Magnolia Parks: Chapter 7
Magnolia Parks (The Magnolia Parks Universe Book 1)
Youâre wonderingâI know you are, everyone doesâwhy we arenât together?
Infidelity aside, you think heâs perfect. That weâre perfect, and that nothing in this world past, present or future could be big enough or bad enough to justify us not being together. I get it, Iâve been there. Iâve thought that too.
There were these couple of months after everything that had happened with Christian where Beej and I began to drift back towards what we used to be. It wasnât intentional or conscious. It was just easier to be with him than not to be, and maybe thatâs not a good thingâI donât know anymore. I canât objectively tell with us. With anything to do with him, my heartâs logic is as blurry as the lines we pretend we donât cross. I was still broken, and I was still sad, and I still didnât trust him how I used to trust him, but I think at one point, I loved him more than he hurt me, and it sort of began to feel stupid to me to love someone how I loved him and to throw it all away because he had sex with someone else one time.
Iâm not belittling that, by the way. Or making excuses. It makes me feel sick to say it even now. Itâs not that it didnât matter. I think itâs just that how much I love him mattered more.
But Marsaili wouldnât have a bar of it. Iâd never seen her before with anyone the way she became with him. When he started showing up again around the house, sheâd practically lurk in the corners with daggers for eyes, waiting for moments to make snide comments, to undercut him, pour a salt ring around him, toss him under a bus. Heâd leave and sheâd make me an extra sweet tea in the kitchen and tell me that what he did couldnât be undone, and he couldnât be trusted, and if he did it once, heâd do it again, and that actually, if he loved me how he said he did, he wouldnât have done it anyway. And Iâd cry, every time, and Iâd tell her I think it was an accident, and sheâd tell me people donât accidentally have sex with people, that it doesnât just happen, you have to want it to happen. Which was always hard to wrap my head around.
It was easier for me to default back to the idea that it accidentally happened, that he slipped over accidentally into having sex, that there was no thought to it, that it happened the way you fall, a trip and then youâre falling, falling without your permission, itâs not conscious, and then you hit the ground.
Thatâs how I needed it to be for us to get back together, but Marsaili helped me see thatâs not how infidelity happens.
It happens because people are careless and callous and casual with hearts and emotions, and those people are dangerous to be involved with and so even if you love them, you shouldnât love them because nothing is worth feeling how he made me feel, and there was no guaranteeing that what happened before wouldnât happen again because the word of a cheater, she said, is void.
So BJ and I didnât happen again either. Itâs what put us on a funny path, I think. Those few months where we were obviously headed towards being together again before I 180°-ed the fuck out of there, started dating other boys to cover my heartâs tracks.
I think it killed him for a minute. Maybe even literally once.
We sort of were like we are now, I suppose. I had just begun dating someoneâReid Fairbairn, an Australian boy whose dad is in mining. He was new on the scene, pretty hot like most Australian boys are. It didnât last longâI think we were together two months or thereabouts. I didnât need it to last, heâd served his purpose. It stung BJ at first but all it took was a hot minute and a long weekend in Amsterdam and he was back to normal.
Weâd all spent the previous night out with my friends at EGG, and Reid told a joke that was actually pretty funny, and I really laughed, and it was one of those rare occasions where I actually had fun with the person I was technically dating at the time.
Anyway, the next night, I donât know where Reid was, but I went to dinner with Henry and Christian at Gauthier Soho, and Jonah came to meet us after for a drink.
âNot this again,â he said, as he waved his thumb between Christian and me, who were sitting next to one another.
âShe has a boyfriend.â Christian rolled his eyes, giving me a tired look.
Jonah tossed me an unimpressed look. âSheâs got a beard.â
âShe does not!â I huffed. Henry threw me a look that told me they all knew anyway, and I reached across his plate to âsampleâ his dessert for the fifth time.
âWhereâs Beej?â Henry asked Jonah.
