Read Cross My Heart Online

Authors: Katie Klein

Cross My Heart (7 page)

“Because. It’s .
. . i
t’s not. . . .” I
wrack my brain, struggling
to find the
appropriate word
. “Normal.”
Lame
. But it’s the best I can do, considering. Because then Parker laughs,
and it

s
light and musical. It reaches all the way to his eyes, lighting them. And suddenly they’ve lost that stony glar
e, and Parker seems
. .
.

“And Mr. Darcy is what you’d call
normal
?”
he
asks
.

“Mr. Dar
cy is a gentleman,” I explain
.

“Mr. Darcy
is a narcissist,” Parker replies
.

“Look, as much as you’d love to, I’m not
gonna
sit here and argue with you all afternoon. Pick a book, and let’s get out of here.”

He s
t
ares
at the
creased,
wrinkled sheet for a momen
t,
studying the words.
“Okay. I’m going to
pick one randomly.”

It’s better than nothing.
“Fine. Go for it.”

Parker
shuts
his eyes and ru
n
s
his
finger down the page. I watch
him
carefully
,
surprised at
how peaceful he looks with his eyes closed
,
how relaxed
.
How is it that we’ve had English together all year and I’ve never paid him an
ounce of attention?
The idea of the two of us sitting in a lib
rary arguing over Jane Austen is mildly humorous. It’
s s
hocking
, even, because he’s
neve
r spoken a word to me before. I
just assumed. . . .
M
aybe—just maybe—there’
s the tiniest possibility
he has more to say than I thought
.


A Midsummer Night’s Dream
,” he says
.

“A S
hakespearean Comedy,” I inform
him.

“Meaning you’ve read it.”

I
fold
my arms, offering a sarcastic smirk in response.

“All right. One more ti
me.” He repeats the gesture
and opens his eyes. He closes
them again.

He’s cheating!
“Wait!
What was that one?”

“What?”

I nod toward his paper.
“The book! You just
picked one, and now you’re going to
pick another. That’s not fair!
I want to know what it was.”
It’s not until after I say the words
that I realize how juvenile I must sound.

“Actually . . . if you must know . . . I
missed. I landed on blank, blue
space,” he says
, forming the words slowly
. “No book. And that doesn’t help us.”

“Fine,” I reply
.

“Are you sure? I mean, do I have your permission to try again?”

I roll
my eyes. “Just go.”

He runs
his finger up and down the
page
. He stops, then opens
his eyes, examining the title.


Ethan
Frome
,” he announces
.


Ethan
Frome
,” I repeat
,
leaning across the table,
studying
the name just above his index finger. His fingernail, I noti
ce, i
s
practically non-existent—
gnawe
d below the skin, his cuticle jagged and tearing.
So . . . h
e

s a nail-biter.
Nervous habit.
 
I
glance at
my own
fingernails—long, and carefully fi
led straight across
.
His look painful
.
And kind of gross.

He eyes
me warily. “You read it?”

I shake
my head. “No. You?”

“No.”

I leap
from my seat and walk
briskly past
the aisles, heading towa
rd the computer catalog. I type
in
Ethan
Frome
,
find
it was writt
en by Edith Wharton, then weave
in and out of
the
rows in Fiction until I’m at
the W’s. I pull
out two
identical,
worn copies of
Ethan
Frome
and carry
them back to
Parker
.

“Here,” I say
, tossing one of the books
. It slid
es
across the table, stopping just
in front of him.

Parker picks
it up
, flips it over, and scan
s
the description on the back. “‘A novel of passion and unfulfilled longing.’ Wow, Jade, looks like you landed yourself a romance.”

My head jerks
up, surprised.
No one calls me Jade. Ever. No one
even tries
. I’ve
always been Jaden. To my teachers . . . to my friends . . . my family.
Everyone.

“What?” he asks
.

“Nothing,” I reply
, slowly turning my attention back to the book.
Jade? That would be like, a nickname. I’ve never had a nickname.

But h
e’s persistent.
“No. What is it?”

I tuck
a stray piece of hair behind my ears. “Nothing. It’s just that . . . you called me Jade. It was just . . . weird, that’s all.”

“If you prefer Jaden
.
. . .”

