The Chase: Chapter 21
The Chase: A Grumpy Sunshine College Hockey Romance (Briar U Book 1)
So I guess nobody talks about oral sex anymore? We just perform it on each other and hand out orgasms willy-nilly and it never gets discussed again? Is this the world weâre living in? If so, Iâm going off the grid. Iâll build a shack in the middle of the woods where there isnât a penis in sight.
Forest animals have penises, Summer.
âOh, shut up, Selena,â I mumble. âI love you, but I donât need this today.â
My row-mate Ben glances at me, sighs, and then returns his gaze to the front of the lecture hall. Heâs grown accustomed to my cat-lady ramblings. Iâm not certain if thatâs a good thing or a bad one.
Itâs been two days since the locker room incident, and Fitz has been completely MIA. Gone in the afternoons (holed up in the painting studio, according to Hollis), hasnât had dinner (or any meals, for that matter) at home, and both nights heâs come back around midnight and proclaimed to be SO TIRED when I tried to talk to him.
You know what I have to say to that?
Fuck you very much, Colin Fitzgerald. Thatâs the last time his dumb penis goes anywhere near my sacred mouth. A girlâs got to have standards.
Brenna echoes that sentiment when I text her after class with a Fitz update.
ME: Still no mention of the BJ. Last nite he said he had a migraine and locked himself in his room. This morning he left for practice at 5am. Snuck out like a thief in the night
BRENNA: Men are garbage
ME: Theyâre pure trash
BRENNA: Trash garbage
I send her the poop emoji, because I canât find a garbage-bag emoji and poop is an adequate alternative.
BRENNA: All seriousnessâIâm sorry, GB. Never thought Fitz was trash garbage, but people are full of surprises
ME: So are Dumpsters
BRENNA: lolololololol
I grin to myself as I slide my phone into my tote. The Prada bag smells like delicious new leather, a scent that never fails to cheer me up. It showed up on my doorstep yesterday morning courtesy of UPS and Nana Celeste. I swear that woman can sense whenever her grandbabies are upset. Itâs like she possesses internal radar that shouts âQuick! Call Prada!â if one of the grandkids so much as gets a paper cut.
Not that Iâm complaining about my gorgeous new tote. Iâm not a crazy person.
I descend the steps toward Laurieâs lecture podium. Itâs not his office hours, but he agreed to see me after the lecture so I could start writing my midterm today instead of waiting till Wednesday for him to approve my thesis.
And the good thing about Erik Laurie teaching History of Fashion as well as serving as my independent-study advisor is that Iâm able to kill two birds with one stoneâI can get my thesis green-lit and give him an update on my swimwear line in one shot.
I still canât quite explain it, but the man continues to creep me out. Everyone else adores him, especially the girls. They laugh at all his jokes. They tolerate his winking disorder.
And then thereâs me, who leaves every encounter with him feeling like I need a shower. He reminds me of that intolerable character from Harry PotterâGilderoy Lockhart, only the film version of him that Kenneth Branagh knocked out of the park. Laurie isnât as flamboyant, but, like Lockhart, he comes off as a vain egomaniac who wants everyone to love him.
Or rather, who assumes they already do.
I know itâs a harsh assessment, and I try to push it out of my mind as I approach my professor.
âWinter!â he teases. âI enjoyed your thoughts in class today.â
âThanks.â
He shuffles a few papers, then glances beyond my shoulder and nods at someone. I turn and realize Nora is waiting a discreet distance away.
âThereâs another student I need a progress report from, so this will be quick,â he informs me.
Thank God. The quicker, the better.
He reads over my thesis for the midterm, suggests two minor tweaks, and signs off on it. Once thatâs out of the way, I fill him in on the fabric order I placed. The Fashion department has a decent selection of free fabrics for students to use, but weâre also able to buy our own if we choose to do so. Since several of my bikini tops are crochet, I had to order a more lightweight yarn that doesnât stretch or shrink if it gets wet. Laurie approves of the choice, nodding in agreement when I explain the reasoning behind it. I conclude by giving him an update on the models I plan to recruit.
He throws his head back in laughter when I mention Iâd like to ask some football players to model the menâs line. âThatâs a great idea, Summer. Thatâll definitely sell some tickets. And for the womenâs pieces?â
âIâm not sure yet.â
He winks. âSo you havenât changed your mind about modeling one of the swimsuits yourself?â
Ugh.
