The Dixon Rule: Chapter 40
The Dixon Rule (Campus Diaries, 2)
ITâS A STRUGGLE TO KEEP MY COMPOSURE AS DIANA AND I DRIVE BLAKE back to campus. Without a word, I pull into the parking lot behind Burton House, Blakeâs dorm, and kill the engine.
âThanks for the ride,â she says, reaching for the door handle. âThis was fun.â
âDonât ignore Isaac,â Diana scolds as Blake hops out of the backseat. âGive him a chance.â
âI donât think so.â
Diana rolls down the window, shouting after her. âGive him a chance!â
âNahâ is the response floating in the wind.
Diana turns to me and grins.
Iâm incapable of sharing in her humor. I cannot unsee what I saw in her phone. Itâs burned like a cattle brand into my brain.
Her smile slowly fades. âWhatâs wrong?â
I take a breath. I canât find the words. I honestly donât know how to start because Iâm so fucking livid.
âShane, hey.â
She reaches for my hand.
I shrug it off.
âSeriously, whatâs wrong?â Deep concern lines her voice. âYouâre freaking me out.â
âDixon.â I drag another burst of oxygen into my aching lungs. âI am trying really hard right now not to explode and do something Iâm going to regret.â
âRegret?â Alarm widens her eyes. âWhat are you talking about?â
âI need you to be honest with me. Iâm going to ask you a question and all I want from you is honesty. Itâs a yes or no. And I mean it. Donât lie.â
She visibly gulps. âWhat is it?â
âDid your ex-boyfriend hit you?â
The car goes deadly silent. Dianaâs face pales, her expression stricken. I already know the answer before she even responds.
âWhy are you asking me that?â
âDonât,â I snap. âI asked for a yes or no. Did Percy hit you?â
After a long, tension-ridden silence, she says, âYes.â
Rage slams into me.
I grip the steering wheel with both hands, squeezing it until my knuckles turn white. I canât even think about putting the car in drive right now. Canât risk leaving this parking lot. Because if I do, Iâll be tracking down Percy whatever the fuck his last name is and mowing him down with this car until heâs a bloody pulp beneath my tires. And I donât give a shit if that makes me a psychopath. The knowledge that he laid his hands on Diana has dissolved my vision into a red haze. At this moment, Iâm capable of murder.
âHow did youâ¦â She trails off.
âThe folder on your phone,â I bite out. âYou should have moved it to one of your hidden folders.â
âI didnât expect anyone to ever go through my phone,â she says tightly.
âI didnât purposely go through it. I accidentally clicked it. And then what? Iâm supposed to pretend I didnât see a picture of your beaten face?â
âItâ¦it was just a black eye.â
âJust aâ!â I stop, taking a calming breath. I squeeze the steering wheel again before slowly lowering my hands. âLet me see it again.â
âWhy?â
âBecause I only skimmed the messages. And I think itâll be easier to read rather than have you tell me, because Iâm goddamn volatile right now andââ
âNo, I get it,â she cuts in. Hands shaking, she passes me her phone.
My heart batters against my ribs as I read through everything. Diana kept it all. From what I can gather, it happened after work. Percy showed up after her shift. Walked her home.
And fucking hit her.
He put his filthy, pathetic hands on her andâ
I hiss out another breath. Calm down.
In his messages, Percy keeps insisting it was a reflex. Instinctual. But I saw the photo of her face. I saw her black eye in person. That was not instinctual. That was a sick asshole who hurt a defenseless woman.
Diana documented every text where he admits that he assaulted her. But he continues to blame her for it, saying she shoved him.
âDid you touch him?â I ask gruffly.
Her entire face collapses. âI didnât do anything. He grabbed my arm and I tried to push him off.â
âShow me,â I order. Not because I donât believe her, but because I require a visual of this in my head. So I have something to tell the cops after I murder this man. âIs this how he did it?â
I reach across the center console and grab her by the forearm. Gentle but firm.
âHe grabbed you like this?â
She nods meekly.
âAnd what did you do?â
With her free hand, Diana shoves my shoulder.
âAnd then he punched you in the face.â The rage bubbles up again. âThat was his response to you pushing his shoulder?â
âYes.â
Thereâs another beat.
âWhy the fuck didnât you go to the cops?â
She flinches.
I immediately collect my temper.
