The Fifteenth Minute: A Hockey Romance: Chapter 2
The Fifteenth Minute: A Hockey Romance (The Ivy Years Book 5)
LIANNE CHALLICE IS CHATTINGÂ me up.
As I fetch the pizza I ordered from the window, I try to decide whether or not Iâm going insane. Maybe all the stress in my life has finally cracked me.
But no. When I deposit the pie on a table, her big eyes cut from the jukebox over to me, before darting away again. She is so freaking cute and so feminine that itâs making me crazy. Her mouth is like a little red candy that Iâm dying to taste. And who has teeth that straight? She intimidates the fuck out of me, to be honest.
I make another trip to the pizza counter for paper plates and napkins. Usually we just grab slices off the tray like animals. But tonight Iâm trying to be classy. The idea makes me snicker to myself.
. Impressing Lianne Challice isnât something Iâm capable of. But Iâm having fun trying. And there hasnât been a whole lot of fun in this year for me. So thatâs something.
Years from now Iâll look back on this night and laugh.
I mean, my father is still telling people about the time he sat one table over from Tina Fey at Nobu.
Lianne sneaks another glance in my direction and I beckon to her. âHave a slice?â If she wants one, now is the time. In a minute my brother and his teammates will fall on the pizza like seagulls.
âThank you. I guess I should. I didnât make it to the dining hall tonight.â
âYour enthusiasm for Capriâs pizza overwhelms me,â I tease. âArenât you a fan?â
She slides a slice onto a paper plate, considering the question. âPizza is like a nineties hit. Pretty good, especially if thatâs all there is and youâre hungry.â
My own slice stops halfway to my mouth and I laugh. âSeriously?â
âWhat?â
âI donât know if we can be friends,â I say before taking a bite.
âBecause I donât love â
I shake my head. âWho doesnât love pizza? Itâs, like, a basic human desire.â I cram a bite into my mouth to prove my point. Smooth, right?
She bites her bottom lip, and I realize Iâd rather have that for dinner. âItâs okay. But itâs mostly just something you eat when youâre in a hurry or need to feed a crowd on the cheap.â
âAh, I see,â I say when I can speak again. âThe problem is that you havenât had any pizza. Youâre a freshman, right? You donât know all the glory that is Harkness pizza. Have you been to Ginoâs Apizza?â
Lianne shakes her head. âI donât think so.â
âShe doesnât think so,â I scoff. âBaby, if youâd had great pizza, youâd remember.â And now I sound like a real perv, but Lianne Challice is smiling at me, watching me with her big doe eyes, and I feel it like a drug. âThey make everything from scratch. Even the sausage. Weâll go together, so I can prove my point.â
Annnd I think I just asked a movie star out on a date. Here comes the crash and burn.
First her eyes widen just a smidge. Then two pink spots appear on her face, one on either cheekbone. âWell, it would be a shame to live in this town and never know its true pizza greatness.â
I replay that sentence in my head and realize that she didnât turn me down. âTrue,â I agree. âDo you think Thursday would be a night to experience pizza Nirvana?â Iâm overselling the hell out of Ginoâs now, but itâs working for me.
She gives me a serious frown, and Iâm hoping sheâs not busy on Thursday. Because I have back-to-back hockey games to DJ on Friday and Saturday. âThursday it is. I shall prepare to be amazed.â
Now Iâm just standing here giving her a big cheesy grin, but I donât know how to stop. Luckily, Orsen pops me on the shoulder. âCan I have a slice, dude?â
âGo for it.â The guy can have anything of mine he wants. I owe him big for renting me a room in the house his parents bought last year as an investment. The other guys living there are all seniors. But this summer I was suddenly in need of a new place to live. So my brother called Orsen and space was made. Iâve got a tiny room they didnât consider big enough to rent out, but it works for me. I was clinging to my Harkness enrollment by my fingernails, and Orsen threw a net under me.
He did it as a favor to my brother, the team captain. But I appreciate it nonetheless.
âOrsen is a good guy,â Lianne says, as if sheâs read my mind.
âTrue.â
âYour brother, too. But Iâm not so sure about his taste in women.â
I laugh so suddenly that I almost choke on a bit of cheese. âYou noticed that, huh?â I ask when I can speak again.
âItâs pretty hard to miss.â
âYes it is.â Finishing my slice, I wipe my hands on a napkin. Then I park my ass against the wall beside Lianne and survey the room. Itâs the usual sceneâhockey players refueling after practice and the puck bunnies who swarm Capriâs to get close to them. Amy is stapled to my brotherâs side because she knows there are other sharks circling. Though my brother has shown no signs of wanting to trade Amy in for a newer model, even if I wish he would. âLet me tell you a little story,â I hear myself say.