Why.
Just why, Gilderoy.
I force a laugh. âNope, still not interested.â
âWhat a shame. All right, letâs touch base at the end of the week.â He rests his hand on my shoulder before giving it a light squeeze.
And either I imagine it, or his fingertips graze the nape of my neck when I turn to walk away.
Disgust crawls up my spine. It takes a serious effort not to Usain Bolt out of the lecture hall. Instead, I move at a normal pace and act as if Iâm not completely repulsed by the potential neck graze.
âNora, Iâll be with you in a minute,â Laurie tells her, stepping away to answer a call on his cell.
âHeâs all yours,â I murmur to Nora.
She makes a sardonic noise under her breath. âDoesnât look that way from where Iâm standing.â
I turn to frown at her. âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
She checks to make sure Laurie is still on the phone, before sniping, âDonât you get tired of using your looks to get ahead?â
âWhat are you talking about? Iâm not using anything.â
âYouâve got Laurie wrapped around your little finger. He drools every time you walk in the room. He acts like every word you say is worthy of a Pulitzer. I swear, if he wasnât already on his feet, heâd give you a standing ovation every time you opened your mouth.â
I clench my jaw so tight my teeth start to hurt. âItâs not like Iâm asking him to do that. Iâm actually interested in the material weâre discussing.â
âIâm sure you are.â She rolls her eyes, tucking a strand of pink-streaked hair behind her ear. âMaybe if you spent less time flirting and more time learning, you wouldnât have gotten kicked out of your last school.â
âUh-huh. Have a good day, Nora.â
My hands are trembling as I stalk off. She is such a nasty person. I canât believe Fitz liked her enough to go out with her.
I wonder if she gave him a blowjob and he ignored her afterward too.
The reminder floods my belly with the heat of embarrassment. Sexual acts donât generally embarrass me, not even the ones in high school that occurred when I wasnât quite sober. But Fitz has made it this way for me. By not even acknowledging that it happened, heâs caused me to feel like thereâs something shameful about what we did.
I try to push the negative thoughts from my mind as I exit the building. Once again, itâs cold outside. I swear, Februaryâs even chillier than January. But at least itâs shorter.
Still, I donât know how much longer I can take this. I might skip out for a week and fly to our place in St. Bartâs, write my essay while lying on a beach chair and sipping pina coladas. Hmmm. Actually not a bad idea.
On the walk to my car, I scroll through my phone contacts. I really do need to secure my models. I require twelve bodies. Six males, six females. Brenna would laugh in my face if I asked her to put on a bikini and strut down a runway. But I do know some girls who might say yes. My Kappa sisters. Or rather, former sisters, but thatâs semantics.
Sorority girls crave attention, and most of them have no issue with skimpy clothing. Besides, I have a feeling Bianca might agree out of guilt alone. I think she genuinely felt bad about the way Kaya handled the whole living situation last month.
I donât have Biancaâs number, so I pull up my profile on MyBri, the college social network. Sheâs not on my friends list, but you donât have to be friends with someone to message them. I send a quick note explaining what I need, then close the app.
For the men, I hadnât been kidding about the football player angle. Nobody wants to see Speedos and swim trunks on scrawny guys with their ribs and hipbones jutting out. Gotta have the abs, baby.
I call my brother, who actually answers despite it being the middle of the school day. âHey,â I greet Dean. âYouâre not teaching a class?â
âSnow day,â he replies.
âAw, itâs snowing over there? We got a few flurries this morning, but itâs cleared up.â I pray that whatever blizzard has hit New York doesnât decide to pop over to Massachusetts.
âYeah, the weatherâs shit here. Whatâs up, Boogers? What do you need?â
âAre you still friends with any of the Briar football players, or did they all graduate?â
âI still talk to a few.â
Thereâs a skip to my step as I reach my Audi. âPerfect. Can you get me an introduction?â
âWhat for?â he asks suspiciously.
âI need models for my fashion show. I was hoping to recruit some hard bodies.â
He snorts in my ear. âIf even one of them says yes, I expect a front-row ticket to the show so I can get my heckle on.â
âDeal. Most of them live on the same street in Hastings, right? Elmway? Elmhurst?â I remember Brenna pointing it out when we passed the neighborhood on the way home from a Briar game.
