: Chapter 9
Wildfire (Maple Hills 2)
WHY IS SAYING YOUâRE GOING to work on yourself easier than working on yourself?
I want to leave my self-destructive habits behind and yet here I amâday one of Project Aurora, cell phone in hand, watching Norahâs story knowing itâs going to upset me.
And it is upsetting me. My manifestation technique requires some work because Dadâs team smashed the Spanish Grand Prix and heâs super happy about it. Which I know from the sweet videos Norah posted of him celebrating with her daughter at his house.
Stuffing my cell phone into the back pocket of my shorts, I try to forget about the perfect family Iâm not part of and speed walk in the direction of the fire safety training, which Iâm already running late for.
While the team-building exercises take place in larger groups across roles, all our specific training is done in our group of six, making it impossible to sneak in undetected.
âYou areââJenna looks at her watchââsix minutes late, Rory.â
Normally I wouldnât care about being late, but feeling everyoneâs eyes on me is making the blood rush to my cheeks. Well, all but one person. I mutter a âsorryâ quietly and keep my head down as I fill the empty seat between Emilia and Clay. He leans in, lowering his voice. âYou havenât missed anything. Basically, fire is bad.â
âIâll try to remember that.â I fight the urge to chuckle and try to concentrate on Jenna starting with the evacuation drill procedure. He offers me a grape from the bag in his hand, which, after yesterday, feels a little like a gesture of goodwill.
Jenna is busy explaining the campfire rules when I feel a tugging on my foot. Looking to the floor, there appears to be a ball of fluff chewing on my shoelaces. Picking up the chubby puppy, I turn the tag toward me. âWhich one are you?â Salmon. âWhereâs your brother, little girl?â
As soon as I look up, I spot Trout cradled like a baby, snoozing on Russâs chest. Oh man, this is not fair. I canât drag my eyes away from the cuteness, which is a mistake, because when Russ finally glances up from the sleeping dog, he looks right at me.
We stare at each other, and itâs as awkward and weird as it sounds, right until Salmon decides to chomp on the ends of my hair, distracting me. When I look back at him, heâs focused on whatever Jenna is saying.
The rest of the training flies by without any further staring contests, and by the time weâre all walking across the main lawn on our way to our team-building activity, Iâm feeling better than I was a couple of hours ago, snooping where I shouldnât be snooping.
âIâve decided I donât care,â I announce to Emilia.
âThatâs good,â she says nonchalantly, trying not to trip over Salmon, whoâs weaving around our feet as we walk, trying once again to eat shoelaces. âWhat are you talking about exactly?â
âEverything.â
âThat feels healthy and definitely not like itâll backfire on you in the future.â
She expertly dodges my elbow when I try to poke her in the ribs. âIâm going to delete my spam account and lock my cell phone in my suitcase. If I donât see it, it doesnât exist.â
âI support it. Iâve said it before, nothing good can come from putting your faith in a man. Let Chuck and Norah play happy families online and you concentrate on you.â
âJesus, it was like being with my mom for a second,â I tease.
Tired of dodging her, Emilia bends to pick up Salmon, tucking the puppy under her arm. âYouâre so annoying,â Emilia groans.
The dogâs tongue lolls out of her mouth as Emilia struggles with the deceptively heavy golden retriever. I reach over to scratch behind Salmonâs ears as we continue toward the activity. âAw, sheâs not annoying. Sheâs a baby.â
Emiliaâs brows knit as she looks over at me. âI was talking to you.â
We finally reach the rest of the counselors standing around several planks of wood and platforms arranged in groups of four. âI donât know what the hell weâre going to have to do,â Maya says.
Iâve seen this activity before, but Iâve never done it. âYou have to get your entire team from the first platform to the one at the end, but it gets harder to move between them because the gaps gets bigger and the platforms get smaller. Nobody can touch the floor.â
âBedlam then.â She smiles. âIâm going to say hi to my friends, Iâll be back in a sec.â
âI wonder if youâd annoy me less if you still had a British accent,â Emilia says quietly, watching Maya as she walks away from us.
âI never sounded like Maya. I still sounded mostly American. It got stronger depending on how much time I spent hanging around at Dadâs work.â
Xander, Russ, and Clay finally stop whispering to one another, turning to face Emilia and me. âOkay, game plan,â Xander says seriously. âWeâre going to jump between the platforms.â
Emilia bursts out laughing and I immediately shake my head. âNo, weâre not.â
âWhy not? Itâll be the easiest way,â he immediately counters.
Emilia is still laughing at the idea of us trying to make those jumps. Xander looks genuinely surprised, while Clay is trying to fight a laugh, too. Russ is⦠observing. âMaybe for you, Mr. NBA hopeful, but for the rest of us mere mortals, jumping that far isnât possible.â
âWeâll help you. Youâll be fine.â
Xanderâs mouth doesnât move, and thatâs when I realize the person talking to me is Russ.
