into a taxi if I had cell service or an internet connection, but it’s probably for the best because I can’t exactly afford to pay for a taxi.
We did get paid today and my check was the full amount. My hands shook as I opened it up. It’s more money than I’ve ever earned in a single paycheck before. It might even be enough to cover the car repairs so my mom can get it out of the shop. I’m sure she and McKenna are both sick of asking people for rides.
I pop the check in an envelope and address it. Max promised he’d drop it in the mail so my mom can deposit it in our joint account.
Everything is settled except for my ride, and unfortunately, Ethan is suspicious.
“When are you leaving?” he asks Friday evening in the cabin. He’s grabbing the last of the things he’s taking with him for the weekend and I’m pretending to do the same. Ah yes, one sock, can’t forget that.
“Oh, my ride will be here any minute.”
“How do you know? You have no cell reception.”
I cast a tight, your-arrogance-has-no-effect-on-me smile over my shoulder. “Call it a hunch.”
“Then I’ll wait for you,” he says, straightening to his full height, which is annoyingly large.
“No need. I wouldn’t want to keep you from Is—your weekend plans.”
I nearly said Isla, and he still smirks, fully aware of where my thoughts were headed.
“You’re right. I do have plans I’d like to get to. Have a good weekend.”
Once that door slams closed behind him and I know he’s a good distance away, I lie back on the bottom bunk and heave a deep breath. Truthfully, I’m tempted to let out a barrage of expletives that outlines every single feeling I have toward Ethan. I want to shout every single word I’ve had to keep bottled up all week so that by the end, the walls would blush, but I just don’t have the energy.
Being around him zaps it right out of me. I have to be on, aware, and mentally present at all times. He keeps me on my toes, and my toes are tired, and I should not have collapsed onto this bunk because it smells like Ethan. It’s a smell I can’t quite categorize. Normally scents are either good or bad. Some thrust you right back to a favorite memory, like freshly sharpened pencils and elementary school. Ethan’s scent—masculine, woodsy, fresh—makes my stomach flip over and my chest ache right near my heart.
I roll off his bunk and step away, scared of what that smell could do to me if I let it linger.
Then I realize I’m stuck here, all alone. Again.
The fact is, I have no ride home, and even though Ethan told me not to, I’m going to have to stay here over the weekend. I’ll just have to be careful. No long leisurely baths on Sunday afternoon. In fact, no baths ever. Also, I should probably make it look as if I return to camp after him, just so he doesn’t think even for one second that I might have disobeyed him.
Plotting out how to do that eats up the first half of my Saturday at the lake, the second half of my day consumed by reading. Oh yes, I found another book. This one was tucked in one of the mess hall cupboards, and I found it while I was cleaning this week. It’s a well-worn romance from the 70s. The pages are so yellowed they’re nearly brown, but I tear through that puppy and enjoy every delicious glance, every teasing innuendo and playful conversation between the hero and heroine. It gets my loins burning and I’m forced to swim in the lake as a reprieve because there is no man in sight to soothe this ache—no man in the whole entire state, it seems.
I walk back out of the water and shake my limbs, flinging water everywhere. Then I lie back down on my towel and pick up the book.
Though I wish I didn’t, I think of Ethan with Isla. I imagine her just like how the author describes the heroine in my book: tall, blonde, effervescent. What a word. Can a woman wearing oversized jeans and work boots even attempt effervescence? I hate Isla on principle.
I glance down and take in my wet t-shirt clinging to my curves. My underwear peeks out just below the hem, and I think of when Ethan accidentally walked in on me bathing last week,