âElmhurst,â he confirms. âRexâs house is your best bet. He lives with a bunch of clowns who like to show off their muscles.â
âPerfect. Iâve got some time now, so I figured Iâd drive over. Can you give me one of their numbers?â
âThereâs no fucking way youâre going to a football house alone.â Horror drips from his every word. âLet me call one of my boys and ask them to meet you there. I was just texting with Hunter, so I know heâs around.â
His overprotectiveness makes me roll my eyes. But I suppose itâs sweet. âFine. Tell him Iâll see him in thirty.â
But itâs not Hunterâs Range Rover that pulls up behind my Audi thirty minutes later. Itâs Fitzâs beat-up sedan.
My brother sent Fitz to meet me?
Ha.
If Dean had so much as an inkling of what Fitz and I did in the locker room this weekend, he never wouldâve dispatched him to Elmhurst Avenue.
I donât know which one of us looks more uncomfortable as we approach each other. Fitzâs hands are shoved in his coat pockets, and his eyes donât quite meet mine as he says, âHey. Dean sent me.â
âI figured.â My tone is probably harsher than necessary, butâ
It is absolutely necessary! Selena assures me.
True. He did come in my mouth and run away.
âYou, ah, had class this morning? History of Fashion?â he says awkwardly.
Heâs making small talk?
Is he for real?
âYes, Fitz, I had class,â I say. I shift my tote to my other shoulder and march toward the driveway of the detached Victorian weâve parked in front of. According to Dean, there are, like, eight football dudes living here.
âHowâs the essay going?â
I stop in the middle of the paved drive. âYou mean the one you agreed to help me with?â I canât help but snipe.
Unhappiness clouds his expression. âIâm sorry. I know I dropped the ball. Iâve beenâ¦â
âBusy?â I supply.
âYeah.â
âAnd donât forget about the headaches,â I say sarcastically. âAll those terrible, terrible headaches youâve been suffering from.â
Fitz lets out a quick breath. He lifts his hand to run it through his hair, then halts when he remembers heâs wearing a Red Sox cap.
âDonât worry,â I mutter, gulping down the bitter taste in my mouth. âIâve got the essay covered.â
We resume our walk up the driveway. His legs are longer than mine, so he shortens his strides to match my pace. âAre you sure? Did your prof approve the thesis? Give you any notes?â
At the mention of Laurie, I momentarily forget that Iâm pissed off at Fitz. âHe made a few suggestions, but I was so eager to leave, I didnât fully listen to what he said. Iâll read over what he wrote in the margins when I get home.â
Fitz studies my face. His own expression is inscrutable. âWhy were you eager to leave?â
âHonestly? He makes me uncomfortable.â
A frown tightens the corners of his mouth. âIn what way?â
âI donât know. Heâs very friendly.â I pause. âA little too friendly.â
âHas he tried anything?â Fitz demands.
âNo. Oh no, he hasnât,â I assure him. âI⦠I donât know. Maybe Iâm being overly sensitive. I get a weird vibe from him, thatâs all.â
âAlways trust your gut, Summer. If something feels off, it usually is.â
âMy gut isnât exactly the most accurate barometer,â I say flatly. âI mean, it told me to track you down in the locker room this weekend, and look how that turned out.â
At the mention of what went down this weekend (me. I went down this weekend. On him), Fitzâs expression fills with regret. âIâmâ¦â He clears his throat. âIâm really sorry about that.â
I donât know how to respond, because I canât figure out what heâs apologizing forâthat he disappeared after I blew him, or that it happened in the first place.
âYouâre sorry,â is what I finally say.
âYes.â
I wait for him to expand on that. When he doesnât, my anger returns in full force, spurring me to brush past him and stomp to the front porch.
The door flings open before I can even ring the bell, and a huge black guy with a shaved head appears in front of me. In a split second, the excitement in his eyes transforms into grave disappointment. âItâs not the pizza!â he shouts over his shoulder.
âMotherfucker,â someone curses from inside.
The big guy peers past me. âFitzgerald? That you?â
Fitz reaches the porch. âHey, Rex. Howâs it going?â
âShitty. I thought your girl was the pizza guy, but she ainât got pizza.â
âSorry.â Iâm trying hard not to laugh.