It doesn’t matter to me.
“No. It’s fine.” I clear
my throat
, signaling us back to
the
task
at hand
. “So anyway, I wouldn’t call this a romance. It says here: ‘marked by tragedy.’ That can’t be good.”

“Ah.
Now it’s sounding better.”

I stifle a laugh
. “Of course it would. Coming from someone who thinks love can actually drive
people to commit heinous crimes,

I mutter
, still examining the flap copy.

“It’s a matter of semantics.”

“Great,” I say
, standing. “We met, we picked out
a book,
mission accomplished
. Let’s
,
um, just plan to read this and get together next week. Then we can divide up responsibilities an
d get this thing done.” I pause
for a moment. “We have to do an oral report, you know.”

“So?”
he asks, gathering his things.

“I’m
just saying.”

Parker
rises to his feet
, sli
nging his bag over his shoulde
r, standing taller than me by several inches
, and I’m one of the tallest girls in my entire grade.
“Don’t worry. I’m sure with all that practice for your future Miss America pageants, you’ll be a natural.”

“I wa
sn’t concerned about me,” I say,
sneer
ing
.
And I have
no plans to become Miss America.

“Well
don’t worry on my account. I
t’s insulting.”

Parker
moves
toward the count
er

each
step assertiv
e,
composed—
to
check out his book. I stan
d there
stagger
ed,
unable to move,
watching in disbelief as the real Parker Whalen—prepared student of a thousand opinions and confident reader of
Wuthering Heights
—slowly begi
n
s
to reveal himself. 

*
  
*
  
*

Dinner is over; dishes are washed. I’ve
played
with Joshua
, who i
s now b
athed and in bed. My homework i
s f
inished, and I’m
intrigued enough by my encounter with Parker earlier in the week to want to start
Ethan
Frome
immediately. It’s a thin book, I’ve
observed, so
it probably wo
n’t take
long to finish.

I stretch
across my bed, a blanket
tuck
ed around me
to ward off
the cold
, and open
the novel
la
to the first page.
A s
yrupy
, perfume-like smell
permeat
es
t
he air, and
for a moment
I wonder if it has
anything to do with whoever
checked the book out last,
or
if Parker’s copy smells
the same way.
I stop. Why do I care what Parker

s book smells like? Why am I even
thinking
about him?
I
force
Parker Whalen
out of my head
and begin reading
.

I’ve
made my way through most of the first chapter when
someone
knock
s
.

“It’s open,” I call
.

Sarah
is already
dressed for be
d—
pink flannel pajama pants and a long-sleeved night shirt—and holding a magazine. A
cold draft from the hallway follows her inside. I shiver
.

“I’m not interru
pting
,
am I?” she asks
.

“No,” I reply
, folding d
own the corner of the page I’m
on
.

“It won’t take long. I
just need an opinion.” Sarah si
t
s
dow
n on the edge of my bed.
It sinks with her
, and
I move
closer
,
wrapp
ing my blanket tighter around my shoulders. “I’m trying to
pick invitations,” she continues
. “Tell me what you think. Honestly.”

She passes
th
e catalog over to me. I flip
thr
ough,
paus
ing at each page
Sarah
marked,
examining
the item
s she’s
circl
ed.


What

s the verdict
?” she asks
.

I
return to the beginning
. “I like this
one . . . and this one.” I show
her the pages.

Sarah laughs
. “Daniel picked those, too.”

“Imagine that,” I say, smiling.
I like
both of my brothers . . . as much as a baby sister c
an
like
them,
I guess
. Now that we’re older, when they a
ren’t
harassing me (Phillip)
, or
being completely overprot
ective of me (Daniel), we all ge
t along pretty well. “Which are your favorites?”

“Actually,” she says
, turning a few pages over, “I think I like this one best.”

“Really?” I ask
, surprised. “I figured you’d go
for something more modern. You know, simple
and streamlined.”

“Yeah, it would make more sense.”

Other books

The Gathering Dark by Christopher Golden
Choke by Kaye George
Finally & Forever by Robin Jones Gunn
Lips Unsealed by Belinda Carlisle
Embrace the Wind by Caris Roane
Banjo Man by Sally Goldenbaum
Rich Friends by Briskin, Jacqueline;
Ranger's Wild Woman by Tina Leonard