The Dixon Rule: Chapter 4
The Dixon Rule (Campus Diaries, 2)
I HAVE A CONFESSION TO MAKE.
Iâm not a fuckboy.
This sad, incontrovertible truth continues to hit me like a freight train after every single hookup. Before last night, I was able to squash these blasphemous thoughts. Banish them to the backburner of my brain and pretend the hollow feeling in my chest doesnât exist.
Today, Iâm staring at this stomach-dropping text from Crystal and finally forcing myself to accept my pathetic reality.
I want a relationship.
CRYSTAL:
This is really embarrassing, but last night was the best date Iâve ever had. It was so low-key, but it was like perfect.
It wasnât supposed to be a date.
But I accidentally turned it into one when I didnât have sex with her.
I had her in my lap, her tongue in my mouth, her hands roaming, and I justâ¦couldnât do it. I wasnât in it. If Iâm honest with myself, I havenât been in it for a long time now. Sure, it was fun at first. Fresh off a breakup from a long-term relationship, my dick eager and raring to go. It was exciting, those first few encounters, the newness of it all. Kissing someone other than my ex. Seeing a naked body that didnât belong to her.
But the novelty has worn off. Yesterday with Crystal is proof of that.
CRYSTAL:
I canât wait to see you again.
I sit at the kitchen counter and drop my head in my hands, my breakfast forgotten, appetite gone. This is my fault. I invited her over because I thought she was hot and because I wanted to get laid. No part of that scenario involved getting into a relationship with her. Crystalâs great, but we donât click on a deeper level. Iâm not interested in taking it any further than a sloppy, aborted make-out session on my couch.
Meanwhile, she left with stars in her eyes, riding the high from âthe best date sheâs ever had.â
Fuck me.
Feeling like a total shithead, I force myself to craft a response before Crystal decides to tell me she loves me and canât wait to have my babies. I compose my standard I donât want anything serious, I thought we were on the same page text.
The chat thread stays dormant, my message still the last one in the scroll. I stare at it for nearly a minute before I see Crystal begin to type. Shit. It was too much to hope that sheâd let it be.
I slide off the stool, carry my half-eaten cereal bowl to the sink, and shove the mushy remains down the garbage disposal. When I come back, sheâs still typing, so I go take a shower and pray her reply wonât be too bad.
I dunk my head under the spray and bemoan my fate.
Iâm not meant for hookups.
Yes, I realize thatâs ironic, considering Iâve been indulging in nothing but hookups since my breakup with Lynsey last spring. Iâve slept with more women this month alone than in all the years Iâve been sexually active. There was one girl before Lynsey, and then Lynsey and I were together for four years, dating from junior year of high school until we broke up my sophomore year at Eastwood College.
To my friends, I insist that our parting was mutual.
By mutual, I mean I nodded numbly and said if thatâs how you feel, then I canât stop you.
I drag my hands over my scalp, shampoo suds sliding down my face and over my chest. I rinse off and then proceed to stand under the hot spray for another five minutes.
Wallowing.
I like having a girlfriend. I donât care if that makes me a total sap. Deep down, Iâve always been a relationship guy. Always had this clear vision for my life, one that really solidified when I started dating Lynsey. Thereâs a reason I havenât ragged on Ryder that much about his elopement with Gigi Graham. To me, itâs not an unfathomable move. I always saw myself marrying young. Hell, I wouldnât even be against having a kid in my early twenties. I can visualize my entire future laid out in front of me. NHL super stardom, a wife, a couple of kids.
I donât want to fuck random girls anymore. I want to fuck the girl.
I step out of the shower, dry off, and stroll naked into my bedroom. My phone still lies on the patterned bedspread where Iâd tossed it. I check it, and sure enough, thereâs an essay from Crystal.
As I read it, I alternate between annoyance and guilt. The thesis statement is basically you led me on, you fucking asshole.
I didnât, though. And I make that clear in my response.
ME:
Iâm really sorry. I didnât mean to upset you. But I told you within five minutes of you getting here that I wasnât looking for anything serious, and you fully agreed. You said it was cool.
CRYSTAL:
Right, but then we hooked up. Hooking up changes the rules, and now itâs NOT cool.
ME:
All we did was kiss, Crystal.
CRYSTAL:
Kissing is even more intimate than sex.
Is she for real? If I kiss a girl, that means Iâm now obligated to propose marriage? If weâd had sex, sure, maybe Iâd entertain that line of reasoning, but we made out for ten minutes, I told her I was tired, and then she left. How can that be considered anything deep?
ME:
Iâm sorry. But I was completely up front with you. Iâm not really over my breakup.
