Rain pelts the window. I stare at the streaks running down the glass, make a face, and then turn back toward the mirror so I can finish my makeup. I havenât washed my hair since last night, the spray Eve put in my hair keeping the curls intact. Theyâre pulled up in a high ponytail so my hair isnât covering the back of Conorâs away jersey.
It was the first thing I grabbed to put on this morning, and Conor told me I should keep it on to wear to the game tonight. I think he was teasing me, but I surprised us both by telling him I was going to. And then we had sex again, because apparently the three seconds it takes to roll on a condom were slowing Conor down before.
The doorbell rings.
âHarlow!â Eve calls. âIâm not expecting anyone.â
âIâm not either!â I shout back.
âWell, itâs definitely your turn to get the door.â
I sigh, twist the mascara tube shut, and then head down the hallway. Eve is at the kitchen table drawing. âProbably your boyfriend,â she tells me.
I donât deny the title this time. After last night, it feels like he might be. Will be. But Conor should already be at the rink, getting ready for his game.
I swing the front door open. I was right.
Itâs not Conor.
Itâs three people I wasnât expecting to see in Somerville until graduation in May.
âWhâwhat are you guys doing here?â I ask Hugh, Allison, and Landon.
âHappy Birthday, honey,â Allison says. âWe wanted to come celebrate with you.â
I was expecting a phone call. A card from them arrived in the mail Thursday. But the Garrisons have never just shown up here. And this yearâthe way Landon is avoiding looking at me and Hugh is focused on the jersey Iâm wearingâseems like suspicious timing. Iâm certain Allison is using today as an attempt to address what happened over Thanksgiving.
The smile slips off Allisonâs face, the longer I stand here silent.
âIâm sorry. I should have called first. We were just hoping we could walk around campus a little, grab a late lunch with you?â
Landon still wonât look at me. Hugh is smiling, and it doesnât look forced.
âUmâ¦â
They drove all this way. But I told Conor I would go to his game. I to go to his game.
Once again, Iâm caught in the middle.
I decide to be honest. âIâm supposed to go to the hockey game. It starts in an hour.â
âWho are they playing?â The question bursts out of Hugh like heâs been dying to ask it.
âEdgewood.â The team they lost to in the playoffs last year. According to Conor, this will be their toughest opponent yet.
âWe could all go to the game, get some food after?â Hugh suggests.
It feelsâ¦strange, going to Conorâs game with the Garrisons. But itâs not like the basketball gamesâ empty, conspicuous stands. Iâm sure the game today will be just as packed as the Friday night one I went to. Possibly even more crowded, since itâs in the middle of the day. I can go with the Garrisons, spend a couple of hours with them after, and then go to dinner with Conor.
âSure,â I say. âThat sounds good. Let me just go grab my stuff. We can walk around campus before the game.â
Allison smiles. âPerfect.â
âCome on in.â I leave the door open, then head into the living room.
Eve is standing by the couch.
she mouths to me.
, I mouth back.
Allison has always attempted to make today a happy occasion for me. Finding out I didnât tell Eve because Iâve never wanted to celebrate at school will only make her feel bad.
âEve!â Allison says, giving my best friend a hug. âHow are you?â
âIâm good, thanks. Nice to see you guys.â
She waves at Hugh and smiles at Landon. Theyâve all met multiple times before.
âIâll be right back,â I say, then head down the hallway to my room. Finish dabbing on some concealer and then grab my phone and keys.
Thereâs a knock on my door.
âYeah?â
Iâm expecting it to be Eve, but Landonâs voice is the one that asks, âCan I come in?â
My chest contracts. The first words heâs spoken to me in over a week. âSure.â
The door opens and Landon steps into my room. He glances around the space quickly before his gaze settles on me. He came to help me move in August, but this is the first time heâs been to Holt since.
âHey,â he says.
âHi.â I play with my keys nervously.
