Two hours later Mom ambushed me in my hotel room. I wouldn't have thought Olivia had been in cahoots with her, but she did conveniently need to take care of a few things before joining us.
"Is there something going on between you and Greg?" she asked, sitting on the chair in my room. She didn't even bother beating around the bush.
Even though I had a sneaky suspicion as to why Mom had followed me to my room, her bluntness caught me off guard, causing me to choke on the sip of water I had taken. "What?" I finally sputtered after regaining my breath.
Mom didn't answer nor did she move, in spite of my coughing fit. Her steely eyes remained fixated on me, which meant she was one hundred percent serious.
"Mom, I love Alec," I said incredulously.
"Honey, I realize that, but I also know when a man is interested in a woman, and Greg has it bad for you."
First Olivia, then my own mother. I had no idea why I seemed to be the only one capable of seeing Greg for who he was. I shook my head in denial. Greg and I were just friends. There was no way he thought of me as anything but that. "Seriously, Mom, he treats me like I'm one of his buddies or something. Being around him is like having Riley or Zachary on the trip. He hasn't gotten as annoying as Tony yet," I laughed at my own joke, trying to get her to smile.
She responded by shaking her head. "Do you remember when Dustin Taylor wouldn't stop pushing you down on the playground in second grade? How upset you were?"
"Really? You're comparing this to something that happened on an elementary school playground when I was eight years old?"
Her argument was silly. First of all, I was scrawny for my age and a stiff breeze could have easily blown me over. Dustin Taylor knew that, which was why he chose to torment me by pushing me down whenever the opportunity arose. At the time, Mom tried to comfort me by telling me that sometimes when a boy liked a girl he would do all kinds of silly things to get the girl's attention. Pushing me down wasn't silly. It was mean and it hurt, a lot. Six years later, a slightly more mature Dustin continued to bother me by tugging on my hair while he sat behind me in science class right before asking me to the spring social. I turned him down flat. I had been holding a grudge over all those skinned knees and raw palms.
This was different. Greg was my friend. Sure, he teased me relentlessly, but Olivia and I were snarky with each other. "Mom, you're not going to try and convince me that the reason Greg teases me is because he really likes me, are you? I mean, aren't we supposed to be a little more mature as adults?"
"Yes, you are, which is why I'm having this conversation with you. You need to put a stop to this before things go too far."
Her words hit me like a two-by-four to the face. I could only sputter as I tried coming up with a response that wouldn't hurt my own mother's feelings. "Mom, listen," I said, exhaling. "I am more than capable of maintaining a friendship with a guy without it turning into something more. I mean, give me some credit." I felt dirty. Cheating went against every fiber in my body. I was crushed she would even think I'd ever do that to Alec. He was my soul mate, my peacock. Okay, so lately I'd been struggling with the idea of commitment, and our schedules seemed to be conflicting at the moment, but it was only a rough patch. Many couples went through an adjustment period. It didn't mean I was looking to hop into bed with the next guy I met.
"I know you are, honey. I'm just trying to protect you."
Tears sprang to my eyes. "He's just a friend," I repeated.
"Honey, it may feel that way, but as an outside observer, it looks like something more. That boy has feelings for you. I may seem old and out of touch, but I still know how to read signals. As far as you and Alec, they say absence makes the heart grow fonder, but I've always said that's a pile of crap. A relationship stays strong by open communication and a healthy sex life."
"Oh my god, Mom," I implored. The last thing I wanted now was a sex talk from my mother.
She rolled her eyes. "Don't Mom me. Your father and I have always had a healthy sex life."
"Ugh, make it stop," I groaned, pretending to vomit as I plugged my ears.
Mom ignored my theatrics, waiting for me to finish before continuing. "You were saying something about being a mature adult? I'm just saying, I know this break has to be hard on you and Alec. No couple wants to be separated when they're so new into the relationship. A separation like this could put a strain on the both of you."
I pulled my bottom lip into my mouth while I processed her words. She was right. Being away from Alec was hard. A constant dull ache had taken up residence in my chest that only seemed to intensify when I was alone and allowed myself to dwell on it. Deep down in my confusion of my mixed-up feelings, I struggled over whether the pain was about missing Alec or about how scared I felt at the idea of becoming a family at such a young age. I wanted to express the latter feelings with my mother, but I couldn't bring myself to do it. They felt like feelings of betrayal.
"The separation is hard. I have no idea how military families do it. You know me. I've always done better when I get to see my loved ones on a regular basis."
"You're like me, honey. Why do you think I insist on Sunday dinners? I need at least one day each week where all my lovely chicks are back un
der my roof. Sunday dinners just haven't been the same without you."
I mulled over her words before confirming my earlier claims. "I know, but that doesn't mean I'm going to replace any of you. That goes for Alec too. I'll make sure Greg understands that."
She accepted my promise and changed the conversation to her joining me on the West Coast during the latter half of the tour. We were a month out from her trip and we still planned on driving to Forks, Washington, to pay homage to our Twilight fandomonia.
Eventually Olivia joined us and Mom decided to head out to find Dad and drag him to their room for a little alone time. I made gagging noises again and shooed her along, making Olivia chuckle.
"Thanks a lot, whore, for filling my mom's head with your ideas about Greg and me." I threw a pillow at her as she continued to laugh. "Where were you?" I asked, popping the tab of a fresh Diet Coke. I grabbed a couple chocolates from the supply I always made sure was replenished.
Olivia batted the pillow away before snagging a couple chocolates for herself. "For your information, I didn't say shit to your mom. She asked me if I knew anything and I got the hell out of there before she could start grilling me." Olivia and I never kept secrets from each other. That had been the basis of our relationship, so I had no reason to think she was lying. It just seemed awfully coincidental that my mom would want to talk about Greg when Olivia had mentioned it before dinner. I continued eyeing her skeptically as she made slow work of unwrapping one of her chocolates.
"I can feel you watching me," she said, keeping her eyes down. "I know how your mind works, and I'm telling you I didn't say a word to her. You need to accept the fact that two people have seen something going on that you claim is nothing. What does that tell you?"