: Chapter 8
Wildfire (Maple Hills 2)
âOH SHIT.â
I donât mean to say it out loud. I was looking at the puppy. Why didnât I just keep looking at the puppy?
Russ doesnât say anything as we stare at each other. The easy, friendly smile from last night gone, replaced with something cooler, more guarded. Iâm scrambling for something to say, something that says, âHey, I know weâve seen each other naked and we thought we wouldnât see each other again, but now weâre in the same group, so letâs not think about it again? Cool? Cool.â
I have thought about it, though, even when I didnât want to. My mouth starts to open, to say what, I donât know, but slams shut before I have the opportunity to embarrass myself when he turns to face the rest of our group without uttering a word.
The silence stings.
And the irony isnât lost on me, since I have ignored several one-night stands while passing by them on campus, but Iâm not sure Iâd truly be my fatherâs daughter if my biggest talent wasnât hypocrisy.
Thereâs nothing nasty about Russâs reaction; Iâm not sure thereâs anything nasty about the guy who whispered how beautiful I am into the dark or folded the clothes he peeled off me into a tidy pile. Iâm just surprised, I suppose, since he was so sweet last night.
I let the uncomfortable feelings linger, unwilling to push them away or attempt to soothe my growing unease. This is what you get for seeking comfort from strangers, Aurora.
Lesson learned.
âHi, everyone. My name is Jenna, or as Iâm more commonly known, Fishâs mom. Iâm the Brown Bears senior this summer, which means, as well as my responsibilities as one of the camp directors, I oversee your plans, make sure everyone is happy and healthy, and help you navigate any tricky stuff that might come up with your campers.â
Taking a spot beside me, Emilia links her pinky with mine, her signal of solidarity and what-the-fuck rolled into one because of the brooding hockey player standing to our right. Iâm trying to concentrate on Jennaâs introduction, but Russ keeps drawing my focus because he wonât even look in my direction.
âIâm going to give you all a tour of the main grounds. I recommend you fill your water bottles before we head out. When weâre done, weâll have dinner together, then the rest of the evening is yours to enjoy before the hard work starts tomorrow.â
Everyone heads to the water machines in the corner of the main hall. When theyâre all gone, Jennaâs professional smile slips into her real one and she lunges at me, pulling me into an oxygen-stealing hug. âIâve missed you so much!â
âCanât breathe, Jen.â
She releases me, taking my face in her hands instead. âI want to cry. I feel like my baby has come home; youâre so grown up now.â
My words catch in my throat and the overwhelming urge to sob floods me. Jenna was my counselor when I was a camper, and as I aged and moved into different camper groups, so did she. She swore it was a coincidence, but I liked to tell myself it was because she wanted to hang out with me, and as a kid who just wanted to be wanted, it was bliss.
I felt like I could breathe again when we drove down the dirt road earlier, like I was finally where Iâm supposed to be.
Jenna was eighteen when we first met, but unlike my actual big sister, Jenna was the one Iâd always needed. She was the tooth fairy when I lost my first tooth here, my savior when I got my first period, and my shoulder to cry on when I had my first kiss with Todd Anson and a day later he was kissing Polly Becker by the volleyball court.
âI spoke to you two days ago and it hasnât been that long since we had a sleepover,â I laugh, freeing myself from her grip and taking the spot beside her. âWhen did you become so needy?â
âYes, but itâs been so long since you were here. Too long, in fact.â I love her being needy, she knows I love it, but she plays along all the same. âSorry, itâs the puppies. Theyâre making me maternal. Now Iâm going to have to look at tall, muscular guys carrying them around all summer.â She sighs as she nods toward where Russ and the others are playing with the trio of golden retrievers. âIt looks like Fish has picked her victim for the summer. She has good taste.â
If Russ can feel our eyes on him, he doesnât look up. I shouldnât be staring at him, but he looks as good as, if not better than, he did last night. I turn so my back is to him. âAbout himâ¦â
Jennaâs eyes narrow like sheâs trying to see into my brain, and she might have achieved it because her face sinks into disgust. âYouâve been here two hours! Aurora, please tell me you havenât managed to break cardinal rule number one already?â
âWhat? No! Of course not. What do you take me for?â
âThank goodness. I canât be your boss if youâre going to break the rules.â
âI havenât!â
She mutters something that sounds a lot like âphewâ and puts her hands on her hips. âGood.â
âIt was last night.â
âRory!â Jenna exclaims, dragging a hand down her face. âDo not make me regret accepting your application by messing around all summer. You promised me youâd work hard. You strutting around here like you owned the place was cute when you were a sassy nine-year-old, but if youâre going to be in charge of campers, I need to know your head is in the game, not in some basketball? Football? playerâs bed.â
âHe actually plays hockeyâ¦â
âIâm glad youâre diversifying your roster, but I really mean it, Ror. You promised me an entire summer. No throwing in the towel because youâre bored of camp life. I need you to show up for the kids, not show up for some random guy.â
âHave some faith in me, Jen. Jesus. I didnât know he was going to be here! Funnily enough, he didnât ask me about my summer plans when he was pounding me into his bed,â I say, folding my arms across my chest.
