He was right behind them.
Eleanor fell against the banister and practically ran to the front door on all fours. She got outside and kept running to the end of the sidewalk. Ben was sitting on the porch, playing with his Hot Wheels. He stopped and watched Eleanor run by.
Eleanor wondered if she should keep running, but where would she go? Even when she was a little girl, she never fantasized about running away. She could never imagine herself past the edge of the yard. Where would she go? Who would take her?
When the front door opened again, Eleanor took a few steps into the street.
It was just her mom. She took Eleanor’s arm and started walking quickly toward the neighbor’s house.
If Eleanor would have known then what was about to happen, she would have run back to tell Ben goodbye. She would have looked for Maisie and Mouse and kissed them each hard on the cheek. Maybe she would have asked to go back inside to see the baby.
And if Richie had been inside waiting for her, maybe she would have dropped to her knees and begged him to let her stay. Maybe she would have said anything he wanted her to.
If he wanted that now – if he wanted her to beg for forgiveness, for mercy, if that was the price she had to pay to stay – she’d do it.
She hoped he couldn’t see that.
She hoped none of them could see what was left of her.
Park
She ignored Mr Stessman in English class.
In history, she stared out the window.
On the way home, she wasn’t irritable; she wasn’t anything at all.
‘Okay?’ he asked.
She nodded her head against him.
When she got off the bus at her stop, Park still hadn’t told her. So he jumped up and followed her, even though he knew she wouldn’t want him to.
‘Park …’ she said, looking nervously down the street to her house.
‘I know,’ he said, ‘but I wanted to tell you …
I’m not grounded anymore.’
‘You’re not?’
‘Uh-uh.’ He shook his head.
‘That’s great,’ she said.
‘Yeah …’
She looked back at her house.
‘It means you can come over again,’ he said.
‘Oh,’ she said.
‘I mean, if you want to.’ This wasn’t going like he thought it would. Even when Eleanor was looking at him, she wasn’t looking at him.
‘Oh,’ she said.
‘Eleanor? Is everything okay?’
She nodded.
‘Do you still …’ He hung onto the backpack straps across his chest. ‘I mean, do you still want to? Do you still miss me?’
She nodded. She looked like she was going to cry. Park hoped she wouldn’t cry at his house again … If she ever came back. It felt like she was slipping away.
‘I’m just really tired,’ she said.
CHAPTER 26
Eleanor
Did she miss him?
She wanted to lose herself in him. To tie his arms around her like a tourniquet.
If she showed him how much she needed him, he’d run away.
CHAPTER 27
Eleanor
Eleanor felt better the next morning. Mornings usually got the best of her.
This morning, she woke up with that stupid cat curled up against her like it couldn’t tell that she’d never liked him or cats in general.
And then her mom gave her a fried egg sandwich that Richie hadn’t wanted, and pinned an old, chipped glass flower to Eleanor’s jacket.
‘I found it at the thrift shop,’ her mom said.
‘Maisie wanted it, but I saved it for you.’ She smudged vanilla behind Eleanor’s ears.
‘I might go to Tina’s house after school,’
Eleanor said.
‘Okay, have fun.’
Eleanor hoped that Park would be waiting for her at the bus stop, but she wouldn’t blame him if he wasn’t.
He was. He was standing there in the half-light, wearing a gray trench coat and black high-tops, and watching for her.
She ran past the last few houses to get to him.
‘Good morning,’ she said, shoving him with both hands.
He laughed and stepped back. ‘Who are you?’
‘I’m your girlfriend,’ she said. ‘Ask anybody.’
‘No … my girlfriend is sad and quiet and keeps me up all night worrying about her.’
‘Bummer. Sounds like you need a different girlfriend.’
He smiled and shook his head.
It was cold and half dark, and Eleanor could see Park’s breath. She resisted the urge to try to swallow it.
‘I told my mom that I was going to a friend’s house after school …’ she said.
‘Yeah?’
