Текст книги "The Other Boy"
Автор книги: Hailey Abbott
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Maddy shot Brian a dirty look. “Why are you being so obnoxious? He’s coming because he lives here.”
“Where?”
“Here! Right over there.” She pointed to the roof of the little white cottage, visible across the field. “He and Fred live in that house.”
“They live there? What are they, white trash?”
Maddy stopped short and whipped around. Her face was hot with anger. “Why are you being such a total snob? I can’t believe you,” she fired at him. Brian fell back a step and held up his hands. “Whoa—
don’t get all worked up.” He flashed his disarming smile.
“I was just kidding. Anyway, stop looking so cute or I’m going to have to . . .” He reached for her, but Maddy turned and strode rapidly to the banks of the stream. 166
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The sight of the clear, golden water tumbling over the slick gray stones soothed her. She took a deep breath.
“This is my favorite thinking place out here,” she told Brian calmly. “Every day after we’re done working, I come out here and sit on this big rock and relax. Isn’t it peaceful? And you can see deer in the evening too.”
“Cool.”
Maddy climbed onto the rock and plunged her hot, dusty feet into the water. “Come on, Brian—it’s nice and cold!”
He stood on the bank, looking a little hot and overdressed in his long-sleeved shirt and dark jeans. “Look at you, hippie chick. What are you doing?” he said, not moving.
“I’m cooling off my feet. Come and sit next to me.”
“I’m fine.” It was obvious he wasn’t going to put his feet in and that he wasn’t interested in the stream. It was time to expedite the tour. She climbed off the big rock.
“Okay, well, the room I’ve been working on is over here.”
“Great,” he said unenthusiastically.
The little red building in front of them almost glowed in the slanting sunlight, which glinted on the tin roof. Dad hadn’t been down here with the weed-whacker yet, so the long grasses lay in dry yellow swathes speckled with purple wildflowers around the foundation. Maddy unlatched and heaved open the big doors. The 167
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cream-painted walls glowed in the light-filled room. They had left the floors natural, but the planks were almost white from scrubbing. The rollers, paintbrushes, tarps, and paint cans were piled in a corner. The furniture and rug still hadn’t arrived, so their footsteps echoed in the bareness. On an old table lay a big bunch of lavender Maddy had picked yesterday in an attempt to cover the paint smell.
“Wow!” Brian said in a goofy voice as they entered.
“What time is the organic vegan yoga class?”
Maddy tried not to let her face show how much the comment wounded her. “I’ve been working really hard. David and I have been out here every day for like a month.”
“I’m just teasing you, Mad! You’ve really lost your sense of humor since coming out here. I guess country living just sucked it all right out of you.” Brian sat down on a barrel and took off one of his Reefs to examine his foot. “I’ve got a cut on my toe—I think I stepped on something.” He looked up. “You mind if we head back to the house?”
Maddy sighed. “Sure. I’ll find you a Band-Aid.” She took one last look around the empty, silent room with the dust motes floating in the beams of sunlight and rolled the big doors shut with a rumbling thud. As she followed Brian up the path to the house, she chewed over his comment about the vegan yoga class. 168
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Something was off. After a minute, it came to her: Just a few months ago, that was exactly the kind of comment she would have made herself, or at least laughed at. Now she thought it was obnoxious and ignorant. The sinking feeling that had been growing in her chest all afternoon suddenly felt worse. She shook her head. Look, Maddy, she told herself, you’ve wanted to see Brian all summer—
obsessed about it, actually. Now he’s here and it’s a gorgeousday and you’re together . So just stop overanalyzing everything and enjoy the time you have.
Even as she psyched herself up, she knew that making this visit fun would be an uphill battle. 169
Chapter Nineteen
!
Maddy! Come on, we’re ready,” Maddy’s mother called from downstairs.
“Okay, coming!” Maddy examined herself carefully in the full-length mirror in her parents’ room. Her long, strapless white cotton sundress had a full, gathered skirt and a tight empire bodice. It just brushed her ankles and showed off her golden tan. She had twisted her hair up into a casual knot at the back of her head. A chunky enamel bracelet in red and blue was her only jewelry.
There was a tap on the door frame. She turned around.
