The Fifteenth Minute: A Hockey Romance: Chapter 4
The Fifteenth Minute: A Hockey Romance (The Ivy Years Book 5)
DJ I DOÂ as Iâm asked. Finally. When everyone is out of the house except me.
The whole debacle is deeply embarrassing. And even though Iâll bet everyone who lives in Orsenâs house has heard about the accusation against me, I never talk about the case. Never.
Part of me is hoping that the lawyer canât take my call. He must be a busy guy, right?
No such luck.
âDaniel,â he says, his voice booming and confident. âItâs a pleasure to get you on the phone. Iâve read your file, and I think I can help.â
âUm, thank you, sir.â But I feel no relief, because I just donât trust him. âI, um, know you donât know me. But before we begin, I just need to tell you that I did notâ¦do what theyâre accusing me of.â I canât even bring myself to say the word, because I donât want it on my tongue. âSo thereâs no compromise Iâm willing to make.â
âWhoa there, son. Letâs slow down just a little bit. Iâm not going to ask you to compromise yourself in any way. Whatâs interesting to me about your case is how ridiculously the college has handled it. They havenât given you a to say, âI didnât do this.â And thatâs not right.â
Even though thatâs all true, my heart is already pounding against my ribcage. I have never known real stress until this year.
âMy first job will be to get the college to give us a private hearing.â
âThey, um, havenât been willing to do that, sir. The first lawyer my father spoke to couldnât get anywhere with them.â
âI know. But you canât defend yourself if they wonât hear you out. So my first job is to demonstrate all the ways that theyâve mishandled you. To defend you, I first have to go on the attack. We have to accuse the college of violating your rights.â
Now Iâm starting to sweat, because is the last thing I want to do. I just want the whole issue to fade away. âBut if they drop their, um, claim, Iâm hoping to stay here.â
âOf course you are. But unless we can make them own up to their failures, theyâre going to just decide this thing behind closed doors and send you a letter with their decision. We have to make it clear that you didnât get to tell your side of the story, and that youâre being mistreated. By the time this is over, Iâm going to make sure everyone knows how poorly theyâve behaved.â
He waits for me to say something, but Iâve got nothing.
âAt some point you and I are going to have to spend a couple of hours discussing the details of the night in questionâlast April eleventh. But today weâre not going to do that.â
âOkay,â I say quickly. Iâm not looking forward to telling him the intimate details of my sex life.
âBut today I want to ask you about August twentieth. The day the dean called your home in Huntington.â
âAll right.â Thatâs another painful story, but at least thereâs no nudity involved.
âYour file indicates that the phone call on August twentieth was the first communication you had from the college. Are you absolutely sure they didnât reach out before then?â
âYes sir.â
âSo the phone rings out of the blue. And whoâs on the other end of the line? Tell me exactly what happened.â
I think of this moment as The Day the Music Died. Just remembering it, my heart does a drum solo, because my father and I have gone over this a million times. If Iâd handled everything more carefully on that summer day, everything might be different. âThe caller was a secretary for the assistant dean of student services. I didnât catch the secretaryâs name. She said if I had thirty minutes to spare, the dean would like to speak to me. So I said that was fine.â
âYou didnât ask, âWhat is this about?ââ
âNo. I wish I had. But I donât get calls from the deanâs officeâ¦â
âYou were intimidated.â
âHell yes.â I remember standing there in our kitchen, feeling worried. But I had an hour before my shift at the seafood restaurant where I wait tables in the summertime, so I just said Iâd take the call. âThe dean came on the lineââ
âAssistant Dean Maria Lagos.â
âRight. She said she wanted to ask me some questions about the night of April eleventh.â I have gotten off that phone and asked for a proper meeting. I should have told my parents there might be some kind of problem. But I didnât do that. âI told her I didnât know off the top of my head what night that was. She said it was the night of a party, and also a young woman had asked to stay in my room, and I said, âYou mean Annie Stevens?â And she said yes.â
âLet me stop you right there,â the lawyer said. âDid the dean ask your permission to tape the call?â
âNo. She didnât mention anything like that. And I donât think she taped it, because there were times when she stopped asking me questions and said, âJust a moment,â like she was trying to catch up with her notes.â
âDid she tell you she was taking notes?â
âI could hear the keyboard clicking.â I remember thinking she was a fast typist.
âOkay. What happened next?â
âShe asked me about the early part of that night. The party was in the next entryway, where a lot of freshmen were serving drinks to other freshmen, so I was freaking out. Thereâs a rule against hard alcohol on Frosh Court, but nobody follows it.â
âWhat did you tell her?â
âThe truth. I went to the party, and Annie was there. The dean asked if I drank alcohol and I said yes I drank some but not very much.â
âDid she ask you to quantify exactly how much? Did she talk about ounces, or ask you to count up the number of drinks?â
âNo. She asked if I was drunk, and I told her I wasnât.â
The lawyer asks me a couple more questions. Heâs focused on procedureâwhat questions I was asked, and how precise they were. I get itâheâs trying to show the college that they didnât gather enough information to figure out what happened that night.
