stay. There is nobody on this planet who can get under my skin like my mother, which only fuels my complaining about her, and yet the moment she shows a shred of humanity I crumble. The guilt begins to creep into my system like venom burning its way through my blood, but the universe delivers me the antidote in the form of my cell phone buzzing in my pocket, quickly reminding me why I so desperately need to get away from this place and everyone in it.
I discreetly tilt my phone screen toward Emilia while Mom hands her credit card to the server, thankfully keeping her distracted. I donât need to be looking at my best friend to know sheâs rolling her eyes hard. Itâs not a surprise to me after I saw him moving Isobel out of her dorm on Norahâs story last night. Itâs nice Norahâs daughter gets the caring dad treatment; perhaps one day Isobel can let me know what itâs like.
The easiest thing for me to do is convince myself itâs just who he is as a person. That it isnât anything to do with me. The disinterest, the broken promises, the cold and aloof parenting method is because he wasnât ever cut out to be a great dad, and thatâs not my fault. But then I see him with someone elseâs kid and Iâm back to thinking maybe it is me.
Iâd be upset if it wasnât so fucking predictable.
Iâm tired more than anything. Tired of feeling like I donât fit into my own family. Tired of questioning my every choice. Tired of wanting to do better but feeling like I canât manage it.
Emilia keeps Mom chatting the whole drive back to the house, which gives me the opportunity to stew in my anger and feelings that are most definitely not disappointment, rejection, and hurt. Iâd have to care to feel rejected, and I donât care anymore.
Itâs clear the universe has no intention of giving me a fucking break as we idle in traffic in front of an ice rink. Russ has been on my mind since I woke up this morning, which is not a problem Iâm used to having after a one-night stand. He wasnât what Iâm used to, in a good way, and I canât get him out of my head. Iâm trying not to feel bad that things ended without so much as a good-bye, but itâs hard to forget about him when his fingerprints are still decorating my hips from where he held me.
Pulling into the driveway beside my car, the impending good-bye hangs awkwardly in the air as we all climb out. The guilt floods me again, because for all of Momâs faults, sheâd never bail on me for someone elseâs kid.
Sheâd never not call. Iâve never had to beg, cry, or fight for her to love me.
The hug I pull her into catches her off guard at first, but she wraps her arms around me tightly and nuzzles my hair, whispering so only I can hear. âDonât forget to call.â
âI wonât.â
Emilia waits until Mom is a dot in the car mirror before daring to speak. âYou good?â
âIâm fine. I just need plane snacks and to manifest both Fenrir cars spontaneously breaking down midrace.â