Fitz seems to be doing the same. âYou realize itâs barely noon, right?â
âYou saying you canât eat pizza at noon? Boy, you can eat pizza whenever you want to eat pizza. Noon, midnight. Dinner time. Breakfast time. Itâs fuckinâ pizza.â
âItâs fuckinâ pizza,â I echo solemnly. Then I stick out my hand. âIâm Summer Di Laurentis. I forced Fitz to bring me here because I need a favor.â
âIâm intrigued. Youâre forgiven for the pizza snafu.â Rex holds the door open for us. âCome inside. Iâm cold.â We enter the house, and he gestures to the scary amount of coat hooks and shoe racks in the front hall. âDitch your gear. Weâre playing Madden. You want next round, Fitz?â
âNaah, I donât think weâre staying that long. Are we?â he asks me.
I shake my head. âIâll be quick. I need to get home and work on my paper.â
We follow Rex into a massive living room with a U-shaped sectional that is currently bearing the weight of four football players. I estimate about eight or nine hundred pounds of muscle.
âFitzgerald!â one of them exclaims. He waves his game controller. âYou want in?â
âAnother time,â Fitz answers.
Rex flops down in an easy chair and gestures to the only other free chair. âSit down, cutie. Summer, you can stand.â He laughs loudly at his own joke before saying, âKidding. Fitz, your ugly ass can remain standing.â
I sink down on the chair he indicates and find myself drowning in brown leather. This is the biggest armchair on the planet. I feel like a toddler trying to sit in the big-people chair.
Rex introduces me to his teammates, and itâs hard to keep up with all the names and positions he spits out. Turns out theyâre all offensive playersâtwo tight ends, a running back, and a wide receiver. Rex is also a receiver. âLockett, Jules, Bibby, C-Mac. This is Summer Di Laurentis. She needs a favor.â
âIâll do it,â one player says instantly. Jules, I think. Heâs really cute, with chin-length dark hair, dimples, and a diamond stud in one ear.
I grin at him. âYou donât even know what Iâm asking.â
âDoesnât matter. Ainât none of us gonna say no to a face like yours,â drawls C-Mac, who has dreadlocks and the cutest baby-face Iâve ever seen. If it werenât for his tree-trunk biceps and huge pecs, Iâd think he was fourteen years old.
âGirl, for real. You could be asking me to let you wax my balls and Iâd say yes.â This comes from Lockett, the smallest guy in the room. And by small, I mean heâs probably five-eleven instead of six-five, and one-hundred-and-eighty-pounds instead of two-fifty. As in, a normal-sized human male.
âOh.â I swallow my laughter. âWell. I mean, thatâs a big commitment.â
Rex snorts.
âIf you agree to help me, there is a chance Iâll be handling your balls, though.â
âWhat!â Fitz sputters, turning to scowl at me. âDean said you just needed models.â
âDean?â Lockett leans forward, recognition filling his dark eyes. âOh shit. Dean Di Laurentis? Heyward-Di Laurentis? Youâre Deanâs sister?â
âYup. And I need six models for my fashion show,â I explain to the football players. There are only five of them in the room, but if at least two or three agree, Iâm sure they could recruit the number I need. âWeâll have to take measurements and do some fittings. And like I said, I might accidentally touch your junk. Sorry in advance.â
âNever apologize for touching a manâs junk,â Rex tells me.
Bibby, a tight end with a bushy red beard, looks curious. âWhat would we be modeling?â
âSwimwear.â
âDibs on the Speedo!â Lockett says immediately.
C-Macâs hand shoots up. âDibs on the thong.â
Iâm surprised at how easy this is. But in case theyâre pulling my leg, I offer more details to judge their sincerity. âThe show is a month from now, right before spring break. Iâm still in the design stage, but if I get a commitment from you, weâll take measurements in the next few days and start fittings in a couple of weeks. Weâll also do some runway coachingââ
âI donât need runway coaching,â Lockett interrupts. âIâve watched Americaâs Next Top Model.â
âSame,â Jules chimes in. âTyraâs got nothing on me.â
I bite my lip to keep from laughing. Yup. These are exactly the guys I need. âSo youâre in?â My gaze conducts a sweep of the room. âAll of you?â
Everyone nods. âWeâll be there,â Rex promises.
