The Fifteenth Minute: A Hockey Romance: Chapter 16
The Fifteenth Minute: A Hockey Romance (The Ivy Years Book 5)
DJ THE NIGHTÂ before my lawyer interview, I canât sleep.
I find myself awake at four-thirty in the morning, thumbing through my copy of Macbeth. Most people wouldnât consider it a comfort read. But I hear Lianneâs voice while I read. And I like imagining her copy is beside her bed somewhere in Beaumont House where sheâs sleeping peacefully.
Besides, Macbeth is a verifiable tragedy. And it takes me out of my head.
Iâm fascinated by the funny scene with the drunk porter, because it comes at such a weird moment in the play. The king has just been killed, but the porter doesnât know that. So heâs drunk and full of bawdy jokes. But thatâs how life really is. Sometimes youâre the fool who believes everything will be fine in the morning.
Giving up on sleep, I keep reading. The hardest scene to read is the one where Macbeth is half out of his mind at the dinner party. He keeps seeing the ghost of Banquo. The guilt is making him crazy, and Lady M just pleads with him to keep it together. He canât do it, though, no matter how much she begs. âFull of scorpions is my mind,â he says.
Mine too, buddy. Only Iâm going mad because people Iâm guilty.
Eventually I fall asleep with the paperback on my chest. When I wake up a few hours later, Iâm still clutching my place in Act Four.
Iâve skipped breakfast, but thatâs okay because I have never been less hungry. After a shower and a careful shave, I put on some khakis and a button-down shirt. Thereâs probably no reason to dress up for my own lawyer, but I canât help but play the kiss-ass. If Iâve learned anything this year, itâs that telling the truth isnât enough. The universe works on another set of rules, and I donât own the manual. So all I can do is make sure my face is smooth and my shoes arenât scuffed, and hope it somehow makes a difference.
Iâve borrowed my brotherâs car for this adventure. At ten oâclock Iâm behind the wheel of Leoâs Jetta. At a few minutes to noon, Iâm pulling up in front of a suburban law office in Westchester County. There is exactly one other car in the parking lotâa shiny BMW. Iâm sure my father is making one of the lawyerâs car payments today. It canât be cheap to have this manâs Saturday.
God, I hope heâs worth whatever Iâm costing my dad.
Thereâs a sticky note on the glass door to the law firmâs office. âCome on back, Daniel. Second door on the left.â I pocket this note and go inside, removing my wool overcoat and tossing it onto a lobby chair on my way toward what turns out to be a rather fancy office. The big oak desk and oriental rug practically shout âSUCCESSFUL ATTORNEY.â
âAfternoon,â a well-dressed man says, standing up to brush muffin crumbs off his tie. âI got us some sandwiches.â
âThank you, sir,â I say, leaning over the desk to shake his hand. Heâs a little younger than Iâd pictured. I have to wonder what his usual case load looks like. Does he specialize in rape accusations? Is that a thing?
Everything about this case makes me feel dirty. If thereâs an industry niche for getting young jocks out of trouble, I donât really want to know. For the millionth time, I wish I could just wash my hands of the whole episode.
, as Lady M would say.
âYou can just call me Jack, okay?â He passes me a paper plate with a club sandwich. âNow, Daniel,â he says, sipping his coffee. âLetâs get started. We have a lot of ground to cover. Iâm going to ask you some questions. Thereâs a lot in your file, but I need to fine tune some things. Lots of little, picky details. And sometimes youâre going to say, âI donât remember.â And thatâs fine. Youâre going to find my level of detail annoying, but itâs my job to ask you every little thing. Because one of these details is going to matter, okay?â
âOkay.â Sounds like a fun time.
âYou mentioned the last time we spoke that on the night in question, you and the girl were at a party. Can you tell me about this party?â
I clear my throat. âWe call it an Around the World party. Thereâs, uh, a different drink served in every dorm suite. And you go around and try them all.â And since we were all nineteen when this happened, Iâm incriminating myself.
