The Play: Chapter 40
The Play (Briar U Book 3)
I have no fucking idea whatâs going on as I charge into the locker room. The guys are all suited up. Iâm the only one half-dressed and I donât give two shits right now. Demiâs father is on my heels, startling every single one of my teammates by his appearance.
Coachâs eyebrows fly up. âWhoâs this?â he demands.
âThis is Demiâs father,â I explain. âDr. Marcus Davis.â
âWow,â Bucky blurts out, gaping at the newcomer. âYou got here fast! This news literally just broke.â
âWhat exactly is going on?â Dr. Davis demands, ignoring everyone but the other adult in the room.
Jensen sticks out a hand. âChad Jensen, and Iâm afraid I canât answer that for you. All we have is a grainy picture on a phone.â
âItâs Demi,â I say through gritted teeth.
Dr. Davis nods grimly. âThatâs my daughter. Where is this place exactly? Bristol House?â
âItâs a dorm on the west side of campus,â Matt supplies. âTen-minute walk, two minute drive.â
Dr. Davis is already back at the door. âDavenport,â he barks. âI need you to show me where it is.â
My feet stay rooted to the floor. Becauseâ¦the teamâs about to hit the ice. This game determines who goes to our conference finals, and from there itâs on to the national tournament. The Frozen Four.
But I canât play hockey right now. My girlfriend is up on a goddamn roof in the middle of February, trying to talk down a suicide jumper. I skimmed several tweets in the stream Matt showed me, and it doesnât sound like itâs just two people simply hanging out up there. TJ is clearly threatening to jump.
I rake both hands through my hair. My fingers are shaking wildly. Iâm geared up in my lower pads, hockey pants, and socks. But up top Iâm in a wife-beater. My shoulder and elbow pads spill haphazardly out of my locker. My chest protector is on the bench.
Swallowing hard, I sweep my gaze around the room. Iâm about to break every rule in the captainâs handbook.
I wanted to be a good captain. I wanted to put the team first, support my guys, be patient with them, follow all the rules Iâve been compiling since the season started. I promised myself I wouldnât let girls interfere with hockey, and now Iâm about to throw the rulebook out the windowâ¦for a girl.
But there is literally no other choice here for me. Guys like Garrett, Dean, LoganâI think theyâd understand. I think theyâd never put sports ahead of their women. So if my team hates me, so be it. All I know is, if Demiâs in trouble, then she comes first.
âGuys.â My voice is rough. âIâm sorry. I canât play tonight.â
Nobody utters a word.
Guilt spirals through me and forms a tight pretzel in the pit of my stomach. âTrust me,â I continue desperately, âI donât want to miss this game, but even if I went out there right now and played, I would only be a detriment to you. My head isnât here, itâs with Demi. I wonât be able to concentrate until I know sheâs safe andââ
âShe just climbed onto the ledge,â Matt blurts out, his eyes glued to his phone screen.
Dr. Davis freezes in the doorway. Iâm sure the sheer terror in his eyes reflects my own.
âShe did what?â I demand. âWhatâs happening now?â
âI dunno. This tweet just says thereâs now two people up on the ledge. No other deets.â
My heart pounds so fast I feel faint. I suck in an unsteady breath, then scrub my hand through my hair again. I want to tear it out. âIâm sorry,â I tell my team. âI need to go.â
âDude, why the fuck are you sorry?â Matt demands.
âAnd why the fuck are you still here?â drawls Conor. The lazy tone is belied by the serious glint in his eyes.
I wearily glance at Coach, who offers a brisk nod. Then I snatch my sneakers off the floor and race out of the locker room.
âThis is it,â I announce five minutes later, concern and impatience warring inside me. âThe lot entrance is up there on the right.â
But when we try to turn into the parking lot, we find the Hastings police sectioned it off. Across the lot, I spot an ambulance and three police cruisers, along with two campus security cars.
I curse in frustration. âJust stop here on the side of the road. If you get towed, Iâll just give you my car, okay?â
Heâs as impatient as I am as we dive out of his BMW. The winter chill slaps me in the face, same way it did when weâd barrelled out of the arena. Itâs freezing out. Yet itâs not the temperature thatâs making my bones ache. Itâs fear. Pure, paralyzing terror.
