“I’m not seeing him any more than normal,” Olive said. “But I always see him around all the time. He’s in my algebra 1 class.”
“Are you friends with him?” I asked.
“Not really,” Olive said. “But he’s a nice guy. You should just say hi to him.”
“That’s insane. I can’t just say hi to him.”
“Sure you can.”
I shook my head and looked away. “You sound ridiculous.”
“You sound ridiculous. He’s a boy in our class. He’s not Keanu Reeves.”
I thought to myself, If I could just talk to Jesse Lerner, I wouldn’t care about Keanu Reeves.
“I can’t introduce myself, that’s crazy,” I said, and then I gathered my tray and headed toward the trash can. Olive followed.
“Fine,” she said. “But he’s a perfectly nice person.”
“Don’t say that!” I said. “That just makes it worse.”
“You want me to say he’s mean?”
“I don’t know!” I said. “I don’t know what I want you to say.”
“You’re being sort of annoying,” Olive said, surprised.
“I know, okay?” I said. “Ugh, just . . . come on. I’ll buy you a pack of cookies.”
Back then, a seventy-five-cent bag of cookies was enough to make up for being irritating. So as we walked over to the counter, I dug my hand into my pocket and counted out what silver coins I had.
“I have one fifty exactly,” I said just as I followed Olive to the back of the line. “So enough for both of us.” I looked up to see Olive’s eyes go wide.
“What?”
She directed me forward with the glance of her eyes.
Jesse Lerner was standing right in front of us. He was wearing dark jeans and a Smashing Pumpkins T-shirt with a pair of black Converse One Stars.
And he was holding Carolyn Bean’s hand.
Olive looked at me, trying to gauge my reaction. But instead, I stared forward, doing a perfect impression of someone unfazed.
And then I watched as Carolyn Bean let go of Jesse’s hand, reached into her pocket, took out a tube of lip balm, and applied it to her lips.
As if it wasn’t bad enough she was holding his hand, she had the audacity to let go of it.
I hated her then. I hated her dumb, soccer-playing, headband-wearing, Dr-Pepper-flavored-lip-balm-applying guts.
If he ever wanted to hold my hand, I’d never, ever, ever let go.
“Let’s get out of here,” I said to Olive.
“Yeah,” she said. “We can get something from the vending machine instead.”
I walked off, depressed and lovesick, heading for the vending machine by the band room.
I bought two Snickers bars and handed one of them to Olive. I chomped into mine, as if it were the only thing that could fill the void in my heart.
“I’m over him,” I said. “Totally dumb crush. But it’s done. I’m over it. Seriously.”
“Okay,” Olive said, half laughing at me.
“No, really,” I said. “Definitely over.”
“Sure,” Olive said, scrunching her eyebrows and pursing her lips.
And then I heard a voice coming from behind me.
“Emma?”
I turned to see Sam coming out of the band room.
“Oh, hey,” I said.
“I didn’t know that you had this lunch period.”
I nodded. “Yep.”
His hair was a bit disheveled and he was wearing a green shirt that said “Bom Dia!”
“So, I guess we’ve got our first shift together,” he said. “Tomorrow at the store, I mean.”
“Oh,” I said. “Yeah.” On Tuesday, Marie had borrowed my Fiona Apple CD without asking, prompting me to call her a “complete asshole” within hearing distance of my parents. My punishment was a Friday shift at the store. In my family, instead of getting grounded or having privileges revoked, you redeemed yourself by working more. Extra shifts at the store were my parents’ way of both teaching lessons and extracting free labor. Assigning me Friday evening in particular meant I couldn’t hang out with Olive and they could have a date night at the movies.
“Tomorrow?” Olive said. “I thought we were going to hang out at my house after school.”
“Sorry,” I said. “I forgot. I have to work.”
The bell rang, indicating that it was time for me to start walking toward my world geography class.
“Ah,” Olive said. “I have to go. I left my book in my locker.”
