I pull my hand back. "I'm fine."
Maggie tsks and bends down so we're face to face. Her gaze meets mine. "No, you're not."
I need to turn the tables or lose whatever control I have when it comes to me and Maggie. My resolve to push her away is weak as it is. I better step up and be the guy she thinks I've become.
"Are you bending over like that on purpose?" I ask her as I gesture toward her chest. "'Cause I've got damn good view of your tits right about now."
six
Maggie
t Caleb's words, I straighten and cross my arms over .my chest to prevent further ogling. "You're disgusting," I whisper, hoping nobody else heard his crass remark.
"Thanks," he responds.
I slide under my covers, unwilling to look in Caleb's direction. "Bleed to death for all I care."
"Want your towel back?" he asks, his cocky attitude out in full force. Why does he do that? One minute I feel like he's being his true self, the Caleb I once knew, and the next minute he acts like the guy he wants everyone to think he is.
No.
"Will you two quit flirting already?" Trish chimes in. "Either admit you guys have a thing for each other or go to bed. Or both."
"I don't have a thing for him," I declare.
"You used to," I hear Caleb mutter under his breath from his bed beside me.
"Ancient history. Didn't I tell you I moved on?" I mutter back.
"Go to sleep, Maggie," Caleb says roughly. "You're getting repetitive."
I turn my back to him. So what if I keep insisting it's over? It's true. If I'm completely honest, I guess a part of me still yearns for the way things were when we were together. But I know he's the last thing I need in my life, and it's obvious Caleb and I are on the same page in that respect. He's been trying to push me away by goading me, and he's doing a great job of it.
When my body finally relaxes and I feel like I'm drifting off, Trish starts snoring again.
I glance at Caleb. He's lying on his back, wrapped in a wadded-up sheet, with his arms folded behind his head. He's obviously not sleeping. As if feeling my gaze on him, he turns to look at me. The bunks aren't that far apart, and if I reached out I could touch his bare shoulder.
He sighs and slightly shakes his head, then looks away. I turn on my back and focus on the squeaking springs above me, wondering how I got here. When I got the call from my physical therapist asking if I wanted to be part of this program, I really felt like it was my chance to close this chapter of my life. I thought if I could share my experience with others instead of keeping all my feelings bottled up inside me, I could make the accident a part of my past and be able to look forward to the future.
I wish Caleb felt the same way and could put our ugly past behind us. To be honest, though, I don't think he'll get past it until he admits the truth.
The truth.
He has no clue that I know he didn't hit me with that car. I've been itching to tell him I know the truth.
But I can't. He's obviously keeping up the facade for a reason.
I force myself to fall asleep and forget that Caleb is sleeping next to me.
In the morning, when I'm walking back from the bathroom on the gravel path that leads to our cabin, I find Lenny sleeping soundly in a patch of grass. He's snoring so loud the sound echoes through the entire campground. I suppress a laugh. He could definitely give Trish a run for her money in the snoring department.
Damon is waiting inside the cabin. "Can someone tell me why Lenny is sleeping outside instead of in a bed?" he demands.
"Maybe he wanted to sleep with his relatives?" Trish says, shrugging.
Damon doesn't look happy. "Not funny. His face already looks like a tomato from the morning sun beating down on him and there are a crapload of mosquito bites on him. Someone wake him up. Now."
"I'll do it," Caleb says.
"I'll go with you," Matt offers and the two boys leave the cabin.
When the three boys walk back in the cabin a few minutes later, one good look at Lenny and my mouth drops open. I didn't realize it as I walked past him this morning, but Damon was right. Lenny's face is bright red and totally sunburned. Mosquito bites are scattered on his face and body.
Lenny points at each and every one of us and says in a warning tone, "Don't. Say. Anything."
"What the hell happened to you?" Damon asks Caleb as he gestures to the dried blood now caked on Caleb's hand. Damon is totally confused.
"One of the beds tipped over last night," Erin chimes in. "Caleb caught it before it crashed on Maggie and me."
I think the rest of us are shocked Erin actually spokeshe's been so quiet.
"Lenny tipped the bed," Trish says. "On purpose."
Lenny sneers at Trish. "Do you know what they do in jail to people who snitch?"
"Lenny, I won't tolerate threats so knock it off. Follow me to the infirmary. Caleb, you too. I want your hand checked out. The rest of you, pack up the van and go to breakfast. The dining hall is the big building by the front office."
When we're all ready, Damon, Lenny and Caleb head for the infirmary while the rest do as instructed. The dining hall is a huge building with rows of picnic tables. At the end of the room, teens line up with trays and choose their food.
"So what's the real story with you and Caleb?" Matt asks me as we join the line.
I wonder how much I should reveal. "It's super-complicated." I grab a carton of milk and look at Matt. "Need help?" I ask when he picks up a tray and balances it on his arm.
"I got it," he says.
I really admire Matt for that.