But I just donât see how this is going to help. The college isnât trying to send me to jail. Theyâre only trying to decide if I can stay at Harkness. There are thousands of guys whoâd like nothing more than to take my spot. The college can do whatever it wishes.
My father and I went over this, too.
âDaniel, at what point did you figure out that Annie Stevens had accused you of sexual misconduct?â
Maybe Iâm slow, but it had taken a while before Iâd figured out where the questions were leading. âWell, I was worried about the underaged drinking until the deanâs questions shifted to my dorm room. When she started asking me about Annie sleeping in my room, I didnât know why she wanted to go there. Staying in someone elseâs room isnât against the rules.â I sighed. âI am the biggest idiot alive.â
The lawyer actually laughed. âNo youâre not, son. You just donât think like a criminal.â
I didnât to. But after someone accuses you of being one, it changes your entire outlook.
âDaniel, please tell me exactly how personal the deanâs questions became.â
My head begins to ache. âShe made me give, uh, the play-by-play of our entire encounter. Who kissed who, which hands removed which clothes. I told her all this, but I was really nervous. Itâs not an easy conversation with anyone, and of course Iâd just caught on to the fact that someone had a problem with it. My first thought was that maybe Annie wasnât eighteen or something. But that would be weird. It was second semesterâ¦â
âIâll run a background check on her and weâll rule that out. But what else did the dean ask?â
âAfter everything I described, sheâd stop and say, âAnd how did she give consent for that? Was it verbal?â And I had really good answers for almost all of those.â Because the whole encounter had been Annieâs idea.
âAll right. And did you get the sense that the dean took careful notice of your responses?â
âI guess so. But I canât be sure.â
âI see. So after this detailed conversation last August, what happened?â
. âI got a letter five or six days later telling me I was on social probation.â
âRight. I have to tell you that Iâve read and re-read this letter, and itâs a pretty interesting document.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âItâs specific about the probation they imposed on youâwhere you can and canât go, and exactly how you should avoid contact with Miss Stevens. But on the subject of what it is that youâre supposed to have done, thereâs nothing. Iâve never seen anything like it. Either it was written by someone who has no experience investigating sexual assault, or theyâre being vague on purpose, because theyâre not feeling confident about the accusation. And now theyâve let five months pass without deciding your case.â
.
âItâs possible that they think the case against you sucks, but theyâre trying to be sure they give it adequate attention anyway. Thereâs a law called Title Nine. Most people think itâs about school sports, but itâs broader than that. Sexual discrimination and harassment.â
âOkay.â
âThese past few years colleges have been threatened with losing certain sources of federal funding if they donât demonstrate that theyâre fighting harassment and also sexual assault. And thatâs a fine idea, right? But collegesâeven well-funded ones like Harknessâkeep proving that they have how to investigate sexual violence. And when they get it wrong, it hurts . Think about it. There are girls who are raped, but the college bungles the investigation. On the other hand, there are guys like you who are at the wrong end of bungled investigations.â
âFederal funding,â I repeat slowly.
âThatâs right. Just like everything in life. Money is the driver.â
My head gives a fresh stab of pain, and I wonder if itâs even possible to get out of this mess unscathed. When I first learned that Harkness College might throw me out for something I didnât do, I still didnât quite realize the seriousness of the situation. But then my father explained that my Harkness transcript would show that Iâd been suspended for disciplinary reasons.
In other words, if Harkness kicks me out, Iâll be untouchable.
âWell, Daniel, weâre going to have to leave it here for now, because I have a lunch meeting. It was a pleasure speaking to you. If I have any more questions for you before I press the college for a hearing date, can I reach you at this number?â
âSure,â I say. âAnytime.â Iâd promise anything right now if it meant getting off this call.
He tells me heâll let me know if he gets anywhere, and then I thank him and hang up.
I spread out on my bed and stare at the ceiling. This lawyer number twoâJackâhe sounded more knowledgeable than the family lawyer whoâd first tried to help sort me out. But it might not even matter. The last guy explained to me that I was just another customer, and Harkness was free to decide at their whim that they didnât want me anymore.
Last summer, even as my parents were freaking out, I kept thinking that it was really just a big misunderstanding. I honestly believed the college would call me back and say, âNever mind. You werenât the guy we were looking for.â
But that never happened. Two lawyers later, my panic had shifted into something heavier, like dread.
Itâs lunchtime, but I canât enter most of the dining halls on campus, because theyâre inside the twelve residence houses. And my âagreementâ with the college states that I canât enter the houses until my case is decided. So I eat a lot of sandwiches from the deli.
Iâm not hungry right now anyway.