Parkโs mom didnโt seem surprised to see Eleanor the next day. He must have warned them she was coming.
โEleanor,โ his mom said extra nicely, โMerry Christmas, come in.โ
When Eleanor walked into the living room, Park had just gotten out of the shower, which was embarrassing for some reason. His hair was wet and his T-shirt was kind of sticking to him. He was really happy to see her. That was obvious. (And nice.)
She didnโt know what to do with his present, so when he walked over to her, she shoved it at him. He smiled, surprised. โThis is for me?โ
โNo,โ she said, โitโs โฆโ She couldnโt think of anything funny to say. โYeah, itโs for you.โ
โYou didnโt have to get me anything.โ โI didnโt. Really.โ
โCan I open it?โ
She still couldnโt think of anything funny, so she nodded. At least his family was in the kitchen, so nobody was watching them.
The present was wrapped in stationery. Eleanorโs favorite stationery, watercolor paintings of fairies and flowers.
Park peeled off the paper carefully and looked at the book. It wasย The Catcher in the Rye. A really old edition. Eleanor had decided to leave the dust jacket on because it was neat-looking, even though it still had a thrift- shop price scrawled on the front with grease pencil.
โI know itโs pretentious,โ she said. โI was going to give youย Watership Down, but thatโs about rabbits, and not everybody wants to read about rabbits โฆโ
He looked at the book, smiling. For a terrible second, she thought he was going to open the front cover. And she really didnโt want him to read what sheโd written. (Not while she was standing right there.)
โIs this your book?โ he asked.
โYeah, but Iโve already read it.โ
โThank you,โ he said, grinning at her. When he was really happy, his eyes disappeared into his cheeks. โThank you.โ
โYouโre welcome,โ she said, looking down. โJust donโt kill John Lennon or anything.โ
โCome here,โ he said, pulling on the front of her jacket.
She followed him to his room but stopped at the door like there was an invisible fence. Park set the book on his bed, then grabbed two small boxes off a shelf. They were both wrapped in Christmas paper with big red bows.
He came and stood in the doorway with her; she leaned back against the jamb.
โThis one is from my mom,โ he said, holding up a box. โItโs perfume. Please donโt wear it.โ His eyes flicked down for a second, then back up at her. โThis one is from me.โ
โYou didnโt have to get me a present,โ she said. โDonโt be stupid.โ
When she didnโt take the present, he took her hand and pressed the box into it.
โI tried to think of something that nobody would notice but you,โ he said, pushing his bangs off his face. โThat you wouldnโt have to explain to your mom โฆ Like, I was going to buy you a really nice pen, but then โฆโ
He was watching her open it, which made her nervous. She accidentally tore the wrapping paper. He took the paper from her, and she opened a small gray box.
There was a necklace inside. A thin silver chain with a small pendant, a silver pansy.
โIโll understand if you canโt take it,โ Park said. She shouldnโt take it, but she wanted it.
Park
Dumb. He should have gotten the pen. Jewelry was so public โฆ and personal, which is why heโd bought it. He couldnโt buy Eleanor a pen. Or a bookmark. He didnโt have bookmark-like feelings for her.
Park had used most of his car stereo money to buy the necklace. Heโd found it at the jewelry store in the mall where people try on engagement rings.
โI kept the receipt,โ he said.
โNo,โ Eleanor said, looking up at him. She looked anxious, but he wasnโt sure what kind. โNo. Itโs beautiful,โ she said, โthank you.โ
โWill you wear it?โ he asked. She nodded.
He ran his hand through his hair and held onto the back of his neck, trying to rein himself in. โNow?โ
Eleanor looked at him for a second, then nodded again. He took the necklace out of the box and carefully fastened it around her neck. Just like heโd imagined himself doing when he bought it. That might even beย whyย he bought it โ so heโd have this moment, with his hands warm on the back of her neck, under her hair. He ran his fingertips along the chain and settled the pendant on her throat.
She shivered.
Park wanted to pull on the chain, to pull it into his chest and anchor her there.
He pulled his hands away self-consciously and leaned back against the doorjamb.
Eleanor
They were sitting in the kitchen, playing cards. Speed. Sheโd taught Park how to play, and she could always beat him for the first few rounds. But after that, sheโd get sloppy. (Maisie always started winning after a few rounds, too.)
Playing cards in Parkโs kitchen, even if his mom was in there, was better than just sitting in the living room, thinking about all the things theyโd be doing if they were alone.
His mom asked how her Christmas was, and Eleanor said it was nice. โWhat do you have for holiday dinner?โ his mom asked. โTurkey or ham?โ
โTurkey,โ Eleanor said, โwith dill potatoes โฆ My momโs Danish.โ
Park stopped playing to look at her. She popped her eyes at him. โWhat, Iโm Danish, shut up,โ she would have said if his mom hadnโt been there.
โThatโs where you get beautiful red hair,โ his mom said knowingly. Park smiled at Eleanor. She rolled her eyes.
When his mom left to run something over to his grandparents, Park kicked her under the table. He wasnโt wearing shoes.
โI didnโt know you were Danish,โ he said.
โIs this the kind of scintillating conversation weโre going to have now that we donโt have any secrets?โ
โYes. Is your mom Danish?โ โYes,โ she said.