âUh huh,â he says, unfazed. âDid your room serve any drinks?â
âNo sir. The party was in the next entryway over from mine. We were just, uh, guests.â
âYou and the girl were both guests. Because you live in the same entryway?â
âRight.â
âOkay. Did you serve anyone an alcoholic beverage that night?â
âNo. That night I only drank other peopleâs liquor.â Iâm a criminal a mooch. Awesome. My lawyer actually chuckles, but I have more to add. âAt that kind of party they only serve in these tiny cups. So you can taste everything without bankrupting the hosts.â
âGot it. Do you think you could find some of those cups if I needed you to?â
âYou meanâ¦at a store?â
âYes. If we had to figure out how many ounces you drank.â
âSure. I could find the cups, but I donât know how many drinks I had. And I donât know how alcoholic they were.â Probably not very alcoholic, actually. Because making drinks is expensive. And itâs not that easy for freshmen to buy liquor from a store.
âI know we canât be precise,â my lawyer admits. âBut we could figure out the maximum you drankâthe number of rooms in the entryway times the volume of the cup. Is that right?â
âYeah. Itâs not polite to double dip, although Iâm sure some people do it.â
âBut not you.â
âNo.â
âWere you drunk?â
âNot really. I had a little buzz, maybe. But those cups are small, and we did a lot of standing around talking.â
âWas Annie drunk?â
The sound of her name makes me feel cold inside. âNoâshe doesnât drink.â
âShe said that?â
âMaybe?â Did she? âI never saw her with a drink in her hand. Ever.â
âWas anyone drunk that night?â
âYeah, sure. One guy from my entryway had a flask he kept using to refill his cup. But my little group didnât get sloshed.â
âAll right. At what point did Annie ask to stay the night in your room?â
âI donât know what time it was. We were standing in the stairwell of the entryway that was hosting the party. There were a few people there. And she said her sister was there for the night because she was being recruited by the crew team.â
âSo this is a younger sister. Did you meet her?â
I thought about that. âYeah, but only for a second. It was when we were all about to go next door for the party. The sister was running off with her rowing buddies, but I remember being introduced.â
âOkay. How did Annie ask you if she could stay with you? Did she ask you by yourself, or did she ask you and your roommate at the same time?â
Jesus Christ, I have no idea. âIt was a long time ago. And at the time, it was not that interesting of a question.â Little did I know⦠âI⦠I just have no idea if my roommate heard the question. I think I answered it by myself, though.â
âOkay. Do you remember what words she used when she asked?â
âShe said, âI told my sister she could have my bed tonight.â Then she asked if she could use the camping mat we keep in our room for when visitors come. My roommate Jake had most of the visitors. But itâs my mat.â
The lawyer is quiet for a second. âThe way you put that sounds as if she meant to borrow it and take it back to her room.â
âI know. Thatâs what I thought sheâd do.â
âOkay. When did it become clear that she intended to sleep in your room?â
âUm, Iâd already brushed my teeth when she knocked on our door. She was wearing a nightgown and she had a sleeping bag under her arm. She said that since she and her roommate had taken apart their bunkbeds, there wasnât enough room on the floor for her to unroll it. She said, âIâm going to sleep here if you donât mind.ââ
âWhat did you think about that?â
âI felt like a dick for letting a girl sleep on the floor while I stayed in my bed. But I didnât say anything, because she seemed happy with the arrangement.â
Weâve been talking for maybe ten minutes. And now I have a splitting headache. I hate the way I sound when I explain myself. And I hate the way we sound like a courtroom drama.
I hate everything about this discussion, and if I could rewind my life I would have avoided what came next that night.
âWhat happened next, Daniel?â
We were here to practice, so practice I did. I told him how Annie initiated everything. A girl climbs into my bed and starts kissing me. I kiss her back. She starts touching me. So I touch her, too.
I guzzled the whole cup of coffee while Iâm telling it, because it all sounds so fucking sordid.
.
