Authors: Rainbow Rowell
her. They both slouched down
low.
‘That was the longest weekend
of my life,’ he said.
She laughed and leaned into
him.
‘Are you over me?’ he asked.
She wished she could say things
like that. That she could ask him
questions like that, even in a
joking way.
‘Yeah,’ she said. ‘Over and
over and over.’
‘Yeah?’
‘Yeah, no.’
She reached into his jacket and
slipped the Beatles tape into his T-
shirt pocket. He caught her hand
and held it to his heart.
‘What’s this?’ He pulled the
tape out with his other hand.
‘The
greatest
songs
ever
written. You’re welcome.’
He rubbed her hand against his
chest. Just barely. Just enough to
make her blush.
‘Thank you,’ he said.
She waited until they were at
her locker to tell him the other
thing. She didn’t want anyone to
hear. He was standing next to her
and
purposely
bumping
his
backpack into her shoulder.
‘I told my mom that I might go
over to a friend’s house after
school.’
‘You did?’
‘Yeah, it doesn’t have to be
today though. I don’t think she’ll
change her mind.’
‘No, today. Come over today.’
‘Don’t you have to ask your
mom?’
He shook his head. ‘She
doesn’t care. I can even have girls
in my room, if I keep the door
open.’
‘Girl-zzz? You’ve had enough
girls in your room to require a
ruling?’
‘Oh, yeah,’ he said. ‘You
know me.’
I don’t, she thought to herself,
not really.
Park
For the first time in weeks, Park
didn’t have that anxious feeling in
his stomach on the way home
from school, like he had to soak
up enough of Eleanor to keep him
until the next day.
He had a different anxious
feeling. Now that he was actually
introducing Eleanor to his mom,
he couldn’t help but see her the
way his mom was going to.
His mom was a beautician who
sold Avon. She never left the
house without touching up her
mascara. When Patti Smith was on
Saturday Night Live
, his mom had
gotten upset – ‘Why she want to
look like man? It’s so sad.’
Eleanor, today, was wearing
her sharkskin suit jacket and an
old plaid cowboy shirt. She had
more in common with his grandpa
than his mom.
And it wasn’t just the clothes.
It was her.
Eleanor wasn’t … nice.
She was good. She was
honorable. She was honest. She
would definitely help an old lady
across the street. But nobody – not
even the old lady – would ever
say, ‘Have you met that Eleanor
Douglas? What a nice girl.’
Park’s mom liked nice. She
loved nice. She liked smiling and
small talk and eye contact … All
things Eleanor sucked at.
Also, his mom didn’t get
sarcasm. And he was pretty sure it
wasn’t a language thing. She just
didn’t get it. She called David
Letterman ‘the ugly, mean one on
after Johnny.’
Park realized that his hands
were sweating and let go of
Eleanor’s. He put his hand on her
knee instead, and that felt so good,
so new, he stopped thinking about
his mom for a few minutes.
When they got to his stop, he
stood in the aisle and waited for
her. But she shook her head. ‘I’ll
meet you there,’ she said.
He felt relieved. And then
guilty. As soon as the bus pulled
away, he ran to his house. His
brother wouldn’t be home yet, that
was good. ‘Mom!’
‘In here!’ she called from the
kitchen. She was painting her nails
a pearly pink.
‘Mom,’ he said. ‘Hey. Um,
Eleanor’s coming over in few
minutes. My, um, my Eleanor.
Now. Is that okay?’
‘Right now?’ She shook the
bottle. Click, click, click.
‘Yeah, don’t make a big deal,
okay? Just … be cool.’
‘Okay,’ she said. ‘I’m cool.’
He
nodded,
then
looked
around the kitchen and the living
room to make sure there was
nothing weird sitting out. He
checked his room, too. His mom
had made his bed.
He opened the door before
Eleanor knocked.
‘Hi,’ she said. She looked
nervous. Well, she looked angry,
but he was pretty sure that was
because she was nervous.
‘Hey,’ he said. This morning,
all he’d been able to think about
was how to get more servings of
Eleanor into his day, but now that
she was here … he wished he had
thought this through. ‘Come on
in,’ he said. ‘And smile,’ he
whispered at the second-to-last
second, ‘okay?’
‘What?’
‘
Smile
.’
‘Why?’
‘Never mind.’
His mom was standing in the
doorway to the kitchen.
‘Mom, this is Eleanor,’ he said.
His mom smiled broadly.
Eleanor smiled, too, but it was
all messed up. She looked like she
was squinting into a bright light or
getting ready to tell someone bad
news.
He thought he saw his mom’s
pupils widen, but he was probably
imagining it.
Eleanor went to shake his
mom’s hand, but she waved them
in the air, like ‘sorry my nails are
wet,’ a gesture that Eleanor didn’t
seem to recognize.
‘It’s
nice
to
meet
you,
Eleanor.’
El-la-no
.
‘It’s nice to meet you,’ Eleanor
said, still squinty and weird.
‘You live close enough to
walk?’ his mom asked.
Eleanor nodded.
‘That’s nice,’ his mom said.
Eleanor nodded.
‘You kids want some pop?
Some snacks?’
‘No,’ Park said, cutting her
off. ‘I mean …’
Eleanor shook her head.
