Her mom wasnโt going to let her babysit.
โHe hasย fourย children,โ her mother said. She was rolling out dough for tortillas. โDid he forget that?
Eleanor had stupidly told her mother about her dadโs phone call in front of her brothers and sister โ theyโd all gotten really excited. And then Eleanor had to tell them that they werenโt invited, that it was just babysitting, anyway, and that Dad wasnโt even going to be there.
Mouse had started to cry, and Maisie got mad and stormed out. Ben asked Eleanor if sheโd call Dad back to see if he could come along to help. โTell him I babysit all the time,โ Ben said.
โYour father is a piece of work,โ her mother said. โEvery time, he breaks your hearts. And every time, he expects me to pick up the pieces.โ
Pick up, sweep aside โ same difference in her momโs world. Eleanor didnโt argue.
โPlease let me go,โ she said.
โWhy do you want to go?โ her mom asked. โWhy do you even care about him? Heโs never cared about you.โ
God. Even if it were true, it still hurt to hear it that way.
โIย donโtย care,โ Eleanor said. โI just need to get out of here. I havenโt been anywhere but school in two months. Plus, he said heโd pay me.โ
โIf he has extra money sitting around, maybe he should pay his child support.โ
โMom โฆ itโs ten dollars. Please.โ
Her mother sighed. โFine. Iโll talk to Richie.โ
โNo. Donโt talk to Richie. Heโll just say no. And, anyway, he canโt tell me that I canโt see my father.โ
โRichie is the head of this household,โ her mom said. โRichie is the one who puts food on our table.โ
What food? Eleanor wanted to ask. And, for that matter, what table? They ate on the couch or on the floor or sitting on the back steps holding paper plates. Besides, Richie would say no just for the pleasure of saying it. It would make him feel like the King of Spain. Which was probably why her mom wanted to give him the chance.
โMom.โ Eleanor put her face in her hand and leaned against the refrigerator. โPlease.โ
โOh,ย fine,โ her mother said bitterly. โFine. But if he gives you any money, you can split it with your brothers and sister. Thatโs the least you can do.โ
They could have it all. All Eleanor wanted was the chance to talk to Park on the phone. To be able to talk to him without every inbred hellspawn in the Flats listening.
The next morning on the bus, while Park ran his finger along the inside of her bracelet, Eleanor asked him for his phone number.
He started laughing.
โWhy is that funny?โ she asked.
โBecause,โ he said quietly. They said everything quietly, even though everyone else on the bus roared, even though youโd have to shout into a megaphone to be heard over all the cursing and idiocy. โI feel like youโre hitting on me,โ he said.
โMaybe I shouldnโt ask for your number,โ she said. โYouโve never asked for mine.โ
He looked up at her through his bangs.
โI figured you werenโt allowed to talk on the phone โฆ after that time with your stepdad.โ
โI probably wouldnโt be, if I had a phone.โ She usually tried not to tell Park things like that. Like, all the things she didnโt have. She waited for him to react, but he didnโt. He just ran his thumb along the veins in her wrist.
โThen why do you want my number?โ
God, she thought, never mind. โYou donโt have to give it to me.โ
He rolled his eyes and got a pen out of his backpack, then reached over and took one of her books.
โNo,โ she whispered, โdonโt. I donโt want my mom to see it.โ
He frowned at her book. โIโd think youโd be more worried about her seeingย this.โ
Eleanor looked down. Crap. Whoever wrote that gross thing on her geography book had written on her history book, too.
โsuck me off,โ it said, in ugly blue letters.
She grabbed Parkโs pen and started scribbling it out. โWhy would you write that?โ he asked. โIs that a song?โ
โI didnโt write it,โ she said. She could feel patches of red creep up her neck.
โThen who did?โ
She gave him the meanest look she was capable of. (It was hard to look at him with anything other than gooey eyes.)
โI donโt know,โ she said.
โWhy wouldย anyoneย write that?โ
โI donโtย know.โ She pulled her books against her chest and wrapped her arms around them.
โHey,โ he said.
Eleanor ignored him and looked out the window. She couldnโt believe sheโd let him see that on her book. It was one thing to let him see her crazy life a little bit at a time โฆย So, yeah, I have a terrible stepdad, and I donโt have a phone, and sometimes when weโre out of dish soap I wash my hair with flea and tick shampoo โฆ
It was another thing to remind him that she wasย thatย girl. She may as well invite him to gym class. She might as well give him an alphabetical list of all the names they called her.
A โ Ass, Fat
B โ Bitch, Red-Headed
Heโd probably try to ask herย whyย she was that girl. โHey,โ he said.
She shook her head.
It wouldnโt do any good to tell him that she hadnโt beenย thatย girl at her old school. Yeah, sheโd been made fun of before. There were always mean boys โ and there were always, always mean girls โ but sheโd had friends at her old school. Sheโd had people to eat lunch with and pass notes to. People used to pick her to be on their team in gym class just because they thought she was nice and funny.
โEleanor โฆโ he said.
But there was no one like Park at her old school. There was no one like Park anywhere.
โWhat,โ she said to the window.
โHowโre you going to call me if you donโt have my number?โ โWho said I was going to call you?โ She hugged her books.
He leaned against her, pressing his shoulder into hers. โDonโt be mad at me,โ he said, sighing. โIt makes me crazy.โ โIโm never mad at you,โ she said.
โRight.โ
โIโm not.โ
โYou must just be madย nearย me a lot.โ
She pushed her shoulder against his and smiled despite herself.
โIโm babysitting at my dadโs house Friday night,โ she said, โand he said I could use the phone.โ
Park turned his face eagerly. It was painfully close to hers. She could kiss him โ or head-butt him โ before heโd ever have a chance to pull away. โYeah?โ he asked.