I cringe even typing those words. Sounds so pathetic. If this was any of my friends, Iâd be like, get the fuck over it already.
ME:
I told you last night, Iâm not emotionally equipped for anything serious right now.
CRYSTAL:
Itâs not like Iâm asking you to get serious RIGHT AWAY. Relationships need time to develop.
ME:
I donât want a relationship.
â¦with you.
Thatâs always the unspoken caveat, and sometimes I wish social etiquette didnât require us to pretend thatâs not what we mean. If someone wants to be in a relationship with you, they will. They wonât string you along. They wonât hit you up in the middle of the night for sex. They wonât feed you endless excuses about how theyâre ânot cut out for relationshipsâ or how âyou deserve so much better.â They would be with you, plain and simple.
And despite the reputation we get for being clueless or fickle or not being able to keep our dicks in our pants, a man usually knows pretty fast, often within minutes, if he considers someone girlfriend material.
CRYSTAL:
I donât get it. I thought we had fun. Were you faking the whole time?
ME:
Of course not. I did have fun last night. But I donât want a relationship.
CRYSTAL:
OMG Iâm not asking you for one!!
Then what the hell are we fighting about? I want to gouge my eyes out. Instead, I apologize once again, and we go back and forth for a while. Normally Iâm good at keeping my cool, but Crystalâs next message really gets my goddamn goat, as my dad always says.
CRYSTAL:
Fuck you. Youâre such a selfish prick. Iâm going to warn every girl I meet to stay away from you and make sure she knows youâll just be using her.
My jaw tightens. Okay, then. Weâre done here.
ME:
Yeah, so⦠I wasnât interested in a relationship with you last night, and Iâm even less interested in one now. Again, Iâm sorry youâre hurt. But Iâve entertained about as much of this conversation as Iâm willing to.
I send a final text to punctuate that.
ME:
Iâm not interested in seeing you again. Best of luck.
Then I block her.
Fucking hell. All we did was make out. How is this even a thing?
And why do I still feel like a total asshole?
As I throw on a pair of black basketball shorts and a Bruins T-shirt, I reread the entire conversation to determine whether I deserved to be yelled at. But my brain truly canât comprehend what I did wrong. The level of Crystalâs vitriol is completely disproportional to what actually occurred.
I jump when the phone vibrates in my hand. For a moment Iâm afraid Crystal found a way to get around the blocking, but itâs my dad asking when they should expect me tomorrow. Iâm heading to my hometown, which boasts the very cheesy name of Heartsong, Vermont, to visit my family.
As for today, I was planning on golfing, but now Iâm too annoyed to golf. Maybe Iâll swim laps instead. Thatâll require less concentration.
Fuck. Why are women so exhausting? Even Lynsey was exhausting, and I liked our relationship.
My heart clenches as her face flashes in my mind. Her big dark eyes. The cute little smirk she wears when sheâs proven right about something. Before I can stop myself, I sit on the foot of my bed and creep her social media, yet another thing that makes me feel like a chump. She unfollowed me after we broke up, but I still follow her. Just havenât been able to press that stupid button to click her out of my life. Besides, she has a private account, so if I did unfollow and then felt the pitiful need to cyberstalk her again, Iâd have to send a request, which is even more embarrassing than the fact that Iâm still following her.
Iâm a stray dog begging for scraps, dying to see what sheâs up to. I eagerly scroll through new shots of her at the dance studio. A black leotard is plastered to her lithe body, pale pink tights hugging her shapely legs. Lynsey is constantly lamenting that she wishes she were shorter. Sheâs 5â6â, which is tiny compared to me, but apparently the average height for a ballerina is like 5â4â or something.
Lynsey is beyond talented, though. She attends the Liberty Conservatory of Fine Arts in Connecticut, one of the top performing arts colleges in the country. Like Juilliard, the Liberty Conservatory offers a highly sought-after dance program and accepts a shockingly small number of students. I took Lynsey for a steak dinner when she received her acceptance letter.
I keep scrolling, until I reach a photo that raises my hackles. Itâs of her and some guy. Their hands all over each other. I canât see his face, but my fist itches to punch it.
I relax when I read the caption.
She tagged Sergei, her best friend, who did the competition with her last year too. He also happens to be gay, so not a threat.
Guilt tugs at my gut. Sheâd always wanted me to be her partner. Thought it would be fun to do it as a couple. Which, frankly, always surprised me because there are far better dancers than I am, and Lynsey is incredibly ambitious. To her, winning an amateur ballroom dance competition is equivalent to securing an Olympic gold medal. I suspect she was secretly relieved whenever I would balk and say absolutely not.
Now Iâm wondering if my resistance is yet another reason she dumped me.
