Magnolia Parks: Chapter 25
Magnolia Parks (The Magnolia Parks Universe Book 1)
Parks took Vanna better than I thought she would.
Donât know whether thatâs a good sign or a bad one, but I was happy that she asked me to come up with her to suss out a new hotel for the leisure edit.
Somewhere new Iâve never heard ofâFarnham House? Off St Ives Bay, I think. She just turned up on my doorstep. Itâs why I donât have girls stay over after. She has a key, but she never uses it. I think sheâs scared to in case somethingâs happening on the other side of the door that she doesnât want to see. Fair enough. Probably safer for her to knock anyway.
I pulled open the door and I know that face like the back of my hand; sheâs nervous about something. I donât know what, donât know why. But I was glad that she came to me.
âOy,â I grinned down at her as I stepped out of the doorway to let her in.
âAre you free?â she asked. âFor the next few days?â
The answer: No, actually. I had a shoot that afternoon and was supposed to take an American model out on a date tomorrow, but that face in front of me and Iâm as free as a fucking bird. I nodded. âI can be.â
âDo you feel like taking me to Cornwall?â she offered. âFor work.â
I tilted my head, curious. âYou donât want Tom to take you?â
âNo.â She shook her head a tiny bit. âI donât.â Our eyes caught and I felt like she was reaching out for me, like she thought I was far away, but I wasnât. That pulled at a weird thread in my head actually, because her being like that, her feeling a distance between us that wasnât coming from me, meant it was coming from her.
âMe drive or you drive?â
âI took the Mullsane,â she told me, âbut you drive it. I like it better when you drive.â
I pulled her inside my apartment.
âGive me five, Iâll pack a bag.â
She lets me drive and I love driving down the M3 with her. Iâve driven her down this motorway a billion times and it always feels like weâre driving back to what we used to be.
Her family has a place up in Dartmouth thatâs a thing for us. We go there sometimes. Not often. Sometimes though.
These roads remind me of her, of that night, of everything that happened. I sigh louder than I mean to, trying to breathe out the memory. She looks over at me and I know she knows. She picks up my phone from my lap and changes the song to âIâll Be Seeing Youâ and looks out the window. She knows. She always knows me, and I always know her, and itâs probably unhealthy and itâs probably fucked up because itâs not just that I canât move past her, itâs that even if I could figure out how to do itâI wouldnât anyway.
Because her eyes right now, all raw and weighed down the same way mine are, they anchor us to the seabed of whatever the fuck we are and were and will be. And I wonder what love is like for other people⦠Is love for everyone wordless exchanges and a million memories that fuck you up to the bone?
She perks up a bit by the time weâre driving through Plymouth. From there itâs about an hour and a halfâs drive to Toms Holidays and Iâm just happy to have the time with her.
No one else, no prying eyes, no weird eavesdropping, no boyfriendsâjust me and her and grazing hands and wandering eyes recalibrating us back into the good old days.
âIâm an ideas gal,â she tells me.
I give her a look. âAre you though?â
She frowns, indignant. âObviously.â
âAlright then, hit us with your best shotââ
She turns in towards me, her brown legs tucked up under her, clears her throat. Dramatic pause. âTitanic: The Waterparkâ
I shake my head. âAbsolutely never.â
âWhat?â She frowns, miffed as anything. âWhy?â
I peer over at her out of the corner of my eye, and shrug as though Iâm making a light suggestion. âItâs maybe a bit insensitive?â
âTo whom?â She blinks. âJames Cameron? Donât worry about that, heâs a friendââ
âNoââ
âOkay, fine,â she concedes. âWe were seated next to one another at a state banquet âtil he asked to move, but I donât think that was about me I think it was because he was right under an air duct. Imagine seating James Cameron under a fucking air duct. Someone lost their job that night!â
Iâm doing my best to rein it in, not to laugh. She doesnât like it when I laugh at her. Itâs a skill thatâs taken years to hone and has probably shaved days off the span of my life. I leave it a few seconds before I carefully ask, âDid you tell him about your water park idea?â
Sheâs frowning again. âYes?â
My mouth twitches. âHe moved because of you.â
Parks pauses, thinking on this. âDo you think heâs going to steal my idea?â
âI really donât.â I shake my head.