âSure?â
âMy brother had a high school girlfriendâGeorgia. She was captain of the tennis team, and he was captain of the hockey teamâ¦â
âThey were the golden couple,â she says, and I nod. âWas she nicer than Amy?â
â
much nicer. I was sixteen when they were seniors, and I had the biggest crush on Georgia. I used to tell her so all the time.â The memory makes me smile. âLeo hated that. But it was our little joke. She was awesome. They were together for years, and I thought they might stay a couple even though they were headed for different colleges.â
âBut they didnât?â
I shake my head. âOver winter break, she went to a tennis training camp in Florida. One night she was walking back from hanging out in someone elseâs dormitory.â And now I realize too late that this story is just too scary for a night of pizza and jukebox music. âShe, uh, was attacked.â
âOh my God.â Lianne has a terrified look on her face now. âWas she okay?â
I am clearly an idiot for telling her something so dark. But itâs been a long time since anyone listened to me quite like Lianne does. Clearly Iâve forgotten how casual conversation works. âYeah, she was okay eventually. I meanâshe was traumatized and missed a bunch of school. But my brother was awesome. For months he went over to her house every day after school to watch movies with her. He read homework assignments to her. He brought her cupcakes. He made funny videos to cheer her up. He never stopped, even though she was really a mess.â
âWow.â Her eyes dart over to Leo and then back again. âWhat happened?â
âGeorgia got some counseling and eventually went back to school. And then he held her hand on the way into the building and out, and he drove her everywhere until graduation, so sheâd feel safe.â
âDamn.â
âYeah. He loved Georgia. A lot. But the day after graduation, she broke up with him. She said she wanted to wipe the slate clean.â
âOuch!â Lianneâs eyes are still round. âThatâs not how I hoped this story ended.â
âMe neither.â My whole family was stunned when she cut him loose. âAnyway, Amy is the latest in a string of bitchy girlfriends. I think he picks the ones that are made of Kevlar. Maybe he doesnât really love them, but he canât really get hurt, either.â
âThatâs depressing.â
. âI know. Iâm sorry. I was just trying to explain why my brother does what he does. Even when I feel like taping Amyâs mouth shut, part of me gets it.â
Jesus, Leo when Georgia left him. I donât think heâd cried since the third grade before that.
âWhat happened to Georgia?â Lianne asked. âDo you know?â
I wish I did. âShe went to college, and friends have told us that sheâs doing really well. But Iâve been thinking about her a lot lately. I wonder how sheâs doing.â And now itâs time to change the subject, for everyoneâs sake. Lianne is finishing her slice in dainty bites, so I offer her another.
âNo thanks,â she says. âI should go, anyway. Iâve got some work to do.â
âYou know itâs the first day of the semester, right?â I really donât want her to leave.
She picks up her beer glass and drains it. âYeah, but I haveâ¦â She cuts herself off with a frown.
âWhat?â
âTo, um, read something for work.â Then she starts speaking really fast. âNo big thing. I-better-go-itâs-getting-late.â She grabs her purse off the table and tucks the strap over her shoulder. Lianne is making a getaway but I donât even have her number yet.
She tries to slip past me but I catch her hand in mine. âOne sec. Thereâs one thing you forgot.â
Those long eyelashes lift, and sheâs staring up into my eyes. Lookingâ¦nervous. That canât be it. Nobody gets nervous about flirting with me. âI did?â she asks.
âYeah. If Iâm meeting you for dinner Thursday, then I need some way to contact you.â
âOh,â she breathes. âOkay. Hang on.â She digs into her bag, hopefully to find her phone.
âHey, Deej?â My brother Leoâor to everyone in this room, as if heâs the only one with rights to our last nameâis suddenly at my elbow.
âTake the pizza,â I hiss.
. His timing could not be worse.
âDad needs you to phone him tonight,â Leo says. âHe says youâre not taking his calls.â
âFine,â I say, my eyes on Lianne. Her phone is clutched in her small hands, and sheâs tapping her passcode into the screen with shiny pink fingernails that remind me of candies.
Can my brother not take a hint?
âOkay, ready?â Lianne looks up and smiles at me.
With an open hand, I lay my palm across my brotherâs face and nudge him away until he melts back into the Capriâs crowd. Then I pull my phone out of my pocket. âOkay, shoot.â She rattles off the number and I test it to make sure Iâve got it right. When Iâm done, my phone notifies me that Iâve missed another call from my dad. Big surprise.
âIâm heading home,â Lianne says.
âLet me walk you out,â I say.
Lianne makes a sound that I canât quite interpret. A squeak, almost. But she waits for me. So I cup her elbow in one hand and lead her to the side door.
âI didnât know there was a door here,â she babbles.
We step outside. The side street is quiet, as always. Her eyes are wide in the glow of the streetlight, and I smile for no reason at all.
âUm, thanks for the pizza,â she says.
I shrug. âDonât thank me yet, smalls. Thank me after I introduce you to Ginoâs.â
Her eyes narrow. âReally? Weâre doing short jokes now?â
âHey!â I lift both hands in surrender. âI thought that was something we had in common.â
She cocks her head to the side. âWhy?â
Seriously? âI donât exactly tower over people, either.â Though itâs kind of her not to notice.