Olive didn’t wait for me, didn’t even offer. Nothing stood between her and being on time for anything.
“I should get going, too,” I said to Sam, who didn’t seem to be in a rush to get anywhere. “We have a test in geo.”
“Oh, well, I don’t want to keep you,” Sam said. “I just wanted to know if you wanted a ride. Tomorrow. To the store after school.”
I looked at him, confused. I mean, I wasn’t confused about what he was saying. I understood the simple physics of getting into a car that would take me from school to work. But it surprised me that he was offering, that he would even think to offer.
“I just got my license and I inherited my brother’s Camry,” he said. In high school, it seemed like everyone was inheriting Camrys or Corollas. “So I just thought . . .” He looked me in the eye and then looked away. “So you don’t have to take the bus, is all.”
He was being so thoughtful. And he barely knew me.
“Sure,” I said, “that would be great.”
“Meet you in the parking lot after school?” he asked.
“That sounds great. Thank you. That’s really cool of you.”
“No worries,” he said. “See you tomorrow.”
As I walked toward the double doors at the end of the hall, heading to class, it occurred to me that maybe it was time to just be friends with whomever I wanted to be friends with, to not try quite so hard to reject everything Marie liked.
Maybe it was time to just . . . be myself.
The next day I wore a red knit sweater and flat-front chinos to school, cognizant of my parents’ request to never wear jeans at the store. And then, ten minutes after the last bell rang, I saw Sam leaning against the hood of his car in the school parking lot, waiting for me.
“Hey,” I said as I got closer.
“Hey.” He went around to my side of the car and opened the car door. No one had ever opened a car door for me before except my father, and even then, it was usually a joke.
“Oh,” I said, taking my backpack off and putting it in the front seat. “Thank you.”
Sam looked surprised for a moment, as if he wasn’t sure what I was thanking him for. “For the door? You’re welcome.”
I sat down and sunk into the passenger’s seat as Sam made his way to his side of the car. He smiled at me nervously when he got in and turned on the ignition. And then, suddenly, jazz music blasted through the speakers.
“Sorry,” he said. “Sometimes I really have to psych myself up in the morning.”
I laughed. “Totally cool.”
He turned the music down but not off and I listened as it softly filled the air in the car. Sam put the car in reverse and twisted his body toward me, resting his arm on the back of my seat and then backing out of the spot.
His car was a mess. Papers at my feet, gum wrappers and guitar picks strewn across the dashboard. I glanced into the backseat and saw a guitar, a harmonica, and two black instrument cases.
I turned back to face the front. “Who is this?” I said, pointing to the stereo.
Sam was watching the steady stream of cars to his left, waiting for his chance to turn onto the road.
“Mingus,” he said, not looking at me.
There was a small opening, a chance to enter the flow of traffic. Sam inched up and then swiftly turned, gracefully joining the steady stream of cars. He relinquished his attention, and turned back to me.
“Charles Mingus,” he said, explaining. “Do you
like jazz?”
“I don’t really listen to it,” I said. “So I don’t know.”
“All right, then,” Sam said, turning up the volume. “We’ll listen and then you’ll know.”
I nodded and smiled to show that I was game. The only problem was that I knew within three seconds that Charles Mingus was not for me and I didn’t know how to politely ask him to turn it off. So I didn’t.
My father was at the register when we came in through the doors. His face lit up when he saw me.
“Hi, sweetheart,” he said, focused on me. And then he turned for a brief second. “Hey, Sam!”
“Hi, Dad,” I said back. I didn’t love the idea of my father calling me “sweetheart” in front of people from school. But groaning about it would only make it worse, so I let it go.
Sam headed straight for the back of the store. “I’m going to run to the bathroom and then, Mr. Blair, I’ll be back to relieve you.”
My dad gave him a thumbs-up and then turned to me. “Tell me all about your day,” he said as I put my book bag down underneath the register. “Start at the beginning.”