Her eyes go to slits. âAre you sure?â I nod once. âWhy?â
I let out a laugh that sounds like a sigh and it doesnât match up with how happy I am to just be shooting the shit with her. âBecause itâd be like someone making an Apollo 11-themed space ride. Or an Amelia Earhart aviation ride.â
She stares at me for a long few seconds and I think she finally gets it. âShit! Beej, thatâs brilliant! Inspired! A disaster theme park! Weâll be rich!â
Iâm laughing now. âWe are rich.â
ââ¦.er,â she offers.
We pull into the grounds of Farnham House.
The building looks a bit like a French chateau. Old stones, maybe sandstone? Slate roof, massive windows.
âItâs nice.â I look over at her as I toss the valet the keys with a wink. Then I nod at a car. Looks familiar. âThat looks like your dadâs car.â
She looks over at the black Quattroporte GTS GranSport.
âHP1977?â She looks at me, confused. âThat is his car.â
I frown a bit.
âDo you know what? A couple of months back he asked for a hotel recommendation that was quiet for an upcoming work trip. I think it was with Post Malone.â
âYour dadâs inside with Post Malone?â I blink, then I nod towards the door. âLetâs go find them.â
I want to pause here for a second and say this: Parks and I had very different childhood experiences.
My mum is the best mum: five kids, not Catholic.
Five kids because she loves kidsâthe fucking weirdo. She cried when she sent us to boarding school, but it was just really what families like ours do. And Dad, we have a bit more of a complicated relationship because I think he thinks Iâm disappointingâwasting my life away, and probably heâs rightâI donât knowâbut Iâve never thought he didnât love me. Parks though, her and Bridgetâs childhood was completely dotted by these weird occurrences where they were made to feel like they were the impositions.
Like her parents had them because they felt like they were meant to have them, not because they wanted them. And I donât think that they donât love them. They do. Iâve seen her mum fight for her onceâjust onceâbut it was once that mattered. And her dadâwhen Parks and I first started sleeping together, my dad was furious, drove to her house, stormed in, I hid under her bed, Marsaili covered for us, liedâsaid Iâd gone to JonahâsâParksâ dad didnât say anything to her, but he did pull me aside later that night. âIâd kill you if I had to,â he told me.
But theyâre hands off. She could have been dealing cocaine for all they knew. Both of them were off with the fairies. Did a lot of shit like forgot birthdays, would go away for Christmas without the girls, would piss off for a few weeks at a time, wouldnât answer their phonesâall that shit-parent shit. You could ask Parks and sheâd tell you for sure that the only reason sheâs a vaguely functional person (and depending on the day I think we can all agree that there are varying degrees to her functionality) is because of Marsaili.
So, we walk into the lobby and over to the front deskâParks does the talking, and I fight the urge to shove the check-in chav whoâs behind the desk because heâs looking at her like Iâm not fucking standing right here, but she doesnât notice. She never notices. I hover behind her closer than I would if we were in London. She doesnât move away from meâshe never does when people canât see us.
Itâs why we love quiet English towns. No one gives a shit about who we are, and I can touch her on the waist without a photo ending up in The Sun, and I can rest my chin on top of her head while the fuckwit behind the check-in desk avoids my eyes for flirting with my girl.
âWe have a suite with two double beds, or one with a king. Which is your preference?â
I pinch my eyes at Check-In. âWhat do you think, mate?â
His mouth pulls tight and he starts typing.
Theyâre still sorting out the rooms, says theyâll be probably another hourâpretty sure itâs some sort of power move Check-Inâs pulling, trying to delay us from having all the sex we wonât be having anyway.
We go to the bar while we wait.