‘We’re just going to watch
some TV,’ he said, ‘okay?’
‘Sure,’ his mom said. ‘You
know where to find me.’
She went back in the kitchen,
and Park walked over to the
couch. He wished he lived in a
split-level or a house with a
finished basement. Whenever he
went over to Cal’s house in west
Omaha, Cal’s mom sent them
downstairs and left them alone.
Park sat on the couch. Eleanor
sat at the other end. She was
staring at the floor and chewing
on the skin around her fingernails.
He turned on MTV and took a
deep breath.
After a few minutes, he
scooted toward the middle of the
couch. ‘Hey,’ he said. Eleanor
stared at the coffee table. There
was big bunch of red glass grapes
on the table. His mom loved
grapes. ‘
Hey
,’ he said again.
He scooted closer.
‘Why did you tell me to
smile?’ she whispered.
‘I don’t know,’ he said.
‘Because I was nervous.’
‘Why are you nervous? This is
your house.’
‘I know, but I’ve never
brought anyone like you home
before.’
She looked at the television.
There was a Wang Chung video
on.
Eleanor stood up suddenly.
‘I’ll see you tomorrow.’
‘No,’ he said. He stood up,
too. ‘What? Why?’
‘Just. I’ll see you tomorrow,’
she said.
‘No,’ he said. He took her arm
by the elbow. ‘You just got here.
What is it?’
She
looked
up
at
him
painfully, ‘Anyone like me?’
‘That’s not what I meant,’ he
said. ‘I meant anyone I care
about.’
She took a breath and shook
her head. There were tears on her
cheeks. ‘It doesn’t matter. I
shouldn’t be here, I’m going to
embarrass you. I’m going home.’
‘No,’ he pulled her closer.
‘Calm down, okay?’
‘What if your mom sees me
crying?’
‘That … wouldn’t be great, but
I don’t want you to leave.’ He was
afraid that if she left now, she’d
never come back. ‘Come on, sit
next to me.’
Park sat down and pulled
Eleanor down next to him, so he
was sitting between her and the
kitchen.
‘I hate meeting new people,’
she whispered.
‘Why?’
‘Because they never like me.’
‘I liked you.’
‘No, you didn’t, I had to wear
you down.’
‘I like you now.’ He put his
arm around her.
‘Don’t. What if your mom
comes in?’
‘She won’t care.’
‘I care,’ Eleanor said, pushing
him away. ‘It’s too much. You’re
making me nervous.’
‘Okay,’ he said, giving her
space. ‘Just don’t leave.’
She nodded and looked at the
TV.
After a while, maybe twenty
minutes, she stood up again.
‘Stay a little longer,’ he said.
‘Don’t you want to meet my dad?’
‘I super don’t want to meet
your dad.’
‘Will
you
come
back
tomorrow?’
‘I don’t know.’
‘I wish I could walk you
home.’
‘You can walk me to the
door.’ He did.
‘Will you tell your mom I said
goodbye? I don’t want her to
think I’m rude.’
‘Yeah.’
Eleanor stepped out onto his
porch.
‘Hey,’ he said. It came out
hard and frustrated. ‘I told you to
smile because you’re pretty when
you smile.’
She walked to the bottom of
the steps, then looked back at him.
‘It’d be better if you thought I was
pretty when I don’t.’
‘That’s not what I meant,’ he
said, but she was walking away.
When Park went inside, his
mother came out to smile at him.
‘Your Eleanor seems nice,’ she
said.
He nodded and went to his
room. No, he thought, falling onto
his bed. No, she doesn’t.
Eleanor
He was probably going to break
up with her tomorrow. Whatever.
At least she wouldn’t have to meet
his dad. God, what must his dad
be like? He looked just like Tom
Selleck; Eleanor had seen a family
portrait sitting on their TV cabinet.
Park in grade school, by the way?
Extremely
cute.
Like,
Webster
cute. The whole family was cute.
Even his white brother.
His mom looked exactly like a
doll. In
The Wizard of Oz
– the
book, not the movie – Dorothy
goes to this place called the Dainty
China Country, and all the people
are tiny and perfect. When Eleanor
was little and her mom read her
the story, Eleanor had thought the
Dainty
China
people
were
Chinese. But they were actually
ceramic, or they’d
turn
ceramic, if
you tried to sneak one back to
Kansas.
Eleanor imagined Park’s dad,
Tom Selleck, tucking his Dainty
China person into his flak jacket
and sneaking her out of Korea.
Park’s mom made Eleanor feel
like a giant. Eleanor couldn’t be
that much taller than her, maybe
three or four inches. But Eleanor
was
so much
bigger. If you were
an alien who came to Earth to
study its life forms, you wouldn’t
even think the two of them were
the same species.
When Eleanor was around
girls like that – like Park’s mom,
like Tina, like most of the girls in
the neighborhood – she wondered
where they put their organs. Like,
how could you have a stomach
and intestines and kidneys, and
still wear such tiny jeans? Eleanor
knew that she was fat, but she
didn’t feel
that
fat. She could feel
her bones and muscles just
underneath all the chub, and they
were big, too. Park’s mom could
wear Eleanor’s ribcage like a
roomy vest.
Park was probably going to
break up with her tomorrow, and
not even because she was huge.
He was going to break up with her
because she was a huge mess.