The Dixon Rule: Chapter 12
The Dixon Rule (Campus Diaries, 2)
I SPEND MOST OF THE WEEK GOLFING AND WORKING OUT, THE TWO CORE tenets of the Summer of Shane. So far, life is pretty phenomenal. I feel sorry for the pool-boy Wills and construction-laborer Ryders of the world. I grabbed drinks with Will last night at Maloneâs, and he was so tired and sunburned from work, he almost passed out in our booth.
On Thursday night, when I return to my apartment from the Meadow Hill gym, I receive a text that sends my pulse racing.
LYNSEY:
Is that offer to crash on your couch still open?
I stare at the message for an eternity. I donât want to sound too eager. Canât be responding with a âHell yeah. Get your sweet ass to Hastings.â Because weâre supposed to be friends, and I shouldnât be commenting on her sweet ass. I also canât respond too fast, so rather than test my willpower, I leave my phone on the couch and go take a shower.
My sweaty T-shirt is still plastered to my chest. I wouldâve stayed longer at the gym and done a few more reps of deadlifts, but by the end of my workout, I had some company in the form of two middle-aged female residents whose blatant ogling was beginning to freak me out. I swear, all the women in this complex are sex starved.
After my shower, I slip into a pair of basketball shorts and return to the living room. Itâs been seventeen minutes. That seems long enough.
ME:
Of course.
LYNSEY:
Can I call you?
ME:
Sure.
A moment later, her throaty voice fills my ears. Itâs so familiar, it feels like coming home.
âI arranged for a Briar tour on Saturday morning. One of the summer students is going to show me around campus, and then I have a meeting with the head of the Performing Arts department.â
âWow. This transfer thing is for real, huh?â My pulse quickens at the notion of having her here all the time. I mean, itâs a big campus and weâll probably never see each other, but just knowing sheâs hereâ¦
But I canât get ahead of myself.
âI think so, yeah. Iâd like to talk to the department heads and some of the faculty before I make any decisions, though. Thereâs a summer course in progress right now. Advanced ballet. Theyâre going to let me join the class for the afternoon.â
âThatâs great. I hope it works out,â I say casually, trying to pretend there isnât a hockey stadium full of fans cheering inside me.
âIâll probably leave Connecticut around dinner time tomorrow and be at your place around seven or eight? Does that work?â
âSure. Iâll text you the address.â
âThank you. Oh, I might be bringing a friend, if thatâs okay. Not sure yet, though.â
âThatâs fine.â I push away the resulting pang of disappointment because I canât exactly ask her not to bring Monique or one of the old crew. One, it would sound sketchy, and two, they were my friends too all throughout high school. Itâll be good to see them, anyway.
âIâll text you tomorrow when Iâm heading out,â she says. âAnd thanks again, Lindy. Thisâll be so much easier than grabbing a hotel in Boston, since youâre only ten minutes from campus.â
âOf course. Like I said, anytime.â
My heart is thrashing in my chest as I end the call. Buzzing with energy, I quickly examine my surroundings. My apartmentâs clean, but Lynsey is sort of a neat freak. In high school she used to drag her finger through the layer of dust on my bedroom window ledge and say, âIs this how you want to live, Shane?â It was cute. Well, most of the time. I canât deny sometimes it could get annoying.
During my cleaning mission, it comes to my attention that I donât own a vacuum. I have no idea how my mother allowed this atrocity to happen. Probably because she pays for a cleaner and assumed I would never even attempt to tidy up between appointments.
There are no chain stores in Hastings, only small boutiques, but the hardware store probably sells vacuums. I could go tomorrow morning when it opens.
A mocking voice in my head points out Iâm going to a lot of effort for Lynsey, who might not even come, but I inform that voice that everyone needs a vacuum, so fuck off, please.
The next morning, Iâm awake bright and early, leaving my apartment at the same time Dianaâs door swings open.
âMorning,â she says when our gazes collide.
âMorning.â
Sheâs wearing white shorts and a yellow T-shirt with the words SPIRIT ACADEMY stenciled on in a blue scribble. Her platinum-blond hair is tied in a high ponytail.
âHeading to work?â I ask as we fall into step together.
Holding a travel mug, she practically races down the stairs. âYeah, and Iâm late. I overslept, and Iâm pretty sure I missed the bus.â
âWhereâs this spirit camp? Iâll give you a ride.â
Her expression is full of distrust.
âCâmon. Where do you need to be?â
âThe high school in Hastings. And Iâm only saying yes because Iâm desperate.â
âI appreciate you allowing me the honor.â
In the parking lot, Diana rolls her eyes at my shiny silver Mercedes. âGod, you are such a spoiled brat. Did your mommy and daddy buy you that?â
âOf course.â I unlock the doors and slide in, waiting for her to settle in the passenger side. Once sheâs seated, I tip my head and ask, âIf your parents bought you an expensive car for high school graduation, are you honestly saying you wouldnât accept it?â
She purses her lips. Then sighs. âFuck no. Iâd snatch the keys out of their hands before they changed their minds.â
âExactly,â I say, and start the engine.
