I’d been fighting it all summer long, throwing up excuses, walls, barriers, because of fear. But now, my heart felt like it had cracked open the whole way. Amelia was right. I’d needed to open it. I’d tried to keep it shut.
But this guy had gotten through to me.
For every bit that he was gruff, he was kind. For every bit that he fought with me, it was with a twinkle in his eye—at least most of the time. He didn't care that I had my tattoos or my eyebrow ring. He didn't care that I was the daughter of migrant farmworkers. He didn't care that I swore all the time or called him names.
Maybe I should tone that down.
But he took the time to do what I wanted. He thought about me.
And I, him. I wanted him to be happy. I didn't want him worried about sick horses or a disabled mom or stupid developers or taxes or his blueberry crop. I wanted him swearing in pleasure as I sucked him off. I wanted him sleeping peacefully. I wantedhim, period, and all the things that came with him—dog, ranch, politics, all of it.
Because I loved his dog Trixie. I loved his four-generation ranch. I loved his surly Republican-ness. I loved his efficient way of talking, using just one word if he could get away with it. I loved the way he dressed in Wranglers and boots. I loved the way he danced in dark, dusty steakhouses.
I loved the way he slept next to me, cuddling me all night long. And I loved the way he explored my body sexually, waking me up. And I loved the way he gave me the space I needed to figure this all out.
And then I started crying for real. Ugly, loud tears. Because if I loved him, then I didn't want to leave him. This pain was what I’d been protecting myself against all summer. It wasn't just sex. It was more. And I didn't want to go back to my studio in Santa Barbara. I wanted to live with him forever and love him and fight him and drool over him and lick him and have his babies. I wanted to talk with him and dance with him and eat every vegan or non-vegan meal with him.
Hell, if I really thought about it, I wanted to marry him.
And I’d never felt this way about another person in my life. That magnet that symbolized our relationship? The one where we were either completely repelled or completely together? It was turned so that we were stuck and that was it. Once I allowed the feelings to open, they were all in. All of them. I had all of the feelings for Will.
Fuck.
I turned and ran up the path to the bluff.
When I got to the top of the bluff, sweating, panting, I kept running. I ran back the trail to the compound, past the horses, and into Will's house, without knocking, without stopping, yelling, "Will! Will?"
He appeared at the top of the stairs, the hard look on his face showing me that he was still pissed at me.
So I yelled from the bottom of the stairs, "I fucking love you, Will Thrash. I’ve never loved anyone in my life as much as I love you. Don't you ever leave me, you asshole."
He stared at me, not saying anything. His jaw ticked.
I continued. “I’m sorry I had my head up my ass all summer. I was scared and I didn’t know what to do. You make me feel like home. You comfort me. You protect me. I don’t hide anything from you.”
He gripped the top of the stairs, not moving, not saying anything.
“I love you. Say something, goddamn it.”
His eyes were the darkest I’d ever seen them, his hair wild and so sexy. “You gonna change your mind again, Marie?”
“Never,” I said fiercely.
He let go of the bannister and took a step back, shaking his head. “You gonna keep looking for a fight?”
“Not intentionally.”
He stared at me. “You gonna quit pushing me away?”
“Yes,” I gasped.
“Then c’mere, baby,” he said, and those were the sweetest words I’d ever heard.
And I ran up the stairs and into his open arms.
"I love you too," he said, "and I will never leave you." And he held me as I crashed into him, kissing him with whatever breath I had left after my run from the beach. He lifted me up and I wrapped my legs around him, holding him as close as I could, and he spun me around, then pressed me against the wall.
I broke our kiss, still crying, a total mess. "Don't make me go away at the end of summer," I sobbed into his shoulder. "Let me stay with you. I can't go. I can't be away from you." He held me against the wall and kissed me again. Then he let me down, but still kept his arms around me, his face the most beautiful thing I’d ever seen. And his next words made me feel a sweet relief, like all the burden of the summer had lifted.