Jonah shook his head. âI havenât seen him since last night.â
They all glance at me nervously.
âGuys!â I rolled my eyes. âI know heâs fucking all of London! No need to tiptoe around me. Besides,â I plopped my shield up in front of me, âI have a boyfriend.â
âAre you okay?â Henry asked, cautiously.
âAs okay as Iâd be to hear that you were fucking all of London.â I blinked with faux indifference.
âWell,â he sighed, contently. âI am.â
âThen great.â I grinned at him, lying through my teeth. âThatâs great, because I am great. With all of it. Because itâs great. Good for him. Iâm happy for him, even.â
âRight,â Jonah said, smirking. I gave him a megawatt smile to shut him up, and he shook his head, suppressing a smile as he poured me some wine.
The magical ingredient in our social circle that enables us to still function after everything weâve been through and done to one another: denial. (And alcohol.)
And then my phone started to ring. âSpeak of the devil.â Christian nodded toward my phone.
âHey.â I tried not to grin too big as I answered.
âParks?â he called into the phone, and his voice sounded weird.
âBeej?â I pressed the phone into my ear and covered the other with my hand.
âParks?â he yelled, then took a big, long sniff.
âBeej, where are you?â I asked quickly, and I felt the atmosphere amongst the boys shift. âYou sound strange?â
âI think Iâmââ I heard him taking deep breaths. âMy heartâs going funny,â he said, but I could hear someone in the background. I donât know which of us he was talking to. A girl.
âGive me the phone,â the girl said urgently.
I asked him again, clearly: âWhere are you?â
âGive it to me!â she said. There was a scuffle at the other end.
âNo!â he growled at her, didnât sound like himself, and thatâs when my heart sank, because I knew. I knew whatâd happened. I could tell, even though it didnât make sense. But Iâd seen it enough in our circles, knew the signs. The way it can change you. I didnât know heâd been using. There was more scuffling, more arguing for the phone. BJ was slurring. The girl was panicked.
âBeej?â Me, all urgent and nervous. All the boysâ eyes were on me, brows furrowed.
âBJ?â I called loudly.
âHello?â the girl said, breathless into the phone.
âWhere are you?â I demanded.
âMagnolia, itâsââ she started, but I jumped in.
âI donât care who you are.â I was doing my best to keep my voice steady. I stood up. The boys mirrored me. âJust tell me where are you?â
Jonah snatched the phone from my hand. âWhere the fuck are you?â he barked, heading for the restaurant door before he had an answer. âYou donât let him take another thing, okay?â Jonah commanded in his voice that frightened me. âIâm coming.â He threw a wad of cash at the maître d and walked up to his car that was parked right out front.
He opened the passenger door to his Escalade and shoved me in, closing the door behind me. âWhat the fuck is going on?â I asked, my voice so much smaller than I wanted it to be. Jonah threw Henry and Christian in the back seat a dark look.
âFuck.â Christian shook his head, nervous. They were all so nervous. Iâd never seen any of them nervous before and it was the most unsettling thing.
âHas this happened before?â I asked Jonah specifically.
He stared straight ahead. âOnce.â
âWhen?â I looked back at Henry, who gave me a long look, his eyes brimming with nervousness. Obviously whenever it happened it was sworn amongst the four of them that I was never to know.
âWhen?â I asked, my tone sharp as I turned to Christian. He pressed his lips together, not wanting to betray his friend.
âIn Amsterdam,â he said eventually.
âWhat the fuck, man!â Jonah glared in the rear view.
I still havenât quite shaken the feeling from that day. Itâs made me not trust blue skies, because the sky was so blue that morning, and as Jonah swerved through traffic down Piccadilly Circus I remember thinking that how the sky had looked that morning was a lie, like it had lulled me into a false sense of safety. It made me feel like that day was going to be a good day, but it was unfolding in front of me to be the worst.