The school is only a five-minute drive. I steer through the automatic gates at the side of the apartment complex and turn onto the street. Mature trees line both sides of the road, residential gardens in full bloom. Everything we drive past is green and colorful. I love summer.
âWhyâd you oversleep?â I ask. âGo to bed late?â
âI stayed up watching commentary videos about Fling or Forever. The internet is shook that Ben chose Jasmine.â
âI knew he would.â
âI thought heâd pick Zoey for sure.â
âNah. It was obvious Zoeyâs set on Connor because he made her come in the Sugar Suite. Plus, that fight with Ben and Jas was fucking epic. The producers know what theyâre doingâof course they steered Ben toward the girl thatâs going to bring them the most drama. Zoeyâs too sweet.â
âI still canât tell if youâre making fun of me.â
Neither can I anymore. Kind of started off that way, but after four consecutive episodes, Iâm strangely invested in Zoey and the Connorâs relationship.
âWhere are you going this morning?â Diana asks with a sidelong look. âYouâre not wearing your dorky golf clothes.â
âMy golf clothes arenât dorky. And Iâm going to buy a vacuum. I need to clean up for a houseguest.â
She snorts. âItâs Niallâs day off. Can you film his reaction for me?â
âHe doesnât like the vacuumâWait, why am I even asking? Dude doesnât like anything thatâs over point two decibels.â
Our short drive comes to an end as I pull up in front of the school, a sprawling gray stucco building with white window trims.
I put the car in park so she can get out. âLater, Dixon.â
âThanks for the ride, Daddy.â
âDonât turn me on this early in the morning, please.â
Sheâs laughing as she runs out. We might not have called an official truce, but she seems a lot less hostile ever since I debunked Crystalâs lies. It still smarts that Crystal led Diana to believe not only did we have sex but that I sent her a one-line brush-off afterward. I would never treat a woman like that.
After I drop Diana off, I purchase a vacuum Iâll likely only use once, then spend the next couple hours cleaning and hoping itâs not in vain.
When I finally turn off the vacuum, I hear an aggravated cry from downstairs.
âFinally.â
âLet it go, Niall!â I shout, giving the finger to the door. Fuckinâ Niall.
At around three, Lynsey texts to say sheâs heading out. Or rather, she says weâre heading out. I guess that means Monique is coming too. But maybe thatâs a good thing. Itâs been more than a year since Lynsey and I were alone together. Weâve seen each other since the breakup, but only with other people around.
It suddenly occurs to me that maybe sheâs intentionally bringing a buffer along. Weâre supposedly friends now, though. Friends shouldnât require a buffer. Which tells me sheâs afraid to be alone with me. And the only reason that would scare her is becauseâ¦she still has feelings for me too.
Or maybe Iâm reaching.
I spend the rest of the afternoon grabbing groceries in town, then squeeze in a quick workout at the complexâs gym. At around seven, Lynsey texts that theyâve reached Boston. That gives me an hour to shower and get dressed. I make an effort not to look like a slob. No basketball shorts, no threadbare tee. I put on jeans and a clean shirt and shove a baseball cap on my head. The hat has the logo of the Warriors, our old high school football team. Maybe itâll tickle her nostalgia bone.
Just past eight, Richard from the Sycamore buzzes to say my guests have arrived and that he gave them the overnight parking pass I requested so their car isnât towed. Shortly after, thereâs another call to my phone, a buzz-in request from the Red Birch doors.
âItâs me.â Lynseyâs staticky voice fills my ear.
âCome on up.â
My palms are a bit damp, so I wipe them on my jeans. Fuck, I was with this girl for four years. I know her better than I know myself. I shouldnât be this nervous.
Through the thin walls, I hear footsteps on the staircase.
I open the front door and there she is. Stunning, of course. A white flowered sundress hugs her toned body, revealing a pair of shapely legs honed by years of ballet. Sheâs straightened her sleek, black hair and wears it loose around her shoulders, rather than tied back in a low ponytail, which she usually prefers.
A hesitant smile plays on her lips. I instantly understand her hesitation when my gaze moves to the guy standing beside her.
I recover fast, forcing an easy smile. âHey. Glad you made it in one piece.â After a beat, I lean in to give her a brief hug. âYou look great.â
Maybe heâs just a friend.
I mean, she did call him a friend.
But I saw the possessive hand he kept on her hip before she hugged me back.
Ignoring the awkward tension hanging in the air, I stick my hand out to the dude. âHey, man. Iâm Shane.â
Lynsey visibly swallows. âOh, sorry, Iâm bad at introductions. Shane, this is Tyreek. My boyfriend.â