The Dixon Rule: Chapter 18
The Dixon Rule (Campus Diaries, 2)
âALL RIGHT, MAJESTIC EAGLES,â I ANNOUNCE. âLETâS RUN THROUGH THESE jumps one last time and then weâll call it a day, okay?â
As Fatima and I count them in, the girls spring to action, giving it their all. Toe touches have been tough for some of them, particularly Chloe and Harper. They can get their legs up but not out, or vice versa.
âWhy is my toe touch so low?â Chloe whines after she lands. Her forehead is shiny from exertion.
I walk over to her. âBecause your legs arenât far apart enough. The farther apart you can get them, the higher your touches will be. This is why we keep harping to you about stretching. Gotta get that flexibility started young.â
Fatima claps her hands. âLetâs do the tuck jumps.â
âTuck jumps are so boring,â Harper grumbles.
âTheyâre great for the core,â I tell the group, patting my abdomen. âTumblersââ I glance at Tatiana and Kerry, our strongest gymnasts. âYou guys in particular need to practice your tuck jumps. The more core strength you can build, the stronger tumblers youâll become.â
We work on the final set of jumps, and everyone is smiling and sweaty when we dismiss them. The girls stream toward the locker room while Fatima tails after them.
âYou coming?â she calls over her shoulder.
âItâs my turn to put away the mats,â I call back.
âCool. If Iâm gone before youâre done, Iâll see you tomorrow.â
The moment the gym is empty, my smile collapses like a cheap tent.
Keeping that smile plastered on my face all week is one of the hardest things Iâve ever done.
Iâve been an emotional wreck since Percy hit me.
According to him, it was an accident. He claimed it was involuntary. That when I pushed him, his first instinct was to defend himself. Maybe thatâs true. Probably not. Either way, I donât want to make a big thing out of it. I donât. I canât.
I fucking canât.
Tears well up, and I blink rapidly to disperse them. I quickly stack up the mats, eager to get home.
I pray the other counselors have already left for the day as I trudge toward the locker room. Fortunately, itâs empty, and since I usually change clothes at home, I grab my keys, sunglasses, and purse from my locker and hurry toward the door.
I falter midstep when my reflection in the wall of mirrors catches my attention. My gaze homes in on the ugly bruise around my left eye. An anguished sob gets caught in my throat, and I forcibly swallow it down. For a second, I canât breathe. Suddenly Iâm back there. That night. Completely stunned, reeling from the pain of Percyâs fist smashing into my face.
No oneâs ever hit me before.
It doesnât matter if it was an accident. It still fucking hurt. I told everyone at cheer camp that I accidentally caught Kenjiâs elbow to the face during dance rehearsal. I told Shane, and Gigi when I saw her the other day, that the same thing happened at camp during a pyramid collapse.
I donât know why I couldnât just tell them the truth.
You do know why.
Yeah. I do. Itâs for the same reason I didnât call my dad the second it happened, even though every instinct in my body was ordering me to.
Every instinct except for oneâfear. The moment Percyâs knuckles connected with my face, fight-or-flight kicked in, and the latter won in a landslide. I couldnât do anything but run. Run from Percy, run from the embarrassment, run from the urge to call my father for help. Because Dad wouldâve made me go to the police, and that was the last thing I wanted to do in that moment.
I still donât. I refuse to make a big deal out of it. And the truth is, I did provoke him. I did try to shove him. So whatâs the point of reporting it to the cops when, in all likelihood, it wonât go further than an uncomfortable interview?
I want to put this entire humiliating incident out of my mind. Itâs over and done with. Iâm not worried about Percy coming near me again. Although heâs been texting apologies all week, Iâve made it clear that I want nothing to do with him ever again. Iâve also kept every single one of his messages, screenshots of them saved in a folder on my phone.
My knees feel too wobbly to walk, so I sink onto the long wooden bench and scroll through those messages now.
The first one was sent less than five minutes after I stumbled into my condo that night and raced upstairs to ice my face.
PERCY:
Diana, Iâm so sorry. That was a complete accident. I did NOT mean to hit you. It was an entirely instinctive response to you trying to push me.
