Magnolia Parks: Chapter 39
Magnolia Parks (The Magnolia Parks Universe Book 1)
Tom insists on dropping me home after the flight.
We land in Luton this time. A smidge less than an hourâs drive at this time of day. I said he didnât have to, but he did anyway. Since our breakfast talk, heâs become this funny, self-appointed guard dog. He didnât leave me alone once, wouldnât let go of my hand.
I donât know completely whether it was just because of what happened with BJ and how sad I was, or another reasonâbecause regular foxholery aside, I felt a peculiar kind of relief to be holding Tomâs hand anyway.
And when he told me to come and sit up with him in the cockpit, I knew it would hurt Beej so I did it, and I was right. I saw him sitting at the back of the plane, waiting for me to come sit next to himâI didnât.
Even though a bit of me wanted to. Because I think a bit of me will always want to. It sounds hypocritical, I knowâthat Iâm this angry at him for sleeping with someone else when I did as well. I donât know why it feels heavy around my neck, a bit like itâs choking me, and why I feel like heâs betrayed me, but Iâve not betrayed him.
Or maybe I do feel like I betrayed him but maybe I had to?
The spare seat next to BJ was for me, that much was obvious from his eyes, even though I didnât meet themâI didnât need to, I could feel them on me, waiting for me, hoping for me.
And then I went into the cockpit with Tom.
And a part of me hoped that Beej felt what I feel whenever I see him with his hands on other girls, hoped that it consumed him while we flewâwhat was happening behind the closed door.
What happened was making out.
âAm I allowed in here?â I asked, as he closed the cockpit door behind us.
He gave me a look. âIâm the pilot.â
âYou didnât ask me in here last time.â
âSaw Ballentine at the back of the plane with the spare seat next to him,â he said. âYou just strike me as the sort of girl whoâd be powerless against a backseat with the love of her life.â
âExcuse me.â I blinked, indignant. âIâm powerless before nothing but Gucci.â
He sniffed a laugh. âGo back out there then.â
âNo,â I told him, my nose in the air. âI fancy my chances better in here but only because heâs wearing grey and I love grey, and he knows that so he did that on purpose.â
He looked down at himself in a plain white tee from Tom Ford. âHow do you feel about white?â
My eyes fell down him and I was being flirty, I knew I was, but itâs fun to flirt with Tom England. âIt goes alright.â
He smiled at me with pinched eyes and a mouth that said nothing while simultaneously saying many things.
I sat in the co-pilot chair. We flirted more. Tom showed me what to do, all the buttons to press, talked me through taking off as he did it, and then once we were in the air, he asked me if I wanted to fly it.
âMaybe?â I glanced over at him, nervously. He patted his lap. âOh, I see.â I rolled my eyes and he laughed.
He bit down on his bottom lip. âCome on,â he said. I walked over to him gingerly, eyeing him, amused. He pulled me down on to him and positioned me for peak plane-flying position, wrapping his arms around me, holding my hands to the yolk of the plane. He rested his chin on my shoulder, guiding the plane through my handsâI wasnât doing anything, I knew I wasnât. But I also wasnât moving because I liked the feeling of Tom England against me.
It felt like I was lost at sea and he was this saviour piece of driftwood that I could cling to.
His breath on my neck caught on my skin and so I turned back, my eyes flicking from his down to his mouth and back up again.
He does this thing with his mouth, Tom Englandâand itâs unbelievably sexyâitâs this almost smile, no teethânearly a smirk but not smug at all. He does it when he wants something or heâs being clever, and it was of my opinion in that moment, that he wasnât being overly clever, ergo he wanted something and the thing Tom England wanted was me.
He swallowed heavily.
Then I brushed my mouth against his. Quick and gentle, shyer than I wished I was.
I donât know why I did it. Not very like me, actually. I just wanted to.
He smiled, maybe surprised, definitely pleased, and then he leant in again, mouth hovered above mine, close enough that you could feel the touch before the touch, and my breathing went weak at the knees, and then our lips touched, slowly at first and then not at all, it was just rushy-rushy, time racing past us and through us.
He spun me around so I was facing him and then we were just kissing. We stayed kissing until we hit an air pocket and the plane dropped a few feet, and I nearly went flying into the ceiling, but he grabbed me, and he was laughing, and then he apologised to everyone over the loudspeaker, told them his co-pilot was a bit distracting and not overly-attentive in the aviation arena.
I didnât know whether he said that for me or for himself, but I hoped it hurt BJ either way.
We stopped kissing after that though, and he sat in his chair and I sat in mine, but every now and then, heâd look at me out of the corner of his eye and his nostrils would flare a bit as he tried not to smile, and then Iâd start laughing, and then heâd start laughing and I think heâs become one of my best friends.
Thereâs a moving lorry out the front of my house when I get home. I look over at Tom, confused. We walk inside and weâre only in for about 4.5 seconds when my sister flings herself into my arms. âThank god,â she cries. âItâs been a madhouse.â
âOh?â I blink. âWhy? Whatâs happened?â
Bridget pulls away, hands pressed into her temples. Sheâs wearing the maroon and custard, yellow, horizontal-stripe, logo cardigan from Miu Miu that I left hanging in her closet, hands on her hipsâshe looks from me to Tom.