I felt like I was driving to my doom. I felt like I was on my way to finding the love of my life dead. I remember gripping the chair of Joâs car so tightly my nails tore the leather. I remember Henry reaching around to me from the backseat behind and holding my arm, steadying me. I remember at a stoplight Jonah turning to me and wiping tears from my face I didnât know I was crying.
And I remember, viscerally, the feeling that my chest had been sawed wide open and the nerve endings of my heart were exposed.
The car jerked to a stop and Jonah barreled out, jogging up the stairs into the lobby of the Courthouse Hotel, us following after him. He smacked his hand down on the counter of the receptionist to get their attention. âBallentine,â he barked. âThe room number for Ballentine.â
âSirââ The woman looked up, flustered. âWe canât just giveââ
âHeâs overdosed,â he told her without flinching.
She blinked rapidly a few times, then nodded quickly, typing something. â305,â she barely uttered before Jonah spun on his heel, running for the stairs not the elevator.
âDo we need to call an ambulance?â I asked no one in particular as we ran after him. Christian, who deeply distrusts all law enforcement like every member of the Hemmes family, shook his head. I flicked my eyes to Henry, who nodded subtly as he whipped out his phone.
Jonah tore down the hallway, hurling himself at door 305. On the second hurl, the door gave way and Jonah tumbled in and on to the floor. I pushed past him, ignoring the girl in black lacy lingerie, hovering over him looking distraught, and ran to the bed where Beej was flopped up against the headboard, looking pale, beads of sweat on his brow and bare chest.
I scrambled up onto his body. âBeej?â
âMagnolia?â he slurred, looking up at me, his pupils completely dilated and unable to focus on me. He smiled faintly at me.
âWhat have you done?â I whispered to him, stroking his cheek.
âIââ BJ said.
I could hear Henry on the phone in the background. âWhat did you take?â I was urgent in tone, but I pushed my hand through his hair like a compulsion. He just blinked at me. âWhatâd he take?â I blinked tearily at the girl, finally acknowledging her. Once our eyes locked I realised we were sort of friends. Lila Blane. A party girl from Cheltenham.
She looked at me, guilty, panicked and confused. âIâI donât know.â Her hands were on her face. âI think just cocaine?â
âHeâs burning up!â I called out to no one in particular, my hand on his forehead.
âBut heâs been racking up since last night,â she said, panicked.
âAnd drinking?â Jonah held up one of the dozen bottles of champagne that was littering the floor of the hotel room. The girl nodded. Christian shoved me off of Beej and pulled him up off the bed, calling for his brotherâJonah ran over, helping drag Beej into the bathroom, me trailing uselessly behind. They pulled him into the shower and made the water tepidâhis eyes jerked open landing on Christian and me.
âAre you together?â Beej roared, angrily and barely coherent.
âNo.â I shook my head, heartbroken.
âThen why is he here!â BJ yelled.
I glanced between the Hemmes boys, hurt and unsure. Jonah shook his head at me. âHeâs just paranoid. Makes him more aggressive.â
I clambered into the shower next to Beej, whose eyelids were heavy, his head kept rolling back.
âBeej!â I smacked him in the face. âBJ!â
âParks,â he whispered, voice shaky. âI love you,â
I didnât realise I was crying but I was. I nodded. âI know. I love you too.â He started shaking and I looked over at Jonah, jaw agape, completely panic-struck.
âTremors,â Jonah told me.
âIs he dying?â I swallowed, nervous, not taking my eyes off of him.
âNo.â Jonah shook his head quickly, pressing his hand into his mouth, nervously. âHenry?â he called. Henry jogged to the bathroom door, phone pressed against his ear.
âETA?â Jonah asked without looking back.
âAny second.â
Beej started shaking more.
âTake her out of the room,â Jonah commanded, nodding in my direction as he turned off the shower, and I was moved out of the way just in time for BJ to vomit and then start convulsing.