We had sex. Unremarkable sex. It wasnât worth it. In hindsight it sure wasnât worth spending a Saturday telling my very expensive lawyer the blow-by-blow of my sex life.
Next come his questions.
âLet me back up to the kissing,â my lawyer says. âWhen she kissed you, how did she position her body?â
âUhâ¦â My head stabs me. âLike, half on my body.â
âDid she say anything when she climbed in your bed?â
âShe said âhi.ââ
He makes me walk through everything againâwhen Annie kissed me. When I kissed her back. When I grabbed her ass. When she started grinding on me.
The lawyer stops for clarification. âShe pushed her pelvis up and down on your pelvis, as if for sexual stimulation?â he asks.
. âThatâs correct.â
My head is practically splitting apart when I tell him that I put my hands under her nightgown. She sheds her nightgown. I lose the flannel pants Iâm wearing. She asks if I have a condom.
âShe vocalized this question?â
âYes she did.â This is one of the details that keeps me sane. Even if itâs deeply confusing to me why Iâm here, Iâm not confused about what happened that night.
âAnd did you vocalize your answer?â
âIâm not sure. I know I opened the bedside table, but she had to fish them out.â
âWhy?â
âBecause I was on my back, and I couldnât see them.â
âOkayâat what point did you flip over?â
âI didnât. I took the condom from her and I put it on.â
âDid she help you put it on?â
âNo. I always do that myself.â
âWhy?â
âSo it goes on the right way.â Because I used to think it mattered. Before this year, I thought I could prevent disaster by being careful.
âThen what happened?â
âWe had sex.â
âIn what position?â
. âI was on my back. She was on top of me.â
âThe whole time?â
âSure.â
âAt any point did you move from that position?â
âWhen I got up to throw the condom away.â
For a long moment, the lawyer is perfectly silent. âShe brings up the condoms. And youâre always on your . What I wouldnât give to cross-examine this girl.â He sighs. âSorry. I got sidetracked. We canât prove your innocence without the young womanâs help. We really need to figure out why sheâs saying this wasnât consensualâ¦â He flips a folder open on his desk and starts sifting through the papers inside.
Meanwhile, Iâm trying to picture telling a room full of peopleâincluding my familyâthe details of how we did it cowgirl style. And isnât that what a guilty man would say, anywayâthat everything was her idea? Will anyone believe me?
He looks up at me with a serious expression, then sets his pen down. âWas there point during this encounter when the young woman hesitated? If she said âyes,â then âmaybe not,â then âyes,â I need to know that. If you discussed it at all, I need the details.â
I just shake my head. âThere wasnât any discussion. She never stopped. She never even slowed down.â
âDid youâ¦â He clears his throat. âHold her in a way that restricted her movements? Where were your hands? Iâm still trying to figure out the basis of the dispute.â
. âNot at all. I meanâ¦â I clear my throat, too. âI, uh, had my hands on her, um, breasts, I think.â
He makes a note on his pad, and I stare into the bottom of my empty coffee cup, praying for the end of this inquisition.
âLetâs move on,â my lawyer says a few minutes later, after weâve literally discussed the dismount. âI want to ask you about her state of mind afterward.â
I should be relieved to change the subject, but the truth was I was more embarrassed about this than anything else.
âWe didnât discuss it,â I say. âI meanâ¦at bio lab the following Tuesday, we just worked on the assignment.â
My lawyer nods. âDid she do anything weird? Anything at all?â
Thatâs a tough question to answer. I didnât really know Annie well enough to say whether she was acting weird. âI donât think so. But I really didnât want to talk about what happened. So I wasnât the most attentive lab partner that first day.â
âYou were nervous?â he probes.
That sounds guilty, too. âNervous isnât the right word. How about sheepish?â
âAll right. Tell me why you didnât want to discuss what happened.â
âBecause itâs stupid to sleep with your lab partner, especially if youâre not really into her.â
. Ugh. I wish Iâd chosen different words. I wish Iâd chosen not to sleep with her at all.