âFirst, I never want to hear about your sex life in that much detail again,â she groans, scrunching her face in repulsion. âAnd second, I do have faith in you, Rory. Iâm your biggest supporter, but I also know you. Letâs not make both of our lives harder, please. Focus all your energy into the kids.â
âI know, Jenna,â I drawl. âLike I said, didnât know he was going to be here.â
She looks around me quickly, then back at my face. âWhen you woke up this morning, did neither of you say, âGot to go, have to go to Honey Acresâ? or, âThanks for the sex, but gotta get to campâ?â
âNo, of course not. I left last night while he hid from me in the bathroom, and when he saw me a couple of minutes ago, he pretended he didnât know me. Like real adults.â
âOh, to be in college again.â
I move to stand beside her, looking at my group mates chatting around the water machine. There are two guys with Russ, both good looking, and if Iâm hearing correctly, theyâre talking about basketball, something that under normal circumstances would pique my interest. âBesides, Iâm not even interested in Russ, the other two guys are cuter.â Lie. âYou donât need to worry.â Big, fat lie.
âNo funny business with any of them⦠No, donât give me that look, Aurora. I mean it. You donât get a free pass because I love you and you think the rules donât apply to you. You told me you want to find yourself this summer.â
âBecause I do.â
Jenna might be five inches shorter than me, but even at five foot two, she still manages to move me a couple of inches to the left when she bashes her shoulder into me. âWell, if you have sex with someone on campgrounds, the only place youâre going to find yourself is buried in the woods when I murder you.â
âYouâre not going to murder me. Iâm not interested in him and heâs clearly not interested in me.â I retake my place and wrap my arms around her, resting my head on hers, something I started doing when I overtook her in height, which I know annoys her. âTell me you love me again.â
She huffs, a sound Iâve missed during our time apart. Jenna becoming exasperated by me doesnât quite have the same effect on a video call. âThis feels like a HR complaint waiting to happen.â
âTell me,â I tease, dragging out the me until she attempts to elbow me, her short black bob tickling my face in the struggle. âPlease, please, please.â
âI love you, Aurora Roberts. Welcome home. Now get off me, I have a tour to conduct.â
âMY FEET FEEL LIKE THEYâRE going to fall off.â
I shoot Emilia a disbelieving look. âYouâre a ballerina. Your feet have been through worse.â
âBeing a ballerina has not stopped my sandals from shredding my feet because I was wearing the wrong shoes on a freaking hike.â
âTypical city girl,â I tease. âShould have read more small-town romances to prepare yourself for the country.â
The short-and-sweet, sandal-appropriate camp tour Jenna was planning to give was hijacked by Cooper, the senior in charge of the Hedgehog counselors, who I suspect has a soft spot for her and asked to combine tours. Thatâs sweet and all, but thanks to Cooper and his enthusiasm, our tour took two hours longer than everyone elseâs and I feel like Iâve seen every blade of grass at Honey Acres.
The long walk gave us the chance to talk to the other counselors, except Russ, who stayed up front, talking to Xander, the same guy he was with earlier.
âYes, thatâs where I went wrong. Not enough small-town romances.â She wiggles her toes in the sand that borders the shore of the lake, commonly referred to as the beach, where weâve commandeered two deck chairs. âIâm going to sit on the dock and dip my feet in the water; do you want to come or guard the seats?â
âIâll stay here.â Our seats are the perfect spot to people watch, and itâs fun seeing who is drawn to each other and make predictions on who will get close. It was funny listening to Orla talk earlier about how fraternization is prohibited, knowing nobody is going to listen to it. When I was a camper here, we would all speculate who was secretly kissing after hours. Then annoy the hell out of our counselors to tell us the adult gossip.
