than sit with Hollis, Nate flops down beside me, which forces Fitz and Summer to shift closer to Hollis.
“I don’t have Ebola, you guys,” he grumbles.
I glance up at one of the television screens. Boston is on the attack. “Where’s Hunter?” I ask.
Almost immediately the mood shifts. Fitz looks unhappy. Summer’s face holds a touch of guilt, although I don’t think she needs to feel guilty. Sure, she and Hunter had a bit of a flirtation, but the moment she realized she had feelings for Fitz, she was honest with Hunter about it. He needs to get over it already.
“I dunno. He’s out and about, probably with some chick,” Hollis answers. “He’s a pussy posse of one lately.”
I purse my lips. I hope Hunter’s extracurricular activities aren’t affecting his performance on the ice. Then again, he scored both goals in the regulation periods last night, and got an assist on Nate’s OT goal, so it doesn’t seem to be a problem.
“Why don’t you two just kiss and make up?” I ask Fitz.
“I’m trying,” he protests. “Hunter’s not interested.”
“He’s being a douchebag,” Nate admits, which is alarming coming from the captain. It tells me that Hunter’s behavior is affecting the team. “Short of an intervention, there’s not much we can do. He’s playing well, and all the partying and hookups aren’t slowing him down during games.”
“Yes, but two teammates having beef is not good for morale,” Fitz counters.
“So squash the beef,” Nate says, rolling his eyes. “It’s your beef.”
“I’m trying,” Fitz repeats.
Summer squeezes his arm. “It’s okay. He’ll calm down eventually. I still think maybe I should move out…?”
“No,” Fitz and Hollis say immediately, and that’s that. She doesn’t bring it up again.
We watch the game for a while. I drink a beer, joke around with Nate, and ignore Hollis’s advances. During the first intermission, we discuss the semifinals results.
“Corsen and I watched a live stream of the Harvard-Princeton game,” Nate says darkly. “It was such fucking bullshit.”
I frown. “How so?”
“Goddamn Brooks Weston. He dished out two of the dirtiest hits I’ve ever seen. First one was leaping into a Princeton defender from the blindside, drove him headfirst into the boards. It completely flew off the ref’s radar, which is unfathomable—like how did he miss that? Second hit was a slash to a guy’s knee. Weston took a penalty for that one.”
Fitz shakes his head at Summer. “I hate that you partied with him in high school.”
“He’s a cool guy,” she protests.
“He’s a goon,” Nate says tightly. “A goon who doesn’t play fair.”
“Then the refs should call him out on it,” Summer points out.
“He does it in a way that escapes their notice,” Fitz says. “It’s a tactic for some teams—purposely fouling other players so that they retaliate and take a penalty. Harvard is really good at it.”
“That’s why my dad hates Daryl Pedersen so much,” I tell Summer. “Coach Pedersen fosters that kind of gameplay.”
“Didn’t your dad and Pedersen play together back in the day?” Nate asks.
“They were teammates at Yale,” I confirm. “They can’t stand each other.”
Summer looks intrigued. “Why?”
“I don’t know the exact details. Dad’s not much of a talker.”
His players snort in unison. “No shit,” Hollis cracks.
I shrug. “I think Pedersen played dirty back then, too, and Dad just didn’t like him.”
“I don’t blame Coach for hating him,” Nate mutters. “Pedersen’s a total fuckhead. He encourages his guys to be as brutal as possible.”
“Shit, people can get hurt,” Mike says, and there’s such sincerity in his tone that I can’t help but laugh. Something about Hollis is very endearing. He’s like a big kid.
“Not sure if you know this,” I solemnly tell Hollis, “but…hockey’s a violent sport.”
Fitz chuckles.
Before Hollis can issue a comeback, noise blasts out of his phone. He’s got the most annoying ringtone, a hip-hop track with a bunch of guys shouting nonsense. Suits him to a T, though.
“Yo,” he answers.
My attention returns to the Bruins game. Briefly. It’s quickly diverted back to Hollis as he provides the most bizarre half of a conversation.
“Slow down…what?” He listens. “Do I have a car? No.” Another long pause. “I mean… I guess I could borrow one? Wait, who is this?”
Nate barks out a laugh.
“What’s happening right now?” Hollis sounds bewildered. “Who is this? Ruby? What pee? Did we meet at Jesse Wilkes’s party?”
Summer makes a strangled sound and covers her mouth.
I look over and we exchange a huge grin. Not Ruby. Rupi. The energy tornado from the diner made her move. She hadn’t wasted any time, either.
“I