ME:
I tried to push you because you grabbed my arm. You wouldnât let go when I asked you to let goâthree times.
ME:
Donât EVER contact me again. FUCKING EVER.
PERCY:
It was an accident. Please believe me.
When I donât answer, his texts continue to stream in. They arrive daily, rife with excuses.
PERCY:
It was a reflex. Completely unintentional.
PERCY:
Are you okay?
PERCY:
I understand why youâre angry, but I truly am sorry. You pushed me and my reaction was purely instinctual.
PERCY:
I didnât mean to hurt you.
PERCY:
I donât hit women.
PERCY:
You know thatâs not who I am.
The last message is from me to him. In no uncertain terms, I spell out whatâs what.
ME:
You need to leave me alone. If you donât, Iâm going to the police. Iâm really fucking serious right now. Iâm going to block you now, and I donât want you in my life anymore. Goodbye, Percy. Have a nice life. Fuck off.
I followed through on the threat and blocked him. I donât know whether he kept messaging after that. I can only assume he did. But on my end, itâs completely closed off.
Along with the screenshots, Iâve also been monitoring my bruise. I took pictures of it the first night, and every day since. I donât know why. I donât plan on pressing charges. I believe him when he says he didnât mean to do it, yet I canât erase the memory of his eyes. For one terrifying moment, those brown irises had been downright feral. Although perhaps that only backs up his defense, that it was an animalistic instinct to defend himself because he thoughtâ
What? That you were a threat? Youâre 5â1â and 110 pounds! What the hell were you going to do to him?
The incredulous voice in my head is correct, of course. But I still silence it. I donât want to dwell on this. I donât want to think about Percy anymore or remember that surreal, foreign sensation of fear clamped around my windpipe.
I force myself to rise from the bench and leave the locker room. I canât hide in here forever. I canât hide in my apartment, either, which is what Iâve been doing for days, and as I head down the sidewalk away from the high school, I vow not to let what Percy did turn me into something Iâm not. A coward and a shut-in. A basket case.
When my phone rings in my hand, I flinch instinctively. Luckily, Percy hasnât found a way to contact me. But it is my dad calling, which is probably even worse. Iâm expected to put on a brave face when Iâm talking to Dad. Or maybe not expected; itâs not something heâs explicitly stated he requires of me. But falling apart in front of my father is not an option. I canât remember the last time I cried in his presence or showed even a sliver of vulnerability.
âHey, kiddo,â he says after I answer the call.
âHey, good timing. I just got out of camp. Iâm walking home.â
âPerfect. I wanted to touch base. Make sure the shower temperature is still to your liking.â
âYep, itâs great.â
âHowâs life? Everything good?â
âEverythingâs great.â
âYou sure?â Concern fills his voice. âThat didnât sound very convincing.â
Shit. I paste on a brighter tone, but Iâm not the best liar, so I opt for a half-truth.
âMostly great,â I amend. âPercy is still kind of bugging me.â
âThe ex?â
âYes. He canât get the hint that I donât want to get back together.â
Dad chuckles. âWell, Iâd offer to beat him up for you, but I know youâre perfectly capable of handling him on your own.â
âYou know it.â I laugh weakly. âDonât worry. I already told him to fuck off.â
âThatâs my girl.â Dad changes the subject. âOh, about the Labor Day potluckâLarissaâs asking if youâll make your potato and bacon salad.â
âOf course. I legit donât know how to cook anything else.â
His laughter tickles my ear. âI still canât believe your mother paid all that money for you to take those cooking classes a couple summers ago.â
âMajor fail,â I agree.
The worst part of that was, the only reason I capitulated was because Mom implied that weâd be taking the class together. Like a sucker, I allowed myself to think she truly wanted to bond with me. Turned out she never intended for us to do it together. She signed me up because my grandmother, her mother, made a disparaging comment the previous Christmas about what a shame it was that Iâm such a terrible cook, and Mom canât look bad in front of her proper southern family. Thatâs unacceptable.
âI canât wait to have you home,â Dad says gruffly.
