Parkโs parents almost never fought, and when they did, it was always about him or Josh.
His parents had been arguing in their bedroom for more than an hour, and when it was time to leave for Sunday dinner, their mom came out and told the boys to go ahead without them. โTell Grandma I have headache.โ
โWhat did you do?โ Josh asked Park as they cut through the front lawn. โNothing,โ Park said. โWhat didย youย do?โ
โNothing. Itโs you. When I went to the bathroom, I heard mom say your name.โ
But Park hadnโt done anything. Not since the eyeliner โ which he knew wasnโt dead, but it seemed in remission. Maybe his parents knew somehow about yesterday โฆ
Even if they did, Park hadnโt done anything with Eleanor that heโd ever been explicitly told not to do. His mom never talked to him about that kind of thing. And his dad hadnโt said anything more than โDonโt get anybody pregnantโ since he told Park about sex in the fifth grade. (Heโd told Josh at the same time, which was insulting.)
Anyway, they hadnโt goneย thatย far. He hadnโt touched her anywhere that you couldnโt show on television. Even though heโd wanted to.
He wished now that he had. It might be months before they were alone again.
Eleanor
She went to Mrs Dunneโs office Monday morning before class, and Mrs Dunne gave her a brand new combination lock. It was hot pink.
โWe talked to some of the girls in your class,โ Mrs Dunne said, โbut they all played dumb. Weโre still going to get to the bottom of this, I promise.โ
There is no bottom, Eleanor thought. Thereโs just Tina.
โItโs okay,โ she told Mrs Dunne. โIt doesnโt matter.โ
Tina had watched Eleanor get on the bus that morning with her tongue on her top lip, like she was waiting for Eleanor to spaz out โ or like she was trying to see whether Eleanor was wearing any toilet clothes. But Park was right there, practically pulling Eleanor into his lap โ so it was easy to ignore Tina and everybody else. He looked so cute this morning. Instead of his usual scary black band T-shirt, he was wearing a green shirt that said โKiss Me, Iโm Irish.โ
He walked with her to the counselorsโ office, and told her that if anybody stole her clothes today, she was to find him, immediately.
Nobody did.
Beebi and DeNice had already heard about what happened from somebody in another class โ which meant that the whole school knew. They said they were never going to let Eleanor walk alone to lunch again, Macho Nachos be damned.
โThose skanks need to know you have friends,โ DeNice said. โMmm-hmm,โ Beebi agreed.
Park
His mom was waiting in the Impala Monday afternoon when Park and Eleanor got off the bus. She rolled down the window.
โHi, Eleanor, sorry, but Park has errand to run. We see you tomorrow, okay?โ
Sure,โ Eleanor said. She looked at him, and he reached out to squeeze her hand as she walked away.
He got into the car. โCome on, come on,โ his mom said, โwhy you do everything so slow? Here.โ She handed him a brochure.ย State of Nebraska Driverโs Manual. โPractice test at end,โ she said, โnow buckle up.โ
โWhere are we going?โ he asked.
โTo get your driving license, dummy.โ โDoes Dad know?โ
His mom sat on a pillow when she drove and hung forward on the steering wheel. โHe knows, but you donโt have to talk to him about it, okay? This is our business right now, you and me. Now, look at test. Not hard. I pass on first try.โ
Park flipped to the back of the book and looked at the practice exam. Heโd studied the whole manual when he turned fifteen and got his learnerโs permit.
โIs Dad going to be mad at me?โ he asked. โWhose business is this right now?โ โOurs,โ he said.
โYou and me,โ she said.
Park passed the test on his first try. He even parallel parked the Impala, which was like parallel parking a Star Destroyer. His mom wiped his eyelids with a Kleenex before he had his picture taken.
She let him drive home. โSo, if we donโt tell Dad,โ Park asked, โdoes that mean I canโt ever drive?โ He wanted to drive Eleanor somewhere. Anywhere.
โI work on it,โ his mom said. โMeantime, you have your license if you need it. For emergency.โ
That seemed like a pretty weak excuse to get his license. Park had gone sixteen years without a driving emergency.
The next morning on the bus, Eleanor asked him what his big secret errand was, and he handed her his license.
โWhat?โ she said. โLook at you, look at this!โ She didnโt want to give it back.
โI donโt have any pictures of you,โ she said. โIโll get you another one,โ he said.
