Authors: Rainbow Rowell
prettiest woman he’d ever seen.
When Eleanor first heard
about Richie, she was leaning
against their old couch, reading a
Life
magazine, and drinking a
virgin banana daiquiri. She wasn’t
exactly eavesdropping – all her
mom’s
friends
liked
having
Eleanor around. They liked that
she watched their kids without
complaining, they said she was
wise beyond her years. If Eleanor
was quiet, they sort of forgot she
was in the room. And if they
drank too much, they didn’t care.
‘Never trust a man, Eleanor!’
they’d all shouted at her, at one
point or another.
‘Especially if he hates to
dance!’
But when her mom told them
that Richie said she was as pretty
as a spring day, they’d all sighed
and asked her to tell them more.
Of course
he said she’s the
prettiest woman he’s ever seen,
Eleanor thought. She undoubtedly
is.
Eleanor was twelve, and she
couldn’t imagine a guy fucking
her mom over worse than her dad
had.
She didn’t know there were
things worse than selfish.
Anyway. She always tried to leave
Park’s house before dinner – just
in case her mom was right about
wearing out her welcome – and
because, if Eleanor left early, there
was a better chance that she’d beat
Richie home.
Hanging out with Park every
day had really messed up her
bath-taking routine. (A fact she
was never ever going to tell him,
no matter how sharey-carey they
got.)
The only safe time to take a
bath in her house was right after
school. If Eleanor went over to
Park’s house right after school,
she had to hope that Richie would
still be at the Broken Rail when
she got home that night. And then
she had to take a really fast bath
because the back door was right
across from the bathroom, and it
could open at any time.
She could tell that all this
sneaky bath-taking was making
her mom nervous, but it wasn’t
exactly Eleanor’s fault. She’d
considered taking a shower in the
locker room at school, but that
might even be more dangerous:
Tina
et al.
The other day at lunch, Tina
had a made big point of walking
by Eleanor’s table and mouthing
the C-word. The c-u-n-t word.
(Richie didn’t even use that word,
which implied an unimaginable
degree of filth.)
‘What is her problem?’ DeNice
asked. Rhetorically.
‘She thinks she’s all that,’
Beebi said.
‘She ain’t all that,’ DeNice
said.
‘Walking
around
here
looking like a little boy in a
miniskirt.’
Beebi giggled.
‘That hair is just wrong,’
DeNice said, still looking at Tina.
‘She needs to wake up a little
earlier and try to decide whether
she wants to look like Farrah
Fawcett or Rick James.’
Beebi
and
Eleanor
both
cracked up.
‘I mean, pick one, girl,’
DeNice said, milking it. ‘Pick.
One.’
‘Oh, girl!’ Beebi said, slapping
Eleanor’s leg. ‘There’s your man.’
They all looked out the cafeteria’s
glass wall. Park was walking by
with a few other guys. He was
wearing jeans and a T-shirt that
said ‘Minor Threat.’ He looked
into the cafeteria and smiled when
he saw Eleanor. Beebi giggled.
‘He is
cute
,’ DeNice said. Like
it was something certifiable.
‘I know,’ Eleanor said. ‘I want
to eat his face.’
They all three giggled until
DeNice called them back to order.
Park
‘So,’ Cal said.
Park was still smiling. Even
though they were long past the
cafeteria.
‘You and Eleanor, huh?’
‘Uh … yeah,’ Park said.
‘Yeah,’ Cal said, nodding.
‘Everybody knows. I mean, I’ve
known forever. I could tell by the
way you stare at her in English …
I was just waiting for
you
to tell
me.’
‘Oh,’ Park said, looking up at
Cal. ‘Sorry. I’m going out with
Eleanor.’
‘Why didn’t you tell me?’
‘I figured you knew.’
‘I did know,’ Cal said. ‘But,
you know, we’re friends. We’re
supposed to talk about these
things.’
‘I didn’t think you’d get it …’
‘I don’t get it. No offense.
Eleanor still scares the crap out of
me. But if
you
’re getting it – you
know,
getting
it – I want to know
about it. I want the whole freaking
report.’
‘This, actually,’ Park said.
‘This is why I didn’t tell you.’
CHAPTER 35
Eleanor
Park’s mom asked him to set the
table. That was Eleanor’s cue to
leave. The sun had almost set. She
rushed down the steps before Park
could stop her … and almost ran
into his dad standing in the
driveway.
‘Hey,
Eleanor,’
he
said,
startling her. He was messing
around with something in the back
of his truck.
‘Hey,’ she said, rushing past
him. He really did look an awful
lot like Magnum P.I. It wasn’t
something you got used to.
‘Hey, wait, come here,’ he
said.
She felt something go slightly
wrong in her stomach. She
stopped and stepped toward him,
but only a little.
‘Look,’ he said, ‘I’m getting
tired of asking you to stay for
dinner.’
‘Okay …’ she said.
‘What I mean is, I want you to
feel like you have a standing
invitation.
You’re
just
…
welcome, okay?’ He seemed
uncomfortable, and it was making
her uncomfortable. Way more
uncomfortable than she usually
felt around him.
‘Okay …’ she said.
‘Look, Eleanor … I know
your stepdad.’
This could go a million
different ways, she thought. All of
them awful.
