“Watch your language,” he bites out. “And if the girl doesn’t want anything, then thank your Irish luck and drop it.”
“It’s my fault this girl is injured. I was waiting for Brian to call. He texted that he needed to talk to me.”
A heavy sigh comes through the phone. “I’m being paged. We’ll talk about your brother later. Leave it alone, Reagan. And if she calls looking for a payout let me know immediately. I’ll have to get Henry involved.”
My family’s lawyer. Less than a moment later, the call drops.
I pull in the empty trash cans from the curb, make my way up the front steps.
Dallas’s parents bought him this monster of a house our freshman year. Our school doesn’t have dorm restrictions due to the lack of on-campus housing available. You would think he’d be stoked to live on a private beach next door to movie stars and pro athletes. I mean, who wouldn’t, right? Dallas, that’s who. He was always crashing on the couch in the apartment I shared with the Peterman twins.
It took us a while to get it out of him, but he eventually admitted that he hated living alone. Once he did, we all moved in with him. Seemed stupid to let the house go to waste.
The front door opens and a tall brunette I vaguely recognize from the girls’ volleyball team steps out.
“Hi, Reagan.”
“Hi,” I say to the tall chick whose name I can’t remember.
Avoiding eye contact, she ducks her head and walks past me when she sees me checking out the stains on her neck, arms, and clothes. This has Dallas written all over it.
To put it bluntly, Dallas Van Zant is the team’s resident fuckup. He also happens to be my best friend, has been since our freshman year when we beat USC by three goals scored by the two of us. From that day forth we were known as Thunder and Lightning, and like thunder and lightning we became inseparable.
Also like thunder and lightning, Dallas and I are profoundly different. I’m a straight-up team player, doing everything by the book, while D just likes to play. Being on this team is a means to an end for him. And that end is to accrue all the glory and the fun of being on a championship winning team without any of the responsibility. If he didn’t have such mad skills, Coach would’ve kicked him off years ago. Not that I blame him. Responsibility is for chumps like me.
I walk into the kitchen to find D naked, with his back to me. He’s focused on scrubbing the marble countertop. He’s also, I note, covered in the same shit-colored stains as the girl who left.
“Do I wanna know what happened here?” I ask, dropping my backpack at the threshold and tossing the keys on the counter.
“Karen and I made a Nutella sandwich,” he says, throwing a wad of dirty paper towels in the trash. He swipes a pair of basketball shorts off the kitchen floor and steps into them.
“You missed some on the refrigerator.”
“Where?” he says, glancing up to inspect the stainless steel behemoth. Four athletes live in this house and growing boys need to store a lot of food. I motion to the spots and he grabs a handful of clean paper towels and starts wiping.
I slip onto the counter stool, rake my hands through my hair, and press the heels into my eye sockets. The pressure’s been building since I dropped off Alice Bailey at her dorm. “Did you get any on the bread?”
“Yeah, no bread. We were the sandwich––” He glances up with a sly grin. “Very slimy, dude. No recommendo, amigo.”
The instant he catches sight of my expression he stops cleaning and gives me his full attention. “Who stepped on your nuts?”
I need sustenance for this conversation so I get up, grab two Coronas from the refrigerator, hand him one. He’ll tell me if I should be worried.
Despite the cavalier attitude, Dallas possesses an uncanny ability to read people. He’s strangely intuitive about their character and has never steered me wrong. It took me three years to see past Jordan’s bullshit. It took Dallas ten minutes of speaking to her. I don’t know if this talent is a consequence of what his parents put him through, and from what I’ve heard it was pretty bad, or it comes naturally. Regardless, he has it in spades.
I pop the top off my beer, lean back against the counter, and exhale tiredly. “I screwed up today.”
“Welcome to my life.”
“I was driving down Severson after practice and I glanced at my phone for a split second, thinking it was Brian calling––it wasn’t, by the way, it was Jordan. And I almost ran someone over.”
Looking unfazed, Dall takes a long pull of his beer. “Who?”
“New girl. Alice Bailey. A film major.” A smile tugs my lips away from the edge of the bottle at the memory of the glare she aimed at me when I asked to see her cameras.