A lump of emotion clogs my throat. âMe too.â
âAll right, I gotta go, kiddo. Talk to you later. Love you.â
âLove you too.â
The tears threaten to spill over again. My dad has such faith in me. My whole life, heâs raved about how resilient I am. How thereâs nobody else heâd rather have his back.
Going to the police about Percy would be so damn embarrassing. Dad knows everyone in law enforcement, so even if I wanted to hide that I was pressing charges, the news would eventually travel back to him. And then my mother would find out too, and knowing her, sheâd say it was my fault for provoking Percy. Mom always scolds that I need to watch my temper.
At home, remembering my vow not to let Percyâs actions send me into hiding, I change out of my camp clothes and into a swimsuit. Shane and I are supposed to go over details for the competition, so I text him to meet at the pool instead of my apartment, then force myself to go outside and walk the path toward the swimming pool.
My pulse quickens the closer I get. Iâve avoided all the neighbors this week because of my face, but I assure myself itâs fine. If someone asks, I can feed them the same excuse I gave Shane and Gigi.
To my relief, the pool area is deserted when I arrive. I find a pair of loungers, get settled, and pull up the NUABC website on my phone. I need to reexamine my entire strategy. Kenji and I were going to perform the tango for our audition video, but with Shaneâs height, I think we might have a better shot qualifying with a Latin dance.
I still canât believe he agreed to be my partner. When Shane showed up the other day, I was still reeling over what happened with Percy, and suddenly someone was offering me a lifeline, a distraction. Sure, that someone was Shane Lindley, but Iâd been looking forward to competing for a whole year, and now the opportunity was back in my grasp.
âJesus Christ, Dixon,â Shane grumbles five minutes later. Heâs lying on the chair beside mine, also scrolling through the website. Cursing, he lifts his head in dismay. âThis is intense. What is this? The American Nine? Dixon! This says we have to do nine dances! Four ballroom and five Latin.â
âRelax. Weâre not entered in that event.â
âHow are we entered in anything if we havenât even qualified?â
âBecause you send in the application before the prelims. Kenji and I signed up for American Smooth Duo and American Rhythm Solo.â
He relaxes. âOh, okayââ Then he pales. âWait. What? Thatâs two events.â
âYup.â
âWeâre doing two dances?â
âThree, actually.â
He stares at me in appalled accusation.
âItâll be okay. Youâve got this. The duo event is the tango and waltz. Solo is the cha cha.â
Shane looks sick. âDixon.â
âWhat?â
âI will not, nor will I ever, perform a dance called the cha cha.â
âOkay.â I shrug. âYou can call Lynsey and tell her weâre dropping out.â
âFuck.â
I grin. âWeâll do the cha cha for the audition. I think youâll take to it better.â
Shane glares at me.
âWhatâs going on here?â a throaty voice inquires.
We look up at Veronikaâs approach. Our resident femme fatale is wearing a filmy, white cover-up over a very indecent leopard-print bikini, her unnaturally red hair loose around her shoulders.
She wags her finger mischievously. âYou two have been spending a lot of time together. Is there romance in the air?â
âOh my God, never. But we are entering a dance competition together.â
âNo, weâre not,â Shane denies immediately. His expression is a warning.
I see how it is. Heâs ashamed of our rhythmic connection.
âWhat?â I shrug at him. âTheyâre going to see us practicing anyway. Weâll be holding a lot of gym sessions.â
âOooh, sounds kinky,â Veronika says.
I smother a laugh.
âWell, enjoy,â she chirps before wandering toward her usual chair and umbrella. Itâs the one with a direct line of sight to the path, so she can see all the comings and goings of Meadow Hill.
âAnyway, back to this,â Shane grumbles, holding up his phone. âIâm not doing more than one dance.â
âWeâre doing three, and this isnât a negotiation.â I tip my head. âWhatâs the problem, Lindley? You donât think you can hack it?â
âOh, you know I can.â
âExactly. Which is why weâre doing three dances. Iâm going for a swim now. You can sulk in private.â
I dive into the deep end, enjoying the sensation of the cold water engulfing my body. For the first time in days, I feel confident again. Strong. Itâs like everything with Percy never happened. Just a fading nightmare I never have to revisit. Soon the bruise will fade entirely, and thereâll be no remnants left of that horrible night.