“Hey, babe,” Brian said.
“Hi.”
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He had put on a blue button-down shirt and wet his hair down under the faucet. A leftover water droplet hung at his temple. He looked sexy as always.
“You look great,” he said, coming into the room.
“Thanks.”
“I brought your birthday present.”
Her heart lifted. Maybe everything was going to be okay after all. “What is it?” She sat down on the edge of the bed.
He sat down next to her and took a box out of his pocket. He smelled like Davidoff Cool Water and hair gel.
Maddy looked into his face. “You’re so sweet, babe,”
she said. “You didn’t even ask me what I wanted!”
“I know. I didn’t have to. Anyway, open it.”
Carefully, she pried open the little blue box. Inside was a huge silver heart pendant on a black silk cord. Maddy stared at it for a second and then remembered. A few months ago, she and Brian had been windowshopping in Union Square. They had just gotten Starbucks, and Maddy had stopped in front of a display of jewelry in front of Tiffany. The heart pendant shone on a bed of gray velvet. “Ohmygod, look at that gorgeous thing,” she’d said, tugging at Brian’s sleeve. “That would look so perfect with my summer tops.” She’d cast a sly, meaningful look at Brian.
“Dream on, babe,” he’d said with a laugh. “Sunny 171
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just got that same heart. It’s like fifteen hundred dollars.”
She had forgotten about it almost immediately, but Brian hadn’t, obviously. Now here it was, right in front of her and she honestly couldn’t have cared less. It looked different to her now, splashy and sort of cheap, for some reason. Maddy looked from the box to Brian’s face. He was grinning, anticipating her reaction. So she did the only thing she could—she faked it.
“It’s gorgeous!” she said. “I can’t believe you remembered!” It really is thoughtful, she told herself.
“I can’t believe I did either. It’s like a miracle or something.”
“Here, put it on me.” She handed him the box. He lifted out the pendant and placed the cord around her throat, struggling a minute with the tiny catch at the back. Maddy stood and looked in the mirror. The heart shone on her tanned chest, but something about the modern, sleek design looked out of place with her white dress and the simple room around her.
Brian came up behind her and put his arms around her waist, watching their reflections in the mirror. “It looks awesome on you,” he said. He kissed the side of her neck and then slid his hand up from her waist. Maddy giggled nervously.
“Come on—we’re in my parents’ room!”
“So?” He tried to kiss her again.
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“Go away. I have to primp some more. Go talk to my Dad or something.”
Brian rolled his eyes and reluctantly headed toward the door. Maddy could hear his footsteps slowly descending the stairs. She turned back to the mirror and covered the heart up with her hand. Outfit perfect. She removed her hand. Outfit weird. Maddy massaged her forehead, where a headache was starting to squeeze her temples, and followed her boyfriend down the stairs.
“Happy birthday, honey!” her mom sang out as she entered the kitchen. “You look beautiful. I can’t believe I have a daughter who’s turning seventeen!” She put her arms around Maddy and gave her a long hug.
“Thanks, Mom. I can’t believe I’m seventeen either—
kind of amazing.” Maddy looked around the kitchen. A stack of plates was sitting on the table, along with a few bottles of wine, but there were no signs of cooking.
“Where’s all the food?”
“Oh, I’m not sure,” her mother said airily, busying herself with a vase of flowers.
“What do you mean, you’re not sure?” Maddy asked, confused.
“Just that—I don’t really know where the food is. Maybe the raccoons ran off with it.”
“Ha-ha. Something’s up, Mom. You’re terrible at keeping secrets.”
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Her mom picked up the vase. “You’re right, honey. I’ll tell you—we’ve decided to take you out to McDonald’s for your birthday.” The screen door banged behind her. Maddy followed her onto the porch. “Very funny.”
Her mother set the flowers on a little table. Maddy leaned against her side and laid her head on her mother’s shoulder. Standing hand in hand, they were silent for a moment, listening to the peepers. Until Maddy realized something. “Um, Mom, where’s Brian?”
“He’s in the living room with Dad. They’re having a nice chat.” Maddy doubted that somehow. She’d better go rescue, well, both of them.
