Authors: Rainbow Rowell
against it, letting herself fall apart.
Just for a minute. God.
God
.
There was a trash can sitting
right outside the door, and she got
up and hurled the Food 4 Less bag
into it. She wiped her eyes with
her
gymsuit.
Okay
, she told
herself, taking a deep breath,
get it
together. Don’t let them get to
you
. Those were her new jeans in
the trash. And her favorite shoes.
Her Vans. She walked over to the
trash and shook her head,
reaching down for the bag.
Fuck
you, Tina. Fuck you to the moon
.
She took another deep breath
and started walking.
There were no classrooms at
this end of the school, so at least
no one was watching her. She
stuck close to the building, and
when she turned the corner, she
walked under a row of windows.
She thought about walking right
home, but that might be worse.
It’d definitely be longer.
If she could just get to the
front door, the counselor’s offices
were right inside. Mrs Dunne
would help her. Mrs Dunne
wouldn’t tell her not to cry.
The security guard at the front
door
acted
like
girls
were
wandering in and out in their gym
clothes all day long. He glanced at
Eleanor’s pass and waved her on.
Almost there
, Eleanor thought.
Don’t run, just a few more doors
…
She
really
should
have
expected Park to walk through
one of them.
Ever since the first day they’d
met, Eleanor was always seeing
him in unexpected places. It was
like their lives were overlapping
lines, like they had their own
gravity. Usually, that serendipity
felt like the nicest thing the
universe had ever done for her.
Park walked out of a door on
the opposite side of the hallway
and stopped as soon as he saw
her. She tried to look away, but
she didn’t do it soon enough.
Park’s face turned red. He stared
at her. She pulled down her shorts
and stumbled forward, running
the
last
few
steps
to
the
counselors’ offices.
‘You don’t have to go back there,’
her mom said after Eleanor had
told her the whole story. (Almost
the whole story.)
Eleanor thought for a moment
about what she’d do if she didn’t
go back to school. Stay here all
day? And then what?
‘It’s okay,’ she said. Mrs
Dunne had driven Eleanor home
herself, and she’d promised to
bring a padlock for her gym
locker.
Eleanor’s mom dumped the
yellow plastic bag into the bathtub
and started rinsing out the clothes,
wrinkling her nose, even though
they didn’t smell.
‘Girls are so mean …’ she
said. ‘You’re lucky to have one
friend you can trust.’
Eleanor must have looked
confused.
‘Tina,’ her mom said. ‘You’re
lucky to have Tina.’
Eleanor nodded.
She stayed home that night.
Even though it was Friday, and
Park’s family always watched
movies and made popcorn in the
air popper on Fridays.
She couldn’t face him.
All she’d see was the look on
his face in the hallway. She’d feel
like she was still standing there in
her gymsuit.
CHAPTER 41
Park
Park went to bed early. His mom
kept bothering him about Eleanor.
‘Where’s Eleanor tonight?’ ‘She
running late?’ ‘You get in fight?’
Every time she said Eleanor’s
name, Park felt his face go hot.
‘I can tell that something
wrong,’ his mom said at dinner.
‘Did you get in fight? Did you
break up again?’
‘No,’ Park said. ‘I think maybe
she went home sick. She wasn’t
on the bus.’
‘I have a girlfriend now,’ Josh
said, ‘can she start coming over?’
‘No girlfriend,’ their mom
said, ‘too young.’
‘I’m almost thirteen!’
‘Sure,’ their dad said, ‘your
girlfriend can come over. If you’re
willing to give up your Nintendo.’
‘What?’ Josh was stricken.
‘Why?’
‘Because I said so,’ his dad
said. ‘Is it a deal?’
‘No! No way,’ Josh said.
‘Does Park have to give up
Nintendo?’
‘Yep. Is that okay with you,
Park?’
‘Fine.’
‘I’m like Billy Jack,’ their dad
said, ‘a warrior and a wise-man.’
It
wasn’t
much
of
a
conversation, but it was the most
his dad had said to Park in weeks.
Maybe his dad had been bracing
for the entire neighborhood to
swarm the house with torches and
pitchforks as soon as they saw
Park with eyeliner …
But almost nobody cared. Not
even
his
grandparents.
(His
grandma said he looked like
Rudolph Valentino, and he heard
his grandpa tell his dad, ‘You
should have seen what kids
looked like while you were in
Korea.’) ‘I’m going to bed,’ Park
said, standing up from the table. ‘I
don’t feel well either.’
‘So if Park doesn’t get to play
Nintendo anymore,’ Josh asked,
‘can I put it in my room?’
‘Park
can
play
Nintendo
whenever he wants,’ their dad
said.
‘God,’ Josh said, ‘everything
you guys do is unfair.’
Park turned off his light and
crawled onto his bed. He lay on
his back because he didn’t trust
his front. Or his hands, actually.
Or his brain.