âShe needs one more, though,â Bibby says. He glances over at me. âIâll ask Chris.â
I have no idea who Chris is, but I reply with, âSounds good. Thank you.â
He shrugs. âAnything for a Di Laurentis.â
Rex nods fervently. âYour brother used to chill here all the time. He was good friends with a lot of our seniors.â
âI know.â Before I can stop it, a lump of sorrow rises in my throat. âBeauâs death hit him pretty hard.â
It hit me pretty hard too, but I donât say that out loud. Beau Maxwell played quarterback for Briar for three seasons and died in a car accident last year. After Iâd heard the news, Iâd locked myself in my room at the Kappa house and cried my eyes out. Dean doesnât know this, but Beau and I made out once. It was a stupid drunken thing, and we both swore weâd take it to the grave because neither of us wanted to deal with my brotherâs wrath.
My heart squeezes painfully as I realize that Beau really did take our secret to the grave.
âBeau was good people,â Rex says gruffly, and the mood in the room grows somber.
âAnyway.â Fitz clears his throat. âWe should be taking off.â
âIâll start a group chat for us on MyBri,â I tell the guys. âAnd thank you so much for doing this.â
They donât let me leave right awayâfirst, each one has to swallow me up in a bear hug, while Fitz watches with resigned eyes.
âDoes every single hetero male on this planet fall in love with you on sight?â he mutters when weâre outside again.
âNo. Some fall in lust.â I spare him a pithy look. âAnd some fool around with me and then pretend it never happened.â
He halts about five feet from our cars. âIâm not pretending it didnât happen.â
âNo? So youâre avoiding me for no reason, then? Just for funsies?â Gritting my teeth, I bulldoze past him.
He catches up to me as I reach the Audi. âSummer. Come on. Wait.â
âWait for what?â I snap. âFor you to decide that Iâm worthy of your time and attention?â
His brown eyes widen. âWhatââ
âIsnât that what it boils down to?â I cut in, bitterness staining my tone. âIâm not someone you want to spend time with.â
âThatâs not true.â
âFine. Iâll amend that. Iâm okay to hook up with, but I donât deserve a conversation about it afterward.â
âStop saying those words,â he growls. âWorthy. Deserve. Thatâs not what this is about.â
âWhatâs this?â I burst out, my frustration levels skyrocketing. âSeriously, Fitz. What is this? You rub up against me outside Maloneâs, and then you drive away. I get on my knees for you in the locker room, and then you disappear for two days. I have no clue how you feel about me at all. So forgive me for assuming that you donât want me.â My mouth twists in a humorless smile. âWhy would I ever think that, right?â Sarcasm creeps into my voice. âI mean, a guy runs for the hills after I blow him. That means heâs super into me, right?â
Guilt flickers in his eyes at the mention of the blowjob. But he remains maddeningly silent.
I grind my molars together. Soon theyâll turn to dust, thatâs how pissed off I am. âI have a date with Hunter this weekend,â I find myself declaring.
That gets me a response. A muscle in his jaw twitches, and then he mutters, âSince when?â
âHe asked me last week.â I hit the key fob to unlock my car. âAnd you want to know why I said yes? Because it was really frigging nice to be asked on a date by someone who isnât, I donât know, ashamed of me.â
Fitz exhales slowly before speaking. âIâm not ashamed of you,â he murmurs. âIâm justâ¦â
âYouâre what?â
âIâm bad at expressing myself.â
âBullshit. Youâre the most articulate person I know.â
âNot when it comes to sharing feelings.â He sounds as discouraged as I feel.
âFeelings? Oh, you mean you have those?â
Every muscle in his face goes taut. Itâs the only outwardly discernible sign that my accusation upset him. His expression is completely shuttered. âIâm not good at this shit, Summer.â The words are hoarse, strained.
âGood at what?â I clench my fists in exasperation. âItâs not that hard, Colin! You either want to be with me, or you donât.â My fingers tremble on the door handle. âSo which is it?â
He hesitates.
He actually hesitates.
A ball of hurt clogs my throat. I gulp it down best as I can. âWrong answer,â I mutter, and then I get in my car and slam the door.