Lianne lifts her chin and looks into my eyes. âEveryone towers over me.â
This is surprisingly true. I actually have to look down to see her properly. And when I do, I see that her expression has shifted to something dreamy. Thereâs a stirring in my chest I havenât felt in a long time. And itâs not because the girl looking up at me is famous. Right now I donât see Lianne Challice, star of stage and screen. Iâm looking at a girl whoâs ambivalent about pizza but awesome with rock music trivia.
And she wants a kiss.
For the first time in months, my mind goes quiet. I hope the moment lasts, because the stillness is as beautiful as the hopeful eyes of the girl in front of me. My hand extends to catch her cheek in my palm. The air around us is cold, but her face is warm to the touch. âIâll see you on Thursday,â I whisper.
Her nod is almost imperceptible. Sheâs quiet.
. The moment yawns open. We both know whatâs supposed to happen next, but I hesitate. After all thatâs occurred, I still know the steps but I no longer trust the dance.
I sweep the pad of my thumb across her perfect cheekbone. Then she leans into my hand. Itâs slightâalmost imperceptible. But itâs there. A sign.
Itâs a short journey to her mouth, but I say a little prayer along the way.
.
On the first pass Iâm still cautious. I take just a brush of her soft lips, landing on her jaw. She smells of berries, I think. Something sweet. I pause there, pressing a kiss to her skin, and she shivers. Then instinct kicks in. I slip my fingers to the nape of her neck and pull her closer to me. The warmth of her small body finds mine, and I to kiss her. I turn my head a few degrees and find her soft mouth with my hungry one.
The noise she makes is a whimper. I kiss it away. Her lips taste as sweet as they look. I angle my head, deepening the kiss just slightly. Maybe because I havenât done this in a long time, or maybe because itâs Lianne Challice Iâm kissingâbut all my senses are dialed up to eleven. I feel every inch of her body where it touches mine, and the sweet scent of her hair is making me crazy. Iâm a loose wire sizzling through the air, humming and electrified.
But still wary. Thatâs probably never going away.
Her lips part, and I take only a little taste, my tongue finding hers for a split second before retreating. She groans, and leans into me. Itâs one of those moments where weâre either going to stop, or things are going to rapidly escalate.
And I know what I need to do.
I kiss her one more perfect time, and then ease back. She releases me reluctantly, her chin dropping, her teeth on her lower lip.
Catching her chin in one hand, I tilt her face up to mine. She looksâ¦embarrassed. But I donât see why that should be. I kiss her perfect forehead, her sweet scent enveloping me once again. âSure glad I came out for pizza tonight,â I whisper.
âMe too,â she breathes. âUmâ¦â She gives herself a little shake. âI should go.â
âYou going to be okay from here?â My voice comes out husky. Thereâs no reason to worry for her, though. Weâre right on campus, and a half a block away students are spilling out of the concert hall, where a performance has just ended.
âYeah,â she whispers. âGoodnight.â
She gives me a shy smile before she walks off down the sidewalk.
I watch her go, feeling like a heel for not walking her home. But I donât want to explain that Iâve been asked by the dean of students not to set foot inside student housing this year. The trouble Iâm in is both terrifying and completely embarrassing.
Speaking of trouble.
Even though Iâd rather focus on Lianne and that amazing kiss, I pull out my phone and redial my dad. If I avoid him any longer heâs going to get mad, which will only make things worse for all of us. âSorry,â I say when he picks up. âItâs been a really busy day.â Thatâs sort of true, anyway.
âDaniel,â he says, his voice serious. âSon, I need you to call the new lawyer back tomorrow. He wants to get to work clearing your name, but he canât help you until he hears from you.â
âOkay,â I promise. The trouble is Iâve already made this promise and then broken it. And Dad isnât going to put up with that anymore.
â
, Daniel. This guy is the very best. Heâs a specialist, and heâs on your side. I canât understand why you donât just call.â
How is it so hard to explain? Itâs like being sent to an oncologist.
In this case, the specialist isnât trying to keep me out of an early grave. Heâs trying to keep me at Harkness.
âI will call him after my first class,â I promise again. Iâm going to do it, too. Iâll get this off my back so I can enjoy my date with Lianne. My first date in months.
âYou do that,â he says. âI need you to keep the faith.â
âI will.â But itâs an empty promise, because keeping the faith requires having some in the first place.
We hang up, and I lean against Capriâs brick wall and wonder for the hundredth time whether my father even believes Iâm innocent. He says he does. But my father is all about damage control. Heâs an accountant and a devout Catholic. He married my mother when they were both twenty-one. My brother came along a year later and began breaking records right out of the womb. Star athlete. Super scholar. Most likely to break every heart on the North Shore of Long Island.
Then thereâs me. The other brother. The difficult one. Even when they donât say it, I can hear my parents thinking:
And that was the college accused me of a heinous crime.
Itâs getting late now, and itâs really freaking cold out here. So I go back inside Capriâs to grab my coat and say goodnight.
At least one thing went right today. While I walk home by myself, Iâm humming âCold as Iceâ by Foreigner and remembering the shape of Lianneâs smile.