Chapter no 6

The Score (Off-Campus, #3)

Dean

FIRST THINGย I do after I stalk out of the arena is call my older brother. Itโ€™s Sunday, so I try his cell first, though thereโ€™s a good chance heโ€™s at the office. Nick works long hours at the firm, including most weekends. I think heโ€™s trying to impress our dad with his dedication to the law, and honestly, I think itโ€™s working.

The cheerful voice that slides into my ear, however, doesnโ€™t belong to Nick.

โ€œDicky! Yay! I havenโ€™t spoken to you in ages!โ€

The nickname never made me cringe when we were kids, but now that weโ€™re adults, itโ€™s fucking mortifying. As far as Iโ€™m concerned, once my little sister learned how to pronounceย Dean, our folks shouldโ€™ve ordered her to kick Dicky to the curb. Then again, ordering Summer to do anything pretty much ensures sheโ€™ll do the opposite. My sister is a stubborn brat.

โ€œWhy are you answering Nickโ€™s cell?โ€ I ask suspiciously.

โ€œBecause I saw your name and wanted to talk to you first. You never call me anymore.โ€

I can envision the pout sheโ€™s no doubt sporting, and it brings a smile to my lips. โ€œYou never call me either,โ€ I point out.

Summer goes quiet for a second. Then she heaves a colossal sigh. โ€œYouโ€™re right. I donโ€™t. Iโ€™ve been a terrible sister.โ€

โ€œNaah, youโ€™re probably just as busy as I am.โ€ I head down the cobblestone path toward the back of the training center, making my way to the parking lot.

โ€œI have been pretty busy,โ€ she relents.

I hear a loud snort over the extension. โ€œWhat was that?โ€ I ask. โ€œNothing. Just Nicky being an ass. Heโ€™s been driving me nuts all

weekend. Has he always been this uptight, or did it happen once he became aย lawyer?โ€

She says โ€œlawyerโ€ as if itโ€™s a dirty word. Though to Summer, it probably is. My sister had declared at the age of twelve that law is โ€œhella boringโ€, and eight years later her stance remains the same. She only agreed to attend an Ivy League college to placate our parents, but last we spoke, she told me she wants to go into interior design after she graduates.

โ€œCompared to you, everyone is uptight,โ€ I tell my sister. โ€œWhich isnโ€™t to say I approve of all the batshit crazy things you do.โ€ Summer is two years younger than me, but she gives me a run for my money when it comes to grabbing life by the horns and seizing the day and all that crap. Iโ€™m surprised our parents havenโ€™t disowned her yet.

A thought suddenly occurs to me. โ€œWhy are you in Manhattan?

Shouldnโ€™t you be at school?โ€

โ€œI felt like visiting my big brother.โ€

Her tone is way too innocent for my liking. โ€œBullshit.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s true,โ€ Summer protests. โ€œI wanted to see Nicky. And I want to seeย youย too, so donโ€™t be surprised if I show up on your doorstep sometime soon.โ€ She pauses. โ€œActually, Iโ€™m thinking of transferring to Briar.โ€

An alarm goes off inside me. โ€œWhy? I thought you were happy at Brown.โ€

โ€œI am. Butโ€ฆuhโ€ฆyeah.โ€ Summer sighs again. โ€œIโ€™m on probation.โ€ I halt mid-step. โ€œWhat did you do?โ€ I demand.

โ€œWhat makes you think I did something?โ€ Thereโ€™s a sniff over the line. โ€œSave your Little Miss Innocent act for the parentals.โ€ I snicker. โ€œNot

that it works on them anymore, either. Now tell me what happened.โ€

โ€œLetโ€™s just say there was an incident at the sorority house. Togas were involved.โ€

I choke down a laugh. โ€œCan you be more specific?โ€ โ€œNope.โ€

I groan in exasperation. โ€œSummerโ€”โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll tell you all about it when I see you,โ€ she chirps. โ€œNicky wants to talk to you now.โ€

โ€œSummerโ€”โ€

Sheโ€™s already gone. My brotherโ€™s deep voice comes on the line half a second later. โ€œHey,โ€ he says.

โ€œWhatโ€™d she do?โ€ I ask him.

