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Something in the Way(32)

By:Jessica Hawkins


My hands might as well be on him now. I had the fabric of his shirt in  two fists, and if I released it, I might fall. Probably. It was likely. I  didn't want to fall. I didn't want to let go of Manning when I finally  had him. I eased my grip and slowly, with appreciation for every detail,  slid my arms around his middle. I clasped my hands together and scooted  closer, my inner thighs pressing against his legs. My pulse beat  everywhere, especially the places we touched. And I felt his, too. I  couldn't tell if the fast, rhythmic ba-boom against my palms was just  the robust heartbeat of a healthy man or if he was feeling as euphoric  and turned on and nervous as I was.                       
       
           



       

As everyone started down the path, Manning and I pulled up the rear  while one handler took the lead. Hannah and the other instructor rode  alongside the kids.

Manning cleared his throat and asked over his shoulder, "Are you comfortable?"

My chest was mashed against him, my butt awkwardly pushed out to keep  just a little distance between us so he wouldn't think I was trying to  get too cozy. Worst of all, I couldn't see over him since he was so  tall, and I didn't know where to put my face. It didn't matter. I  sighed. "Yes."

"Did you fall off a horse as a kid or something?"

"No. I never even got on one."

"So this is like the Ferris wheel?" he asked. "It's not really a height thing."

"No. My friend had a treehouse growing up and I went in there sometimes. I get on the roof at home."

"The roof?"

"From my room. I can climb out the window."

"Hmm." His hum vibrated my body. "So it must be things that move. Not  being able to control what could happen. Have you ever been on a plane?"

Those were worst of all. Talk about having no control. You could die a  million different ways on a plane and most of it wouldn't be instant. If  it started to fall out of the sky, you'd have to sit there, knowing you  were going to die. Just waiting. I shuddered. "I had to as a kid when  we took vacations. I didn't have a choice. I think I cried through my  entire first flight and after that, my parents just gave me something."

"That surprises me," he said. "I know you're brave."

Me, brave? I wasn't so sure. "Why do you think that?"

"Just little things. Like when we went to that party before the fair,  and Tiffany pressured you to go in. You said no when most teenagers  would've done the opposite."

"That wasn't bravery," I said. "I just don't like those things-drinking,  flirting, acting stupid because they think it's cute or funny."

"A lot of people don't like those things, but they do them anyway.  Because people make them think it's cool. They back down. They're the  cowards." Manning placed his hand over mine as I held onto his stomach.  My throat went dry, my body tingling in places I didn't know could  tingle. "Take the reins a minute," he said.

"I can't even see." That was a lie. I saw Manning, and Manning was all I saw.

"You don't need to, because I can." He removed my hand to place a rein  in it, then did the same with the other. "There you go. You're a pro."

I wasn't doing a single thing but holding the reins. He could've been  steering me into the lake, and I'd have no idea. For some reason, it was  important to him that I do this on my own.

"Hey, Jake," Manning called out. "Mike. Stop screwing around. This isn't a videogame. These are real animals."

"Sorry, Manning," a couple boys said.

"You're good with them. I can tell they look up to you." My back started  to ache from keeping some distance between us. "Do you want kids?"

He took the reins again. "Not really. No. Not right now."

I had nowhere to put my hands. "I do, one day."

"You're still a kid yourself."

"Just because I'm younger than you doesn't mean I'm a kid." I wrapped my  arms around him again, this time pulling myself forward until we were  snug, hardly any space left between us. "And I'm getting older every  day."

He straightened up, and I rested my cheek against his back, closing my  eyes, inhaling the scent of the pine trees around us. We rocked together  with the steady bump-and-grind of the horse's hooves on the dirt path.  The fresh morning air kept me cool, even while my body warmed where we  touched. My jeans caught on his, but his t-shirt was soft under my bare  arms. Based on what I'd heard from kids at school, this was the way I  imagined it felt to be drunk or high, to reach a level of happiness and  bliss that could only be achieved with help. Arms, chest, cheek. My  entire self pressed against Manning's solid body-that was my drug of  choice.

Was sixteen too young to fall in love? I might've thought so before  Manning. Could he love me back, a man seven years older? I was sure if  he did, he'd never admit it. But I would wait for him. Even I understood  that for a while, ours ages mattered. There was no right now for us.  Eighteen was a lifetime away. That was two more whole school years,  another long summer. It was millions of breaths that would inevitably  catch in my throat around him and thousands of pages read across so many  books and hundreds of long, sun-soaked California days. But the wait  would be, without a doubt, worth it.                       
       
           



       

The horse slowed. I opened my eyes but didn't lift my head. We were at  the lake now. A couple cabins were canoeing. Because she was as familiar  to me as my own reflection, but also because she was yelling across the  water at some of her girls, my gaze went straight to Tiffany.

Her canoe rocked, and for a second, I thought she might fall in. She  grabbed the edges, steadied herself, and sat. Her campers pointed at the  parade of horses, waving to us. Tiffany shielded her eyes.

I turned my head away, resting my other cheek against Manning's back as I  tightened my hold on him. Tiffany didn't know what she had, what she  could have.

As much as it frustrated me, I was thankful for that.





16





Manning





Lake carried a bucket of water that looked half her size. She put it  down in front of Betsy and with a tentative hand, stroked her nose. We  were only halfway through the ride, and she was already overcoming her  fear. It was what I wanted, except that when Betsy whinnied and Lake  jumped back and looked at me, a part of me liked that. I craved that  feeling of being needed again, of being held onto when she was scared. A  hint of fear was good. It would keep her alert.

The air up here was crisp. I could practically feel it move through my  lungs. I wished my fears were as easily overcome, but I was fucked any  way I turned. Lake was important to me in a way she shouldn't be. Her  naiveté about some things made me overprotective. Then, once in a while  her girlish mannerisms or expressions reminded me of things Maddy did  I'd forgotten about, like how she blinked a lot when processing  something new. It drew me in. On a primal level, I wanted to keep bad  things from happening to her. Was it more than that? I didn't want to  know the answer. In some ways, she was still sweet and open. In others,  Lake was more mature than people my own age. She wanted to understand  things rather than accept them as they were. She took an interest in me  nobody else had in a long time, grilling me about the smoking, asking  why I wanted to be a cop. Trusting me when she had no reason to.

Lake returned to my side. She'd barely spent any time with Hannah or her  girls since we'd left the stables. She was here to experience camp, not  me. But I was greedy. When she looked up at me with her huge eyes,  waiting for my direction, I knew peripherally that I was in too deep. I  needed to pull back. But that look reminded me someone might depend on  me again one day, and if things were different, Lake could've been that  someone.

She was still standing there. Even if I pushed my heels into my eye  sockets and forced her image away, she'd still be here. Looking up at  me. Waiting.

"Why don't you go check on the girls?" I asked.

"I did. The boys, too. After I gave the horse water."

Time passed in a funny way around her. Maybe she had talked to the  campers. Maybe she'd spent time with Hannah. I'd been the one standing  in the same spot, watching her. Time could be slow like that with her,  and then sometimes it went by in flashes. Sometimes I just wanted it to  stop and others, I wished it'd go by faster.

"We should head back," she said. "There's a group after us."

I wasn't sure if it was the altitude or what. My head wasn't clear. All I  could think was that I'd spent twenty-four hours on a lake, underneath  clear, endless skies, and yet I'd still never seen a blue the shade of  her eyes. I was sure the image of her looking up at me this way would be  burned into my brain for as long as I walked this Earth.