âSo you and Annie didnât talk about it. Who you discuss it with?â
âMy roommate.â
âWhy?â
âBecause he woke up at some point during, umâ¦â
âHe heard you having sex.â
âYeah.â
âAnd he was in the bunk above you.â
âYes.â
âWhat did he say?â
âHe said, âYou and Annie? I didnât know you were into her.â And I said âIâm not, and it was probably a stupid thing to do.ââ
My lawyer clears his throat. âIâm going to need to speak to your roommate.â
. âHeâs in Tibet this year.â
I swear the lawyer says âfuckâ under his breath. âOkay. Iâll need his email address. They have email there, right? And maybe Skype?â
âProbably.â I havenât spoken to my roommate all year, though. Heâs not here, and Iâm too embarrassed.
Talk about awkward.
The questions last for hours. And then finally weâre done. Jack is packing up his papers, and I unfold my stiff body from my chair.
âLet me run something by you,â he says, tucking yet another folder onto his stack. âYou werenât really planning to have sex that night.â
âNo, I wasnât.â
âBut you let it happen.â
âYes.â Didnât we just spend three hours on this?
âDid she force you?â
âWhat? No!â Thatâs the most ridiculous idea ever. If heâs even half serious, I need a new lawyer. Because this one is cracked.
âBut you regret it,â he says.
âOf course I do. How could I not?â
His nod is serious. âYou regretted it she accused you, though.â
âYeah. I regretted it because it was awkward. And I wasnât interested in her. Whatâs your point?â Maybe that sounded rude, but I was seriously running out of patience.
My lawyer taps his fingers on the desktop. âI have a suspicion that this whole case boils down to regret, which is not the same as force. But I donât know how to prove it if the college wonât let me interview her.â
In other words, this whole session was for nothing. âBut even if they do let you talk to her, Iâm still the guy whoâs accusing a girl of lying.â Itâs hard to imagine a worse position to be in. I watch the news. No matter which side prevails, nobody ever wins. The guy comes across looking shady as hell, and the woman gets harassed all over social media. Disaster for everyone.
âUnless she withdraws her complaint, or else Harkness dismisses it,â my lawyer says, rising from his chair. âWe have to let the college know that theyâve dropped the ball all over the place. That they didnât bother gathering any of the facts. Thatâs my only play here.â
He comes around the desk, but Iâm still rooted to his rug. Because thereâs one thing that neither of us has said yet. âItâs probably not going to work, is it?â
Jack stops in front of me, offering me his hand. We shake before he answers. âNo guarantees. But we wonât go down quietly.â
Thatâs exactly what Iâm afraid of.
We both climb into our cars, and Jack drives away first. For a few minutes I just sit there, too spent to drive myself back. Itâs five oâclock. Right now the womenâs game is just starting. Lianne has texted me a picture of the women warming up on the ice. âIâm ready,â sheâs added. âDonât worry about a thing.â
As if.
I drive back to Harkness, and thereâs traffic. By the time I park my brotherâs car behind the rink where he keeps it, people are already streaming out of the game. I check my phone again and find a stream of text messages from Lianne.
, she wrote during the first period.
.
Yep. She totally has the hang of it.
My phone buzzes in my hand with a text from goalie Scarlet Crowley.
.
Of course they had.
, I reply.
. I get out of the car and lock it, thinking about my shaky future at Harkness. Then I text Scarlet again.
. I add Lianneâs email address and then shove the phone in my pocket.
An hour later Iâm home in our silent house. The guys are in Boston tonight to play Harvard. It practically echoes with silence, and I could be getting a lot of school work done. But Iâm ridiculously tired from being grilled all day. And my classwork seems even more pointless than usual.
I turn the TV on and flip a few channels. My phone lights up with messages from my parentsâboth of them separatelyâasking how it went. Since theyâre paying the lawyer a big chunk of change to try to extract me from my troubles, I really ought to call them back. But I canât seem to make myself do it. They want to hear of progress, and all I can hear is Jack saying, âWe wonât go down quietly.â
Tonight the fight is all out of me.