A sense of calm washes over me as I swim laps. I zone out, focusing on propelling my body through the water, welcoming the burn in my muscles. When I stop to catch my breath in the shallow end, I notice a few more neighbors have arrived. I love summers in Meadow Hill. Thereâs a real sense of community here.
I backstroke toward the deep end, where I heave myself out of the water so I can say hi to Priya, who sits at a table with Marnie and Dave.
âItâs a college student,â Dave is saying.
âWhoâs a college student?â I ask curiously, catching the tail end of their conversation. Water drips off my body as I approach the table. I glance over my shoulder. âHey, Lindley, fetch me a towel?â
âSay please,â he calls out.
âNo,â I call back.
Priya looks amused. âWait, do we like him now?â She speaks a little too loudly.
âI knew it!â Shane, whoâs strolling toward us with my towel, glowers at me. âI knew you instigated a shunning program.â
âI did not instigate a shunning program,â I lie.
âDid she?â Shane asks Priya.
âDoctor-patient confidentiality,â she answers smugly.
âMarnie?â he demands.
I glance at Marnie, winking. With a straight face, she says, âYouâre imagining it, honey. Nobody is shunning you.â
âStone-cold evil. All of you,â he accuses, then shoves the towel at me. âYou donât even deserve this towel.â
Dave snickers under his breath.
Marnie redirects the group back to the topic at hand. âThe renter of Sweet Birch 1A arrived today,â she tells me.
Veronika saunters over in her white cover-up. âAre we talking about the Garrisonsâ rental?â
Marnie nods. âWe just saw him in the parking lot unloading some boxes. Heâs going to be staying here the full six weeks. Handsome guy. Young.â
Veronika perks up. âHow young?â she inquires. Because sheâs Veronika and sheâs gross.
âI donât know, maybe mid to late twenties?â Marnie answers. âHe said heâs a grad student at Briar.â
Guard shooting up, I tighten my grip on the towel. âDid you catch his name?â
Dave purses his lips. âPeter something?â
His wife lets out a laugh. âHoney. Peter? How can you forget his name? It was Percival.â
Shock slams into me. Oh my fucking God.
No.
Absolutely not.
âPercival?â I burst out, anger whipping inside me. âAre you sure that was his name?â
âUnlike this doofusââMarnie points at her husbandââitâs not a name Iâm likely to forget.â
Priya eyes me in concern. âWhatâs wrong?â
âThatâs my ex.â I wrap the towel tighter around me, already backing away from their table. âIâm sorry, I have to go and figure out what the hell is going on.â
Shane chases after me as I hurry toward our chairs to throw on my clothes. I gather my stuff and leave the pool area, Shane on my tail as we step onto the main path.
âThat canât possibly be your ex moving into our building,â he says in amusement. âCan it?â
âSure sounds like it,â I mutter, and I want to tell him itâs not even remotely funny. Itâs the furthest thing from funny. But I canât say a word because I already lied to him about how I got this bruise. âDo you know any other Percivals who are grad students at Briar?â
âNo, but Iâm sure there has to be another one.â
âOh, fuck off, Shane. Come on.â
âHey, donât take it out on me.â
Panic fills my throat and weakens my palms. âIâm sorry. I didnât mean to snap at you. Iâm justâ¦â
I stop walking and bury my face in my hands for a moment, trying to calm myself. If Percy is actually in Meadow Hill, I donât know what Iâm going to do. What can I do?
Something else suddenly occurs to me, a reminder of what I said to Percy the night he hit me.
âOh my God,â I groan into my palms. I lift my head and stare at Shane helplessly. âThe last time I saw Percy, I told him you were my boyfriend.â
Shaneâs amusement returns in the form of a loud laugh. âWhat? Why would you do that?â
âBecause apparently this is a thing we do now, okay? We tell our exes that weâre boyfriend and girlfriend.â
My hands are still shaking. I press them to my sides and hope Shane doesnât notice. What game is Percy playing? He punches me and then moves into my apartment complex? I want to cry, but I put on a steely face and pretend Iâm angry about the latter and not the former.