âOh.â Say something, Aurora. âCool.â
I hate myself.
Russ does that nod thing guys do, without saying anything more. It was nice to hear him speak, so now I know he is real and not just a figment of my imagination haunting me like the ghost of hookups past.
âIs this thing on?â
We all turn our attention to Orla, standing at the last platform with a megaphone. Sheâs had that megaphone for as long as Iâve known her, and every time it breaks, she gets the maintenance team to fix it for her instead of investing in one from this century.
I stole it once. Used it to scare the shit out of Jenna when she was flirting with one of the other counselors and ended up in a time-out for the rest of the afternoon, but it was worth it.
Orla goes over the rules, explaining that you canât start moving to the next platform until your entire team is together. If anyone in your team falls off, your team has to start again from the beginning, and whoever makes it to the end, managing to stay on the platform for thirty seconds without falling, is the winner.
Maya wanders back to our group and Xander immediately turns to her. âWeâre jumping.â
âNo, weâre not,â Emilia and I say in unison.
âYouâre tallââ Maya says, looking him up and down.
âThank you for noticingâ¦â
âIf youâre so confident, why donât you just lie down between them and we can all walk you like a plank?â
âYeah, Xan,â Russ says, grinning. âWhy donât we just walk you like a plank?â
âI donât think Iâd like being crushed by a hockey player, funnily enough.â
âDonât knock it until youâve tried it,â I say quietly without thinking.
Thankfully, most of the group didnât hear my little admission, but Russ and Xander did, and Russâs cheeks flush pink.
Xanderâs eyes flick between us quickly, but the whistle blows, putting an end to anything he might be about to say. The six of us rush toward the first platform, only just fitting on comfortably.
âWe are at a distinct disadvantage because the three of you are so massive,â Emilia groans into Clayâs back, which is pressed up against her face.
âAurora, Iâm really sorry my hand is touching your bum, but I canât move it,â Maya says.
âItâs touching mine, too,â Xander adds.
Russ sighs. âNo, thatâs mine.â
The platform creaks as Russ jumps to the next one, followed by Clay and Xander. Thereâs enough room for the three of us to maneuver now that the boys are gone, and we coordinate moving our plank to the next platform to walk along it.
âJust jump!â Xander shouts.
Maya holds her arms out to keep her balance as she walks to the next platform. âI am not bloody jumping when there is a walkway!â
âCome on, Mary Poppins,â Clay says, holding his hand out to Maya, helping her to take the final few steps. Itâs easy to follow, and when weâre all together on the next platform we start the whole ordeal again.
âXander, youâre going to push me off!â I cling to Clay behind me, and his hands immediately land on my waist. I switch to holding on to Emilia beside me, looking up at him over my shoulder. âItâs okay, you donât need to hold me.â
We realize that the wood hardly reaches the next platform, which is farther away than the last, and the guys work out a plan that has one of them jumping over last, then theyâll help those of us who arenât part kangaroo get across. The sound of all the other teams shouting instructions at one another is flooding the air, and realizing that weâre slightly in the lead kick-starts the competitive part of me.
Xander easily jumps to the next platform, kneeling and reaching to accept the end of the plank that isnât long enough to rest against the edge of where heâs standing. He keeps it steady with his hand, and we all pat his head as we climb over him, keeping as close to the edge as we can to let Russ and Clay jump over, too.
âOh my God,â Emilia squeaks. âSomeone jump before we lose our balance.â
The guys all spring across, making it look ridiculously easy, but as soon as theyâre all on the final platform together itâs immediately clear that there is not enough room for six people. Even if there was enough room, thereâs no way weâre making that jump.
âHow the fuck are we supposed to do this?â Iâd put my hands on my hips, but there isnât enough room without nudging Maya off.
âIs anyone concerned about the weight limit of these platforms?â Clay says, looking at the creaking box beneath their feet.
âWas anyone a cheerleader?â Xander asks.
âThis isnât the type of team building weâre supposed to be doing right now, buddy,â Emilia says sarcastically.
Rolling his eyes, he points at the distance between us. âTwo of you can launch the other across the gap. We can catch.â Weâre all silent. âYouâre telling me nobody was a cheerleader in high school?â
âYeahâ¦â Maya says. âThatâs not a thing where I live.â
âAurora got kicked off the cheerleading squad freshman year,â Emilia says. âAnd as for me, ballet and human pyramids arenât a good mix.â
âYou also arenât very cheerful,â I mutter under my breath.
âWhat did you get kicked off for?â Clay asks immediately.
âNot importaââ
âShe stole the other teamâs mascot and lost it.â
âEmilia!â
Xander peers over to the other teams, his face twisting in concern. âGuys, we really need to get movingâ¦â
âHow do you lose a mascot?â Russ asks, looking right at me.