Yeah, bro, you got dumped because you didnât want to do the damn salsa with her.
Who knows. Maybe that is the reason.
Iâve had a lot of time for self-reflection since the breakup, and Iâm honestly questioning if maybe Iâm just a shit boyfriend. Iâm too focused on hockey and Iâve never been willing to compromise about that. My game schedule was and is nonnegotiable. But, damn it, I did make an effort. I went to all her dance recitals, sitting front-row center. I attended all her family events, often picking them over my own. I did my best to put her first.
Guess it wasnât good enough.
I let out a breath, staring at her picture. My fingers slide across the cool surface of my phone.
I should call her.
No, you shouldnât.
No, I should. Weâre still friends. Friends call each other.
You shouldnât call her, and youâre not friends. Youâre still in love with her.
Friends can be in love with each other.
They canât.
The inner debate goes on for a while. Until my fingers make the decision for me and dial her number. One ring in and I regret it, but itâs too late. Sheâll see the missed call. Maybe she wonât pick up, though. Maybeâ
âHey,â she answers, sounding surprised. âWhatâs up?â
âHey.â My vocal cords sound like theyâre wrapped in two bags of gravel. I clear my throat. âI was just scrolling Insta and saw the post of you and Sergei. I realized we hadnât spoken in a while, so I wanted to check in and say hi.â
âOh. Yeah. No, youâre right. It has been a while.â She doesnât sound put off that I called. âActually, I ran into your mom last night at the pancake house.â
âYouâre home?â My heart speeds up, then stutters for a beat, because Lynsey saw my mother and didnât even text me about it? I guess that shows where her head is at. âIâll be there tomorrow until Friday. How long is your visit?â
âIâm leaving this afternoon. Going up north to Moniqueâs familyâs cabin for a week.â
âNice.â Last July, I went with her on her best friendâs annual lake trip.
Do not bring that upâ
âWe had the best time there last year.â
Fucking tool.
âWe did, didnât we?â
I chuckle to myself. âRemember night swimming?â
âOh, you mean when you almost got your dick bitten off by a snapping turtle?â
âIt did not almost bite my dick off. It just brushed my thigh.â
âThatâs mighty close to your dick, Lindy.â
The nickname makes my heart clench. And it reminds me of all those times we laughed about what would happen if we got married. Sheâd be Lynsey Lindley. Very firmly, sheâd declared it was too much of a tongue twister and vowed to never take my name. Eventually we compromised and decided sheâd hyphenate.
Not that it matters anymore.
âYouâre right, it did get a bit too close for comfort,â I relent, still chuckling. âMan, that was a fun trip.â
âIt was.â
A short silence falls.
Donât tell her you miss her.
âI miss you.â
Thereâs a pause.
âAs a friend,â I add, fighting a grin. âI miss our friendship.â
âYeah, I can hear you smiling right now.â
She knows me too well. âIâm not.â
Another pause.
âI miss our friendship too,â she admits. âBut I still think distance is the right move.â
Sheâs not wrong. I canât imagine the agony of talking to her regularly while not being together.
I want to ask her if sheâs seeing anybody, but I know I shouldnât. Fortunately, this time my mouth is able to curb the impulse.
âHow about you?â Lynsey asks. âEverythingâs good?â
âYeah. Hockeyâs great. New apartment is sick. Ohâmy best friend got married.â
âWhat?! Who? Beckett?â
âSeriously? Thatâs your guess?â I sputter with laughter. âTry again.â
She gasps. âNo. Ryder?â
âYep.â
âWhen did this happen?â she demands.
âThree months ago.â
âAnd you didnât tell me?â
âDistance, remember?â
She sighs grudgingly. âFine. Thatâs fair. But I think when it comes to friends getting married, you have an obligation to make that call. Deal?â
âDeal. Iâll call you when Beck gets married.â
âThank you.â This time I can hear her smiling, and it sends another ache to my heart. âDid you guys enjoy your first season at Briar?â
âDefinitely. We got off to a rocky start, but we won the Frozen Four, so I canât complain.â
âWhatâs the campus like?â
âGreat. Why? Want to transfer?â I joke.
She hesitates. âActuallyâ¦â
My pulse starts racing again. âAre you kidding me? Youâre really thinking of transferring?â
âIâve been considering it. I might want to take on another major, and Liberty doesnât offer many academic options. I heard Briar has an excellent psych program. And I already spoke to my advisorâshe said it would be easy to transfer. I have all the credits I need and wonât have to retake anything. Butâ¦I donât know. Itâs kind of far, andâ¦â
And youâre there is the rest of that sentence.
âCome on, Linz. Briar is big enough for the both of us. We could probably go years without crossing paths.â
âNo, thatâs not it.â
I snort.