โYeah.โ
โYeah,โ he said, smiling. โBut you wonโt let me write down my number?โ
โTell me,โ she said. โIโll memorize it.โ โLet me write it down.โ
โIโll memorize it to the tune of a song, so that I donโt forget.โ
He started singing his number to the tune of โ867-5309,โ which cracked her right up.
Park
Park tried to remember the first time he saw her.
Because he could remember, on that day, seeing what everybody else saw. He could remember thinking that she was asking for it โฆ
That it was bad enough to have curly red hair. That it was bad enough to have a face shaped like a box of chocolates.
No, he hadnโt thought exactly that. Heโd thought โฆ
That it was bad enough to have a million freckles and chubby baby cheeks.
God, she had adorable cheeks. Dimples on top of freckles, which shouldnโt even be allowed, and round as crabapples. It was kind of amazing
that more people didnโt try to pinch her cheeks. His grandma was definitely going to pinch her when they met.
But Park hadnโt thought that either, the first time he saw Eleanor on the bus. He remembered thinking that it was bad enough that she looked the way she did โฆ
Did she have to dress like that? And act like that? Did she have to try so hard to be different?
He remembered feeling embarrassed for her. And now โฆ
Now, he felt the fight rising up in his throat whenever he thought of people making fun of her.
When he thought of someone writing that ugly thing on her book โฆ it made him feel like Bill Bixby just before he turned into the Hulk.
It had been so hard, on the bus, to pretend that it didnโt bother him. He didnโt want to make anything worse for her โ heโd put his hands in his pockets and pressed them into fists, and held them that way all morning long.
All morning long, heโd wanted to punch something. Or kick something. Park had gym class right after lunch, and he ran so hard during drills, heโd started to retch up his fish sandwich.
Mr Koenig, his gym teacher, made him leave class early and take a shower. โHit the bricks, Sheridan. Now. This isnโtย Chariots ofย Fuckinโย Fire.โ Park wished it wasย onlyย righteous anger that he felt. He wished that he could feel defensive and protective of Eleanor without feeling โฆ
everything else.
Without feeling like they were making fun of him, too.
There were moments โ not just today, moments every day since theyโd met โ when Eleanor made him self-conscious, when he saw people talking and he was sure they were talking about them. Raucous moments on the bus when he was sure that everyone was laughing at them.
And in those moments, Park thought about pulling back from her.
Not breaking up with her. That phrase didnโt even seem to apply here.
Just โฆ easing away. Recovering the six inches between them.
Heโd roll the thought over in his head until the next time he saw her.
In class, at her desk. On the bus, waiting for him. Reading alone in the cafeteria.
Whenever he saw Eleanor, he couldnโt think about pulling away. He couldnโt think about anything at all.
Except touching her.
Except doing whatever he could or had to, to make her happy.
โWhat do you mean youโre not coming tonight?โ Cal said.
They were in study hall, and Cal was eating a Snack Pack butterscotch pudding. Park tried to keep his voice down. โSomething came up.โ
โSomething?โ Cal said, slamming his spoon into his pudding. โLike you being completely lame โ is that what came up? Because that comes up a lot lately.โ
โNo.ย Something. Like, a girl something.โ
Cal leaned in. โYouโve got a girl something?โ
Park felt himself blush. โSort of. Yeah. I canโt really talk about it.โ โBut we had a plan,โ Cal said.
โYou had a plan,โ Park said, โand it was terrible.โ โWorst friend in the world,โ Cal said.
Eleanor
She was so nervous, she couldnโt even touch her lunch. She gave DeNice her creamed turkey and Beebi her fruit cocktail.
Park made her practice his phone number all the way home.
And then he wrote it on her book anyway. He hid it in song titles. โForever Young.โ
โThatโs a four,โ he said. โWill you remember?โ
โI wonโt have to,โ she said, โI already know your number by heart.โ โAnd this is just a five,โ he said, โbecause I canโt think of any five songs,
and this oneโ โ โSummer of โ69โ โ โWith this one, remember the six, but forget the nine.โ
โI hate that song.โ
โGod, I know โฆ Hey, I canโt think of any two songs.โ โโTwo of Us,โโ she said.
โTwo of us?โ
โItโs a Beatles song.โ
โOh โฆ thatโs why I donโt know it.โ He wrote it down. โI know your number by heart,โ she said.
โIโm just afraid youโre going to forget it,โ he said quietly. He pushed her hair out of her eyes with his pen.
โIโm not going to forget it,โ she said. Ever. Sheโd probably scream out Parkโs number on her deathbed. Or have it tattooed over her heart when he finally got sick of her. โIโm good with numbers.โ
โIf you donโt call me Friday night,โ he said, โbecause you canโt remember my number โฆโ
โHow about this, Iโll give you my dadโs number, and if I havenโt called you by nine, you can call me.โ
โThatโs an excellent idea,โ he said, โseriously.โ โBut you canโt call it any other time.โ
โI feel like โฆโ He started laughing and looked away. โWhat?โ she asked. She elbowed him.
โI feel like we have a date,โ he said. โIs that stupid?โ โNo,โ she said.
โEven though weโre together every day โฆโ โWeโre never really together,โ she said. โItโs like we have fifty chaperones.โ โHostile chaperones,โ Eleanor whispered. โYeah,โ Park said.
He put his pen in his pocket, then took her hand and held it to his chest for a minute.
It was the nicest thing she could imagine. It made her want to have his babies and give him both of her kidneys.
โA date,โ he said. โPractically.โ