SLEEPING ON THE bus is a rarity when your teammates are impossibly annoying.
The three-hour bus ride back from Princeton has my head in knots. Quarterfinals, semifinals, and the tournament have been my only focus for the past three weeks. It paid off because winning regionals means thereโs only one more game until the Frozen Four in Boston.
The only downside is that weโll be up against Yale. And although weโve beaten them once, theyโre not to be underestimated. After a loss to them, Kian gets so drunk that he makes decisions heโll regret for years. Tabitha was his last post-Yale mistake, and the year before he was suspended for streaking across Michiganโs campus. The aftermath never went over well with Coach, so heโs understandably desperate for this win.
When we hop off the bus and head into the locker room, Coach hands me a paper.
โYouโre done with community service.โ Today he allows a smile to sit easily on his face. โAs much of an idiot you are for taking their fuck-up on your shoulders, Iโm glad you stuck it out. Your research partner had a lot of good things to say about you. And so did I.โ
I skim the paper. โTheyโre clearing it from my record?โ
โYes. But there will be a notice in your sealed file. If you or the boys even think of doing something like this again, Iโll make sure you never play again.โ
โI wonโt.โ That is for damn sure.
He nods, pausing to pick up a towel from the floor and tossing it at an unsuspecting Kian. โClean up around here, Ishida. This place is a fucking mess.โ
Kian collects the dirty towel and tosses it in the bin. โI havenโt talked during practice for an entire month, and he still wonโt relieve me of laundry duty.โ
โItโll happen soon enough, buddy. Only up from here,โ I say, just as a jock strap flies past his face.
Kianโs death glare has our goalie backing away. He uses a hockey stick to toss the rotten thing in the bin, and I laugh. โYou should be the last one laughing, Mr. Community Service.โ
โActually, Coach just handed me this.โ I show him the paper that exonerates me.
โNo fucking way. Youโre done? Iโm happy for you, man.โ
โYou should be. None of this would have happened if it werenโt for you and Dylan.โ
โHey, we said we were sorry. Plus, I think this is more than enough punishment.โ He points to the large hamper. I agree. Having to launder those items was much more severe than teaching kids how to play hockey and working with a girl whoโs the best thing to ever happen to me.
Dylan and Eli toss their things in the bin, saving Kian the job of collecting them.
โYou just watch,โ Kian says, โHeโll be begging me to speak when he realizes how boring it is around here.โ
โDonโt hold your breath,โ says Dylan. โOr, actually, do.โ โWatch it, or I might just forget to do your laundry.โ
Dylan flips him off as we exit the building. โIs anyone heading to Boston tonight?โ
I make a face. โFor the Harvard party? Hell no.โ โIโll come with you,โ Eli offers.
I look at him as if heโs spawned a second head. The last place Eli Westbrook wants to be is at a party, especially one in Boston. โYou want to go to Harvard? Didnโt you send their defenseman to the hospital?โ
โIt was a broken clavicle. Heโs fine now.โ
โLet me guess. You sent flowers to his hospital room and kissed his booboos?โ Dylan taunts.
โNo. I just paid for his medical bills.โ
Weโre laughing when weโre halfway through the parking lot, and I hear my name float behind us. I turn to see Donny Rai, dressed in a black sweater over a white collared shirt and perfectly pressed gray trousers. I gesture for the guys to go ahead.
โYou look too happy to have gotten the news,โ he notes, and his face fills with pleasure.
This canโt be good. โIf it has something to do with you, you can save your breath.โ
โAs much as I love talking about all my achievements, this is much more entertaining. There was a break-in at the psychology building just before spring break. Turns out itโs being investigated, and there are a few suspects. In fact, theyโve made a list of Dalton students who could be responsible.โ He stares at me as if I should care. โWould suck if they got caught.โ
โWhat does this have to do with me?โ I ask.
โYouโre right, it has nothing to do with you. Unless you know whose ID I found on the floor of the building entrance.โ He holds up a Dalton student ID.
Summer Preston. Fuck.
โEven someone like you might understand that breaking and entering is grounds for expulsion. Or worse.โ The fucker is smiling, content with my reaction.
โYou snitched?โ
โIโm dropping by the deanโs office after my debate meeting. Just thought Iโd do a good deed so you two can say your goodbyes.โ Hisย good deedย is as transparent as plexi.
I jog to my truck, passing the guys. โThink you guys can hitch another ride?โ
They exchange looks. โYeah, no problem. Is everything okay?โ asks Eli. โIt will be.โ Before they can ask more questions, Iโm speeding out of the
lot. On the drive to the administrative center, I realize I am so embarrassingly in love with my girl that Iโm certain if she knew the things running through my mind, she would laugh at me. Itโs the kind of love that makes you do shit like run straight to her dorm after an exhausting ninety- minute game or power down an entire house full of people. Illogical and impulsive.
Now, Iโm on my way to do another illogical and impulsive thing, or at least thatโs how she would see it.
I barrel inside the administrative center, straight to the front desk. โIโd like to speak with Dean Hutchins,โ I say, startling the secretary.
She assesses me. โIโm sorry, we canโtโโ โItโs about the break-in.โ I cut her off.
Hesitantly, she calls to ask about a last-minute meeting and then looks at me. โYou have five minutes.โ