Iâve got both my hands on her shoulders and Iâm walking her through the door frame, and sheâs laughing and smiling and then she stops dead in her tracks.
I follow her gaze over to the far back corner of the bar.
Her dadâ¦and Marsaili?
She frowns. âThatâs strange.â
And it doesnât compute to her, because it wouldnât, because Parks isnât like that, sheâs not wired to think about the underbellies of emotion and because sheâs put Marsaili up on a pedestal all her life as the only adult who hasnât disappointed her, and I get this feeling like I need to get her the fuck out of here, like I need to keep her from seeing what sheâs about to seeâ
âCome onââ I grab her hand, pulling her backwards. âWe should check on the room.â
âNo.â She snatches her hand back. âWhat are they doing here?â
And as soon as she asks that, she gets her answer as they lean across the table and kiss in that fucking gross tender way old people kiss.
Her jaw hits the floor.
âParksââI grab her wristââcome on.â
She turns to look at me, and her eyes are wide with surprise and something elseâsomething I canât pick. A bit like hurt but worse.
I squeeze her hand. âI think we should just go.â
âAbsolutely not.â She shakes her head, spins on her heel and marches right on over.
âWell!â Parks claps her hands together. âWhat do we have here?â
âShit,â says her dad, standing reluctantly.
âMagnolia!â Marsaili jumps up, the colour draining from her face.
Parks looks between the two of them for a few seconds. âI meanâwow.â
âDarlingââ Harley starts.
She holds up a hand to silence him. âI mean, reallyâwow.â
âMagnolia,â Marsaili starts, glancing from her to me, like I might toss her a line. âI can explainââ
âCan you?â Magnolia blinks, pleasantly. âBy all means, have at it.â
Harley shakes his head, stepping forward. âDarling, listenââ
She looks at him, gesturing. âYou, doing thisâfine. Whatever. Youâve been fucking girls from rap videos for years.â He pulls his head back, indignant. Heâs a big enough guy her dad, six feet, two inches, probably. Maybe a half an inch or so shorter than me. But rock solid. Gladiator status. Iâve seen him train with Dwayne Johnson and keep up. SheâParks, is like five feet, eight inches, Bambi legs, big mouth and fighting eyes and she is incapable of backing down from a conflict with this man.
Iâve always wondered if Iâd have to fight him one day. I wonder if today will be the day.
âExcuse me?â he growls at her.
âDo you think I didnât know what you were doing with that girl you were with at Britannia Row when I walked into the sound booth? I was thirteen.â She shakes her head. âI expect this shit from you, Harley, but you?â She eyes Marsaili. And I low-key love that my Parks has turned into a little dragon. âOn your high horse, looking down at the rest of usâspouting all self-righteous about himââshe thumbs in my directionââand his misgivings, and how unforgivable his behaviour is, and all the while youâre screwing my married father?â
Marsailiâs face falls. I press my lips together.
âMagnoliaââ Harley steps between them. âThatâs enough.â
âHow long for?â Parks asks, ignoring him.
Her dad glares at her a bit and I clench my fists.
âSix years,â Marsaili says, quickly.
At that, even my jaw goes lax.
âSix years,â Magnolia repeats slowly.
Something about the air between them shiftsâ¦. Shifts from shock and maybe a bit of betrayal toâI donât know⦠Iâm watching Parksâ eyes and I know all their colours and tells and my best bet here is⦠theyâre sporting some kind of grief?
Parks looks too pained for the feeling to just be anger.
Mars and Parks stare at each other and thereâs this exchange happening between their eyes, Marsâ are pleading and Parksâ are just gutted, and they donât look away, theyâre locked on. And I wish I could tune into whatever theyâre saying because I feel like itâs maybe about me?
Magnolia points a weak finger at the woman whoâs loved her all her life, says nothing for a heavy few seconds.
âDonât you ever speak to me again,â she tells her.
And then she grabs my hand and pulls me back to the car.