When I gaze up at the roof of Bristol House, a hiss of horror flies out. âJesus.â
âOh my God,â Dr. Davis says at the same time. He lets out a tortured moan, and when I look over heâs covering his eyes with the back of his hand, as if he canât bear to look again. Then his arm drops limply and he gives a determined nod. âLetâs go.â
We hurry forward, but the police roped off the scene. The scene. Christ, Iâm already viewing this as the scene of a crime. Or rather, a potentially devastating accident.
I stare up again, my throat tightening to the point of asphyxiation. Although Demiâs dark hair is blowing in the wind, she stands as motionless as a statue. Sheâs in a red sweater and black leggings, and she looks so small and vulnerable up there. I wish I could hear her voice or see her eyes.
Beside her, TJ is in a T-shirt and sweats, his skinny arms planted firmly at his sides.
Theyâre talking. I donât know what theyâre saying. I donât care what theyâre saying. I want to go up there and pull that little asshole off the ledgeâand then throw him the fuck over it for endangering Demiâs life.
I force myself to take a breath. Then I notice that Demiâs father is about to hurl himself over the blockade, despite the protests of the young officer whoâs attempting to stop him.
âYou canât go beyond this point, sir!â
My gaze flies toward the copâs face. I know that guy. What was his name again? Alberts? Albertson!
âThatâs his daughter,â I explain, stepping between the two males. Albertsonâs eyes widen when he recognizes me. âAnd sheâs my girlfriend. You know her, Albertsonâshe was the one in the holding cell with me.â
Dr. Davis turns to glower at me. âWhat holding cell?â
I wave off the question. âPlease. Albertson.â Somehow my voice sounds calm.
The uniformed man throws a discreet glance over his shoulder, then dips his head in a tiny nod and allows us to rush past him.
We skid to a stop about twenty yards from the entrance of the dormitory. Near the front doors, several officers are engaged in intent conversation with a man in a suit. The dean, I realize. Other faculty members are also present, along with a small crowd of observers that the cops are trying to corral to one area.
Dr. Davis grabs my arm suddenly. I flinch, because his steel grip is definitely going to leave a bruise. âDo you know how to get up there?â he demands.
I hesitate. Because I do know. Itâs not a well-kept secret that Bristol is the place to go if you want to hang out on the roof and smoke Jâs. But the wild look in his eyes tells me itâs not a wise idea for him to be anywhere near Demi right now. Hell, I can barely keep my own cool, and sheâs my girlfriend. I canât imagine how Iâd feel if I was looking up there at my daughter.
Fear and desperation form a lethal cocktail in my bloodstream. My hands wonât quit shaking. I can barely stay upright without stumbling, and my bare arms are covered with goose pimples.
âEven if I did, thereâs no way the cops are letting us enter that building. I think weâre gonna have to stay out here.â
Rage burns hot in his dark eyes. âAnd you claim to give a shit about my daughter?â
âI do give a shit.â I exhale weakly. âDr. Davis. Marcus. Look at herâlook at them.â
His anger dissolves into agony as he tilts his head back. His scalp is shiny under the glow of the streetlamp at the foot of the path.
âTrust her,â I urge.
He blinks. âWhat?â
âJust trust her. I know you want to run up there and storm the roof, but all youâre going to do is scare the shit out of TJ. Trust me, if I was up on that ledge and you came outâ¦?â I shake my head in warning. âYouâll make things worse, I promise you that. I know how much you love your daughterâI mean, you drove all the way from Boston to order me to stay away from her. Which I still donât understand, by the way, because Iâve done nothing but love that girl with all my heart. And because I love her, I have faith in her.â
He visibly gulps. His massive Adamâs apple bobs like thereâs a whole other entity in his throat.
âSheâs so smart,â I tell him. âAnd she knows what sheâs doingâshe and I spent the entire semester working on a project that required her to pretend to be my therapist. If anyone can get through to TJ, itâs her. Trust her.â
All the fight seems to drain out of him. His massive shoulders sag.
After a second of hesitation, I reach over and touch his arm reassuringly.
His eyes narrow at first, but then his expression softens. âYou do love her,â he says brusquely.
âYes.â
We both turn our attention back to Demi. Time ceases to exist. Itâs frozen like the air. Frozen like the ground beneath my feet. Frozen like the fear in my heart. Minutes pass, or maybe itâs hours. Days. I donât know.
What I do know is that I donât breathe easy until Demi finally takes TJâs hand and safely helps him off the ledge.