Landon blows out a long breath. âIâm sorry, Harlow. Iâm really sorry. Iâ¦thereâs a lot there, for me, when it comes to Conor. Years of anger and resentment, and I havenât had to deal with it. I could shove it all away and act like he doesnât exist. And then youâ¦you were my friend first. I had to share a school with him and a town and my dadâeven though Conor pretends thatâs not the caseâbut I never thought Iâd have to share you. Not with . It messed with my head, and I didnât handle it well. Some of the shit I said to youâinexcusable. I mean it, Iâm really sorry.â
I nod. âThank you for apologizing.â
âYouâre my best friend, and I want you to be happy. I know youâve had to deal with a lot. But as your friend⦠I think heâll make you happy. This isnât me giving my blessing. I think youâre too good for him and I think heâll hurt you. I still hate him, and I donât see that ever changing. Butâ¦itâs not worth our friendship. So Iâll shut my mouth where heâs concerned. Your life, your decision.â
Itâs about the best-case scenario I could have hoped for. But it still leaves me right smack dab in the middle. âI might be dating him, Landon.â
His arms cross. âYeah. I noticed the jersey.â
âAnd Iâm just supposed toâ¦what? Disconnect a huge part of my life like that?â
âYouâve never talked to me about guys much before.â
âYeah, because they werenâtâ¦â
âLook, Conor made his choices. He decided he didnât want a dad, and he wasnât very nice about it, I might add. Thatâs not on me. Thatâs not on my dad. Are you asking Conor to mend fences? Inviting him to family dinners, on the trip to Vancouver with us this summer?â
âNo.â
He wouldnât go, if I did.
Landon nods, knowing the answer already. âDonât ask me to accept him if youâre not asking him to accept me. Iâm saying you can keep us separate, that I wonât hold your shitty taste in guys against you. Donât ask me for more than that.â
I sigh. âOkay.â
âGreat. Mom wants to take photos of us all over campus so she can relive her wild college days. Hurry up.â
He grins at me, then leaves my room.
Itâs raining out as we approach the main entrance to the hockey rink. No surprise there.
The misty, wet weather matches my mood.
Walking around campus with the Garrisons wasnât as awkward as I was worried about. Landon is back to acting like his normal, upbeat self, laughing and joking with me. The relief was obvious on Allisonâs face, watching us.
Hugh spent the walk studying the campus curiously. Unlike Allison, who was here for four years, heâs only visited a couple of times. He seemed lost in his own head, and Iâm guessing he was thinking about Conor.
Allison was in her element. Just like Landon said, she took photos of us all over campus. In another life, I could easily picture my mom beside her, both of them giddy over seeing the changes on campus since they went to school here themselves.
My nerves ramp up to a new degree as we follow the crowd headed into the arena. I was right about the turnout being even larger than usual. We have to literally fight our way into the lobby. Part of the issue is that the lobby wall with the sad trophy display is cordoned off. All the plaques from last nightâs banquet are being added to the wall.
My gaze snags on the Caddell-Spade Award thatâs already hanging back up, and Hugh notices it too as we pass by. Itâs the largest one, which I guess is some indication of its prestige.
âConor won that?â he asks me.
âYeah. Last night.â
We pass through the lobby and walk along the rubber mats that lead to the boards surrounding the ice. The bleachers are already packed, and more people keep streaming in.
âWow. This is really something,â Allison states, looking around at the crowd.
âShould we meet you after the game?â Hugh asks.
âNo, itâs fine. Letâs try to get seats together,â I say.
They came all this way. And part of me is curious to see what Hughâs reaction will be to watching his son play hockey for the first time.
After some pushing and shoving, we finally find a section in the bleachers wide enough for the four of us to squeeze into. Theyâre not great seats, at an awkward angle and partially obscured by the net hanging behind the goal, but theyâre better than nothing.
Loud pop music is playing, and it continues blaring as players start appearing on the ice. Holtâs blue jerseys are at the opposite end, Edgewoodâs maroon nearer to us.
I lean over Allison and hand Hugh the program I picked up on the way in. âFifteen,â I tell him.
He mouths me a , then alternates between studying the roster and glancing at the ice.
âHow have you been? Really?â Allison asks me.
âOkay.
,â I tell her. âSchool has been crazy lately, with the end of the semester coming up soon.â
âAnd everything else?â
âHeâs taking me out tonight. On a date.â
Allison smiles. âHave you told him? How youâre feeling?â
âNot yet.â
I almost did, last night when we were lying in bed after the banquet. It seems like the way I feel about him must be obvious, the way Conor appeared stunned I thought he might be hooking up with anyone else. My feelings for him are so consuming, itâs hard not to get swept up in them.
But I hadnât spoken to him before October. My experience with relationships is minimal, and Iâm not sure thereâs any long-term future possible for us between the complication of the Garrisons and our individual dreams.
Iâve never asked Conor what his back-up plan is if hockey doesnât work out, because I donât want to imply he needs one. If he plays professionally, he could end up anywhere in the country next year. If he doesnât get signed, I have no idea what heâll do.
