: Chapter 25
Wildfire (Maple Hills 2)
YOU KNOW WHEN YOU FEEL like everyone is staring at you while youâre doing something but you tell yourself itâs your imagination?
That. Except I look up from my breakfast plate and everyone is staring at me.
âWhat?â I mumble with my mouth full of scrambled egg.
Aurora looks ready to start a fight, but she was perfectly content an hour ago when I managed to find us a private spot for two minutes and press her against a very large and discreet tree to make out.
Emilia looks like her usual, perfectly normal self, but Xander looks as pissed as Aurora.
âDo you have something to tell the group?â Aurora says dramatically, leaning back in her chair and folding her arms across her chest. Iâve hated getting into trouble my whole life, but the way sheâs staring at me is kind of sexy.
âNo? Am I supposed to have something to tell the group?â Thereâs so many fucking traditions in this place that itâs perfectly plausible Iâve forgotten something ridiculous.
âYour birthday, Russ,â Aurora snaps, âis tomorrow.â
I concentrate on my eggs, but Aurora kicks me under the table so I look back up. If I stare at her for too long sheâll pout or smile and Iâll agree to something that makes me the center of attention when I donât want to. âIs it?â
âDid you ask him?â Jenna asks no one in particular as she walks up to our table.
âOh God, ask me what?â I groan.
âWhat type of cake you want for your birthday,â Jenna says.
âI donât need a cake. Iâm not really into birthdays, so please donât feel the need to do anything.â
Jenna sits beside Aurora and steals a piece of toast from her plate. Aurora is too busy glaring at me to notice. Jenna takes a bite and turns her attention back to me. âAw, donât be like that when itâs your twenty-first.â
âYour twenty-first?â Aurora squeaks. âAnd you want to spend it here with no birthday cake and no party? I love this place, but that sucks, Russ.â
Jenna scowls at her. âUh, family legacy? Rude.â
âYouâre the farmer equivalent of a nepo baby, calm down,â Aurora grumbles. âCan we all have time off to go to Vegas?â
âYouâre not even old enough to enjoy Las Vegas,â Emilia tells Aurora, only to be met with an unimpressed glare.
âI donât want to go to Vegas,â I add, even though I donât think anybody in this conversation cares about what I want.
Aurora looks appalled. âWhy not? We can take our camp counselor riches and put it all on red.â
Iâm back to studying my eggs, wondering how I can say I donât gamble without it creating more questions Iâd rather not answer. Thankfully, Jenna saves me. âCan someone tell me what cake Iâm buying? Ideally the birthday boy himself.â
Xander is the first to reply. âChocolate.â
Followed by Emilia. âLemon.â
And finally Aurora. âIce cream.â
Theyâre all looking at me again. âNo cake.â
âYâall are impossible,â Jenna moans as she stands from our table. âIâll be at the cabin in twenty minutes to do the inspection. Whoâs not working today?â
âMe and Russ,â Aurora says casually.
âIâm so glad I work so hard on all your programs for you to all switch it around whenever you feel like it,â Jenna drawls, rolling her eyes. Jenna has been nice about us switching, even though it ruins her spreadsheet and she has to reprint it. Aurora told her weâre the only ones who like hiking and thatâs why weâre spending so much time together. âIâm just going to put you two on the same day off from now on. Iâm wasting so much paper.â
I donât know how people sneaking around at other camps do it considering so many of them offer hardly any time off. Aurora and I struggle for privacy, but weâre lucky Emilia and Xander are flexible and like each other enough to swap with us so we can be alone.
I feel like Iâm sweating beneath the pressure of being around Jenna, but Aurora looks perfectly cool as she changes the topic. âDo you want anything from the ice cream shop in Meadow Springs?â
âI thought you were hiking,â Jenna asks, and Iâm definitely sweating.
âJen, how do you feel about having a huge food fight tonight instead of a pajama party?â Xander says, quickly changing the topic.
âI do not feel good about it,â she replies, instantly turning her attention to my roommate.
I take the attention being elsewhere as an opportunity to inhale the rest of my breakfast, while Aurora has already made a quick exit, saying she needed to do something.
âIâm mad at you,â she says as we approach my truck.
âI know, sweetheart.â
I open the passenger door for her, holding her hand to help her climb in. The summer dress sheâs wearing rises, the lace of her underwear just visible as she bends over to climb in, and when she looks back at me, I realize this is supposed to be a punishment. âReally mad at you.â
âI accept and encourage you to continue reminding me how mad you are,â I say, closing the door.
MEADOW SPRINGS IS A TINY little town not far from Honey Acres thatâs popular with the staff.
