Magnolia Parks: Chapter 62
Magnolia Parks (The Magnolia Parks Universe Book 1)
I make it home for London just in time for the 3rd. Not that it matters. It doesnât matter anymoreâwell, it does, but Iâm with Tom now, I think. In a proper way.
Or at least Iâm going to be.
Thatâs what I decided as I drove away from him earlier.
âWhere are you going anyway?â he asked.
âDevon,â I shrug. âFor work.â
He looks confused. âWhy Devon?â
I think on my feet. âResearch for a âin our own backyardâ kind of piece.â
âOh.â He nods, then brushes his mouth over mine. âIâd come with you if I didnât have to fly outââ
I shake my head. âDonât be silly. Itâs just Devon.â
I hug him tight.
Heâs who I should be with. Iâm sure of it. Thatâs what I think the whole way there, and it doesnât matter now anyway because when I told BJ that we were done, he said finally, like heâd been waiting for me to do it. How long had he been waiting for me to cut him loose?
I probably should have done it all those years ago, but Iâll worry forever that Iâll never love another person the way I love him.
Fated: thatâs what I thought we were. That no matter what happenedâhow far we went, how much we hurt each other, that weâd always sort of find our way back to each other.
Now that Iâm twenty-three and weâre here and all weâve done since losing each other is lose each other in different ways over and over, being together again sort feels like a childish daydream. A bedtime story I clung to that eased the growing pains of having to leave him behind.
Leaving him behind was never going to happen passively, I could have told you that from the start. Leaving him would always involve pain, an act of violence, like ripping my heart from my own chest, leaving it on a bench somewhere, hoping for the best until I could make it to a hospital and be patched up, but I donât think you can live too long with your heart outside of your chest.
I pull up to our family home up here in Dartmouth.
Itâs a big old manor house on twenty-nine hectares of land. Indoor pool, outdoor pool, a lake, path to the beach, some horses and sheep.
I used to love it up here. Not so much anymore.
I look around for the groundskeeper. Mr. Gibbs. Heâs worked for my family for yearsâmy whole life, actually. Heâs a good man. Quiet.
A widower, I believe.
I often wonder if heâs lonely up here.
He and his two Saint Bernards that live with him on the property.
I pull together the Embellished, suede-trimmed, ribbed, camel hair cardigan that Iâm wearing, hug myself because no one else is and I walk around back to the garden and follow the path that isnât there down to the lake where the tree lives.
I always loved this willow tree, even before. Thereâs something poetic about it, even before there were poems to write. It weeps into the water, leaves swinging low like a chariot, bending like itâs broken, but none of that makes the tree less beautiful.
And now⦠I still love this willow treeâeven before I spot BJ Ballentine standing underneath it.
I stare at him for a few seconds.
Black, cashmere hoodie from the Fear of God x Ermenegildo Zegna collaboration, Paccbet tartan trousers, trashed black Vans.
His hair is messy, his eyes are heavy. His mouth hangs open a bit as he stares over at me.
I blink that I miss him and the turned down edges of his mouth tell me he misses me too and I have a feeling running right through like being tucked tightly into your bed at night, like a safe certainty that I will major in the minor details of him forever. I will never unlearn the shape of his mouth.
âYouâre here,â I say softly.
âCourse Iâm here.â He looks a bit annoyed. âI promised.â
âYouâve broken promises before.â
He looks over at me. âNot this one.â
I walk over and stand next to him, further away than I want to be.
Thereâs a noticeable distance between usâwhen is there not these days? Minutes go by without us saying anything with our mouths.
At the altar of the tree, I make a thousand soundless prayers and offerings, beg whoeverâs listening to align our stars and let him be who I thought he was. If he canât be that, I pray, may I be free of him and not have it kill me. But he is worth dying over and thatâs the part that gets me, I guess.
Heâs watching me with the eyes of someone whoâs known me for too long, reading things on my face he doesnât have permission to.
âYou okay?â He looks down at me.
I nod, even though itâs a bit of a lie. âAre you?â
He shrugs. âThis day always kind of fucks me up.â
I nod again. âYeah.â
He stares at the tree, smiling a little. âI think about that night all the time.â
My cheeks go pink. âDo you?â
He presses his index finger into his nose, amused. âYep. Donât you?â
I try not to is the honest-to-god answer.
âWho was it that walked in on us?â I squint up at him.
âThatcher,â BJ laughs. âHendry.â
He shoves his hands through his hair.
âYes.â I grin up at him. âYou were very cross.â
âWell,â he says, wiping away his smile with his hand, âyou were practically naked.â
I frown as my cheeks flame. âSo were you.â
âYeah but I donât give a shit if someone sees my arseââ
Our eyes lock. I swallow, then shake my head trying to keep my composure.
âYou just never could make the lock on that door work.â
âItâs a fucking dud lock, Parks.â He laughs once and a million memories are swimming on the surface of his face. âIâll never not be happy that door didnât lock thoughââ
If there was a fire in my mind and I could only save three things, one of them would be that nightâthe feather down quilt we muddied up at the foot of the tree and seventeen-year-old BJâs impatient eyes and wandering hands.
âDo you remember afterwards how a family of ducks walked out from the pond shrubbery?â I ask and he starts laughing.
âYou were so upset. Like the ducks knew what we were doing.â
âThey did!â I shake my head. âI bet those ducklings have been in therapy for years after what they watched you do to me.â
He gives me a playful look. âI donât recall you having a problem with it at the timeâ¦â
I stare over at him, lifting my chin. âI donât have a problem with it now.â
His mouth twitches and his eyes fall from mine, he drops his head into his hands, shaking it.
âParks, how the fuck am I ever going to get over you with all this shit between us?â
I purse my mouth. âTrauma bonds, you mean?â And he sniffs a laugh, annoyed at my sister all the way from here.
âIâm quite glad for them, actually,â I tell him.
He looks down at me tenderly. âIâve had the best life being fucked up by you.â
We look at each other with eyes that are saying more than our mouths ever could.
The air between us begins to thickenâlike how a tropical island feels before a storm breaks. Heavy and charged. Tangible.
And maybe this tree is a wormhole through space and time or maybe the coat finally falls off, or maybe I just love him in an undoable way.
His eyes flicker over my face, landing on my mouth, and then itâs happening before I know itâs happening. Like waves crashing into a cliff face, thatâs how we kiss.
I donât know whether Iâm the water or heâs the rock, but his hands are everywhere, all over me, up my white, cotton midi dress from Bottega Veneta and Iâm moving backwardsâI pull off his shirt, run my hand over my old stomping groundsâand then Iâm pressed up against the treeâhis mouth is on my neckâhis breath has jagged edges that snag on my skinâand Iâm up on his waistâour eyes lock. Theyâre always greener than youâd think they areâalmost the colour of the leaves of the tree weâre about to do this under once again.
He stares at me, blinking, his face all serious.
âI love you,â he tells me, his voice low and throaty.
I swallow, nervous. âI love you too,â I whisper. And then he pushes into me. A tiny gasp gets caught in my throat and I rest my forehead on his. I hold his face in my hands, kissing his stupid mouth that I love, I push my hands though his hair âtil theyâre tangled in it.
And the world falls to black. Itâs just me and him in all the universe. The stars have exploded, the sunâs burnt out. And itâs rushy, and I love him and itâs urgent. I love him, and itâs like someoneâs put a fire under us or maybe in our bones and we need to put it out, but maybe we donât want toâand I love him.
Iâll burn the coat, I donât care.
His mouth on my skin is like snow falling onto water. And itâs unforgivable of me, reallyâthat I dragged other hearts into this. But I did, and Iâm sorry and my mind is swimming as he holds me against him and maybe Iâm tired or maybe itâs just that Iâm here in his arms again as my eyes fill with tears and the whole world trembles in time with our bodies, all the flowers in this world and any others that might exist bloom all at once and the leaves of that tree we love rustles a whisper that Iâm home.