I looked around to see that the only customer in the store was an older man reading a military biography. He was pretending to peruse it but appeared to be downright engrossed. I half expected him to lick his fingertip to turn the page or dog-ear his favorite chapter.
“Aren’t you supposed to be taking Mom on a date?” I asked.
“How old do you think I am?” he asked, looking at his watch. “It’s not even four p.m. You think I’m taking your mother to an early bird special?”
“I don’t know,” I said, shrugging. “You two are the ones who made me work today so you could go see a movie together.”
“We made you work today because you were being rude to your sister,” he said. His tone was matter-of-fact, all blame removed from his voice. My parents didn’t really hold grudges. Their punishments and disappointments were perfunctory. It was as if they were abiding by rules set out before them by someone else. You did this and so we must do that. Let’s all just do our part and get through this.
This changed a few years later, when I called them in the middle of the night and asked them to pick me up from the police station. Suddenly, it wasn’t a fun little test anymore. Suddenly, I had actually disappointed them. But back then, the stakes were low, and discipline was almost a game.
“I know that you and Marie are not the best of friends,” my dad said, tidying up a stack of bookmarks that rested by the register. When the store opened, sometime in the sixties, my great-uncle who started it had commissioned these super cheesy bookmarks with a globe on them and an airplane circling it. They said “Travel the World by Reading a Book.” My father loved them so much that he had refused to update them. He had the same exact ones printed time and time again.
Whenever I picked one of them up, I would be struck by how perfectly they symbolized exactly what I resented about that bookstore.
I was going to travel the world by actually traveling it.
“But one day, sooner than you think, the two of you are going to realize how much you need each other,” my dad continued.
Adults love to tell teenagers that “one day” and “sooner or later” plenty of things are going to happen. They love to say that things happen “before you know it,” and they really love to impart how fast time “flies by.”
I would learn later that almost everything my parents told me in this regard turned out to be true. College really did “fly by.” I did change my mind about Keanu Reeves “sooner or later.” I was on the other side of thirty “before I knew it.” And, just as my father said that afternoon, “one day” I was going to need my sister very, very much.
But back then, I shrugged it off the same way teens all over the country were shrugging off every other thing their parents said at that very moment.
“Marie and I are not going to be friends. Ever. And I wish you guys would let up about it.”
My father listened, nodding his head slowly, and then looked away, focusing instead on tidying up another stack of bookmarks. Then he turned back to me. “I read you loud and clear,” he said, which is what he always said when he decided that he didn’t want to talk about something anymore.
Sam came out of the back and joined us up by the registers. The customer reading the book came over to the counter with the book in his hand and asked us to keep it on hold for him. No doubt so he could come back and read the same copy tomorrow, as if he owned the thing. My father acted as if he was delighted to do it. My father was very charming to strangers.
Right after the man left, my mom came out of her office in the back of the store. Unfortunately, Dad didn’t see her.
“I should tell your mother it’s time to go,” he said. I tried to stop him but he turned his head slightly and started yelling. “Ashley, Emma and Sam are here!”
“Jesus Christ, Colin,” my mom said, putting a hand to her ear. “I’m right here.”
“Oh, sorry.” He made a scrunched face to show that he’d made a mistake and then he gently touched her ear. It was gestures like that, small acts of intimacy between them, that made me think my parents probably still had sex. I was both repulsed and somewhat assuaged by the thought.
Olive’s parents always seemed on the edge of divorce. Marie’s friend Debbie practically lived at our house for two months a few years earlier when her parents were ironing out their own separation. So I was smart enough to know I was lucky to have parents who still loved each other.
“All right, well, since you’re both here, we will take off,” my mom said, heading toward the back to grab her things.
“I thought you weren’t leaving for your date until later,” I said to my father.
“Yeah, but why would we hang around when our daughter is here to do the work?” he said. “If we hurry, we can get home in time to take a disco nap.”
“What is a disco nap?” Sam asked.
