“A bit.” He smiled at her. “But confusing can be an adventure as well.”
She returned the gesture, “I like adventures.”
“Really? You don’t seem the type.”
She was interested in his assessment of her, “Oh, and what type is that?”
He rested his hands on the arm of the chair and looked away for a moment. “I don’t know, shy, maybe a bit creative. But you seem like you like to stay safe in your own small world; adventurous certainly isn’t something I would use to describe you. Am I right?”
She thought for a moment because she wasn’t quite sure herself. “I guess for the most part. I used to be a planner. I wanted to know everything that was going to happen. Every move set out in front of me. But now I’ve learned to just kind of go with life; it’ll take you to some strange places. Places you think you can never come back from, but you do. Life brought me here.” She used her hands to gesture around her.
“So it did.”
Now that she had answered some of his questions she had her own. “How about you? What brought you here?”
He reached over and took the white mug between his hands taking a long drink before speaking. “My mum and dad divorced when I was about thirteen. She got an offer in the States for a job and she took it. I came with her. For a while I wanted to live with my dad but he traveled a lot and it just didn’t make sense. You could say I’ve had a pretty normal American upbringing.”
“Do you have a good relationship with your dad now?”
He took another sip, “I guess. I only see him maybe once a year, either he travels over here or I go there. He’s remarried now and has a daughter. It’s not really my place to interfere with their family.”
“But it’s your family too. Just because he’s not around all the time doesn’t mean he’s abandoning you.” It was only the second time she had spoken frankly since before Levi’s death. It was one of the things about her personality she thought she had lost. But instead Brighton had brought it out of her in only a few minutes. What was so magnetic about him that made her feel like herself?
“That was remarkably honest.” He remarked.
“I know,” she said watching him closely. Surprisingly he didn’t appear offended.
“I’m going to get a refill. Can I get you anything?”
She nodded, “Yeah, sure, some tea would be great.”
When he stood he bumped into her messenger bag revealing a notebook of poetry she had been working on for her class. “Bugger, I’m sorry.”
She quickly moved to stuff the book back in her bag, “It’s fine. Don’t worry about it.” When she moved to pick up the book he also leaned down to retrieve it and their hands touched for a moment. She paused and retracted while he picked up the notebook to hand back to her. It was open and the poem on top was about the New England colors of fall.
She watched his eyes scan the page. Green pools of reflection of her inner most thoughts. “This is really great you know.” He sat down slowly in the leather chair putting down his mug. She watched emotions crossed his face as he read.
When his finger moved to turn the page he stopped himself, “May I?”
She simply nodded, unsure of what to say. She knew the next poem in the book was about her scars and she wasn’t sure how he would take the dark thoughts she penned on the page. She had gone over that poem a million times. She shocked herself allowing him to continue to read while she sat there in silence as he made his way through the notebook. When he finally reached a blank page he sat back looking at her in awe.
“These are bloody incredible. You should get someone to look at them.”
She was shocked, “Really? I mean, it’s just way I feel sometimes. Not like I’ve had any formal training.”
He smiled at her while handing the book back to her, “Sometimes you don’t need training. What’s inside you is what’s most important.”
It was what was inside her. He was exactly right. Maybe Brighton and her professor knew her better than she knew herself. Maybe this was her true calling after all.
14
By the time Claire and Victoria got to the party on the beach it was already in full swing. Sunset had just fallen around them and there was already a huge bonfire in the middle of a group of people that Victoria recognized from high school. She had told Brighton to meet her at the beach. It didn’t matter how old you were, it was still awkward when a guy met your parents for the first time. And she wasn’t quite sure how they would react since she hadn’t brought anyone home in so long.
The music was pumping through speakers attached to someone’s car and no one even really seemed to notice Victoria and Claire’s presence. It wasn’t how she envisioned coming home but she appreciated that no one questioned her about Levi or what she was doing now. She called her sister to tell her that she was going to the party but Fallon was away for the weekend with her husband Drew. Fallon had mentioned that things were tense between the two of them and Victoria guessed that this was supposed to be some type of romantic rekindling of their love. She didn’t really care. She didn’t want to see her sister hurt but at the same time she knew that Drew was not a catch.
“You want a beer?” Claire yelled over the music.
“Yeah, let’s find the keg.”
A guy they didn’t recognize filled up their solo cups. “I’m Quinn,” he said shaking their hands. “I’m here with Trey.”
Unexpected, but it made sense. Victoria looked over her shoulder to see the party boy from high school dressed in Calvin Klein but not talking to his usual group of girls. Instead he raised a single hand waving to her. They never really been friends but it was a nice gesture and she appreciated it.
She waved back and began to look around the party in search of Brighton. It didn’t take her long to find him sitting on a log next to the fire alone. She pointed him out to Claire and walked over by herself while Claire chatted with some other former members of the cheerleading squad. She had always been more outgoing than Victoria. She was focused on her social life which proved to be important now that she was working in marketing.