âIâm sorry. No, Dixon, Iâm sorry. This isnât on you. This is on him. Iâ¦â I hear my pulse thudding in my ears. âI donât understand why you wouldnât report this. Why did you lie and say you got hurt at cheer camp?â She told me she took an elbow to the face, for chrissake.
âBecause itâs embarrassing!â
Her voice cracks. So does a piece of my heart. Iâve never seen Diana look so destroyed. She sits in the passenger seat, completely stripped away of the confidence Iâve come to adore, tears streaming down her cheeks.
âThatâs not who I am, okay?â
âWhat does that mean?â
âIt means I can take care of myself.â Her voice trembles wildly. âYou heard the stories my dad told you. Iâm the one who kicks peopleâs asses. Iâm not the woman who gets hit by a man, all right? I didnât report it because I canât be that woman.â
âBaby.â I unbuckle my seat belt, then lean over to unbuckle hers. âCome here.â
âNo.â She tries to twist away from me.
âCome here,â I repeat, reaching for her.
This time she doesnât resist. She climbs into my lap and buries her face in my neck. We sit there in the dorm parking lot, and I hold her tight while barely restrained rage boils in my blood.
Diana straightens up, her tear-streaked face breaking my heart.
âIâm the strong one,â she mumbles. âIâm the unstoppable one, and some fucking asshole punched me on the sidewalk. I canât go to the police.â
âYes, you can. And you should,â I say firmly.
She bites her lower lip, which is still quivering.
âYou have to, Dixon. You canât let him get away with this, and I think deep down you want to report it.â
Moisture clings to her eyelashes again.
âYou do. Thatâs why you saved this folder on your phone. You documented what he did and kept it because you knew you might need to use it. Actually, no, not mightâyou knew you should use it.â
Diana starts to cry again, shuddering in my arms. âI canât go to the police. My dad is going to find outââ
âYouâre right. Heâll find out. And once he knows what happened, heâll probably be as murderous as I am. But he loves you. And heâll know, just like I do, that you didnât do anything wrong.â
Her teeth gnaw at her lip. âI provoked him.â
âYou didnât provoke him. You broke up with him and told him to leave you alone. He followed you to work and then assaulted you. Thatâs all you need to say to the cops. Trust me, no one is going to victim-blame or think you did anything to cause what happened.â
âHis lawyer will if we go to court. Oh my God.â Panic lights her eyes. âIâm not going to court, Shane. Iâm not fucking testifying.â
âI doubt itâll even reach that point,â I assure her. âI guarantee you heâll plea out.â I gesture to the phone I dropped in the cup holder. âYouâve got pictures. Youâve got texts. His own words admitting it. This is a slam dunk.â
âSure, you say that now, and then suddenly the next year, or however long itâll take, will be spent dealing with this.â She makes a desperate noise in the back of her throat. âI donât want him in my life anymore.â
âI donât want him in your life either.â I gently touch her chin, forcing her to meet my gaze. âBut let me ask you thisâdo you want him to find a new girlfriend? Because what if his new girlfriend makes him mad and then he hits her and gives her a black eye?â
Something flashes in Dianaâs eyes. I think itâs anger.
âYes,â I urge. âGood. Be angry, baby.â She needs to be angry. âYou didnât do anything wrong. You didnât invite this. You didnât deserve this. And you need to report this. If you do, I promise Iâll go with you. Iâll drive you to the police station in Hastings right now, and I wonât leave your side.â I stroke her cheek. âAnd if you want, Iâll be there when you talk to your dad. But this isnât something you can sweep under the rug andââ
I stop suddenly.
âWhat is it?â she says.
âThis is why you wanted me to pretend to be your boyfriend when he showed up at Meadow Hill,â I realize, cursing softly. âYou were scared of him.â
I inhale through my nose and try to ground myself because once again, if Percy were in front of me, Iâd be ripping his throat out with my bare hands.
âYou should have told me,â I say gruffly.
She avoids my gaze. âI was ashamed.â
âYou have nothing to be ashamed of.â
âIâm the girl whose boyfriend hit her. Itâs pathetic.â
âDiana, stop. I know this is coming from a place of emotion, but once youâre able to take a step back and look at it rationally, youâre going to realize that thatâs not who you are. There is nothing pathetic about you and never will be.â
âDo you promise?â
âI promise. And I promise to support whatever you decide to do, even if I disagree with it. With that saidâ¦â I grasp her chin to force eye contact. âCan I take you to the police station?â
Her mouth starts quivering again.
Then she nods.