Authors: Rainbow Rowell
Plus, the whole process tickled
like crazy. Eleanor didn’t know
whether Park was watching. She
hoped not.
A few minutes later, her hair
was hot-oiled and wrapped in a
towel so tight it hurt her forehead.
Park was sitting across from her,
trying to smile, but looking almost
as uncomfortable as she felt.
His mom was going through
box after box of Avon samples. ‘I
know it’s here somewhere,’ she
said.
‘Cinnamon,
cinnamon,
cinnamon … A-ha!’
She wheeled her chair over to
Eleanor. ‘Okay. Close eyes.’
Eleanor stared at her. She was
holding up a little brown pencil.
‘Close eyes,’ she said again.
‘Why?’ Eleanor said.
‘Don’t worry. This wash off.’
‘But I don’t wear makeup.’
‘Why not?’
Maybe Eleanor should say that
she wasn’t allowed to. That would
sound nicer than ‘because makeup
is a lie.’
‘I don’t know,’ Eleanor said,
‘it’s just not me.’
‘Yes, you,’ his mom said,
looking at the pencil. ‘Very good
color for you. Cinnamon.’
‘Is that lipstick?’
‘No, eyeliner.’
Eleanor especially didn’t wear
eyeliner.
‘What does it do?’
‘It’s makeup,’ his mom said,
exasperated. ‘It makes you pretty.’
Eleanor felt like she had
something in her eye. Like fire.
‘Mom …’ Park said.
‘Here,’ his mom said. ‘I’ll
show you.’ She turned to Park,
and before either of them realized
what she was planning, she had
her thumb at the corner of his eye.
‘Cinnamon too light,’ she
muttered. She picked up a
different pencil. ‘Onyx.’
‘Mom …’ Park said painfully,
but he didn’t move.
His mom sat so that Eleanor
could see, then deftly drew a line
along Park’s eyelashes. ‘Open.’ He
did. ‘Nice … close.’ She did the
other eye, too. Then she added
another line under his eye and
licked her thumb to wipe away a
smudge. ‘There, nice.’
‘See?’ she said, sitting back so
that Eleanor could see. ‘Easy.
Pretty.’
Park didn’t look pretty. He
looked dangerous. Like Ming the
Merciless. Or a member of Duran
Duran.
‘You look like Robert Smith,’
Eleanor said. But … yeah, she
thought,
prettier
.
He looked down. Eleanor
couldn’t look away.
His mom swooped in between
them. ‘Okay, now close eyes,’ she
said to Eleanor. ‘Open. Nice …
Close again …’ It felt exactly like
having someone draw on your eye
with a pencil. Then it was over,
and Park’s mom was rubbing
something cold on Eleanor’s
cheeks.
‘This very easy routine,’ his
mom said. ‘Foundation, powder,
eyeliner, eye shadow, mascara, lip
liner, lipstick, blush. Eight steps,
take you fifteen minutes tops.’
Park’s
mom
was
very
businesslike, like someone with a
cooking show on PBS. Pretty
soon
she
was
unwrapping
Eleanor’s hair and standing behind
her.
Eleanor wanted to look at Park
again, now that she could, but she
didn’t want him looking back. Her
face felt so heavy and sticky, she
probably looked like one of the
Designing Women
.
Park scooted his chair closer
to hers and started bouncing his
fist on her knee. It took Eleanor a
second
to
realize
he
was
challenging her to a game of
Rock, Paper, Scissors.
She played along. God. Any
excuse to touch him. Any excuse
not to look at him directly. He’d
rubbed his eyes, so he didn’t look
painted anymore – but he still
looked like something Eleanor
didn’t have words for.
‘That’s how Park keep little
kids busy during haircuts,’ his
mom said. ‘You must look scared,
Eleanor. Don’t worry. I promise
no cutting.’
Eleanor and Park both made
scissors.
His mom rubbed half a can of
mousse into her hair, then blew it
dry with a diffuser (which Eleanor
had never heard of before but was
apparently very, very important).
According to Park’s mom,
everything Eleanor was doing with
her hair – washing it with
whatever, brushing it, tying in
beads and silk flowers – was dead
wrong.
She should be diffusing and
scrunching
and,
if
possible,
sleeping on a satin pillowcase.
‘I think you look really good
with bangs,’ his mom said.
‘Maybe next time, we try bangs.’
There will never be a next
time, Eleanor promised herself
and God.
‘Okay, all done.’ Park’s mom
was all smiles. ‘Look so pretty …
Ready to see?’ She turned Eleanor
around to the mirror. ‘Ta-daa!’
Eleanor looked at her own lap.
‘Have to look, Eleanor. Look,
mirror, so pretty.’
Eleanor couldn’t. She could
feel them both watching her. She
wanted to disappear, to drop
through a trap door. This whole
thing was a bad idea. A terrible
idea. She was going to cry, she
was going to make a scene. Park’s
mom was going to go back to
hating her.
‘Hey, Mindy.’ Park’s dad
opened the door and leaned into
the garage. ‘Phone call. Oh, hey,
look at you, Eleanor, you look like
a
Solid Gold
dancer.’
‘See?’ his mom said, ‘I told
you – pretty. Don’t look in mirror
until I come back. Looking in
mirror best part.’
She hurried into the house,
and Eleanor hid her face in her
hands, trying not to mess anything
up. She felt Park’s hands on her
wrists.