âI, um⦠It ran off.â That gets his attention. His eyes widen and I immediately feel the need to clarify. âIt was a pig, not a person. They found him a few hours later; he was totally fine. He was hanging out with the janitorâs dog, but, um, they felt my actions did not align with the teamâs core values. Anyway, can we get on with this? Who are we throwing?â
âGuys, if we lose because youâre all short and Aurora is a pig stealer, Iâm going to be so pissed,â Xander snaps.
âEveryoneâs short when youâre a freaking giant. Maya, youâre up,â I say, linking my fingers together and bending for her to put her foot into the cradle my hands have made. Emilia copies me and Maya holds on to us both as she tentatively steps into our hands.
âFor the record,â she says quietly, âI think this is a terrible idea.â
âBe ready to catch her! Three⦠Two⦠Oneâ¦â
It feels like weâre playing human bowling as Emilia and I launch poor Maya in the direction of the guys a little too enthusiastically. Thankfully, they catch and squish her against them to keep her on the platform. There is physically no more room for people, and Iâm not sure how weâre supposed to do this.
âGet on someoneâs shoulders, Maya!â Emilia shouts. Russ and Clay hold Mayaâs arms and help Xander move her onto his shoulders, once again creating a tiny bit of space for another person. Emilia nudges me lightly, something she can do now that thereâs a tiny bit more space. âYou next.â
âAbsolutely not. You next.â
Xander is once again looking at the other groups. âAurora, as much as you think youâre not, you are tall enough to jump.â If he thinks Iâm more qualified because Iâm five foot seven to Emiliaâs five foot three, he clearly doesnât know sheâs capable of leaping across a stage like a freaking gazelle. âEmilia, I have an idea, do you trust us?â
âNot even a little bit,â Emilia calls back. I shake my head, too, trying not to smirk when Xander immediately looks irritated.
âCan you learn to trust us in the next five seconds? Jump forward with your arms out. Like youâre diving to catch a baseball.â
âDo I seem like the type of person who knows anything about baseball?â she snaps.
Iâm laughing before Iâve even said what I want to say. âYou know a lot about third baseâ¦â
âNo! No! No!â
I manage to stay on the platform by clinging to Emilia, even though sheâs the one trying to push me off, much to the horror of our teammates and their screams.
âJesus Christ this is stressful,â Clay groans. âArms out, Emilia. Me and Russ will grab your hands and pull you over; you just need to get far enough for us to reach you.â
âI hate you for convincing me to come here,â she mumbles before setting herself at the edge of the platform with her arms out. To Xanderâs credit, it works perfectly, and within a few seconds Emilia is across and sitting on Clayâs shoulders.
Thereâs no way that Clay can help pull me across with Emilia on his shoulders, which means Iâm really going to have to jump. The urge to just step off the platform and make us lose is overwhelming. âIâm scared,â I yell, trying and failing to visualize myself being able to cover the distance. Thereâs a lot more room now that Iâm over here on my own, but itâs not enough for me to run before jumping.
âYou can do it, Rory,â Emilia shouts from above Clay. âPlease do it quickly, though. I think Iâm developing a fear of heights.â
âI donât think I canâ¦â
âAurora,â Russ says softly, shuffling so his body is the one closest to the last space on the platform. âLook at me. You can do it, you just need to jump toward my arms and Iâll catch you, okay?â
âWhat if you fall?â
âThen weâll fall together.â He smiles at me, and my heart bashes brutally against my chest like the traitor it is. Weâre not supposed to be caring about anything, remember? âAnd Xander can be pissed at both of us.â
âI will be pissed at both of you,â he grumbles.
âIgnore him, just look at me,â Russ says. âI believe in you. Take a deep breath. Iâm going to count down from three and then I want you to jump as far as you can.â
âAnd youâll catch me?â
âI promise Iâll catch you. Three⦠Twoâ¦â
He leans forward with his arms out and I zone out when he reaches one, instead concentrating on launching my body toward his. His hands are on my arms almost immediately, dragging me forward until I hit his chest.
âBrown Bears! Thirty seconds to be the winners,â Orla announces through her megaphone.
âNobody fucking move,â Xander snaps.
I wiggle my arms free from the position theyâre locked in against Russâs chest, but he doesnât loosen his grip on me, and my body stays flush against his, keeping us both on the platform. He smells like clean laundry, sandalwood, and vanilla, and when I look up toward his face, his eyes are shut tight and heâs quietly muttering names of hockey teams.
And then I feel it against my stomach and his hold on me finally loosens, but itâs too late.
Itâs the slowest thirty seconds in history, as Russ desperately tries to lose the boner pressing into me.
âBrown Bears win!â Orla announces, much to Xanderâs delight.
I step off the platform and away from Russ. Thankfully the other guys are distracted by getting Maya and Emilia off their shoulders, and when Russ looks at me, I canât help but wink.
His blush reaches his ears this time.