“Don’t, Sam; it’s a trap,” I said.
Sam laughed. I never really made people laugh. I wasn’t funny the way Olive was funny. But, suddenly, around Sam I felt like maybe I could be.
“A disco nap, dear Samuel, is a nap that you take before you go out and party. You see, back in the seventies . . .”
I walked away, preemptively bored, and started reorganizing the table of best sellers by the window. Marie liked to sneak her favorite books on there, giving her best-loved authors a boost. My only interest was in keeping the piles straight. I did not like wayward corners.
I perked up only when I heard Sam respond to my father’s story about winning a disco contest in Boston by laughing and saying, “I’m so sorry to say this, but that’s not a very good story.”
My head shot up and I looked right at Sam, impressed.
My dad laughed and shook his head. “When I was your age and an adult told a bad story, do you know what I did?”
“Memorized it so you could bore us with it?” I piped in.
Sam laughed again. My father, despite wanting to pretend to be hurt, gave a hearty chuckle. “Forget it. You two can stay here and work while I’m out having fun.”
Sam and I shared a glance.
“Aha. Who’s laughing now?” my dad said.
My mom came out with their belongings and within minutes, my parents were gone, out the door to their car, on their way to take disco naps. I was stunned, for a moment, that they had left the store to Sam and me. Two people under the age of seventeen in charge for the evening? I felt mature, suddenly. As if I could be trusted with truly adult responsibilities.
And then Margaret, the assistant manager, pulled in and I realized my parents had called her to supervise.
“I’ll be in the back making the schedule for next week,” Margaret said just as soon as she came in. “If you need anything, holler.”
I looked over at Sam, who was standing by the register, leaning over the counter on his elbows.
I went into the biography secti
on and started straightening that out, too. The store was dead quiet. It seemed almost silly to have two people out in front and one in the back. But I knew that I was here as a punishment and Sam was here because my parents wanted to give him hours.
I resolved to sit on the floor and flip through Fodor’s travel books if nobody else came in.
“So what did you think of Charles Mingus?” Sam asked. I was surprised to see that he had left the area by the cash register and was just a few aisles down, restocking journals.
“Oh,” I said. “Uh . . . Very cool.”
Sam laughed. “You liar,” he said. “You hated it.”
I turned and looked at him, embarrassed to admit the truth. “Sorry,” I said. “I did. I hated it.”
Sam shook his head. “Totally fine. Now you know.”
“Yeah, if someone asks me if I like jazz, I can say no.”
“Well, you might still like jazz,” Sam offered. “Just because you don’t like Mingus doesn’t mean . . .” He trailed off as he saw the look on my face. “You’re already ready to write off all of jazz?”
“Maybe?” I said, embarrassed. “I don’t think jazz is my thing.”
He grabbed his chest as if I’d stabbed him in the heart.
“Oh, c’mon,” I said. “I’m sure there are plenty of things I love that you’d hate.”
“Try me,” he said.
“Romeo + Juliet,” I said confidently. It had proven to be a definitive dividing line between boys and girls at school.
Sam was looking back at the journals in front of him. “The play?” he asked.
“The movie!” I corrected him.
He shook his head as if he didn’t know what I was talking about.
“You’ve never seen Romeo + Juliet with Leonardo DiCaprio?” I was aware of the fact that there were other versions of Romeo and Juliet, but back then, there was no Romeo but Leo. No Juliet but Claire Danes.
“I don’t really watch that many new movies,” Sam said.
A mother and son came in and headed straight for the children’s section in the back. “Do you have The Velveteen Rabbit?” the mom asked.
Sam nodded and walked with her, toward the stacks at the far end of the store.
I moved toward the cash register. When they came back, I was ready to ring them up, complete with a green plastic bag and a “Travel the World by Reading a Book” bookmark. When she was out the door, I turned to Sam. He was standing to the side, leaning on a table, with nothing to do.
One True Loves Page 3