The soft, familiar colors of the living room glowed in the orange light of the lamps. Maddy paused quietly in the doorway. Neither her father nor Brian noticed her standing there. Darkness pressed at the windows, and the wooden coffee table was piled with books and copies of Practical Winery & Vineyard. Her dad was sitting in the big armchair, his legs crossed, one hand swirling wine in a glass. Even from the doorway, Maddy could see that he was gripping the glass more tightly than necessary. Brian sat in a studiously casual pose on the green velour sofa, arm flung over the back, ankle crossed over knee. He tapped a little on the sofa arm and whistled under his breath. Her dad looked strained.
“Ah, so . . . how do you like the vineyard, Brian?” he asked politely.
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“It’s really nice.” There was another silence. “Really cool.”
“Yes, well, we can’t expect much the first year, of course, but after this fall we’re going to double our vine capacity,” Maddy’s father said with more vigor. Brian’s gaze started to wander. Her dad trailed off. The silence descended again. Her dad started to fiddle with the edge of a newspaper at his elbow.
“So, Maddy tells me you’re going down to L.A. after this weekend?”
“Yeah, my buddies and I are staying with some people in Malibu.”
“Oh, I see.” Silence again.
Maddy thought that if she had to listen to Brian and her father make any more small talk, she was going to pull her hair out by the roots. Why did he always clam up like that around her parents? Sure, they were a little odd sometimes, but they were just parents, she thought. He acted so stupid and stiff around them. “Hey, guys,”
she said brightly, entering the room. Both of them turned toward her with obvious relief.
“Hi, honey!” Her dad practically leaped to his feet.
“How’s the birthday girl?”
“Great.”
“Come on, you all, it’s time for the birthday girl’s dinner,” her mother said, sticking her head in the room.
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“Are you coming?” Maddy asked Brian, who was still sitting down.
“Yeah.” He took his time getting off the sofa. Maddy followed her mom into the kitchen and stopped short just inside the door.
“Mom!” she cried. “I can’t believe you brought the crown!” Sitting on the scrubbed round kitchen table was an object that resembled a Burger King crown with schizophrenia. It actually was an old Burger King crown—practically museum-quality. Dried macaroni, old pieces of faded yarn, shells, and plastic beads were stuck all over the gold cardboard with a liberal, crumbling layer of Elmer’s glue. Maddy had made the crown at her own princess-themed sixth birthday party. Everyone had had a glorious, sticky, messy time decorating their own crowns. On the front, Maddy had written maddy birthday girl in careful, wobbly print. She remembered being so proud that she’d made the G facing the right direction. The crown had been preserved and trotted out every year until Maddy finally forbade its appearance at her twelfth-birthday pool party. Her mother had seemed to understand at the time, and the crown hadn’t reappeared since—until now.
Maddy looked at her mom and dad. They were grinning. Brian stood in the doorway, looking confused.
“You know, guys,” she said, “at first I thought that, since 176
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I’m seventeen, a tiara from Cartier would be nice, but after seeing this crown again, I’ve totally changed my mind.” Her parents applauded as she placed it on her head and bowed, trying to keep the crown from crashing to the floor.
“Here, honey, get in a picture with Dad.” Maddy’s mother was wielding the digital camera. Obligingly, Maddy and her dad draped their arms around each other’s shoulders and smiled. Then her father took the camera and everyone shuffled around.
“Now one with your mom.” Click.
“Okay, now me and Brian,” Maddy said. He was still standing forlornly in the doorway. “Come here, cutie.”
He came over. She put her arms around him and gave him a hug. “Are you having a good time?” she whispered. He looked down at her. “Yeah, of course,” he said, as if there were no other possible option.
“Okay, kids, smile!” Maddy’s dad aimed the camera at them. Click.
“Let me see, Dad,” Maddy took the camera and everyone bent over the tiny screen. She paged through a series of photos of the grapevines and the house before coming to the ones they had just taken. There were general murmurs of “Cute!” and “Good one” at the pictures of Maddy with her parents, but when she came to the one of Brian and her, everyone squinted at the screen. 177
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Maddy could see why—it wasn’t very good: Brian had his eyes closed for one thing, but it wasn’t just that. His clothes looked too harsh and dark against the soft wood of the background and her white cotton dress, and they were standing kind of stiffly, their arms around each other’s waists. It looked like they’d just met and had been told to stand still to have their photo taken.