When Victoria got to Brighton he stood up awkwardly like he didn’t know how to greet her. He settled on a quick kiss on the cheek. “Some party. Thanks for inviting me.”
“Sorry that we’re late. I had a dinner with Kate I had to finish up. Has anybody talked to you yet?”
“Talk to the bloke that no one knows? Not really. People seem a little close minded around here.”
She sat down next to him, “Well, then you haven’t met our hippies yet. Because they love everybody.”
He laughed, “I assume you weren’t part of that group in high school.”
She shook her head, “Oh no. I was a total nerd. All that I was focused on was college and getting to the next step of my life. I didn’t take a lot of time to enjoy the time that I had. Always focused on the next step, never living in the present.”
He looked at her like he was considering something, “So, are you telling me you are not spontaneous?”
“I certainly wasn’t in high school. I guess I could be a little bit more now. Remember, I do like an adventure.”
He took her cup from her hand. “Then let’s have one.” He set both the plastic cups in the sand and stood up taking her hand.
“Where are we going?”
“If I told you then I’d have to kill you.”
Victoria looked over her shoulder to see Claire still making her rounds with the group. She wouldn’t miss her if they were only gone for a little bit. “Well, I don’t want that to happen. Let’s go.”
She and Brighton ran far down the beach to another lit fire, this one unoccupied. They stopped out of breath and he started to take off his clothes. “What the hell are you doing? We’re not that far away from the group! Someone is going to see you.”
Brighton laughed while he removed his shirt unveiling a six pack and rock hard pecs. “That’s part of the adventure. Getting caught.”<
br />
“You’re dangerous.”
“And you’re a prude.”
She folded her arms and he knew he gone too far, “Come on Tori. Come in the water with me.”
“It’s freezing,” she countered. Tori, nobody called her Tori except her dad, but she kind of liked it.
“Who cares?”
She knew it wasn’t the fact that it was cold that was stopping her, it was the water. She looked out and watched the waves crash on the shore while Brighton continued to remove his clothes. When he was left in nothing but a pair of boxer briefs she knew she had to make a decision.
“You have to promise me something.”
“What’s that?”
“You’ll hold my hand.”
He smiled, “I was hoping you would ask.”
She took off her jacket and shoes first then removed a tank top and jeans to reveal very plain set of underwear. She had no plans of showing them off that evening.
Slowly Brighton grabbed her hands and gently pulled her into the water. Instead of the nightmare she expected, she felt free. Truly free. Her emotions washed away with the water and, for the first time in months, she didn’t think about Levi. She only thought about Brighton and the water flowing around her.
He held tight to her hand while she stood and looked up to the stars. Her concentration only broke when he whispered to her, “You make me feel alive. I don’t know what it is about you, but ever since that first day you walked into group... You just make me feel like I want to be better.”
She looked over at his glistening body in the moonlight and noticed that around his neck were set of dog tags. His loss.
All the realness of the situation came crashing down upon her with the next wave. The water was ice cold against her skin and it was time to get out. “I’m freezing, let’s go sit by the fire.”
She let go of his hand and walked away leaving him speechless in a sea of questions.
Only after they put their clothes back on and sat next to the fire on the sand was she ready to ask a question that had been burning in her mind.
“Are those dog tags yours?”
He absentmindedly ran his fingers along the chain around his neck. “Mine? No, they’re not mine.”
Then she was right. “They belong to the person you lost. The reason you started the group?”
“I didn’t start the group, but yeah, she was why I joined it.”
She. The word struck Victoria like a slap in the face. Here she was having told him all about her past love when he had never mentioned his.
“Who was she?”
He looked away. She noticed the rough facial hair he had left on his chin and lower cheeks in the light of the fire. Shadows of his past danced on his face. Brighton was uncommonly beautiful and his thick British accent allowed Victoria to fall into the story with ease.
He took a deep breath before starting his tale, “Tiffany and I were best friends in high school. She was awesome. She liked football and really had a lot of respect for people, you know? But some things were really hard for her. Some people were really hard on her. Her dad was a mess and her mom was pretty absent. They split up when she was little and she always hoped that her mom would take more of an interest in her, but she never did. My mum practically raised her for most of her high school life. Until I decided to go to college and she opted for the military and we kind of lost touch. My mum would tell me that she would call her and update her but I didn’t hear from her as much. I don’t even know if she ever met someone.” He paused, clearly reflecting on his loss of contact with her. ”And then she got deployed. I remember her calling me the night before she left. It was the first time we had talked in weeks. She was so excited and so scared at the same time. She was being trained in the medical field and when she got out would have become an RN. It was an amazing opportunity for a kid like her—someone who didn’t come from anything, someone who needed to run away. Three months after she had arrived in Afghanistan, her transport vehicle hit a roadside bomb. Four guys and Tiffany exploded. There wasn’t even anything left to identify accept her dog tags.” He pulled them from around his neck and held them in his hand. “This is all I have left of her.”