Christian ran and grabbed a pillow, putting it under his head, and Henry was trying his best to block out the world for me as he pressed me into his chest and covered my eyes.
And then the paramedics arrived, yelling for us to move, wheeling in a stretcher. Itâs funny how your brain copes with trauma. Everything fell silent at that point. Silent and slow. Billie Holiday playing in the background of my mind as they lifted his limp body onto the stretcher. I remember Lila Blane hugging her knees on the bed, crying, pointing as she tried to relay what happened to one of the paramedics. I remember seeing from afar Jonah step out of the shower, covered in vomit and water, both hands in his hair, looking down at BJ, frozen in some kind of sorrow. I remember Christian on his knees in the shower, heaving like he was about to be sick himself. I remember wondering if this was it, if that was the last time ever Iâd see him. Him with the starry eyes and the hair I loved to knot my hands up in. The most beautiful boy in every room, the great love of my lifeâhow many loves do you get in a lifetime? I remember wondering that. How many people will look at me like he does, not just like Iâm the sun but like Iâm the whole god damn universe. I remember hating him for doing this to us. I remember hating him for dying before we had a chance to be okay again, because I always thought we would be. I thought weâd be fine, I thought one day weâd sort our shit out and Iâd forgive him for everything heâs done, and weâd grow old together and weâd finally get that house in Tobermory but then he was dying of a coke overdose because I looked happy the night before with another man I donât give a fucking shit about. I remember resentment pounding through my body and then I remember it, like a physical punch in the gut, how much I loved him. Really loved him. To the bone, loved him. Cut me and Iâd bleed him. How much I needed him, still needed him, would forever, always, never couldnât even if I tried, needed him. And I remember being deeply afraid of what my life would be like without him in it.
From there, he was taken in the ambulance to the hospital. After about two hours, a doctor came and told us that heâd stabilised but was hypoglycaemic. Christian flopped his head on his brotherâs shoulder, sighing relieved. One single tear slipped from Jonahâs eye, which he wiped away before anyone could see, but I saw it. Our eyes caught and we traded a heavy glance because even though the whole world would feel it if BJ wasnât in it anymore, me and Jonah would feel it the most. The Hemmes boys sat in the waiting room for BJâs parents, and Henry took my hand, leading me to the recovery room. âCome on.â He tried to smile, but he couldnât really. We got to the door of the room, and I stopped, looking up at Henry.
âJonah said that happened once before?â
Hen shook his head. âNot that.â
âWhat then?â I folded my arms over my chest, trying to feel in control of something, because it became raucously apparent then that I was in control of absolutely nought when it came to loving BJ.
âHe just took a lot once.â
âWhen?â
âA few months ago.â
âHow long has he been using?â I looked up at him with dark eyes.
Henâs brows furrowed and he sighed. âWe all use it sometimes.â
âI donât.â He gave me a look. âHow long?â I repeated, rubbing my eye as a ruse to cover up the fact that I was crying.
Hen scratched his throat, pursing his lips. âSince Amsterdam.â
I nodded once. âRegularly?â
He tilted his head, thinking. âRecreationally.â
âThatââI pointed to the roomââwasnât recreational.â
âNo,â he conceded quietly. âIt wasnât.â
We opened the door, and BJ was asleep on the bed. There was a seat in the corner that Henry collapsed on, exhausted. Beej was still a bit pale, his big puffy pillow lips parted in the centre, his chest rising and falling in a rhythm that was the soundtrack of my youth and Iâd never been more grateful to hear it. I walked over to him, cautious, like he might break if I moved too quickly, and reached up to touch his hair. âFamily only,â a young, pretty, brunette nurse appearing at the doorway told me. I looked over at her, feeling a bit like someone slapped me.
âI know who he is,â she told me. âYouâre not his family.â
Henry stood, frowning. âIf you know who he is, you know who she is. She is his family.â The nurse looked between us, then nodded once, and left. I climbed into BJâs bed, snuggling up next to him like no time or boyfriends or overdoses were between us.