Park’s dad kept talking, one
hand on his truck, the other on the
back of his neck, like he was in
pain. ‘We grew up together. I’m
older than Richie, but this is a
small neighborhood, and I’ve put
in my time at the Rail …’
The sun was too far gone to
see his face. Eleanor still wasn’t
sure what he was getting at.
‘I know that your stepdad isn’t
an easy man to be around,’ Park’s
dad said finally, stepping toward
her. ‘And I’m just saying, you
know, that if it’s easier to be over
here, then you should just be here.
That would make Mindy and I feel
a lot better, okay?’
‘Okay,’ she said.
‘So this is the last time I’m
going to ask you to stay for
dinner.’
Eleanor smiled, and he smiled
back, and for a second he looked
a lot more like Park than Tom
Selleck.
Park
Eleanor on the couch, holding his
hand. Across from him at the
kitchen table with her homework
…
Helping him carry in groceries
for his grandmother. Politely
eating everything his mom made
for dinner, even if it was
something completely disgusting
like liver and onions …
They were always together,
and it still wasn’t enough.
He still hadn’t found a way to
put his arms all the way around
her. And he still didn’t have
enough opportunities to kiss her.
She wouldn’t go to his room with
him …
‘We can listen to music,’ he’d
say.
‘Your mom …’
‘Doesn’t care. We’ll leave the
door open.’
‘Where will we sit?’
‘On my bed.’
‘God. No.’
‘On the floor.’
‘I don’t want her to think I’m
slutty.’
He wasn’t sure his mother
even thought of Eleanor as a girl.
She liked Eleanor though.
More than she used to. Just the
other day, his mom had said that
Eleanor had excellent manners.
‘She’s very quiet,’ his mom
said, like that was a good thing.
‘She’s just nervous,’ Park said.
‘Why nervous?’
‘I don’t know,’ Park said. ‘She
just is.’
He could tell that his mom still
hated Eleanor’s clothes. She was
always looking her up and down
and shaking her head when she
thought Eleanor wasn’t looking.
Eleanor was unfailingly polite
with his mom. She even tried to
make small talk. One Saturday
night after dinner, Park’s mom
was sorting her Avon shipment on
the dining room table while Park
and Eleanor played cards. ‘How
long have you been a beautician?’
Eleanor asked, looking over at all
the bottles.
His mom loved that word.
‘Since Josh start school. I get
my GED, I go to beauty school,
get license, get permit …’
‘Wow,’ Eleanor said.
‘I always do hair,’ his mom
said, ‘even before.’ She opened a
pink bottle of lotion and smelled
it. ‘Little girl … cut doll’s hair,
paint on makeup.’
‘That sounds like my sister,’
Eleanor said. ‘I could never do
any of that.’
‘Not so hard …’ his mom said,
looking up at her. His mom’s eyes
lit up. ‘Hey, I have good idea,’ she
said. ‘I do your hair. We have
makeover night.’
Eleanor’s
mouth
dropped
open. She was probably picturing
herself with feathered hair and
fake eyelashes.
‘Oh, no …’ she said. ‘I
couldn’t …’
‘Yes,’ his mom said, ‘so much
fun!’
‘Mom, no,’ Park said, ‘Eleanor
doesn’t want a makeover … She
doesn’t need a makeover,’ he
added, as soon as he thought of it.
‘Not big makeover,’ his mom
said. She was already reaching for
Eleanor’s
hair.
‘No
cutting.
Nothing we can’t wash off.’
Park
looked
at
Eleanor,
pleading. Hopefully, she’d know
that he was pleading because it
would make his mom happy, not
because he thought there was
anything wrong with her.
‘No cutting?’ Eleanor said.
His mom was fingering a curl.
‘Better light in the garage,’ she
said, ‘come on.’
Eleanor
Park’s mom put Eleanor in the
shampoo chair and snapped her
fingers at Park. To Eleanor’s
horror – to her ongoing horror –
Park came over and started filling
the sink with water. He took a
pink towel down from a big stack,
and expertly Velcroed it around
Eleanor’s neck, carefully lifting
out her hair.
‘I’m sorry,’ he whispered. ‘Do
you want me to leave?’
‘No,’ she mouthed, grabbing
his shirt.
Yes
, she thought. She
was already starting to dissolve
with embarrassment. She couldn’t
feel the tips of her fingers.
But if Park left, there’d be no
one to stop his mom if she
decided to give Eleanor giant,
claw-shaped bangs or a spiral
perm. Or both.
Eleanor wouldn’t try to stop
her, no matter what; she was a
guest in this garage. She’d eaten
this
woman’s
food
and
manhandled her son – she was in
no position to argue.
Park’s mom pushed him aside
and laid Eleanor’s head firmly
back into the sink. ‘What kind of
shampoo you use?’
‘I don’t know,’ Eleanor said.
‘How you not know?’ his
mom asked, feeling her hair.
‘Feels too dry. Curly hair is dry,
you know?’
Eleanor shook her head.
‘Hmmm …’ Park’s mom said.
She tipped Eleanor’s head back
into the water and told Park to go
stick a hot-oil pack in the
microwave.
It was really, really strange
having Park’s mom wash her hair.
She was practically standing in
Eleanor’s lap; her angel necklace
hung right over Eleanor’s mouth.