When Iâm with him, itâs easy to think emotionally instead of rationally. Sitting in a cold arena next to the closest thing I have to a mother figure is more confusing.
Allison squeezes my thigh, right as the loudspeaker crackles to life. The announcer runs through the same welcome and emergency evacuation information as before, then the national anthem is played. And then the starting line-ups are announced.
I glance down at Hugh the moment before I know âAnd your captain and leading scorerâ¦CONOR HART!â will be announced. His expression is awed and proud as he looks around at the packed bleachers of spectators screaming for his son, and I wish I could snap a photo and show it to Conor. Wish he could see past his resentment and anger to acknowledge he has more of a father than he thinks.
The puck drops a minute later, and the clock starts ticking down. Edgewood is aggressive from the start, and Holt matches their intensity. For most of the first period, players keep zipping up and down the ice repeatedly, each team fighting for possession while only managing a few shots on goal.
The second period starts out the same. Then, five minutes in, Edgewood scores. Thereâs a collective groan among the crowd.
Thirty seconds later, Edgewood gets called on a high-sticking penalty. Fresh excitement ripples through the crowd, watching the maroon jersey step into the penalty box and giving Holt a prime opportunity to even the score.
Conorâs line gets sent out. Hunter is the one who carries it down toward Edgewoodâs goalie, passing to Robby Sampson, who then passes it to Conor. They set up a circular formation, their familiarity with each other obvious as the puck ricochets between their sticks, none of Edgewoodâs defensemen able to stop its trajectory.
Hunter is the one who takes the shot. The net bulges from the velocity, the siren sounds, and the arena erupts as the score gets tied.
I glance down at Hugh, whoâs beaming. Allison, who is not normally much of a sport spectator, is paying close attention. Even Landon looks intrigued, I notice. Heâs not even pretending to act disinterested, leaning forward on his elbows like heâs trying get as close to the ice as possible.
Hockeyâs an easy sport to get wrapped up in. The energy humming in the air is electric, punctuated by the rattle of boards and the scrape of blades against ice.
Play resumes again, Edgewood clearly pissed about giving up a goal. They press harder and the game grows more physical. I wince, watching Conor take a hit that I know will be another bruise on his ribs. Conor manages to keep possession of the puck, skating behind the goal and then passing to a waiting Robby. Robby shoots, and the siren sounds again.
I relax a little once Holt is officially winning.
Four minutes later, Edgewood scores. The second period ends, tied 2-2.
I make small talk with Allison during the second intermission, my knee bouncing wildly the entire time.
I wasnât this invested the last game I watched, and I know it wasnât just because that score wasnât this close. Itâs because I , about Conor. I want this win for him, more than anything else.
The third period is a battle, both teams desperate to score. Edgewood earns two penalties and Aidan takes one for Holt. No one gets another power play goal.
And then, with just over three minutes left, Edgewood scores, pulling ahead. My hands curl into fists, my fingernails biting into my palm, the flash of each second expiring all I can focus on. Only one hundred and eighty-three of them left.
Itâs chaos on the ice, lines changing and boards clanging as Edgewood struggles to maintain its lead and Holt fights to protect its undefeated season. Time keeps ticking down. If they can get just one goal, they could win in overtime.
Thereâs a whistle on the ice, then a congregation of jerseys near the center. A blue jersey is waving at the ref with his hand raised, while two other blue jerseys try to pull him back.
I have a bad feeling, even before the player turns and I see the number on the back.
âHolt penalty on number fifteen, Conor Hart. Two minutes for tripping.â
Instead of heading into the penalty box, Conor steps off the ice at Holtâs bench. He passes the row of his teammates. I watch his coach call out something that has Conor shaking his head, then continuing under the opening beneath the bleachers. He stops, a few steps later, swinging his stick against the cinderblock wall. The wood splinters, falling to the ground in a cracked heap. Conor keeps walking until I canât see him anymore.
âHe left the game early?â I hear Landon ask Hugh.
âThereâs less time left in the game than his penalty,â Hugh replies. âHe wouldnât have been able to go back out on the ice.â
Under other circumstances, I would take Landonâs interest in Conor and hockey as a positive sign.
But Iâm focused on the slumped shoulders beneath the blue jerseys on the ice. The cracked stick no one has moved yet. The quiet, somber crowd.
Fifty-three seconds later, Holtâs winning streak ends.