âItâs not entirely it,â she amends. âBut yes, I might come and do a tour.â
âNice. If you do, youâre welcome to crash here. I have a very comfortable couch.â
âOh, I wouldnât want to impose.â
âItâs not an imposition. You know youâre always welcome here. Same goes for Monique and the rest of the old crew. Just because you and I arenât together, doesnât mean weâre not all still friends, right?â
Her voice softens. âWell, thanks, Lindy. I appreciate that.â
Iâm wired after we end the call. My skinâs buzzing, pulse still off-kilter. I head for the living room and step onto my balcony, which overlooks the landscaped grounds. I canât quite see the pool, but I have a clear view of the flower-lined path leading to it. I feel like Iâm at a Caribbean resort. Itâs fucking amazing.
I breathe in the warm summer air. Itâs a gorgeous morning. Maybe Iâll play golf after all. But that swim sounds nice too. So why not both?
Like the man of leisure I am, I change into swim trunks and shove my feet into flip-flops. With an oversized towel over my arm, I grab my sunglasses and keys from the hall credenza.
Outside, the scent of freshly cut grass hits my face. I inhale deeply. I need fresh air to process that phone call.
I arrive on the pool deck in time to see Diana gliding through the air.
Literally.
A guy with jet-black hair and bronzed skin is lifting her up by her calves, twirling them both around while Dianaâs arms are stretched high above her in a V pose. Itâs like some weird form of water dancing.
When Diana notices me, she makes a face and jumps out of the guyâs arms, landing in the water with a splash.
âNo,â she growls as she heaves herself out of the pool. Her wet ponytail hangs over one shoulder. Sheâs in a red two-piece, the top resembling a sports bra and the bottoms tiny booty shorts.
Je-sus. Her body is ridiculous. Toned to high heaven, without an ounce of fat on her. Female athletes are so hot.
âTuesdays are my pool day,â Diana declares.
âThatâs not a rule,â I answer cheerfully.
âIt is now.â
âYou canât invent new Dixon rules whenever you want.â I suddenly notice the tripod and smartphone set up in front of the pool. âWhat the hellâs going on here?â
As if remembering the camera, she stomps over to turn it off, dripping water all over the concrete.
âWeâre rehearsing,â she says haughtily, âand Shanes arenât allowed. Especially on Tuesdays, which are my pool days.â
I turn toward the guy in the water, whoâs watching us in amusement. I wave. âIâm Shane.â
âKenji,â he calls back.
âDonât befriend my partner,â Diana orders.
Grinning, I drop my towel and keys on a nearby lounge chair. Everything about this apartment complex is lit, but the pool area tops everything. Rows of loungers, a gathering area with tables and chairs, a frickinâ pizza oven. And these red-and-white-striped umbrellas are bomb.
I slide my shades on. âSo what are we rehearsing for?â
âNone of your business.â
Once again, I seek out Kenji because he seems more level-headed. âNUABC,â he supplies.
âWhat the fuckâs New Absey?â
Diana huffs in annoyance. âItâs the National Upper Amateur Ballroom Championships.â
âYou say that like Iâm supposed to know what it isââ I stop. âWait, actually I do know what that is.â
âBullshit.â
âSeriously. My ex competes.â
She eyes me suspiciously. âWhoâs your ex?â
âLynsey Whitcomb.â
âOh, I remember her,â Kenji tells Diana as he does a lazy backstroke. âShe and her partner placed third in the American Nine last year.â
Diana glares at me as if Iâm personally responsible for Lynseyâs dance prowess. âDid you come all the way down here to flaunt that your ex-girlfriend is some ballroom prodigy?â
âNo.â I roll my eyes. âI came down to swim laps. So chill out and go back to your water dancing. Iâll stay out of your way if you stay out of mine.â
âBut weâre filming,â she complains.
âGreat. Then your viewers can feast their eyes on the beautiful, godlike man in the pool.â
She stares at me. âOh, youâre referring to yourself.â
I snicker. Arguing with Diana has succeeded in easing the lingering tension from my call with Lynsey. I was in low spirits before, but my chest feels lighter.
I saunter past the irritable blond and descend the steps in the shallow end. With the late morning sun beating down on us, the water feels like heaven against my skin.
âDo you go to Briar too?â I ask Kenji as I swim by him.
He opens his mouth, but Diana silences him with her hand. âYou donât have to answer that, Kenji.â
I chuckle and wait for him to speak for himself, but he simply gives me an apologetic shrug. Wimp.
Grinning, I slice through the cool water to start the first lap. It brings me deep enjoyment knowing Dixon doesnât want me here.
Iâm in a terrific mood now.