âLindley,â I say in misery. âBefore I go over to Sweet Birch to confront him, I need you to agree to be my boyfriend.â
He shrugs. âSure, letâs go. I owe you one.â
âNot just for today. Iâm talking about the entire time heâs here.â
âDidnât Marnie say heâs renting the unit for six weeks?â Shane demands.
I bite my lip. âYou said so yourselfâyou owe me one.â
âDixon. I asked you to be my girlfriend for one night. Youâre asking me to give up my whole summer.â
âGive up what? You already said you donât want to sleep around, so itâs not like youâll be bringing random women home all summer. Right?â
âRight, butââ
âAnd all you were planning to do this summer was take it easy. Being my fake boyfriend doesnât change your plans at all. And it gives you more opportunities to make your ex jealous,â I finish, grasping at as many straws as I can.
âSo youâre trying to make Percy jealous?â
âNo, I want him to leave me alone!â
Shaneâs forehead creases at my outburst. âDixonâ¦â he starts warily. âWhat exactly is going on?â
I feel the desperation rising again, gripping my throat in its talons. I canât have Percy living here, but I also canât have Shane knowing Percy is the reason for the bruise on my face. Itâs so fucking mortifying.
I start walking again. Standing still is making me feel dizzy. Shane matches my stride, and I feel his gaze boring into the side of my face.
âI donât want him here.â I hate how small my voice sounds. âI broke up with him and he canât accept it. Please, Lindley, itâs only six weeks. Once heâs gone, we can tell everyone we broke up.â
âWait, you want us to lie to people we know? Even Gigi and Ryder?â
âJust while Percy is here. I donât want it getting back to him that we might be faking it.â
Thatâs a lie. The reason I donât want to tell Gigi that Shane and I are faking it for Percyâs expense is because her first question is going to be why.
Why am I playing games instead of telling Percy to fuck off? Why am I putting on a charade instead of marching headfirst into battle?
And those whys require me to tell the truth.
That he hit me.
That Iâm scared of having him around me.
That Iâve never felt more ashamed in my life.
My brain is a tangled jumble of thoughts. Some of them might be irrational. I recognize that. But I canât do it. I canât tell my friends that my ex-boyfriend hit me. I tried, damn it. I saw Gigi this week. I opened my mouth, fully prepared to confess that Percy gave me this black eye, but the words refused to come out. Instead, I fed her the lie.
âGigiâs never gonna believe it,â Shane says wryly.
âSure she will. Besides, sheâs going to be distracted by the wedding and honeymoon.â I implore him. âPlease? Iâd feel betterâ¦saferâ¦if he thinks I have a boyfriend.â
âSafer?â Shane echoes, wary again.
âI mean in the sense that he wonât show up at my door with breakfast and make me uncomfortable,â I say smoothly.
Speaking of uncomfortable, the devil himself suddenly appears on the path. Dressed in khakis and a white T-shirt, Percyâs arms are full of two cardboard boxes that have the words TEXTBOOKS written on them in black marker.
I halt. Our eyes lock, and thereâs no mistaking the flash of guilt in his. This is the first time Iâve seen him since the night at Dellaâs, and while being in his proximity again triggers a jolt of deep disgust, I also feel a twinge of fear. And thatâs what pisses me off the most.
I refuse to be afraid of this asshole.
I stalk forward, not mincing words. âI donât know what kind of game youâre playingââ
âThis isnât a game,â he interrupts quietly. âYou knew I was looking for housing, Diana.â
âAnd you had to move here?â
My hands are trembling again, this time with rage. How dare he? How fucking dare he?
âIt was either that or spend weeks at that fleabag motel on the outskirts of town. I canât afford to stay at the inn on Main Street for six weeks. This is the best option until my new townhouse becomes available in September.â
It sounds on the up-and-up, but I donât buy it.
I notice his gaze is fixed on my face. On the fading bruise that he inflicted.