Park was the only person she knew who wore his backpack actually on his shoulders, not slung over one side – and he was always holding onto the straps, like he’d just jumped out of a plane or something. It was extremely cute. Especially when he was being shy and letting his head hang forward.
She pulled the front of his bangs. ‘Yeah.’
‘Cool,’ he said, smiling, all shiny cheeks and full lips.
Don’t bite his face, Eleanor told herself. It’s disturbing and needy and never happens in situation comedies or movies that end with big kisses.
‘I’m sorry about yesterday,’ she said.
He hung onto his straps and shrugged.
‘Yesterday happens.’
God, it was like he wanted her to eat his face clean off.
Park
He almost told her all the things his mom had said about her.
It seemed like it was wrong to keep secrets from Eleanor.
But it seemed like it would be more wrong to share that kind of secret. It would just make Eleanor even more nervous. She might even refuse to come over …
And she was so happy today. She was a different person. She kept squeezing his hand. She even bit his shoulder when they were getting off the bus.
Plus, if he told her, at the very least she was going to want to go home and change. She was wearing an orange argyle sweater today, way too big, with her silky green tie and baggy painter’s jeans.
Park didn’t know if Eleanor even had any girl’s clothes – and he didn’t care. He kind of liked that she didn’t. Maybe that was another g*y thing about him, but he didn’t think so, because Eleanor wouldn’t look like a guy even if you cut off her hair and gave her a mustache. All the men’s clothes she wore just called attention to how much of a girl she was.
He wasn’t going to tell her about his mom.
And he wasn’t going to tell her to smile. But if she bit him again, he was going to lose something.
‘Who are you?’ he asked, when she was still smiling in English class.
‘Ask anybody,’ she said.
Eleanor
In Spanish class today, they were supposed to write a letter in Spanish to a friend. Señora Bouzon put on an episode of Qué Pasa, USA?
while they worked on it.
Eleanor tried to write a letter to Park. She didn’t get very far.
Estimado Señor Sheridan,
Mi gusta comer su cara.
Besos,
Leonor
For the rest of the day, whenever Eleanor felt nervous or scared, she told herself to be happy instead. (It didn’t really make her feel better, but it kept her from feeling worse …) She told herself that Park’s family must be decent people because they’d raised a person like Park. Never mind that this principle didn’t hold true in her own family. It wasn’t like she had to face his family alone. Park would be there. That was the whole point. Was there any place so horrible that she wouldn’t go there to be with Park?
She saw him after seventh hour in a place she’d never seen him before, carrying a micro-scope down the hall on the third floor. It was at least twice as nice as seeing him somewhere she expected him to be.
CHAPTER 28
Park
He called his mom during lunch to tell her that Eleanor was coming over. His counselor let him use her phone. (Mrs Dunne loved the opportunity to be good in a crisis, so all Park had to do was imply that it was an emergency.)
‘I just wanted to tell you that Eleanor is coming over after school,’ he told his mom. ‘Dad said it was all right.’
‘Fine,’ his mother said, not even pretending that she was okay with it. ‘Is she staying for dinner?’
‘I don’t know,’ Park said. ‘Probably not.’
His mother sighed.
‘You have to be nice to her, you know.’
‘I’m nice to everybody,’ his mom said. ‘You know that.’
He could tell Eleanor was nervous on the bus.
She was quiet, and she kept running her bottom lip through her teeth, making it go white, so that you could see that her lips had freckles, too.
Park tried to get her to talk about Watchmen; they’d just read the fourth chapter. ‘What do you think of the pirate story?’ he asked.
‘What pirate story?’
‘You know, there’s that character who’s always reading a comic book about pirates, the story within the story, the pirate story.’
‘I always skip that part,’ she said.
‘You skip it?’
‘It’s boring. Blah, blah, blah – pirates! – blah, blah, blah.’
‘Nothing Alan Moore writes can be blah-blah-blahed,’ Park said solemnly.
Eleanor shrugged and bit her lip.
