Magnolia Parks: Chapter 20
Magnolia Parks (The Magnolia Parks Universe Book 1)
I plan it so we arrive fifteen minutes after the start of our reservation because I want the whole room to see us when we walk in, and boy, do they. Tomâs in a plain white T-shirt from Sandro Paris, the reversible, check bomber jacket from Burberry, the Gucci tapered, cotton-poplin trousers in indigo and the cornstalk and true white Old Skool Vans; Meâthe gathered, floral-print, silk-satin jacquard mini dress by Magda Butrym, the fire-engine red, double-breasted cashmere and wool blend coat from Saint Laurent and the 105mm, bow-tie pumps from Aquazzura to match. Every single eye is on usâexcept BJâsâas Tom and I walk into Le Gavroche hand in hand.
BJâs not looking is intentional. Its intention is to infuriate me. Itâs working.
âEngland.â Henry stands up to shake his hand.
Jonah follows. Christian just nods at Tom. BJ stands and hugs him. âMy man,â he says, smacking him on the arm. âGood to see you.â He glances at me and nods. âParks.â He looks so good. I donât know why he looks so good. All heâs in is the black MX1 skinny-fit, distressed, leather-panelled, stretch-denim jeans from Amiri, black logo-print, loopback, cotton-jersey sweatshirt from Givenchy, and black Vans.
Bit of a nothing outfit, really. But still, my heart still goes funny.
Tom pulls my seat out for me, slides me in. Paili mouths at me, oh my god.
And I look at her like, I know.
I point to the Pâs. âDo you know Perry and Paili?â
Tom shakes his head, then shakes their hands. âHeard a lot about you both though.â He sits down, leans back into his chairâthe most confident man in the room, and heâs at a table full of men who could respectively be megalomaniacs, narcissists and down and out sex legendâso itâs really quite saying something.
He flips open the wine list, points to the 2005 Latour. âThatâs the one I was telling you about.â
I lift my hair over my shoulders. âOh, get it.â Tom orders it and heâs a jovial delight with the maîtreâd, which is usually BJâs forte and he looks pissed. Heâs avoiding my eyes.
âSo,â Perry leans in. âYou have to tell usâhow did this happen?â
Tom stretches his arm around me and gives me a fond look and a small, covert wink. âWell, I was actually on the shittest date of my life the other night. Called it early, went to meet up with Gus at Raffles, and when I walked in, I saw her at the bar. Looked a bit glassy eyedââ He touches my face gently. Heâs a very good foxhole. Meanwhile, BJ is not loving this story. Heâs sullen and annoyed and muttering things under his breath to Jonah whoâs occasionally elbowing him as subtly as possible. Tom pretends he doesnât notice (or genuinely doesnât notice because heâs a grown-up).
âWe had a couple of drinks and I got a bit braver so I kissed her. To be honest, Iâve always fancied her a bit, but sheâs always been otherwise⦠preoccupied.â His eyes dart over towards BJ just to annoy him. âIt just happened that everything aligned that night.â He gives Perry a pleasant smile. BJâs building towards something, I can see it in his eyes.
And then: âBut youâre thirty and sheâs twenty-two,â BJ pipes up. âSo what, when you were twenty-three and she was fifteen, you were keen on her?â
âShut up,â Henry whispers, looking embarrassed.
âNo,â BJ shrugs innocently. âIâm just sayingâitâs a bit weird.â
âYou first felt her up when she was fourteen, man,â Jonah announces.
My hands fly to my cheeks. âJonah!â
âWhat?â He frowns at me. âIâm helping.â
I scowl at him. âAre you?â
Christian chuckles, amused. Tom gives Beej a long, sobering look, then says, âSince she was of age.â He pauses, to give BJ another look. âI have always fancied her.â
âBut you had a girlfriend then,â BJ tells him, in case he forgot. âSo, once again, bit inappropriateâ¦â
âSure, yeah I guess. But sorryââTom pausesââdidnât you cheat on her?â
Jonah makes a sound in the back of his throat and Christianâs now full-blown laughing.
BJ looks over at me, eyes all guilty, sorry, sad. His mouth goes tight, he nods once.
âSo!â Jonah says loudly, commandeering the conversation, steering it into safer waters. âHowâs being a pilot these days?â
Tom pushes his hand through his hair. âYeah, good. Fun. Itâs always fun. Itâs never not fun to fly a plane, you know?â Then he glances at me. âSpeaking of, I actually got put on a run to the Americas next in a few days. Do you want to come?â
I smile over at him, and my eyes catch BJâs, whoâs watching me altogether too closely, and his face looks a tiny bit afraid and I want to reach out and touch his face but I canât, so I touch Tomâs arm instead.
âI wish I couldâI have a work thing I canât miss.â
Tom nods understandingly and BJ licks away a smile.
âSo,â Tom glances between us all, âyouâre all friends from high school?â
I nod.
He points to me and Paili, âDorm mates?â
âYeah,â Paili nods, gesturing between us. âBut weâve been friends since year one.â
Tom shakes his head, a little fascinated. âI kind of wish I went to boarding school. Mum would never send us away.â
âOh, muffinââ I rub his arm with a sarcastic affection. âHow terrible that your mother loved you so much she wanted to keep you around.â
He rolls his eyes playfully.
âIt just always looked like fun,â he says.
âIt was,â BJ says, looking just at me.
My cheeks go hot.
âThere was a bizarre amount of independence given to us at such a young age,â Perry tells him.
âThat developed into a co-dependency.â Paili laughs.
Jonah shrugs. âYouâre in each otherâs pockets all the time.â
âYou kind of have to be though. Because youâre so disjointed from your family that you make your own hotchpotch one,â I tell him.