“Well!” her mother said, turning away. “Very nice.”
Maddy could tell by the tone of her voice that her mom had noticed the dissonance also. Maddy tried to quell the tiny worm of worry inside her. Things were a little off, but they’d been apart for a while. Right now she and Brian were together—that was what mattered. 178
Chapter Twenty
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Where are we going, Mom?” Maddy asked. “I’m starving.” She was starting to get a little annoyed. It was already nine thirty, and for the last ten minutes, she, Brian, and her parents had been weaving their way through the grapevines, up and down different rows, as if they were hunting something. Maddy’s full skirt brushed her ankles as she walked. The full moon cast a ghostly white light over the field, and an abundance of stars were flung across the inky black sky. Was this some sort of pre-dinner scavenger hunt her parents had cooked up? She could hear Brian’s footsteps behind her. Up ahead, the adults reached the end of a row and turned right, disappearing.
“Oh, here you are! We were lost. I forgot where 179
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you . . .” The rest of her mother’s words were lost in an indistinct mumble.
What the hell was going on? Maddy walked faster and finally broke into a trot. She turned down the row her parents were in and skidded to a halt so fast that Brian, close behind her, almost sent her sprawling into the dirt.
There, in the middle of the grapevines, was the most beautiful feast she had ever seen, spread on a simple white cloth. Bunches of lavender, grasses, and daisies stood in big pottery pitchers down the center of the long table. Candles in clear glass holders were scattered between the flowers, spreading a warm yellow glow over everything. Vineyard tomatoes and thick white slices of fresh mozzarella with basil stood at one end. A bowl heaped with arugula, endive, and radicchio was liberally sprinkled with—Maddy laughed—blue cheese crumbles. Crowded near the salad was a platter of cold salmon with dill, drizzled with a silky cream sauce. A gorgeous chocolate torte stood next to a white bowl of glowing raspberry sauce. David stood next to Fred, leaning his palms on the end of the table. Maddy’s eyes met his, and he grinned. “The torte is coffee-chocolate,” he said.
“Wow!” Maddy exclaimed. “This is so gorgeous!
Look at all of this!” Everyone was grinning. “Whose idea was this?” She looked questioningly at her mother. Mom was smiling and shaking her head.
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“It wasn’t me, honey.”
Maddy looked around. “It wasn’t you?” David’s grin broadened as he saw the realization dawn on her face. Maddy looked at him, amazed. “You? I can’t believe you’d—” She caught herself and quickly tore her eyes away from his.
He looked down and brushed an invisible crumb from the table. “It’s nothing—just some stuff I put together this afternoon.” His voice was low, but the pleasure in it was unmistakable.
“Arrmmhh.” Brian cleared his throat.
“Oh, I’m sorry. David, this is Brian, my . . . boyfriend.” She wondered if the tiny pause had been apparent to anyone else. The two boys eyed each other—
one very tall and lean, clean-shaven, with curly light brown hair, the other dark-haired and blue-eyed, a threeday scruff on his chin. David jerked his head once. “Hey.”
“Hey.” Brian stuck his hands in his pockets. David reached out and plucked a piece of yarn off Maddy’s shoulder. He held it out. “This fell off your crown,” he said solemnly.
“Oh! Thanks.” She took the yarn. “It sheds sometimes.”
“I noticed,” he replied with a funny look on his face.
“Well, okay!” Maddy’s father said heartily, looking from Brian’s furrowed brow to David’s bland expression 181
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with the air of a hockey referee trying to head off a brawl on the ice. “Let’s eat.”
The food was incredible. Maddy couldn’t stop eating. Her mom insisted David tell her the recipe for the cream sauce, and he laughed and shook his head, saying that Mondavi chefs would hunt him down if he let that gem get out. Maddy looked around the table at everyone’s faces, illuminated by the soft candlelight, the wind blowing up the rows and occasionally lifting one end of the tablecloth. This had to be one of her best birthdays yet.
“Well, honey, this is the first birthday here at the vineyard,” Maddy’s father said, glancing around the table and smiling.
