Magnolia Parks: Chapter 52
Magnolia Parks (The Magnolia Parks Universe Book 1)
ââAnd he hasnât really spoken to me since.â
My sister grimaces as she leans back in her seat. Weâre having brunch at Neptunes.
âHe never doesnât talk to you.â She tells me like I donât already know, like itâs not my every waking thought.
I told Tom what happened. He wasnât so upset, he said he saw it coming. Actually, he said Gus saw it coming and gave him a headâs up.
Tomâs been around a bit, a numbing agent in the wound of an absent Ballentine.
Heâs even stayed over a few times.
Iâm not sure thatâd placate BJ, but itâs placated me.
I think Iâm starting to see why BJ has sex all the time now.
It does make me feel better, itâs a brief kind of betterness, very little permanence to the whole thing but thereâs this euphoric few seconds where you canât really focus on anything at all other than the good thing youâre feeling, and itâs so good and for twenty seconds I canât think about how far away BJ feels or how fucked everything is these days, or who Iâll pick, because I know Iâll have to pick one of them soon, or how Iâm worried about hurting Tom when I donât pick him, because I donât know how to pick anyone over BJ, or how Christianâs relationshipâs seemingly gone to shit because of me without me even lifting a fingerâall of it is all I think about when my mind isnât forced to think about something else, and thuslyâTom and I have been having sex quite a lot.
Heâs gone away for work for two days though, leaving me in the lurch with all my thoughts and the boy I love ignoring me.
âItâs actually wild, isnât it,â Bridget considers. âYour capacity for male-driven drama.â
I give her a look.
âWhat?â She shrugs. âIt isâyouâve got a lot of boys in the air.â
âIâve got two boys in the air.â I pet my dark green, asymmetric, pleated, wrap skirt from Marni.
âChristian might beg to differ.â
I take a long sip of champagne, glaring over at her a bit. And sheâs doing this thing she doesâitâs shit and I hate it. Sheâs watching me, thinking, processing, reading. She leans back in her chair, squinting a bit at meâusually sheâs doing this to me and Beej, trying to solve the unsolvable.
But me, she can read like a book. Crack me open, get straight to the core.
âI donât know if itâs because of BJ or Dad,â she says. âBoth probably.â She considers. âYou might be addicted to male attention.â
âFuck off.â I blink, horrified. âI am not.â
âItâs not your fault.â She shrugs. âLook at your face. Your face is the first part of the problemââ
I frown, touching it absentmindedly. âWhatâs wrong my face?â
âNothing,â she says and laughs, pulling a piece of lint off of her script-logo, crew-neck jumper from Saint Ivory NYC. âHence the origin of the problem.â
âI donât much feel like being psychoanalysed, Bridge.â
âToo bad.â She leans in. âDad never paid much attention to us, not enough. Not the amount little girls need from their father, anyway. But BJââ She gives me a knowing look. âHe was your saving grace. He⦠looks at you and sees the sun. So, you were covered. You didnât need a dad, you had a BJ. For years, you were fine. For years, boys probably paid attention to you and you just didnât even know, because all you saw is BJ. And then he cheated on youââ
âIâm aware.â
ââAnd that undercut all the attention heâd paid you âtil then.â
My brows drop a little.
âSullied it. Made it untrustworthy and invaluable. So now I think, maybe you just collect the attention of menââ
âFuck youââ
ââKeep it in your back pocket for a rainy day.â
âYouâre being ridiculous.â I shake my head.
âAm I?â She arches her brow.
And I worry that maybe sheâs not. I fold my arms over my chest.
âThis thing with Christian is hitting Beej harder than I thoughtââ
âWell, yeah.â She shrugs. âHeâs his best friend.â
âItâs not like I was shagging Jonah!â I say, mostly to make myself feel better.
âRight,â she says. âJust his other best friend whoâs as close to him as his brother. Much better.â
I sigh, deflated.
âWe werenât shagging.â
She looks at me, dubious. âYou and Christian really never slept together?â
âNo.â My nose in the air.
âItâs okay if you did.â She gives me a look.
âWell, we didnât.â
She gives me a look. âWhy the fuck not?â
I shrug like thereâs no reason, like itâs a mystery to me too, but itâs not. I know why. And thereâs so much more to it than I can say.
âBeej thinks you did,â she tells me, and I have a pang of jealousy that my sister knows the innermost thoughts of the boy I love.
âI know. He doesnât believe me.â
âThatâs because BJ doesnât know how to not have sex with people.â
I nod, glib. âExcellent.â
âDo you think you guys will ever work it out?â she asks, tilting her head as she watches me.
And honestly, the question hits me like a slap.
The idea that thereâs a chance we might not has never been a reality on my horizon.
But all of that feels too personal to say out loud, even to my sister. I donât want her to know I always assumed weâd just wind back up together and I also donât want her to know that until this waking moment, I hadnât realised that maybe we might not.