Iâve been saying Iâm going to visit since I got here, but thereâs only so many hours in the day and I prefer spending it wandering around after Aurora.
Many of the other counselors like its one bar and come here for drinks when theyâre not working, but bar hoppingâwould it be a bar hop since thereâs only one place to drink?âis not on our agenda.
Despite her repeated declaration that sheâs mad at me about my birthday, the second I open the truck door to help Aurora down she wraps her arms around my neck and kisses me. The amount of self-control and concentration I have to exercise on a daily basis not to touch her in front of other people is ridiculous. She sinks into me, her body smooth and soft and warm.
âAre you excited?â she asks, squeezing my hands as she climbs out of the truck.
She flattens her dress and straightens the straps, and she looks so fucking good Iâm considering if we should go back to Honey Acres at all. âThat depends, are we going to the famous tea cozy museum? The only one of its kind, and the Meadow Springs Gazetteâawarded tourist attraction of the year 1973?â
She throws her head back as she laughs and I just soak it all in. âIâm not sure youâll be able to handle the excitement.â
Threading Roryâs fingers through mine, the realization hits me that we donât have to pretend here, I can hold her hand and kiss her and donât have to worry. She realizes it at the same time as I do, squeezing my hand tightly and looking at me with a soft expression on her face.
Weâre not even out of the parking lot before Iâm pulling her to me. My hand cups her face, tilting it up to mine so I can kiss her again. âYou look so beautiful today.â
She huffs playfully, placing her hands on the front of my T-shirt, keeping my body close to hers. âYou say that every day.â
âBecause I mean it every day.â
She lets me go, rejoining our hands and pulling me in the direction of the stores. âYou just like me in this dress.â
The fire station comes into view and itâs the size of my house. âI like you in everything,â I say honestly. âAnd also in nothing at all.â
She gasps dramatically, stopping abruptly just before we round the corner. âYou canât say that here, Russ! Youâll outrage the townspeople.â
She tuts and I realize sheâs joking. âThere arenât any here right now to hear me.â
âPeople will just know. Thereâs a nosy old lady somewhere with her spidey-senses tingling because she knows you want to rip this sundress off and do disgusting and deviant things to me.â
âThatâs exactly what I want to do to you.â
âAnd you will, later. But for nowââwe turn the cornerââwelcome to the Meadow Springs shopping district.â
On first appearances, it seems that the shopping district is just two rows of family-owned stores running parallel from a fire station to a police station. I know theyâre family owned because the words appear at least three times on every store. âWow, itâs exactly like being on Rodeo Drive,â I say, looking at the three different bowling ball stores. âHow do they have three different places to buy bowling balls, but not a drugstore? And how can that possibly be economically viable?â
âOoh,â she squeaks. âBig drama. So it was one family businessââ
âSurprising.â
ââand when the dad died, the three sons couldnât agree on how to run it, so they split into three stores and they all directly compete with one another. Itâs a great source of stress for the people who just want to respect the sanctity of bowling and not get involved in family feuds.â
âSanctity of bowling?â Iâm amazed and confusedâand unusually invested. âHow do you know all this?â
She stops outside a bookstore and I realize weâve walked the full length of the street in a couple of minutes. âJenna keeps me updated. She goes to the Meadow Springs Committee of Commitments to Town Improvements and Other Important Announcements. We call it MSCCTIOIA for short.â
She sounds it out like misk-tea-eye-owe-ah, but it just sounds like a sneeze. âI honestly feel like youâre fucking with me.â
She gives me her brightest smile as she pulls me into the bookstore. âMy favorite thing is the fact Iâm absolutely not fucking with you.â
The bell rings above our heads, the smell of stale coffee and dust immediately assaulting me. The store is small, the same dim brownish glow throughout, but thereâs plenty to choose from. Iâm browsing the classics when Auroraâs nose scrunches at the old anthology I pull out. âI freaking hate poetry.â
âYouâre an English major, how can you hate poetry?â I push the anthology back into its slot.
âJust get to the point, yâknow? If you love someone, say it with your chest. Itâs why I like contemporary romance; I know where I stand,â Aurora says, running her fingers along the spine as we walk between two rows of shelves. âI donât trust poetry. You think youâre reading about an intense love story but then you find out itâs actually about a shoe.â
She stops in front of the mystery section and I move behind her to hold her waist, resting my chin on the crown of her head as she scans the spines of the books in front of her. She reaches for one, reading the blurb before putting it back. âI have a friend in my major called Halle. She runs the book club at The Next Chapter bookstore in Maple Hills and sheâs super sweet, but she does wholeheartedly believe my indifference to Jane Austen should get me kicked out.â
âWhatâs your beef with Jane? Poetry and Austen hater? Iâm beginning to agree with your friend Halle,â I tease.