“Stop, Dad, I can hear the violins starting,” Maddy teased.
Suddenly, there was a thud next to her. Maddy looked over to find Brian lying on the ground, flat on his back, lying on top of the wooden chair he had been sitting on. A chair leg was lying in the dirt a few feet away.
“Oh my God, Brian. Are you okay?” She leaned down.
“What happened?” Maddy’s mother asked with concern. Everyone was craning to look over at Brian, who had picked himself up and was now brushing the clingy dust from his blue shirt, his face red.
“I was just sitting there and the chair bottom busted through.” He picked up the chair. The woven rush seat 182
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had a giant ragged hole in it. “And a leg snapped off.”
He sounded like he was mad but trying not to show it. Maddy’s eyes widened, and involuntarily, she locked eyes with David across the table. She could tell he was thinking the same thing she was—the only difference was, he looked like he was about to start laughing hysterically. Brian caught the look and his eyes narrowed.
“What’s going on?” he asked slowly.
Maddy glared at David, whose face had started to turn purple from holding in his laughter. “Nothing, I’m sorry. It’s just, one of the chairs in the shed was a casualty of a minor paint fight we might have had. We put it aside to take it up to the repair shed, but—”
“Dad must have gotten it when we were getting chairs for dinner, not realizing it was broken,” David finished. Fred nodded, looking a little sheepish.
“I grabbed one that was sitting right by the door,” he said.
“Oh, well, let’s just get that bucket over there,”
Maddy’s mom jumped in. “We can turn it upside down and—”
“I’ll sit on it,” David interrupted. “Brian, take my seat.” Brian looked suspicious for a minute and then moved toward the foot of the table. David vacated his seat and settled down on the upturned metal bucket across from the birthday girl.
“Thanks.”
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David shrugged. “Sure.”
Fred leaned over to Maddy’s mother. “Debbie, I wanted to tell you that I did some pricing on a new mower—they’re really exorbitant.”
“I completely forgot, Fred, I talked to a guy from the seed place and he has a mower he might be selling,” her father said.
David rolled his eyes at Maddy. “Business again?”
She smiled. “Why are they so boring?”
Then, with an innocent air, David said, “I wonder if that’s how we sounded at the furniture store?”
“David,” Maddy kicked him under the table. He widened his eyes and gave her a “Who, me?” look. Brian looked up from his fish.
“What happened at the furniture store?” he asked Maddy.
“Nothing,” she said.
“Something happened. Unless you’re into reminiscing about sofa-shopping now,” Brian insisted. Maddy sighed and aimed another invisible kick at David’s shin. “It was just a funny misunderstanding, that’s all. We were picking out furniture for the tasting room, David and I, and the salesman called David my husband,” she explained, stifling a giggle. She looked over at Brian with an expectant smile, waiting for him to laugh at the absurdity of the situation, but his face was stony. She hurried ahead. “So, we were just joking around 184
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and David said, ‘Oh, yeah, we hardly have any furniture,’
and the guy asked if we were newlyweds and I had to explain that I was keeping my maiden name and it was all just totally ridiculous.” David’s laughter erupted like he’d been holding his breath until now. His laugh was infectious and Maddy giggled also, remembering how earnest the salesman had been. She couldn’t help it. But Brian just sat there silently, his eyebrows knit together. Suddenly, Maddy’s gaze locked onto David’s across the table. He smiled right into her eyes, his face open and engaging. Before Maddy could stop herself, she smiled right back at him, despite Brian sitting right next to her. Her heart started beating faster and her palms felt clammy. What was going on? Why was she having this kind of reaction? You know why, a little voice in her head piped up. You’ve known for a while now. Be quiet! she insisted. Oh, just face it, the voice went on. You want David. Oh. My. God. No! She glanced at Brian as if he could read her mind. But she didn’t need to worry—he wasn’t even looking at her. He was staring off into space, gazing over the tops of the vines.
Maddy stared down at her lap, trying to calm her racing thoughts. Her boyfriend was sitting two feet away. This is David, she reminded herself. David. Remember?
Work buddy? Platonic friend? Don’t panic, she told herself. Stay calm. Brian is your boyfriend. Just focus on him and everything will be fine.
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