Authors: Rainbow Rowell
For Forest, Jade, Haven and
Jerry – and everyone else in the
back of the truck
ELEANOR & PARK
Rainbow Rowell
Contents
Cover
Dedication
Title Page
August 1986
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Copyright
He’d stopped trying to bring her
back.
She only came back when she
felt like it, in dreams and lies and
broken-down déjà vu.
Like, he’d be driving to work,
and he’d see a girl with red hair
standing on the corner – and he’d
swear, for half a choking moment,
that it was her.
Then he’d see that the girl’s
hair was more blond than red.
And that she was holding a
cigarette … And wearing a Sex
Pistols T-shirt.
Eleanor hated the Sex Pistols.
Eleanor …
Standing behind him until he
turned his head. Lying next to him
just before he woke up. Making
everyone else seem drabber and
flatter and never good enough.
Eleanor ruining everything.
Eleanor, gone.
He’d stopped trying to bring
her back.
AUGUST 1986
CHAPTER 1
Park
XTC was no good for drowning
out the morons at the back of the
bus.
Park pressed his headphones
into his ears.
Tomorrow he was going to
bring Skinny Puppy or the Misfits.
Or maybe he’d make a special bus
tape with as much screaming and
wailing on it as possible.
He could get back to New
Wave in November, after he got
his driver’s license. His parents
had already said Park could have
his mom’s Impala, and he’d been
saving up for a new tape deck.
Once he started driving to school,
he could listen to whatever he
wanted or nothing at all,
and
he’d
get to sleep in an extra twenty
minutes.
‘That doesn’t exist,’ somebody
shouted behind him.
‘It so fucking does,’ Steve
shouted back. ‘Drunken-monkey
style, man, it’s a real fucking
thing. You can kill somebody with
it …’
‘You’re full of shit.’
‘
You
’re full of shit,’ Steve
said. ‘Park! Hey, Park.’
Park heard him, but didn’t
answer.
Sometimes,
if
you
ignored Steve for a minute, he
moved
onto
someone
else.
Knowing that was 80 percent of
surviving with Steve as your
neighbor. The other 20 percent
was just keeping your head down
…
Which Park had momentarily
forgotten. A ball of paper hit him
in the back of the head.
‘Those
were
my
Human
Growth and Development notes,
dicklick,’ Tina said.
‘I’m sorry, baby,’ Steve said.
‘I’ll teach you all about human
growth and development. What do
you need to know?’
‘Teach her drunken-monkey
style,’ somebody said.
‘PARK!’ Steve shouted.
Park
pulled
down
his
headphones and turned to the
back of the bus. Steve was
holding court in the last seat. Even
sitting,
his
head
practically
touched the roof. Steve always
looked like he was surrounded by
doll furniture. He’d looked like a
grown man since the seventh
grade, and that was before he
grew a full beard. Slightly before.
Sometimes Park wondered if
Steve was with Tina because she
made him look even more like a
monster. Most of the girls from
the Flats were small, but Tina
couldn’t be five feet. Massive hair,
included.
Once, back in middle school,
some guy had tried to give Steve
shit about how he better not get
Tina pregnant because if he did,
his giant babies would kill her.
‘They’ll bust out of her stomach
like in
Aliens
,’ the guy said. Steve
broke his little finger on the guy’s
face.
When Park’s dad heard, he
said, ‘Somebody needs to teach
that Murphy kid how to make a
fist.’ But Park hoped nobody
would. The guy Steve hit couldn’t
open his eyes for a week.
Park tossed Tina her balled-up
homework. She caught it.
‘Park,’ Steve said, ‘tell Mikey
about drunken-monkey karate.’
‘I don’t know anything about
it.’ Park shrugged.
‘But it exists, right?’
‘I guess I’ve heard of it.’
‘There,’ Steve said. He looked
for something to throw at Mikey,
but couldn’t find anything. He
pointed instead. ‘I fucking told
you.’
‘What the fuck does Sheridan
know about kung fu?’ Mikey said.
‘Are you retarded?’ Steve said.
‘His mom’s Chinese.’
Mikey
looked
at
Park
carefully.
Park
smiled
and
narrowed his eyes. ‘Yeah, I guess
I see it,’ Mikey said. ‘I always
thought you were Mexican.’
‘Shit, Mikey,’ Steve said,
‘you’re such a fucking racist.’
‘She’s not Chinese,’ Tina said.
‘She’s Korean.’
‘Who is?’ Steve asked.
‘Park’s mom.’
Park’s mom had been cutting
Tina’s hair since grade school.
They both had the exact same
hairstyle, long spiral perms with
tall, feathered bangs.
‘She’s fucking hot is what she
is,’ Steve said, cracking himself
up. ‘No offense, Park.’
Park managed another smile
and slunk back into his seat,
putting his headphones back on
and cranking up the volume. He
could still hear Steve and Mikey,
four seats behind him.
‘But what’s the fucking point?’
Mikey asked.
‘Dude, would you want to
fight a drunk monkey? They’re
fucking huge. Like
Every Which
Way But Loose
, man. Imagine that
bastard losing his shit on you.’
Park noticed the new girl at
about the same time everybody
else did. She was standing at the
front of the bus, next to the first
available seat.
There was a kid sitting there
by himself, a freshman. He put his
bag down on the seat beside him,
then looked the other way. All
down the aisle, anybody who was
sitting alone moved to the edge of
their seat. Park heard Tina snicker;
she lived for this stuff.
The new girl took a deep
breath and stepped farther down
the aisle. Nobody would look at
her. Park tried not to, but it was
kind of a train wreck/eclipse
situation.
The girl just looked like
exactly the sort of person this
would happen to.
Not just new – but big and
awkward. With crazy hair, bright
red on top of curly. And she was
dressed like … like she
wanted
people to look at her. Or maybe
like she didn’t get what a mess she
was. She had on a plaid shirt, a
man’s shirt, with half a dozen
weird necklaces hanging around
her neck and scarves wrapped
around her wrists. She reminded
Park of a scarecrow or one of the
trouble dolls his mom kept on her
dresser. Like something that
wouldn’t survive in the wild.
The bus stopped again, and a
bunch more kids got on. They
pushed past the girl, knocking into
her, and dropped into their own
seats.
That
was
the
thing
–
everybody on the bus already had
a seat. They’d all claimed one on
the first day of school. People like
Park who were lucky enough to
have a whole seat to themselves
weren’t going to give that up now.
Especially not for someone like
this.
Park looked back up at the
girl. She was just standing there.
‘Hey, you,’ the bus driver
yelled, ‘sit down.’
The girl started moving toward
the back of the bus. Right into the
belly of the beast.
God
, Park
thought,
stop. Turn around
. He
could feel Steve and Mikey licking
their chops as she got closer. He
tried again to look away.
Then the girl spotted an empty
seat just across from Park. Her
face lit with relief, and she hurried
toward it.
‘Hey,’ Tina said sharply.
The girl kept moving.
‘Hey,’ Tina said, ‘
Bozo
.’
Steve started laughing. His
friends fell in a few seconds
behind him.
‘You can’t sit there,’ Tina said.
‘That’s Mikayla’s seat.’