Authors: Rainbow Rowell
my dad’s number, and if I haven’t
called you by nine, you can call
me.’
‘That’s an excellent idea,’ he
said, ‘seriously.’
‘But you can’t call it any other
time.’
‘I feel like …’ He started
laughing and looked away.
‘What?’
she
asked.
She
elbowed him.
‘I feel like we have a date,’ he
said. ‘Is that stupid?’
‘No,’ she said.
‘Even though we’re together
every day …’
‘We’re never really together,’
she said.
‘It’s like we have fifty
chaperones.’
‘Hostile chaperones,’ Eleanor
whispered.
‘Yeah,’ 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.
‘A date,’ he said.
‘Practically.’
CHAPTER 19
Eleanor
When she woke up that morning,
she felt like it was her birthday –
like she used to feel on her
birthday, back when there was a
shot in hell of ice cream.
Maybe her dad would have ice
cream … If he did, he’d probably
throw it away before Eleanor got
there. He was always dropping
hints about her weight. Well, he
used to, anyway. Maybe when he
stopped
caring
about
her
altogether, he’d stopped caring
about that, too.
Eleanor put on an old striped
men’s shirt and had her mom tie
one of her ties – like knot it, for
real – around her neck.
Her mom actually kissed
Eleanor goodbye at the door and
told her to have fun, and to call
the neighbors if things got weird
with her dad.
Right, Eleanor thought, I’ll be
sure to call you if Dad’s fiancée
calls me a bitch and then makes
me use a bathroom without a
door. Oh wait …
She was a little nervous. It had
been a year, at least, since she’d
seen her dad, and a while before
that. He hadn’t called at all when
she lived with the Hickmans.
Maybe he didn’t know she was
there. She never told him.
When Richie first started
coming around, Ben used to get
really angry and say he was going
to move in with their dad – which
was an empty effing promise, and
everyone knew it. Even Mouse,
who was just a toddler.
Their dad couldn’t stand
having them even for a few days.
He used to pick them up from
their mom’s house, then drop
them off at
his
mom’s house while
he went off and did whatever it
was that he did on the weekend.
(Presumably, lots and lots of
marijuana.) Park cracked up when
he saw Eleanor’s tie. That was
even better than making him
smile.
‘I didn’t know we were getting
dressed up,’ he said when she sat
down next to him.
‘I’m expecting you to take me
someplace nice,’ she said softly.
‘I will …’ he said. He took the
tie in both hands and straightened
it. ‘Someday.’
He was a lot more likely to say
stuff like that on the way to school
than he was on the way home.
Sometimes she wondered if he
was fully awake.
He turned practically sideways
in his seat. ‘So you’re leaving
right after school?’
‘Yeah.’
‘And you’ll call me as soon as
you get there …’
‘No, I’ll call you as soon as the
kid settles down. I really do have
to babysit.’
‘I’m going to ask you a lot of
personal questions,’ he said,
leaning forward. ‘I have a list.’
‘I’m not afraid of your list.’
‘It’s extremely long,’ he said,
‘and extremely personal.’
‘I hope you’re not expecting
answers
…’
He sat back in the seat and
looked over at her. ‘I wish you’d
go away,’ he whispered, ‘so that
we could finally talk.’
Eleanor stood on the front steps
after school. She’d hoped to catch
Park before he got on the bus, but
she must have missed him.
She wasn’t sure what kind of
car to watch for; her dad was
always buying classic cars, then
selling them when money got
tight.
She was starting to worry that
he wasn’t coming at all – he
could’ve gone to the wrong high
school or changed his mind –
when he honked for her.
He pulled up in an old
Karmann Ghia convertible. It
looked like the car James Dean
died in. Her dad’s arm was
hanging over the door, holding a
cigarette. ‘Eleanor!’ he shouted.
She walked to the car and got
in. There weren’t any seat belts.
‘Is that all you brought?’ he
asked, looking at her school bag.
‘It’s just one night.’ She
shrugged.
‘All right,’ he said, backing out
of the parking space too fast.
She’d forgotten what a crappy
driver he was. He did everything
too fast and one-handed.
Eleanor braced herself on the
dashboard. It was cold out, and
once they were driving, it got
colder. ‘Can we put the top up?’
she shouted.
‘Haven’t fixed it yet,’ her dad
said, and laughed.
He still lived in the same
duplex he’d lived in since her
parents split up. It was solid and
brick, and about a ten-minute
drive from Eleanor’s school.
When they got inside, he took
a better look at her.
‘Is that what all the cool kids
are wearing these days?’ he asked.
She looked down at her giant
white shirt, her fat paisley tie and
her half-dead purple corduroys.
‘Yup,’ she said flatly. ‘This is
pretty much our uniform.’