Nick gives a hearty laugh. โ€œOh no, Iโ€™m not spoiling it for you. All Iโ€™m going to say is, classic Summer.โ€

Fucking hell. Iโ€™m not sure I even want to know anymore. โ€œDo Mom and Dad know?โ€

โ€œYup. Theyโ€™re not thrilled about it, but itโ€™s not like she got kicked out. Itโ€™s just two months of probation and twenty hours of community service.โ€

The last bit distracts me from Summerโ€™s woes. โ€œSpeaking of community serviceโ€ฆโ€ I quickly fill him in about Oโ€™Sheaโ€™s new gig at Briar.

โ€œShit,โ€ Nick says when Iโ€™m done. โ€œDid he mention Miranda?โ€

โ€œNo, but itโ€™s obvious he still blames me for everything that happened.โ€ Bitterness clogs my throat. โ€œA part of me is tempted to track her down and talk some sense into her, maybe ask her to speak to her dad.โ€

โ€œShe didnโ€™t bother doing that back then,โ€ Nick points out. โ€œWhy do you think sheโ€™d do it now?โ€

Good point. โ€œI know, butโ€ฆโ€ I reach my car and jam my finger on the key fob to unlock the door. Iโ€™m still on edge from Oโ€™Sheaโ€™s unexpected reappearance in my life, and I just want to get the hell away from the arena. โ€œWhatever,โ€ I say darkly. โ€œI guess itโ€™s stupid of me to think Miranda would want to help me. Iโ€™m the monster who broke her heart, remember?โ€

โ€œYou want my advice? Just keep your head down. Show up for practice, do what Oโ€™Shea says, and donโ€™t start any shit. Spring will be here before you know it, and then youโ€™ll graduate and never have to see that bastard again.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re right,โ€ I concede. โ€œItโ€™s not worth stressing over. Iโ€™ll be out of here soon enough, right?โ€

โ€œYup. But let me know if he gives you any trouble, okay? Iโ€™ll try to come up with a good reason to sic a lawsuit on him.โ€

I chuckle. โ€œYou donโ€™t practice civil law.โ€

โ€œFor you, baby brother, Iโ€™ll make an exception.โ€

Iโ€™m in a far better mood after we hang up. My friends like to mock me about being a rich kid from Connecticut. Iโ€™m sure they think my parents are snobs and my siblings are spoiled, but truth be told, my family is awesome.

Both my parents are high-powered attorneys, but theyโ€™re the most down-to-earth people youโ€™ll ever meet. Donโ€™t get me wrong, my siblings and I definitely had a ton of perks growing up. We had a nanny and housekeeper. We went to private schools and got a cushy weekly allowance.

But we also had to do chores and finish all our homework before we ever saw a dime. If our grades slipped, weโ€™d be grounded in a heartbeat. And if we tried pulling that gimme-whatever-I-want-because-weโ€™ve-got-oodles-of- money crap, we were punished for it. The one and only time I demanded money from my dad, he turned around and donated my entire college fund to a charity for underprivileged kids. Then he made me clerk at his firm for the whole summer to earn it all back.

โ€œWhatโ€™d Coach want?โ€ Garrett asks when I stride into the living room fifteen minutes later.

โ€œTo introduce me to the new defensive coordinator.โ€ I flop down in the armchair and glance at the flat screen. G and Logan are battling each other in a game ofย Ice Pro, and judging by the score, Logan is getting his ass handed to him.

โ€œWe have a new defensive coordinator?โ€ Logan instantly pauses the game. โ€œAnd why did you need a private introduction?โ€

I choose my words carefully. โ€œHis nameโ€™s Frank Oโ€™Shea. He was my high school coach, so Jensen figured weโ€™d want to catch up before Oโ€™Shea is officially introduced to the team.โ€

Logan furrows his brow. โ€œOkay. But why is he just coming in now? Seasonโ€™s already started. Seems weird to bring in a DC after weโ€™ve already played our first game.โ€

โ€œAnd lost,โ€ Garrett mutters.

โ€œStill just one game,โ€ Logan insists. โ€œItโ€™s not like weโ€™re in such bad shape that we need a new coach to turn shit around. This feels like a panic move on Coachโ€™s part.โ€ Frowning, he turns to me again. โ€œWhatโ€™s he like? Good guy?โ€

Heโ€™s the devil. โ€œHeโ€™s decent,โ€ I lie, then change the subject. โ€œWhereโ€™s Tuck?โ€

โ€œNot sure. Donโ€™t think he came home last night.โ€ Logan unpauses the game and refocuses his attention on the screen.