âEverything.â She shakes her head. âEverything!â I wave my hands impatiently, waiting for more information. BJ would have flicked me for doing that to Bridge. âWell, Mumâs moving out,â she starts, and I roll my eyes.
Wow. âOkay.â
âTheyâre getting a divorce.â
Geez. I nod. âOkay.â
âMars is moving in.â
I frown. âShe already lives here.â
Bridge gives me a look. âInto his room.â
I scrunch up my face, make a âyuckâ sound.
Tom glances at me and has a fairly solid lid on that smile of his but BJ would have covered my mouth to shut me up.
âI heard that,â Marsaili says, walking out. âMagnoliaââ She goes to kiss me and I dodge it. Not just to be petulant (though I am) but because weâre not kissers. We werenât before she had an affair with my father. We arenât now that she has. âLovelyââ She clears her throat. âStill acting like a child, I see.â She nods at him. âHello, Tom.â
He gives her a curt smile. âMarsaili.â
My mother wanders out of a living room wielding a Carolingian sword from the 12th century.
âThatâs mine!â yells my father. âThatâs mine, put it back.â
âIâm taking it,â she tells him.
âYou hated that swordâyou said it was a waste of money!â
âYes, but see, you love wasting money, darling, donât you?â My mother bats her eyes at him. âThat third breast augmentation I had was just money down the drain, wasnât it? Money down the drain! Didnât even look at them once.â
âMum, donât say âbreast augmentationâ in front of Tom England,â Bridget tells her.
Tom tosses Bridge an amused look.
âOh!â She looks over at us. âTom! Magnolia, what a surprise.â
âIs it though?â I frown.
âHi.â Tom smiles uncomfortably.
I wobble my head around, considering it. âI mean I do live hereââ
âAnd I do not,â she tells me with an indelicate nod.
I walk up a few stairs feeling like Iâd rather like to be taller than the rest of the room, except Iâm still not taller than Tom.
I stare at my mother for a few seconds. âAre you wearing a ballgown?â
She looks down at herself in the black Puff-sleeve, cotton-blend, Chantilly-lace gown from Dolce & Gabbana. âYes.â
âWhy?â
âThis is my moving ballgown.â
âPractical.â My sister nods appreciatively.
âWell, I was going to wear it at our recommitment ceremony.â She eyes my father dangerously. âBut that planâs in the toilet now.â
âI never asked you to marry me again,â he tells her, unceremoniously.
âHarleyââ Marsaili smacks him in the arm.
I flick her a look. âBit of a weird time for you to jump inââ
And I wish for a second that BJ was here. Heâs so good when things go pear-shaped like this. Heâs so good at diffusing my familial stupidity.
My mother folds her arms over her chest. âSheâs right, Harley, our vows might have gone to the wolves but thereâs no reason your manners need to.â
I look only at my sister and give her a look. âI hate this.â
She mirrors it. âWelcome home.â
âWellââ I look between them all with a grimace. âIâm going to go upstairsâfind a builder to soundproof my bedroom walls.â
Marsaili rolls her eyes. âWeâve had sex here before.â
I quickly stick my finger in my ears. âLalalalalalalala.â
âMarsaili.â My father gives her a look.
She looks annoyed. âShe didnât hear us thenââ
âAnd I shanât now,â I yell.
âDo mine too, actually, will you?â Bridge tells me, and I give her a point and wink.
I turn to run up the stairs, Tom following me.
âActually, darlingââmy father makes a step towards meââcan I speak to you alone for a moment?â
I stand still and look back at him. Tom shifts in front of me. âNo.â
My fatherâs jaw goes tight. Heâs annoyed but also a bit sad.
âNo?â Mars says, incredulous. Tom shakes his head, indifferent. âListen Tom,â Marsaili sighs. âItâs very, very sweet that youâre so protective of Magnolia but sheâs perfectly fine to be left alone with her father, and frankly, this isnât any of your business, soââ
I shake my head. âDonât speak to him like that.â
âMagnolia, with all due respect, Tom is new around here, and heâs getting himself involved in our family affairsââ
ââYou are not my family anymore.â I shake my head as I point to her. âAnd heââI point to himââis my boyfriend.â
Tom looks over at me and smiles with just the corner of his mouth, and it feels like maybe for a second, heâs not just my fake boyfriend.
âWell,â Marsaili sighs, âIâm sorry you feel that way, Magnolia. Iâve only ever treated you like my own daughterââ
âOh!â I nod, thinking it through. âIs that why youâve been fucking my father all this time?â
My father sighs with a groan under his breath. âCome on, loveââ
âI donât know what you want from me.â I look between them. âMy approval? You wonât get it.â
âDarling.â My father steps towards me. âI havenât been in love with your mother for a very long time.â
âFine,â I nod. âThatâs fineâI donât have a problem with that. What I have a problem with is the spineless act of cheating. Which you do.â I gesture towards him. âYou cheat, I know you do. But with her?â I gesture to Mars. âWho was ours? Our one grown-up who loved us and cared for us and raised usâyou had to ruin her?â
âMagnolia,â Mars says, shaking her head. Her voice sounds a bit high and hopeful. âIâm not ruined, Iâm justââ
âA hypocrite,â I tell her.