โWhatโs your dad?โ โAn ass.โ
He frowned.
โWhat? You wanted honest and intimate. Thatโs way more honest than โScottish.โโ
โScottish,โ Park said, and smiled.
Eleanor had been thinking about this new arrangement he wanted. This being totally open and honest with each other. She didnโt think she could start telling Park the whole, ugly truth overnight.
What if he was wrong? What if he couldnโt handle it?
What if Park realized that all the things he thought were so mysterious and intriguing about her were actually just โฆ bleak?
When he asked about her Christmas, Eleanor told him about her momโs cookies and the movies, and how Mouse thoughtย The Grinchย was about โall the Hoots down in Hootville.โ
She half expected him to say, โYeah, butย nowย tell me all the terrible parts โฆโ Instead he laughed.
โDo you think your mom would be okay with me,โ he asked, โyou know, if it wasnโt for your stepdad?โ
โI donโt know โฆโ Eleanor said. She realized that she was holding on to the silver pansy.
Eleanor spent the rest of Christmas vacation at Parkโs house. His mom didnโt seem to mind, and his dad was always inviting her to stay for dinner.
Eleanorโs mom thought she was spending all that time with Tina. Once sheโd said, โI hope youโre not overstaying your welcome over there, Eleanor.โ And once sheโd said, โTina could come over here sometimes, too, you know,โ which they both knew was a joke.
Nobody brought friends into their house. Not the little kids. Not even Richie. And her mom didnโt have friends anymore.
She used to.
When Eleanorโs parents were still together, there were always people around. There were always parties. Men with long hair. Women in long dresses. Glasses of red wine everywhere.
And even after her dad left, there were still women. Single moms who brought over their kids, plus all the ingredients for banana daiquiris. Theyโd sit up late talking in hushed voices about their ex-husbands and speculating about new boyfriends, while the kids played Trouble and Sorry in the next room.
Richie had started as one of those stories. It went like this:
Her mom used to walk to the grocery store early in the morning while the kids were still asleep. They didnโt have a car back then either. (Her mom hadnโt had a car of her own since high school.) Well, Richie would see her mom out walking every morning on his drive to work. One day he stopped and asked for her number. He said she was the prettiest woman heโd ever seen.
When Eleanor first heard about Richie, she was leaning against their old couch, reading aย Lifeย magazine, and drinking a virgin banana daiquiri. She wasnโt exactly eavesdropping โ all her momโs 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 didnโt care.
โNever trust a man, Eleanor!โ theyโd all shouted at her, at one point or another.
โEspecially if he hates to dance!โ
But when her mom told them that Richie said she was as pretty as a spring day, theyโd all sighed and asked her to tell them more.
Of courseย he said sheโs the prettiest woman heโs ever seen, Eleanor thought. She undoubtedly is.
Eleanor was twelve, and she couldnโt imagine a guy fucking her mom over worse than her dad had.
She didnโt know there were things worse than selfish.
Anyway. She always tried to leave Parkโs house before dinner โ just in case her mom was right about wearing out her welcome โ and because, if Eleanor left early, there was a better chance that sheโd 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 Parkโs 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 wasnโt exactly Eleanorโs fault. Sheโd 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 Eleanorโs table and mouthing the C-word. The c-u-n-t word. (Richie didnโt even use that word, which implied an unimaginable degree of filth.)
โWhat is her problem?โ DeNice asked. Rhetorically. โShe thinks sheโs all that,โ Beebi said.
โShe ainโt all that,โ DeNice said. โWalking around here looking like a little boy in a miniskirt.โ
Beebi giggled.
โThat hair is just wrong,โ DeNice said, still looking at Tina. โShe needs to wake up a little earlier and try to decide whether she wants to look like Farrah Fawcett or Rick James.โ
Beebi and Eleanor both cracked up.
โI mean, pick one, girl,โ DeNice said, milking it. โPick. One.โ
โOh, girl!โ Beebi said, slapping Eleanorโs leg. โThereโs your man.โ They all looked out the cafeteriaโs glass wall. Park was walking by with a few other guys. He was wearing jeans and a T-shirt that said โMinor Threat.โ He looked into the cafeteria and smiled when he saw Eleanor. Beebi giggled.
โHe isย cute,โ DeNice said. Like it was something certifiable. โI know,โ Eleanor said. โI want to eat his face.โ
They all three giggled until DeNice called them back to order.
Park
โSo,โ Cal said.
Park was still smiling. Even though they were long past the cafeteria. โYou and Eleanor, huh?โ
โUh โฆ yeah,โ Park said.
โYeah,โ Cal said, nodding. โEverybody knows. I mean, Iโve known forever. I could tell by the way you stare at her in English โฆ I was just waiting forย youย to tell me.โ
โOh,โ Park said, looking up at Cal. โSorry. Iโm going out with Eleanor.โ โWhy didnโt you tell me?โ
โI figured you knew.โ
โI did know,โ Cal said. โBut, you know, weโre friends. Weโre supposed to talk about these things.โ
โI didnโt think youโd get it โฆโ
โI donโt get it. No offense. Eleanor still scares the crap out of me. But ifย youโre getting it โ you know,ย gettingย it โ I want to know about it. I want the whole freaking report.โ
โThis, actually,โ Park said. โThis is why I didnโt tell you.โ