I wrinkle my forehead. Tucker hadnโ€™t spent Friday night at home either. I wonder if heโ€™s seeing someone new, because he doesnโ€™t usually stay out two nights in a row.

Since my roommates are distracted by the video game, I go upstairs and force myself to catch up on the course readings Iโ€™d fallen behind on. I spend the rest of the day alternating between reading and napping, only going

downstairs to steal a few slices of the pizza Garrett and Logan order in the evening. I donโ€™t know why Iโ€™m feeling so antisocial. Maybe Iโ€™m still edgy about Oโ€™Shea showing up at Briar. Or maybe itโ€™s because every time I closed my eyes for a nap today, I pictured Allieโ€™s sexy mouth wrapped around my dick. Her smooth, golden curves pressed up against me. Her tits filling my palms.

Why canโ€™t I get this girl out of my mind? Yes, the sex was phenomenal. Yes, I find her attractive. But phenomenal sex and attractive girls arenโ€™t exactly an anomaly in my life.

Get over it, I order my dick when it yet again hardens at the thought of Allie.

It twitches in response. Taunting me.

โ€œGoddamn it,โ€ I growl. Then I fumble on the bed for my phone and bring up the number Iโ€™d dialed last night.

Allie picks up after four rings, her wary voice sliding into my ear. โ€œHey.

Whatโ€™s up?โ€

I let out a ragged breath. โ€œI want to fuck you again.โ€

โ€œIs this a thing now? Youโ€™re going to call me every night and say that?โ€ โ€œMaybe?โ€ Shit. Iโ€™m cranky and horny and as confused as she is. โ€œSay

yes, baby doll. Just say yes and put me out of my misery.โ€

โ€œI already told you, it was a one-time thing. Iโ€™m not into casual sex. We had fun, sure, butโ€”shit, Iโ€™ve gotta go. Call one of your puck bunnies and Iโ€™m sure theyโ€™ll take care of you, okay?โ€

For the second time in two days, she hangs up on me.

*

Allie

โ€œWho was that?โ€

I jump nearly two feet in the air at the sound of Hannahโ€™s voice. I disconnected the call when I heard her footsteps in the hall, but I hadnโ€™t expected her to appear in my doorway this fast.

โ€œUh, it was no one.โ€ Brilliant answer.

She raises one dark eyebrow. โ€œNo one?โ€

โ€œTelemarketer,โ€ I amend. โ€œWhich is the equivalent of no one.โ€

She grumbles in annoyance as she heads for my bed. โ€œHow do they even get our cell phone numbers? When I signed up with my phone provider, they had this whole section in their policy about how theyโ€™ll never, ever give my number to a third party. Well, I call bullshit, because guess what? I get daily calls from airlines and clothing stores and all these companies telling me about their awesome sales and saying I won some bogus prize. Oh my God, and the worst one? This stupid cruise ship promotion that starts the call with an automated foghorn! Itโ€™sย awful.โ€

Hannahโ€™s tangent lasts for several minutes, and Iโ€™m grateful for it because it means sheโ€™s too riled up to figure out I lied to her. And sheโ€™s so caught up in her rant that she doesnโ€™t notice when I discreetly check the text message that pops up on my phone.

Dean:ย U really need to stop hanging up on me.

I text back,ย U really need to stop propositioning me. I know Iโ€™m a great lay, but get over it already.

Him:ย I canโ€™t. Trust me, Iโ€™ve tried.

Me:ย Try harder.

Him:ย Cโ€™mon, baby doll. Just 1 more time. Think of how good it will beโ€ฆ

Of course itโ€™ll be good. Heโ€™s a sex champion. But that doesnโ€™t change the fact that Iโ€™m not comfortable with casual sex.

Me:ย Go away. Iโ€™m running lines w/ Hannah.

Him:ย Text me when ur done and Iโ€™ll sneak into your dorm. Wellsy wonโ€™t even know Iโ€™m there.

Iโ€™m startled to feel a sharp ache between my legs. The idea of Dean sneaking in and fucking me while Hannah sleeps obliviously in the next room is a turn-on I didnโ€™t expect.

I ignore the unwelcome response and type,ย Goodnight, Dean.

Then I turn to Hannah and say, โ€œAre we done bashing telemarketers?

Because this script isnโ€™t going to read itself, babe.โ€

โ€œSorry. I canโ€™t help itโ€”I hear the wordย telemarketerย and I turn into a ball of rage.โ€ She sits cross-legged on the center of my bed and catches the script I toss at her.