โYou will? Really?โ
โYou can have one of my school pictures. My mom has tons.โ โYou have to write something on the back,โ she said.
โLike what?โ
โLike, โHey, Eleanor, KIT, LYLAS, stay sweet, Park.โโ
โBut I donโt L-Y like an S,โ he said. โAnd youโre not sweet.โ โIโm sweet,โ she said, affronted, holding back his license.
โNo โฆ youโre other good things,โ he said, snatching it from her, โbut not sweet.โ
โIs this where you tell me that Iโm a scoundrel, and I say that I think you like meย becauseย Iโm a scoundrel? Because weโve already covered this, Iโm the Han Solo.โ
โIโm going to write, โFor Eleanor, I love you. Park.โโ โGod, donโt write that, my mom might find it.โ
Eleanor
Park gave her a school picture. It was from October, but he already looked so different now. Older. In the end, Eleanor hadnโt let him write anything on the back because she didnโt want him to ruin it.
They hung out in his bedroom after dinner (Tater Tot casserole) and managed to sneak kisses while they looked through all of Parkโs old school pictures. Seeing him as a little kid just made her want to kiss him more. (Gross, but whatever. As long as she didnโt want to kiss actual little kids, she wasnโt going to worry about it.)
When Park asked her for a picture, she was relieved that she didnโt have any to give him.
โWeโll take one,โ he said. โUm โฆ okay.โ
โOkay, cool, Iโll get my momโs camera.โ โNow?โ
โWhy not now?โ
She didnโt have an answer.
His mom was thrilled to take her picture. This called for Makeover, Part II โ which Park cut short, thank God, saying, โMom, I want a photo that actually looks like Eleanor.โ
His mom insisted on taking one of them together, too, which Park didnโt mind at all. He put his arm around her.
โShouldnโt we wait?โ Eleanor asked. โFor a holiday or something more memorable?โ
โI want to remember tonight,โ Park said. He was such a dork sometimes.
Eleanor must have been acting too happy when she got home because her mom followed her to the back of the house like she could smell it on her. (Happiness smelled like Parkโs house. Like Skin So Soft and all four food groups.)
โAre you going to take a bath?โ her mom asked. โUh-huh.โ
โIโll watch the door for you.โ
Eleanor turned on the hot water and climbed into the empty bath tub. It was so cold by the back door that the bath water started cooling off before the tub was even full. Eleanor took baths in such a hurry she was usually done by then.
โI ran into Eileen Benson at the store today,โ her mom said. โDo you remember her from church?โ
โI donโt think so,โ Eleanor said. Her family hadnโt gone to church in three years.
โShe had a daughter your age โ Tracy.โ โMaybe โฆโ
โWell, sheโs pregnant,โ her mom said. โAnd Eileenโs a wreck. Tracy got involved with a boy in their neighborhood, a black boy. Eileenโs husband is having a fit.โ
โI donโt remember them,โ Eleanor said. The tub was almost full enough to rinse her hair.
โWell, it just made me think about how lucky I am,โ her mom said. โThat you didnโt get involved with a black guy?โ
โNo,โ her mom said. โIโm talking about you. How lucky I am that youโre so smart about boys.โ
โIโm not smart about boys,โ Eleanor said. She rinsed her hair quickly, then stood up, covering herself with a towel while she got dressed.
โYouโve stayed away from them. Thatโs smart.โ
Eleanor pulled out the drain and carefully picked up her dirty clothes. Parkโs photo was in her back pocket, and she didnโt want it to get wet. Her mom was standing by the stove, watching her.
โSmarter than I ever was,โ her mom said. โAnd braver. I havenโt been on my own since the eighth grade.โ
Eleanor hugged her dirty jeans to her chest. โYou act like there are two kinds of girls,โ she said. โThe smart ones and the ones that boys like.โ
โThatโs not far from the truth,โ her mom said, trying to put her hand on Eleanorโs shoulder. Eleanor took a step back. โYouโll see,โ her mom said. โWait until youโre older.โ
They both heard Richieโs truck pull into the driveway.
Eleanor pushed past her mother and rushed to her bedroom. Ben and Mouse slipped in just behind her.
Eleanor couldnโt think of a place safe enough for Parkโs photo, so she zipped it into the pocket of her school bag. After sheโd looked at it again and again and again.