Victoria sat silently, unsure of what to say. At least she had been there when it happened with Levi, but to not see it or have any real closure was terrifying. Brighton took another deep breath before continuing on, “You know her dad didn’t even come to her funeral?” He shook his head. “Her mum showed up, but she stood in the back and didn’t say anything to any of us. I’m not even sure she knew she was in the military.” He looked out over the water. “I just don’t get it. How could someone so amazing just fall away like that? Only twelve people came to her funeral. It’s not right.”
Victoria picked at the sand, avoiding eye contact with Brighton hoping that she could think of something wise to say. But nothing came out.
“Sorry. I hate when I dump on people like that.”
She looked up to meet his eyes, seeing clarity within them. “Don’t be sorry. Sorry is for wimps; you and I are both stronger than sorry. Your friend was fighting for her country, she was doing what she thought was right. She died doing what she thought was right. Just like Levi. He died protecting me. Our situations are similar in a way. But I’m not sorry, and you shouldn’t be either.”
Brighton sat speechless staring open mouthed at the petite girl in front of him. Victoria didn’t know when she had gotten so strong, but suddenly she felt like she could handle anything.
“I’m not going to law school,” she told him. He cocked his head in confusion.
“Were you supposed to?”
She nodded, “Harvard or Yale... I had offers from both.”
“Impressive.” He sat back relieving some of the tension in his body.
“Yeah it is. But I’m not going. Instead I’m going to write a book.”
“A book? You’re going to give up law school to write a book? I thought your thing was poetry.”
“I’m not giving anything up. And I do like poetry, but I want to write a book about grief and what it’s like to get through it.”
She absentmindedly touched the scars on the inside of her arm. “I tried to commit suicide you know. About a week after Levi died. I don’t ever want to feel that low again.”
“Wow. You are not at all what I expected. Everything you say surprises me.” Brighton crossed his arms in front of him studying Victoria with judging eyes.
“What did you expect?”
“A mopey ex-fiancée still holding onto a life that doesn’t exist anymore.”
“That was honest.” She wasn’t offended, just intrigued.
“But you’re not like that. You’re completely letting go of your past to embrace a totally new future. One with lots of questions.”
She nodded, “I haven’t completely let go, but I’m trying. Maybe you should try it sometime. Take a bit of your own advice from group. Put away your anger and resentment and just be happy with the time that you had with her. She sounds like she was special.”
“Maybe I should. So where can I stay in this quaint little town?”
“Well, there’s a B&B in town.”
“Smashing. I’ll find it.” He took out his phone and started scrolling. “You good?”
“Yeah, I’m staying with my parents. Actually, we should get back, Claire’s going to worry.”
He stood up slowly offering her a hand. She took it but once she was up, he didn’t let go. They walked back to the party together. Victoria tried to ignore the chills because she knew they weren’t from the water, they were from him.
15
16
“Your phone’s been going off an awful lot,” Victoria’s mom commented the next morning. It was true; Brighton hadn’t stopped texting since last night.
“Yeah well...”
“Well, who is he?” Her mom turned her back to Victoria and continued to work on her pancakes.
Victoria sighed, “His
name is Brighton, he’s from group.”
“Oh?” She could tell her mom was playing games. Either she already knew about him, thanks to Kate, or she didn’t want to spook her.
“Go ahead, Mom, tell me what you want to know.” I downed the rest of my orange juice like it would help me get the words out.
Her mom turned around wiping her hands on her apron. With her beautiful blonde hair and soft blue eyes she was just an older version of Victoria and Fallon. “I want to know if he makes you happy. Parents always worry about their kids no matter how old they are. So does he make you happy?”
That was so much more of a loaded question than Victoria was prepared for. “He makes me think. And he makes me feel.”
Her mother nodded. “Okay then.”
Victoria held her empty glass in her hands. “I don’t want to be empty anymore Mom. I want to be more than that.”
Her mom came over and sat down in the chair next to her, reaching across to take Victoria’s hands in her own. “Then be more.”
Victoria called Brighton after talking with her mom. She wanted to spend more time with Brighton; he made her think.
“Did you have fun last night?” He asked smugly.
“It was interesting.”
“Adventurous?”
“Yes, you could call it that.”
“So I have a two hour drive back to school today. Any interest in joining me?”
“You and me in the car for two hours. I don’t know... besides I drove up here with Claire.”
“Okay,” he sounded defeated.
She didn’t want to disappoint him. She wanted to give this real effort. “You know what? Let me text Claire.”
“Brilliant. I’ll pick you up in an hour.”
“Great, I’ll text you my parent’s address.” Wow awkward.
He was silent for a minute before he said, “Cheers,” and hung up the phone.
Two uninterrupted hours alone with Brighton. She was getting adventurous.
The XOXO New Adult Collection: 16 Full Length New Adult Stories Page 304