My favorite thing to do now that Iâm a counselor myself is to watch the dogs inspect everyone, occasionally sitting down to be petted, before moving on. I love dogs, which is exactly why Iâm watching one of the puppies sleep on Russ as he laughs and chats with Maya from our group, while Fish and the other puppy sleep at his feet.
âAnyone sitting here?â
Looking behind me, I find Clay, the third guy in our group standing barefoot in the sand, holding two beers. âNot right now, but sheâll be back soon.â I point in the direction of Emilia, chatting with someone on the dock. âTake a seat.â
Sitting beside me, he holds out one of the beer bottles. âBeer?â
Although Orla does her best to enforce the no-drinking rule, short of inspecting everyoneâs bag when they arrive, there isnât a way for her to stop people sneaking it in for training week. I assume she knows, but is less strict as there are no children around currently. What she does take very seriously is campers sneaking in alcohol, which I found out the hard way when I was fifteen. âNo, thanks. Iâm, uh, Iâm trying not to break all the rules on day one.â Or massively piss off Jenna.
Clay shrugs as he puts the spare beer in the drink holder. âWe never get caught. Iâve been here before. But youâre right, we have plenty of time to break the rules.â
He launches into a tale about being a counselor and Iâm struggling to follow along. Not because Iâm not smart enough, just because itâs really, really boring. By the time heâs moved on to talking about playing basketball at Berkeley (or was it USC?), heâs totally lost me.
Itâs not his fault that my mind is elsewhere and Iâm sure heâs not used to women zoning out when heâs trying to talk to them. Heâs attractive by conventional standards: tall, sharp jaw, nice eyes and smile. Not a huge fan of the amount of gel he uses to slick back his hair, but mainly because thereâs so much Iâm concerned thereâs going to be a pollution incident if he jumps into the lake. And I could do without the way his eyes drop to my chest when Iâm talking, but heâs not the worst guy whoâs ever tried to befriend me.
Normally Iâd take the attention heâs showing me and run with it, but I find his confidence off-putting and his bragging hard to listen to. I hook up with one quiet guy and suddenly I donât like confident basketball players? The matrix is glitching.
My eyes wander across the beach and the dogs look super comfortable as Maya brushes something from Russâs shoulder, smiling at him sweetly. The puppy on his lap doesnât even stir when he shuffles in his seat and rubs the back of his neck with his palm.
âI will have that beer actually,â I say, interrupting Clay telling me how much he can bench.
âOh, sweet. Hereâ¦â
At least itâs still a bit cold. âThanks. Nice chatting with you.â
I donât hear if he responds as I stand and rush over toward Emilia on the dock. Her eyebrows pinch together as she sees me approach. âWhat happened to our seats?â She spots the beer in my hand. âAnd becoming a changed woman?â
She accepts it from me, taking a sip as I sit beside her, dipping my feet into the water. âIâm starting tomorrow. Too many things to be irritated about today to overhaul my life.â
âHeâs just shy, Ror,â Emilia says carefully, handing me back my beer.
I turn to look at her, confused. âClay is not shy. Shy people donât talk to your breasts.â
Her eyes roll. âYou know who Iâm talking about. The one you keep staring at.â
Looking over my shoulder back toward the beach, I see Russ is still talking to Maya, and Xander has joined them. âIâm looking at the dogs,â I say. âBut if youâre talking about Russ⦠well, heâs not too shy to talk to other people, is he?â
âJust go over and talk to him.â
âAnd let him ignore me with an audience? No, thanks.â
âMaya is homesick, heâs probably just trying to make her feel better.â
âI know, I chatted with her while you were on the phone to Poppy. She lives near the Fenrir UK base, but a few of her friends from home are here, too. Look, itâs not important, he can talk to whoever he wants, Iâm not trying to be that person. It just sort of sucks that I seem to be the only person he doesnât want to talk to, yâknow? Iâm beginning to think maybe I got played and heâs not as nice as he seems.â
âYou didnât. But if you did, who cares? You hooked up, youâll move on like you always do.â Emilia wraps her arm around my shoulders and pulls me closer, resting her head against mine as I swallow a glug of the now warm beer. âIf you make me listen to you complain about a man all summer, I will tell your mom youâre moving back home.â
âI wonât. I told you, starting tomorrow Iâm going to be a new woman.â