I remain standing. The opening scene requires my character to pace, and I want to get a feel for how talking while marching back and forth will affect my breath control.

Hannah thumbs through the intro pages. โ€œAll right. Who am I?

Jeannette or Caroline?โ€

โ€œCaroline. Her defining traits are petty and insensitive.โ€

My best friend grins widely. โ€œSo I get to play the bitch? Nice.โ€

Honestly, I wishย Iย was playing the bitch. My character is a young widow who lost her husband in Afghanistan, which is the more emotionally draining role. Thanks to this breakup with Sean, my emotion well is dangerously close to depleted, and Iโ€™m scared I wonโ€™t be able to tap into it and do this role justice.

My fear isnโ€™t off base. Weโ€™re only five pages in and Iโ€™m already drained, so I call for a quick break.

โ€œWow,โ€ Hannah remarks as she skims the next few scenes. โ€œThis play is intense. Everyone in the audience is going to be bawling the entire time.โ€

I collapse next to her and stretch out on my back. โ€œIโ€™mย going to be bawling the entire time.โ€ Literally, because my character weeps in every other scene.

Hannah falls back on her elbows and a comfortable silence falls between us. I like it, because I donโ€™t have this with many people. Even with Megan and Stella, who I consider close friends, one of us is always trying to fill the silence with conversation. I think it takes a certain level of trust to sit next to someone and not feel the pressing urge to babble away.

My dad once told me that the way a person responds to silence reveals a lot about them. I always figured he was talking out of his ass, because Dad has a habit of coming up with insightful-sounding adages and insisting thereโ€™s wisdom in them, when half the time I know heโ€™s bullshitting me.

But right now, I see the truth in his words. When I think of the silences Iโ€™ve shared with my other friends, I realize they really are incredibly telling. Meg breaks a silence with jokes, doing her damndest to fill the lull with laughter. For as long as Iโ€™ve known her, sheโ€™s resorted to humor whenever

shit gets too serious for her.

Stella fills the silence by barraging you with questions about your life. For as long as Iโ€™ve knownย her, sheโ€™s avoided discussing herself if she could help it. I guess thatโ€™s why it surprised me when she started dating Justin Kohl, the football player Hannah had a crush on before she fell for Garrett. Stella has openly admitted more than once that sheโ€™s afraid of intimacy.

The thought of Justin has me turning toward Hannah. โ€œHey, did Garrett ever own up to being wrong about Justin?โ€

She wrinkles her forehead. โ€œWhere did that come from?โ€

I grin. โ€œSorry. I was just thinking about Stella, and it reminded me of how Garrett was convinced that Justin had sinister motives. Didnโ€™t he insist that Justin was a slimeball?โ€

โ€œYep.โ€ She sits up with a laugh. โ€œWe actually talked about it a while back. I accused him of being subconsciously jealous of Justin.โ€

โ€œHa. I bet heย lovedย that.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s the only thing that makes sense, though. Justin is one of the nicest guys Iโ€™ve ever met. But Garrett insists he just misread him.โ€

โ€œWell, either way, Iโ€™m glad Justin turned out to be a good guy. Stella deserves to be happy.โ€ I hear the wistful note in my voice and hope Hannah doesnโ€™t pick up on it.

She does. โ€œYou deserve to be happy too. You know that, right?โ€ โ€œI know.โ€ I swallow the lump that rises in my throat.

Her green eyes take on a hesitant light. โ€œAllieโ€ฆdo you regret breaking up with Sean?โ€

The lump gets bigger. It makes it hard to breathe, especially when I remember the agony in Seanโ€™s voice when heโ€™d asked me who I slept with.

โ€œNo,โ€ I say finally. โ€œI know it was the right decision. We wanted completely different things for our future, and it wasnโ€™t something we could compromise on, not without one of us resenting the other.โ€

Hannah looks pensive. โ€œDo you think youโ€™re ready to start dating again?โ€

I shudder out a breath. โ€œNope, not even close.โ€ But God, what Iย wouldย like is a distraction. Iโ€™m tired of being sad. Iโ€™m tired of wondering how Sean is doing and fighting the urge to call him. I might not want to get back together, but I hate knowing that I hurt someone I care about. I have this terrible habit of wanting to make everyone happy, even if it means

sacrificing my own happiness. My dad insists itโ€™s an admirable quality, but sometimes I wish I were more selfish.