‘I’m beginning to think you shouldn’t have started reading comics with a book that completely deconstructs the last fifty years of the genre,’ he said.
‘All I’m hearing is blah, blah, blah, genre.’
The bus stopped near Eleanor’s house. She looked at him.
‘We may as well get off at my stop,’ Park said, ‘right?’
Eleanor shrugged again.
They got off at his stop, along with Steve and Tina and most of the people who sat at the back of the bus. All the back-of-the-bus kids hung out in Steve’s garage when he wasn’t at work, even in winter.
Park and Eleanor trailed behind them.
‘I’m sorry I look so stupid today,’ she said.
‘You look like you always do,’ he said. Her bag was hanging at the end of her arm. He tried to take it, but she pulled away.
‘I always look stupid?’
‘That’s not what I meant …’
‘It’s what you said,’ she muttered.
He wanted to ask her not to be mad right now. Like, anytime but now. She could be mad at him for no reason all day tomorrow, if she wanted to.
‘You really know how to make a girl feel special,’ Eleanor said.
‘I’ve never pretended to know anything about girls,’ he answered.
‘That’s not what I heard,’ she said. ‘I heard you were allowed to have girl- zzz in your room
…’
‘They were there,’ he said, ‘but I didn’t learn anything.’
They both stopped on his porch. He took her bag from her and tried not to look nervous.
Eleanor was looking down the walk, like she might bolt.
‘I meant that you don’t look any different than you usually look,’ he said softly, just in case his mom was standing on the other side of the door. ‘And you always look nice.’
‘I never look nice,’ she said. Like he was an idiot.
‘I like the way you look,’ he said. It came out more like an argument than a compliment.
‘That doesn’t mean it’s nice.’ She was whispering, too.
‘Fine then, you look like a hobo.’
‘A hobo?’ Her eyes lit.
‘Yeah, a gypsy hobo,’ he said. ‘You look like you just joined the cast of Godspell.’
‘I don’t even know what that is.’
‘It’s terrible.’
She stepped closer to him. ‘I look like a hobo?’
‘Worse,’ he said. ‘Like a sad hobo clown.’
‘And you like it?’
‘I love it.’
As soon as he said it, she broke into a smile.
And when Eleanor smiled, something broke inside of him.
Something always did.
Eleanor
It was probably a good thing that Park’s mom opened the door when she did because Eleanor was thinking about kissing him, and no way was that a good idea – Eleanor didn’t know the first thing about kissing.
Of course, she’d watched a million kisses on TV (thank you, Fonzie), but TV never showed you the mechanics of it. If Eleanor tried to kiss Park, it would be like a real-life version of some little girl making her Barbie kiss Ken. Just smashing their faces together.
Besides, if Park’s mom had opened the door right in the middle of a big, awkward kiss, she’d hate Eleanor even more.
Park’s mom did hate her, you could tell. Or maybe she just hated the idea of Eleanor, of a girl seducing her firstborn son right in her own living room.
Eleanor followed Park in and sat down. She tried to look extra polite. When his mom offered them a snack, Eleanor said, ‘That would be great, thank you.’ His mom was looking at Eleanor like she was something somebody had spilled on the baby-blue couch. She brought out cookies, then left them alone.
Park seemed so happy. Eleanor tried to con-centrate on how nice it was to be with him – but it was taking too much of her concentration, just keeping herself together.
It was the little things about Park’s house that really freaked her out. Like all the glass grapes hanging from everything. And the curtains that matched the sofa that matched the little doily-napkins under the lamps.
You’d think that nobody interesting could grow up in a house as nice and boring as this one
– but Park was the smartest, funniest guy she’d ever met, and this was his home planet.
Eleanor wanted to feel superior to Park’s mom and her Avon-lady house. But, instead, she kept thinking about how nice it must be to live in a house like this one. With your own room. And your own parents. And six different kinds of cookies in the cupboard.
Park
Eleanor was right. She never looked nice. She looked like art, and art wasn’t supposed to look nice; it was supposed to make you feel something.