âParksâ parents forgot her sixteenth birthday,â Christian says, nodding his chin at me
Tom looks horrified. âNo?â
They did. It was sad and I was heartbroken, because even Marsaili forgot, which was so unlike her. Bridge remembered though, of course, and by the time we got to school, BJ and Paili had executed a redemption plan: Jonah procured the Hemmes family jet (their parents always asked the fewest questions), they all piled into the stretch my parents sent us to school in and off we flew to Paris.
I canât even imagine how ridiculous we would have looked, the seven of us with our school bags in our uniforms, in the foyer at Le Bristol.
Beej squared up his shoulders and walked straight up to the concierge. âBooking for Ballentine. Three rooms.â
The womanâs gaze flickered from BJ to us all behind him.
âIsâerm, you âave an adult?â she asked, French accent.
âNo.â BJ smiled at her, shrugging his shoulders.
âErm.â She glanced around.
BJ slid his Coutts World Silk card across to her.
âIs this yours?â She picked it up, inspecting it.
âAre you saying I donât look like the kind of person who would have a Coutts card?â he asked, giving her a playful smile.
She looked at him a little like a beetleâwhich never happens, because he was heaven back then, so she probably didnât like men. âNo, I think you look like a child,â she said.
âHere, take mine then.â I offered her my AMEX Centurion card, but BJ swatted it away.
âI can pay in cash, if youâd prefer?â he tells her.
The woman looked at us skeptically for a few seconds, then blinked, and began typing into the computer.
âBallentine.â She pronounced it Bally-Teen. âErm, you have requestedââ She clicked her tongue in thought. âTwo Junior suites and le Saint-Honoré Suiteâoui?â
âOui.â He nodded.
She ran his card through, then looked up and smiled at us as warmly as she could muster.
âBienvenue à Paris.â
They all piled onto our bed that night. I cried a bit, happy and sad tears. âParents are shit, Parksââ Christian shook his head, passing me a glass of champagne.
âForgetting their first-bornâs sixteenth birthday, shit?â I asked, eyebrows raised.
âAll of our parents have sent each of us away to boarding school,â Paili reminds me. âTheyâre all shit.â
âOur parents donât talk anymore,â Jonah offered, looking at Christian a bit uncomfortably. âThey havenâtânot sinceââ His voice trailed.
Not since their sister drowned five years ago. Beej and Jonah held eyes, faces sombre. Sheâd been under the water in their family pool for more than fifteen minutes when they found her. They dove in and pulled her up. Jonah was too distraught, BJ tried to revive her, but she was gone.
Beej and Jonah were already best friends before that happened, but after it they were brothers.
âThey canât talk,â Christian downed a full glass of champagne before he continued. âIf they do, they just blame each other.â
âMumâs okay, sheâs pretty normal stillâlike,â Jonah shrugged, âinsaneâshe bought an octopus last weekâbut okay enoughâshe leaves the house still. But Dadââ
Christian pursed his lips. âHe just sits and looks at photos of Rem in his office.â
âMy parents still think Iâm straight,â Perry offered. âI canât tell them.â He told us before we could say anythingââMy uncleâs gay. My dad wonât speak to him.â
âYouâre their son,â Paili reminded him gently.
âI donât want him to look at me how he looks at my uncle.â
BJ smacked him on the arm apologetically.
My eyes fell next on Henry, but he flicked his gaze to Beej.
âErm.â He sniffed a laugh. âI donât knowâour parents are pretty greatââ
âWell.â Christian rolled his eyes. âFuck you, thenââ
Hen and Beej laughed.
âMy mum is pretty slutty these days,â Paili announced, despondent. âBut only with younger men.â
âHow young?â Christian asked.
âLike, university. First year.â She sighed.
âYour mumâs pretty hot.â Jonah shrugged. âReckon I could have a crack?â
Paili smacked him in the head with a pillow before shrugging. âAnd I havenât seen my dad in forever. Heâs moved to Berlin with his new family.â
I remember looking around at the group of people assembled in front of me, piled on my bed in a hotel room I ran away to in Paris with my boyfriend, and thinkingâmaybe theyâre what family actually is. Maybe theyâre who have been my family all along. Maybe it was these people who had raised me this whole time.
It was Christian Hemmes in a stairwell when I was thirteen who told me what sex actually was. Not just rolling around under sheets and kissing.
It was Jonah that same year who first gave me alcohol, and then took care of me all night as I threw it up.
It would be Perry who, when he eventually did come out to his parents, taught me about taking pride in who I am, no matter what.
It would be from Henry that Iâd learn about steadfastness and what itâs like to have a brother. Paili would teach me how to be selfless (a work in progress) and how to show up for the people you love.
And it would be BJ who would make me fearless and safe and hopeful all at once, and it would eventually be BJ who would strip me of those things one day also when heâd come home smelling like musk and orange blossom.
Tom gives me a sad look back in Le Gavroche. âI canât believe they forgot your birthday.â Itâs sweet how foreign an idea that seems to him.
BJ looks over at me, eyes too soft for this table. âWe sorted her out.â
Tom gives him a small smile that maybe has seeds of genuine gratefulness.
âI like your friends,â Tom tells on the way home later that night. âItâs kind of special what you have.â
I nod, feeling proud of them.
âEven BJ?â I ask.
âEven BJ.â He nods. âDoes the younger Hemmes have a thing for you? He was looking at you a lotââ
I swat my hands because I canât right now. âHeâs just a starer.â
Tom snorts a small laugh. He looks over at me. âSo howâs the foxhole working out for you?â
âYou did very well.â
âYeah?â He grins.
I kiss him on the cheek as we pull up. âYeah.â
00:14
Parks
Hi
Hey
Howâs the weather, Beej?
Better now.
Goodnight BJ.