‘I’m sorry,’ he said. ‘I guess I
knew you’d hate this, but I didn’t
think you’d hate it this much.’
‘It’s just so embarrassing.’
‘Why?’
‘Because … you’re all looking
at me.’
‘I’m always looking at you,’
he said.
‘I know, I wish you’d stop.’
‘She’s just trying to get to
know you. This is her thing.’
‘Do I look like a
Solid Gold
dancer?’
‘No …’
‘Oh my God,’ she said, ‘I do.’
‘No, you look … just look.’
‘I don’t want to.’
‘Look now,’ he said, ‘before
my mom gets back.’
‘Only if you close your eyes.’
‘Okay, they’re closed.’
Eleanor uncovered her face
and looked in the mirror. It wasn’t
as embarrassing as she thought –
because it was like looking at a
different person. Someone with
cheekbones and giant eyes and
really wet lips. Her hair was still
curly, curlier than ever, but calmer
somehow. Less deranged.
Eleanor hated it, she hated all
of it.
‘Can I open my eyes?’ Park
asked.
‘No.’
‘Are you crying?’
‘No.’ Of course she was. She
was going to ruin her fake face,
and Park’s mom was going to go
back to hating her.
Park opened his eyes and sat
in front of Eleanor on the vanity.
‘Is it so bad?’ he asked.
‘It’s not me.’
‘Of course it’s you.’
‘I just, I look like I’m in
costume. Like I’m trying to be
something that I’m not.’
Like she was trying to be
pretty and popular. It was the
trying
part that was so disgusting.
‘I think your hair looks really
nice,’ Park said.
‘It’s not
my
hair.’
‘It is …’
‘I don’t want your mom to see
me like this. I don’t want to hurt
her feelings.’
‘Kiss me.’
‘What?’
He kissed her. Eleanor felt her
shoulders fall and her stomach
untwist. Then it started twisting in
the other direction. She pulled
away.
‘Are you kissing me because I
look like someone else?’
‘You don’t look like someone
else. Plus, that’s crazy.’
‘Do you like me better like
this?’ she asked. ‘Because I’m
never going to look like this
again.’
‘I like you the same … I kind
of miss your freckles.’ He rubbed
her cheeks with his sleeve.
‘There,’ he said.
‘
You
look like a different
person,’ she said, ‘and you’re just
wearing eyeliner.’
‘Do you like me better?’
She rolled her eyes, but she
felt the heat in her neck. ‘You
look
different.
You
look
unsettling.’
‘You look like
you
,’ he said.
‘You with the volume turned up.’
She looked in the mirror
again.
‘The thing is,’ Park said. ‘I’m
pretty sure my mom was holding
back. I think she thinks this is the
natural look.’
Eleanor laughed. The door to
the house opened.
‘Awww, I told you guys to
wait,’ his mom said. ‘Were you
surprised?’
Eleanor nodded.
‘Did you cry? Oh, I miss it!’
‘Sorry if I messed it up,’
Eleanor said.
‘No mess,’ his mom said,
‘waterproof mascara and stay-put
foundation.’
‘Thank you,’ Eleanor said
carefully. ‘I could hardly believe
the difference.’
‘I’ll make you a kit,’ his mom
said. ‘These all colors I never use
anyway. Here, sit down, Park. I
trim your hair while we here.
Looking shaggy …’
Eleanor sat in front of him and
played Rock, Paper, Scissors on
his knee.
Park
She looked like a different person,
and Park didn’t
know
if he liked it
better. Or at all.
He couldn’t figure out why it
upset her so much. Sometimes, it
seemed like she was trying to hide
everything that was pretty about
her. Like she wanted to look ugly.
That
was
something
his
mother would say. Which is why
he hadn’t said it to Eleanor. (Did
that count as holding back?) He
got why Eleanor tried so hard to
look different. Sort of. It was
because
she
was
different –
because she wasn’t afraid to be.
(Or maybe she was just more
afraid of being like everyone else.)
There
was
something
really
exciting about that. He liked being
near that, that kind of brave and
crazy.
‘Unsettling,
how?’
he’d
wanted to ask her.
The next morning, Park took
the
onyx
eyeliner
into
the
bathroom and put it on. He was
messier than his mom, but he
thought that might look better.
More masculine.
He looked in the mirror. ‘This
really make your eyes pop,’ his
mom always told her customers,
and it was true. The eyeliner did
make his eyes pop. It also made
him look even less white.
Then Park did his hair like he
usually did – flared up in the
middle, all messy and tall, like it
was reaching for something.
Usually, as soon as he did that,
Park combed his hair out and
down again.
Today he left it wild.
His dad flipped at breakfast.
Flipped
. Park tried to sneak out
without seeing him, but his mom
was
non-negotiable
about
breakfast. Park hung his head
over the cereal bowl.
‘What’s wrong with your
hair?’ his dad asked.
‘Nothing.’
‘Wait a minute, look at me … I
said
look at me
.’
Park lifted his head, but
looked away.
‘What the fuck, Park?’
‘Jamie!’ his mother said.
‘Look at him, Mindy, he’s
wearing makeup! Are you fucking
kidding me, Park?’
‘No excuse to cuss,’ his mom
said. She looked nervously at
Park, like maybe this was her
fault. Maybe it was. Maybe she
shouldn’t have tried out lipstick
samples on him when he was in
kindergarten. Not that he wanted
to wear lipstick …
Probably.