After he saw Eleanor today, it
hadn’t occurred to him, not for at
least an hour, to wonder why she
was walking down the hall in her
gymsuit. And it took him another
hour to realize he should have said
something to her. He could have
said, ‘Hey’ or ‘What’s going on?’
or ‘Are you OK?’ Instead he’d
stared at her like he’d never seen
her before.
He
felt
like he’d never seen her
before.
It’s not like he hadn’t thought
about it (a lot) – Eleanor under her
clothes. But he could never fill in
any of the details. The only
women he could actually picture
naked were the women in the
magazines his dad every once in a
while remembered to hide under
his bed.
Magazines like that made
Eleanor freak. Just mention Hugh
Hefner, and she’d be off for half
an hour on prostitution and
slavery and the Fall of Rome. Park
hadn’t told her about his dad’s
twenty-year-old
Playboy
s, but he
hadn’t touched them since he met
her.
He could fill in some of the
details now. He could picture
Eleanor.
He
couldn’t
stop
picturing her. Why hadn’t he ever
noticed how tight those gymsuits
were? And how short …
And why hadn’t he expected
her to be so grown up? To have
so much negative space?
He closed his eyes and saw her
again. A stack of freckled heart
shapes, a perfectly made Dairy
Queen ice cream cone. Like Betty
Boop drawn with a heavy hand.
Hey
, he thought.
What’s going
on? Are you okay?
She must not be. She hadn’t
been on the bus on the way home.
She hadn’t come over after
school.
And
tomorrow
was
Saturday. What if he didn’t see her
all weekend?
How could he even look at her
now? He wouldn’t be able to. Not
without stripping her down to her
gymsuit. Without thinking about
that long white zipper.
Jesus
.
CHAPTER 42
Park
His family was going to the boat
show the next day, then out to
lunch, and maybe to the mall …
Park took forever to eat his
breakfast and take a shower.
‘Come on, Park,’ his dad said
sharply, ‘get dressed and put your
makeup on.’
Like he’d wear makeup to the
boat show.
‘Come on,’ his mom said,
checking her lipstick in the hall
mirror, ‘you know your dad hate
crowds.’
‘Do I have to go?’
‘You don’t want to go?’ She
scrunched and fluffed the back of
her hair.
‘No, I do,’ Park said. He
didn’t. ‘But what if Eleanor comes
over? I don’t want to miss the
chance to talk to her.’
‘Is something wrong? You
sure you didn’t fight?’
‘No, no fight. I’m just …
worried about her. And you know
I can’t call her house.’
His mom turned away from
the mirror. ‘Okay …’ she said,
frowning. ‘You stay. But vacuum,
okay? And put away big pile of
black clothes on your floor.’
‘Thanks,’
Park
said.
He
hugged her.
‘Park! Mindy!’ His dad was
standing at the front door. ‘Let’s
go!’
‘Park staying home,’ his mom
said. ‘We go.’
His dad flashed him a look,
but didn’t argue.
Park wasn’t used to being home
alone. He vacuumed. He put his
clothes away. He made himself a
sandwich and watched a
Young
Ones
marathon on MTV, then fell
asleep on the couch.
When he heard the doorbell,
he jerked up to answer it before
he was awake. His heart was
pounding, the way it does
sometimes when you sleep too
hard in the middle of the day, like
you can’t remember how to wake
up.
He was sure it was Eleanor. He
opened
the
door
without
checking.
Eleanor
Their car wasn’t in the driveway,
so Eleanor figured Park’s family
wasn’t home. They were probably
off doing awesome family stuff.
Eating lunch at Bonanza and
having their portraits taken in
matching sweaters.
She’d already given up on the
door when it opened. And before
she could act embarrassed and
uncomfortable about yesterday –
or pretend that she wasn’t – Park
was opening the screen door and
pulling her in by her sleeve.
He didn’t even close the door
before he put his arms around her,
his entire arms, all down the
length of her back.
Park usually held Eleanor with
his hands on her waist, like they
were slow-dancing. This wasn’t
slow-dancing.
This
was
…
something else. His arms were
around her, and his face was in
her hair, and there was no place
for the rest of her to go but against
him.
He was warm … Like
really
warm and fuzzy-soft. Like a
sleeping baby, she thought. (Sort
of. Not exactly.) She tried to feel
embarrassed again.
Park kicked the door closed
and fell back on it, pulling her
even tighter. His hair was clean
and straight and flopping into his
eyes, and his eyes were nearly
closed. Fuzzy. Soft.
‘Were you sleeping?’ she
whispered. Like he still might be.
He didn’t answer, but his
mouth fell on hers, open, and her
head fell back into his hand. He
was holding her so close, there
was nowhere to hide. She couldn’t
sit up or suck in or keep any
secrets.
Park made a noise, and it
hummed in her throat. She could
feel all ten of his fingers. On her
neck, on her back … Her own
hands hung stupidly at her side.
Like they weren’t even in the same
scene as his. Like
she
wasn’t even
in the same scene.
Park
must
have
noticed,
because he pulled his mouth back.
He tried to wipe it on the shoulder
of his T-shirt, and he looked at
her like he was seeing her for the
first time since she got there.