Shane is only a few feet away, so I know Percy wonât dream of bringing up what happened the other night, but he does lower his voice and ask, âAre you okay?â
I ignore the question. âYou know what? I donât care about your reasoning for why youâre here. It doesnât change a damn thing between us. My last text to you made it clear where I stand.â
Wincing, he has the decency to appear shamefaced again.
âOh, and while weâre here.â I beckon Shane closer, then take his hand and, very blatantly, intertwine our fingers. âThis is my boyfriend, Shane.â
Shane doesnât go in for a handshake. He nods and says, âNice to meet you, bro.â
Percy tightens his lips for a second. âNice to meet you too. If youâll excuse meâ¦â He lifts the boxes slightly. âI have to finish unpacking.â
As he walks past us, I turn to stare at his retreating back. His shoulders are stiffer than boards. As if heâs the aggrieved party.
âYou all right?â Shane asks gruffly. Heâs still holding my hand, almost like he knows I need the support, otherwise Iâll keel over.
No, Iâm not all right, I want to say.
The need to tell someone what happened is almost suffocating. I want to tell Shane. And Gigi. And my dad. Yet I canât summon the words. Theyâre like a frightened animal cowering in the corner, and no matter how hard I try to coax them out, they refuse. Theyâre stuck.
The confession burns in my throat, and then, for one panicky second, constricts it entirely. No air gets in, and suddenly I canât breathe. This has happened more than once this week.
âIâm fine,â I manage to say. Miraculously, my voice sounds completely normal.
Shane seems oblivious to the turmoil roiling inside me as we walk to Red Birch, climbing the stairs to the second floor. âWhen do you want to start rehearsing?â
âFor what?â Iâm too distracted by my racing heart to focus on what heâs asking.
âThe competition?â he prompts, chuckling. âAnd when are we filming this audition?â
âRight. Sorry. We donât have to send the video until the end of August, but we should hit the ground running. How about rehearsal on Saturday? Iâm only working breakfast and lunch shifts this weekend, so Iâm free both evenings.â
âSounds good. Text me.â
We part ways in the hall, and I practically dive into the solace of my apartment, where I can hyperventilate to my heartâs content.
âOh my God, Skip,â I moan at my fish. âWhat the hell is happening?â
Breathing hard, I collapse onto the couch and fight the onslaught of sensation. The contents of my stomach threaten to come up. I really feel like I might throw up. I take a deep breath, then another, until the twisting, churning queasiness starts to dissipate. But my heart is still beating too fast for comfort. It canât be healthy for a heart to pound this hard.
Why does this keep happening?
Youâre having anxiety attacks.
No, damn it. I canât be.
I never feel anxiety. Even before a cheer competition, the nerves come in the form of giddy excitement. Fear isnât something I feel often, and when I do, itâs entirely justified. Like that time Gigi and I were walking down a dark alley in Boston and heard a car backfire. I genuinely thought it was a gunshot, and the resulting jolt of adrenaline injected into my bloodstream had been intense.
Or when Dadâs next door neighborâs dog got loose during the Labor Day potluck last summer. The huge Doberman went tearing toward a group of children, and for a second, my heart was in my throat because I truly thought he was going to maul them. Turned out the dog was great with kids. All he did was steal their ball and then make them chase him while the kids shrieked with laughter.
Both those incidents elicited fear, and it made sense. I thought there was danger. But Iâm not in any danger right now. Thereâs no reason for even a twinge of panic.
I sit on the couch, breathing in and out, willing my pulse to slow.
Eventually, the anxiety fades, but the unhappiness remains tight in my chest. I canât let this keep happening. I am not a weak person. I am not afraid of anything, especially not a pathetic, insecure man like Percy Forsythe.
Starting right now, I need to find a way to let this go.
GIGI:
Are we still on for tomorrow night? If so, Iâm thinking dinner at the Indian place near Fenway. Then drinks at that martini bar we really liked?
ME:
Yeah, Iâm still down!
ME:
Oooh yes, I love that restaurant. Def want to go back there
ME:
Shane and I are dating now
ME:
Which martini bar? The one near the Ritz?
GIGI:
Wait. What?
GIGI:
What do you mean you and Shane are dating??
GIGI:
Answer me!
GIGI: