Magnolia Parks: Chapter 64
Magnolia Parks (The Magnolia Parks Universe Book 1)
We leave Dartmouth the next day, stay on the phone talking to each other, laughing as we drive beside one anotherâwe pull off on the M3 just before we hit Lightwater.
We kiss again, have sex again in back of his carâbecause weâve got lost time to make up forâand then when we get closer to London, the dread hits me.
It could barrel me over, the juxtaposition of how Iâm feeling⦠such a peculiar mix.
Iâm so happy, so in love, so relieved to be finally with Beej, properly, out loud, confessedly in love with him.
But thereâs an encroaching shadow in the corner of my mind about having to tell Tom. About having to let him go. Because heâs important to me now, and I adore him.
Itâs different than with BJ and we canât pretend that itâs the sameâitâs not. Tom wouldnât even think it is.
If BJâs water to me, Tom is wine. I donât need him to survive, but I love him anyway; he tastes good, makes me feel better, makes me feel braver.
Heâs nice to have around, and actually, in all unmetaphorical seriousness, I have no idea how I would have stayed afloat this year without Tom.
Itâs strange, donât you think, the way we attach to people.
The way our best intentions are cast aside, and the seed gets deeper into the soil of us than we planned and their place in our lives grow roots. I donât think weâre supposed to love people lightly. I donât think weâre supposed to love them a little bit and move on. Tom grew roots. Itâs not his fault. I let him.
And I have a horrible, nervous feeling that maybe my sister was right about me, and if she wasâwhat kind of person does that make me?
I ask for Tom to meet me in the park by my house.
Heâs waiting for me on the bench.
The navy, Horsey lounge pants from Loro Piana with the brown, wool polo shirt and the matching suede sneakers from Fear of God for Ermenegildo Zegna.
Handsome as ever. The eyes Billie Eilish wrote the song about, Iâm sure of it.
I walk towards him, swallowing nervously as I do. And I suspect he knows as soon as he sees me. Itâs probably written all over meâBJ usually is.
Tom England looks up at meâthis strange, closed mouth, sad-eyed smile.
He breathes out, his eyes drop from mine. âYouâre back together.â
I sit down next to him, my hands heavy in my own lap. I nod, my mouth pulls into a reluctant smile. He shakes his head and gives me a small shrug; his eyes look a bit remorseful. âWe kind of saw this comingââ
âI suppose.â I nod. âI didnât see you becoming my best friend, though,â I tell my hands because I canât face him.
He looks over at me, picks up my hand and holds it in his. âNo, I didnât see that coming either.â
He puts his arm around me, sighing as he looks out over the park. âSo, are you already back together or just deciding youâll be?â I glance over at him and my cheeks are pink. âAh,â he says and chucklesâalbeit a bit flatly. âYou had sex.â
I twitch my mouth from side to side.
And then he asks me as though he genuinely cares, âHow was that?â
I look up at him. âDo you really want to know?â
âNo.â He smiles a little. âI donât.â
I lean into him. âThank you,â I tell him without looking at him. âFor what you did for me.â
âWhat did I do for you?â He tugs on my blue, pavilion pleated, cotton shirt dress from Aje.
âLots of things,â I say. âBut mostly that you loved me.â
His mouth goes tight and he looks a bit embarrassed. âHe tell you that?â I shake my head. âHowâd you know then?â
âBecause I know you now, quite well.â
âOh.â He gives me a look. âI suppose you do.â
I watch him closely. âAre you okay?â
âIâll be fine.â He nods, not meeting my eyes.
âYouâll need a new foxhole.â
He lets out a dry laugh. âI think Iâm done with foxholes for a while.â
I sniff a laugh. âMe too.â
He nods, mouth pursed and then drops his arm from around me, turning to me. His face goes serious, eyebrows dropping in a sort of serious low. âIâve got to say somethingâand it might sound self-serving, but Iâm not trying to be.â
I shake my head at him. âYou never areââ
âHeâs going to hurt you again,â he tells me without flinching.
My heart climbs a little up my throat.
I shake my head. âNoââ
âYes.â He nods.
âTomââ
âMagnolia.â He shakes his head. âIâm not telling you to change your mind. I couldnât, anyway. You two areââhe pauses, looking for the wordââbound.â
He says that like itâs a hopeless thing.
But heâs right. We are.
âI canât undo thatâIâm not trying.â He shrugs. âIâm just telling you, so someone hasâheâs going to hurt you again, and I donât know that Iâll be here when he does.â