You think big things like that change a person on the spot, but the changes that happened were invisible. He felt the same to me, to hug and to hold. His whole body was a familiar mountain Iâd climbed and conquered so many times in our lives that until that night had felt vast, but it suddenly felt so fleeting. My eyes kept catching on his wrists with the IV needles in his veins. I remember shifting into his neck, breathing him inâdeliberately ignoring the hickeys all over it made by people who werenât me. His nose was raw from how much blow heâd done, and my chest panged because I didnât understand how I could know him how I knew him and not know he was doing this.
About ten hours later, he came to. His mum and dad were sitting next to his bed which I was still lying on. I hadnât moved once. I felt him shift under me, his butterfly eyelashes twitching before they opened. I pulled back, looking up at him. Drearily, he blinked at me a few times. âParks.â He slowly smiled. My heart surged at him waking. His voice, I remember it sounding like Christmas morning and my birthday and Valentineâs Day and home and I loved him.
âIs he going to be okay?â I asked his doctor.
He nodded. âHeâs going to be fineââ
Relief flooded me as quickly as I found myself smacking him in the face. The whole room gasped, then froze. Both his parents, Henry, Jonah and a doctor. Beej looked wide-eyed, confused, still a bit dazed.
âIf you ever,â I started, my voice shaking. âDo that to me, ever againââ I shook my head. âI will never forgive you.â
âOkay.â He blinked, kind of teary.
âPromise me.â
âI promise.â He barely nodded.
Then I climbed out of his bed and walked out of his room.
No one knows that, by the way. We never talked about it, we didnât tell anyone, not even Paili or Perry. The only person who knows is my sister and thatâs because I came home from the hospital that day crying, and she wouldnât leave me aloneâIâd been missing for going on two days. I didnât even notice. I didnât realise hours were passing, let alone days. I was at the precipice of losing the love of my life and time had suspended. Allie would have told her anyway.
Reid didnât noticeâor if he did, he didnât say anything. He knew, I thinkâthey all did. What they were to me. Or perhaps more aptly, they knew who they werenât to me.
I didnât talk to BJ for a week. He texted me constantly, called, IM-ed, DM-edâeverything. But I couldnât.
I was undone. Ruptured from the inside and bleeding out.
Thatâs what him nearly dying did to me.
So, I ignored him for as long as I could.
It was Saturday a week and a half later, and our friends were going to see a rerun of It at Leicester Squareânot exactly like us but with Beej secretly on substance lock down, it was slim pickings for social activities. I walked into the foyerâand all the boysâ eyes fell on me, like I had a bomb strapped to my chest. I remember BJ looking over at me, eyes big and round, him swallowing nervously as I walked to him. And then it happened, not even consciouslyâI took his face in my hands and pressed my lips against his. He tasted like popcorn. Heâs never been able to wait for the movie to start to eat his snacks.
That kiss, it wasnât sexy or full of lust, but it was laced with a desperate, thirsty, nameless love that we had and have still now and we canât quite shake. I pulled back a little, our faces hovering only a few inches apart. We blinked at each other, our faces still like our hearts werenâtâall of our friends, utterly baffled. Then I stepped around him, linked my arm with Henryâs and marched into the cinema.
None of us ever talked about that kiss. Paili and Perry never asked. And thank goodness because how could I ever have explained it? Iâd already banished that night into the same corner of my heart where our other terrible night lives.
There are three memories that live there, all ones I never look at. All ones that shape me still all the same. All of them involving BJ.
Heâs a time bomb for me, do you see now? That heâll hurt me. Heâll always hurt me. Iâll never be safe with him, even if Iâm always safe next to him.
So, it doesnât matter if I love himâwhich I donâtâbut if I did, it doesnât matter, even now. Because loving him is the same thing as tossing the keys to my heart to a valet without a driverâs license. Heâll drive me off a cliff.