I guess I was selfish on Friday night, though. My rebound sex with Dean was all about satisfying my own base urges, and as guilty and embarrassed as I felt afterward, I canโ€™t deny it was hella satisfying.

Shit. Maybe Deanโ€™s right. Maybe weย shouldย hook up again. โ€œMaybe I need a fling,โ€ I say aloud, just to test out the idea.

Hannahโ€™s response is swift and scolding. โ€œYou tried that, remember?

After you and Sean broke up the first couple times. You hated it.โ€

Itโ€™s true. I did hate it. โ€œBut I didnโ€™t actually sleep with anyone,โ€ I point out. โ€œAll I did was go on a bunch of crappy dates and make out with a few jerks. Maybe that was my mistakeโ€”actuallyย datingย those guys. Maybe this time I should pick a hot dude and bang his brains out for a few weeks. Just sex, no expectations.โ€

She snorts. โ€œGood luck with that. We both know you canโ€™t even make out with a guy without hearing relationship bells in your head.โ€

Also true.

And why am I even contemplating this? If this is how Hannah responds to me broaching the subject of a fling, I can just imagine what sheโ€™d say if I admitted Iโ€™m considering a fling withย Dean. The guy is a player to the extreme. Not only is he not relationship material, but I doubt he could even commit to a fling. I canโ€™t see him being exclusive to me, which is absolutely non-negotiable, because thereโ€™s no way Iโ€™m sleeping with someone whoโ€™s also sleeping with other people.

Yeahโ€ฆI need to nip this Dean idea in the bud. I donโ€™t know why heโ€™s so eager to jump into bed with me again, but Iโ€™m confident heโ€™ll get over it eventually. The guy has the attention span of a fruit fly, and the affection- giving habits of a puppy, offering his sexual devotion to whoever happens to be holding the treat. By which I mean the vagina.

As I return to my senses, I change the subject. โ€œHey, what are you doing for Thanksgiving?โ€

โ€œGarrett and I are going to my aunt and uncleโ€™s place in Philly. My parents are flying in and meeting us there.โ€

โ€œNice. Sounds like fun.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™ll be in Brooklyn, right?โ€

I nod. I spend every holiday in Brooklyn with my dad. I always look forward to seeing him, but this year Iโ€™m a tad worried because the last time we spoke, he insisted on cooking Thanksgiving dinner himself.

Usually Iโ€™d be cheering over that announcement, because Dad happens to be the best cook on the planet. But since he was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis five years ago, Iโ€™ve been doing my best to make sure he doesnโ€™t push himself. The only reason I turned down a free ride to UCLAโ€™s drama program was so I could remain within driving distance of him. The man is so damn stubborn, insisting he doesnโ€™t need help and that he can manage on his own, but I hadnโ€™t felt comfortable moving to the opposite end of the country once his remission periods became few and far between.

Now Iโ€™m even more relieved I stayed on the east coast, because Dadโ€™s condition has gotten progressively worse this past year.

Like most people who suffer from the disease, he was initially diagnosed with relapsing-remitting MS, but now itโ€™s transitioned into the secondary-progressive type, which means his relapses are more frequent and more severe than they used to be. When I visited him over the summer, I was shocked by the change in him. Suddenly he was having trouble walking, when before it was the occasional loss of balance and mild numbness in his limbs. He had two attacks of vertigo when I was there, and when I pressed him, he admitted that the pain was getting worse and he was experiencing the occasional vision problems.

All this? Fucking terrifies me. I already lost my mom to cancer when I was thirteen. Dad is all I have left. I refuse to lose him too, even if it means chaining him to his recliner in our Brooklyn brownstone and forcing him to watch football while I cook dinner in his stead.

โ€œOkay, break time is over.โ€ Once again I need a distraction from my bleak thoughts. Groaning, I sit up and open the script to where we left off. โ€œCaroline is about to yell at Jeannette again.โ€

Hannah tucks a strand of dark hair behind her ear. โ€œFor the record? If you ever lost your husband, I would never call you a crybaby and tell you to โ€˜get over itโ€™.โ€ Her expression grows serious. โ€œIn other words, you can keep moping about Sean for as long as you need to. I promise I wonโ€™t judge you for it.โ€

Emotion wells up in my throat, but I manage to squeeze out two words. โ€œThank you.โ€

You'll Also Like