My stomach drops, and I barely hear the coach tell us, “You’re both eighteen now. Don’t test me on how much worse the consequences get from here on out regarding assault. Do not leave this room.” And then she points to Liv. “You’re still a student.”
Which means, she can still tell Liv what to do, considering this is a school-sanctioned trip, and her family would assume she was in a teacher’s care. Legal adult or not, Coomer’s responsible for us.
Coach slams the door, and I watch Liv swipe her cell phone from the bed. She dials, holding the phone to her ear as she digs in a bag Krisjen left, taking out a change of clothes.
I hear someone talk in Liv’s ear, and then she says. “Come to Cross and get me.” She snatches jeans, a bra, and a tank top from the bag. “I’m at the Marriott.”
I shake my head. “Yeah, by all means,” I tell her. “Get expelled and solve all our problems.”
I mean, technically, a whole stadium saw me attack her, so no one would fault her for refusing to stay locked in this room with me. She has every right to leave.
She almost looks at me, but casts her eyes back to her task. “Trace?” she says, trying to get her brother’s attention.
“She’s not joking, Liv!” I yell. “She’ll expel us for that stunt on the field just now! We can’t leave!”
Her eyes finally flash to mine, but only for a second. Her brother says something.
“You just want to see me suffer,” she tells him.
“No, I want you to get our fucking flag back!” he shouts.
And she pulls the phone away from her ear and stares at it for a second before tossing it on the bed. He hung up on her.
I almost smile. In her rush to leave Marymount and prove something to us, she’d forgotten about that.
“I doubt you can hide an expulsion from Dartmouth,” I remind her, content that no one is coming to pick her up.
She brushes past me, carrying her clothes. “What do you care?”
“I don’t,” I fire back. “I care about the team, and as much as it pisses me off, you’re the only one who can seem to perform up to a standard, so let’s get each other past this so you can come back to school, back to the team, and we can finish the year out amicably before we never have to see each other again.”
“I’m not going back to that school.”
And then she disappears into the bathroom, slamming and locking the door.
I stand there, still in my uniform, cold and covered in dirt and grass from the fight.
I reach out, putting my palm on the door. “And the play?” I ask, knowing that graduating from a top-notch prep school wasn’t the only thing keeping her at Marymount. We have the funds for the arts, unlike a lot of the public schools. “I hear you’re Callum’s understudy. The possibility of a major role? What you’ve been waiting for? Is she really more important than all the things you used to want?”
She’s silent for a moment, and then I hear, “Who?”
I pull my head up, staring through the door. “Don’t waste my time. I’m smarter than you think.”
It takes a few seconds, but the door swings open and Liv stands there in some faded black skinny jeans, white top, and her hair loose and looking like it hasn’t been combed in days.
“Martelle?” she asks, looking almost amused.
I back up a little, thankful for her calm tone for once. “It makes it easier, not being at school, doesn’t it?” I point out. “You both won’t be tempted to meet. You can keep your hookups secret. She can keep her job.”
Liv blinks, and then something crosses her eyes.
Laughter.
“Um, yeah.” She nods. “You nailed it.” She steps into the room, walking to the bed and putting her dirty clothes in the duffel bag. “She thought it would be best. It was just too hard, not wanting each other all the time, you know?”
I lean against the door to the room, watching her. “You’re still a student.”
“As everyone likes to remind me.”
“And I can still have her fired.”
She laughs under her breath, still tending to her bag and not sparing me eye contact. “Well, that would be one way to ensure I never return to Marymount, Clay.”