âI donât have beef with her; I just think Darcy is a dick.â I canât help how loud the laugh is that launches out of me, because of all the things I was expecting her to say, it wasnât that. âYouâre laughing, but Iâm right. Any man who says, âShe is tolerable, but not handsome enough to tempt me,â deserves to be thrown from his horse into a pond, not to get the girl.â
Aurora spins to look at me, and even under these terrible lights sheâs mesmerizing. âI could never say that about you, sweetheart.â
I will never get tired of being able to bend down and kiss her freely. Itâs that feeling of instant relief that has me thinking about how soon college is restarting and the fact that weâre going back to the same place when camp ends. I stroke my thumb against her cheek and enjoy the feel of her pulse against the palm resting on her neck.
âWhy? Because Iâm so handsome?â
I shake my head, running my thumb along her bottom lip as she pouts up at me. âNo, because I could never describe you as tolerable.â
Her jaw drops instantly, hand reaching for the closest book to hit me with as I laugh, fighting to pull her close to me. âNo, get off,â she snaps as I bury my head into her hair and kiss her neck. âIâm mad again.â
I totally forgot someone runs this store until they clear their throat behind me. Aurora and I both turn, her hair ruffled and cheeks flushed from our play fight. âSorry to interrupt,â he says. âCan I help you with anything?â
Iâm about to say no, but Aurora beats me to it. âHi, yes, you can actually. My husband and I are looking to open a strip club here in Meadow Springs. Do you happen to have any books on business?â
âI THINK IâD LIKE TO own a bookstore one day,â Aurora says as she eats another mouthful of chocolate chip ice cream. âMaybe thatâs what Iâll do when I finish college.â
After terrifying the bookstore owner with Auroraâs elaborate strip club plans, ones that were so well thought out Iâm not convinced they were thought up on the spot, weâve ventured to the other side of the street to The Little Moo, a cute ice cream shop.
âMove here, open a rival bookstore, join the community commitment to nonsense, or whatever itâs called, sell dirty romance books, and scandalize the townsfolk.â
âI love scandalizing people,â she says proudly. âAnd what are you going to do while Iâm running my bookstore and corrupting the masses?â
âIâll open a rival bowling ball store to rival the rival bowling stores, obviously.â
Aurora snorts loudly, immediately slapping her hand over her mouth and nose. âYouâre going to get us kicked out of the MSCCTIOIA.â
âWeâll start a rival one.â I shrug.
âYouâve gone mad with power. Iâm so glad youâve thought this all through, though, because I donât think Meadow Springs is on the NHL roster.â
I scrape up the last of my ice cream, immediately eyeing hers. âI donât want to play professionally anyway.â
Her eyebrows practically shoot into her hairline. âWhat, why? I thought it was every athleteâs dream to play in a major league.â
Auroraâs response doesnât bother me, because itâs the one I get every time the topic comes up in conversation with someone. âI have no desire to be famous and I donât love hockey enough to give up my privacy.â
âBut why?â she says, her face more serious.
I canât tell her itâs because Iâll always be worried someone will dig into my family or that the money Iâll have will make my dad more relentless. I shrug, but I can tell sheâs waiting for an answer from me.
âI donât know, Ror. I appreciate a low-key life, I suppose. I love my teammates, and of course I love hockey, but Iâm not sure Iâd have even tried to play at collegiate level if it wasnât the thing that got me a full ride.â She spins her spoon in her ice cream bowl and I know instantly Iâve said something wrong. âWhat? Why do you look like that?â
âMy family is well-known, Russ. Like, famous-level well-known. Elsa is essentially a socialite, sheâs in the tabloids all the time, and my dad is known all over the world because of Fenrir, so there are quite a lot of people who know who I am. Plus, my parents had this super messy public divorce.â
I didnât realize it was anything to do with Aurora when I first met her, but I do vaguely remember my mom following along with court proceedings many years ago. âOh. Iâd never thought of it like that.â
âYeah⦠oh. Iâm not saying Iâve got paparazzi in my face all the time. I mostly get left alone, unless Iâm purposely drawing attention to myself, but I could never guarantee privacy to the person Iâm dating. I canât even guarantee it to my friends.â
Of all the ways I overthink, I canât believe Iâve never thought about this. My brain is scrambling for a response and doesnât find one, but luckily Iâm saved when the ice cream store owner who served us earlier approaches our table. âAre yâall the folks opening a strip club?â