Her dad’s girlfriend – fiancée
– Donna, didn’t get off work until
five, and after that she had to pick
her kid up from daycare. In the
meantime, Eleanor and her dad sat
on the couch and watched ESPN.
He smoked cigarette after
cigarette, and sipped Scotch out of
a short glass. Every once in a
while the phone would ring, and
he’d
have
a
long,
laughy
conversation
with
somebody
about a car or a deal or a bet.
You’d think that every single
person who called was his best
friend in the whole world. Her dad
had baby blond hair and a round,
boyish face. When he smiled,
which was constantly, his whole
face lit up like a billboard. If
Eleanor paid too much attention,
she hated him.
His duplex had changed since
the last time she’d been here, and
it was more than just the box of
Fisher Price toys in the living
room and the makeup in the
bathroom.
When they’d first started
visiting him here – after the
divorce, but before Richie – their
dad’s duplex had been a bare-
bones bachelor pad. He didn’t
even have enough bowls for them
all to have soup. He’d served
Eleanor clam chowder once in a
highball glass. And he only had
two towels. ‘One wet,’ he’d said,
‘one dry.’
Now Eleanor fixated on all the
small luxuries strewn and tucked
around the house. Packs of
cigarettes, newspapers, magazines
… Brand-name cereal and quilted
toilet paper. His refrigerator was
full of things you tossed into the
cart without thinking about it just
because they sounded good.
Custard-style yogurt. Grapefruit
juice.
Little
round
cheeses
individually wrapped in red wax.
She couldn’t wait for her dad
to leave so that she could start
e a t i n g
everything
. There were
stacks of Coca-Cola cans in the
pantry. She was going to drink
Coke like water all night, she
might even wash her face with it.
And
she was going to order a
pizza. Unless the pizza came out of
her babysitting money. (That
would be just like her dad. He’d
take you to the cleaners with fine
print.) Eleanor didn’t care if eating
all his food pissed him off or if it
freaked out Donna. She might
never see either of them again
anyway.
Now she wished she
had
brought an overnight bag. She
could have snuck home cans of
Chef Boyardee and Campbell’s
chicken noodle soup for the little
kids. She would have felt like
Santa Claus when she came home
…
She didn’t want to think about
the little kids right now. Or
Christmas.
She tried to turn the station to
MTV, but her dad frowned at her.
He was on the phone again.
‘Can I listen to records?’ she
whispered.
He nodded.
She had an old mix tape in her
pocket, and she was going to dub
over it to make a tape for Park.
But there was a whole packet of
empty Maxell tapes sitting on her
dad’s stereo. Eleanor held a
cassette up to her dad, and he
nodded, flicking his cigarette into
an ashtray shaped like a naked
African woman.
Eleanor sat down in front of
the crates full of record albums.
These used to be both of her
parents’ records, not just his. Her
mom must not have wanted any of
them. Or maybe her dad just took
them without asking.
Her mom had loved this
Bonnie Raitt album. Eleanor
wondered if her dad ever listened
to it.
She felt seven years old,
flipping through their records.
Before she was allowed to take
the albums out of their sleeves,
Eleanor used to lay them out on
the floor and stare at the artwork.
When she was old enough, her
dad taught her how to dust the
records with a wood-handled
velvet brush.
She could remember her
mother
lighting
incense
and
putting on her favorite records –
Judee Sill and Judy Collins and
Crosby, Stills and Nash – while
she cleaned the house.
She could remember her dad
putting on records – Jimi Hendrix
and Deep Purple and Jethro Tull –
when his friends came over and
stayed late into the night.
Eleanor could remember lying
on her stomach on an old Persian
rug, drinking grape juice out of a
jelly jar, being extra quiet because
her baby brother was asleep in the
next room – and studying each
record, one by one. Turning their
names over and over in her
mouth. Cream. Vanilla Fudge.
Canned Heat.
The records smelled exactly
like they always had. Like her
dad’s bedroom. Like Richie’s
coat. Like pot, Eleanor realized.
Duh. She flipped through the
records
more
matter-of-factly
now, on a mission. Looking for
Rubber Soul
and
Revolver
.
Sometimes it seemed as if she
would never be able to give Park
anything like what he’d given her.
It was like he dumped all this
treasure on her every morning
without even thinking about it,
without any sense of what it was
worth.
She couldn’t repay him. She
couldn’t even appropriately thank
him. How can you thank someone
for The Cure? Or the X-Men?
Sometimes it felt like she’d always
be in his debt.
And then she realized that Park
didn’t know about the Beatles.
Park
Park went to the playground to
play basketball after school. Just
to kill time. But he couldn’t focus
on the game – he kept looking up
at the back of Eleanor’s house.
When he got home, he called
out to his mom. ‘Mom! I’m
home!’
‘Park,’ she called. ‘Out here!
In the garage.’
He grabbed a cherry Popsicle