Authors: Taylor Jenkins Reid
“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 section 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.
“What do you like to do, then?” I asked. “If you're not into movies, I mean.”
Sam thought about it. “Well, I have to study a lot,” he said. “And other than that, between my job here and being in the marching band, orchestra, and jazz band . . . I don't have a lot of time.”
I looked at him. I was thinking less and less about whether Marie thought he was cute, and more and more about the fact that I did.
“Can I ask you something?” I said as I turned away from the stacks in front of me and walked toward him.
“I think that's typically how conversations go, so sure,” he said, smiling.
I laughed. “Why do you work here?”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean, if you're so busy, why do you spend so much time working at a bookstore?”
“Oh,” Sam said, thinking about it. “Well, I have to buy my own car insurance and I want to get a cell phone, which my parents said was fine as long as I pay for it myself.”
I understood that part. Almost everyone had an after-school job, except the kids who scored lifeguard jobs during the summer and somehow ended up making enough to last them the whole year.
“But why
here
? You could be working at the CD store down the road. Or, I mean, the music store on Main Street.”
Sam thought about it. “I don't know. I thought about applying to those places, too. But I . . . I think I just wanted to work at a place that had nothing to do with music,” he said.
“What do you mean?”
“I mean, I play six instruments. I have to be relentless about practicing. I play piano for at least an hour every day. So it's nice to just have, like, one thing that isn't about minor chords and tempos and . . .” He seemed lost in his own world for a moment but then he resurfaced. “I just sometimes need to do something totally different.”
I couldn't imagine what it was like to be him, to have something you were so passionate about that you actually needed to make yourself take a break from it. I didn't have any particular passion. I just knew that it wasn't my family's passion. It wasn't books.
“What instruments?” I asked him.
“Hm?”
“What are the six that you play?”
“Oh,” he said.
A trio of girls from school came in the door. I didn't know who they were by name, but I'd seen them in the halls. They were seniors, I was pretty sure. They laughed and joked with one another, paying no attention to Sam or me. The tallest one gravitated toward the new fiction while the other two hovered around the bargain section, picking up books and laughing about them.
“Piano,” Sam said. “That was my first one. I started in second grade. And then, let's see . . .” He put out his thumb, to start counting, and then with each instrument another finger went up. “Guitarâelectric and acoustic but I count that as one stillâplus bass, tooâelectric and acoustic, which I also think counts as one even though they really are totally different.”
“So five so far but you're saying that's really only three.”
Sam laughed. “Right. And then drums, a bit. That's my weakest. I just sort of dabble but I'm getting better. And then trumpet and trombone. I just recently bought a harmonica, too, just to see how fast I can pick it up. It's going well so far.”
“So seven,” I said.
“Yeah, but I mean, the harmonica doesn't count either, not yet at least.”
In that moment, I wished my parents had made me pick up an instrument when I was in second grade. It seemed like it was almost too late now. That's how easy it is to tell yourself it's too late for something. I started doing it at the age of fourteen.
“Is it like languages?” I asked him. “Olive grew up speaking English and Korean and she says it's easy for her to pick up other languages now.”
Sam thought about it. “Yeah, totally. I grew up speaking Portuguese a bit as a kid. And in Spanish class I can intuit some of the words. Same thing with knowing how to play the guitar and then learning the bass. There's some overlap, definitely.”
“Why did you speak Portuguese?” I asked him. “I mean, are your parents from Portugal?”
“My mom is second-generation Brazilian,” he said. “But I was never fluent or anything. Just some words here and there.”
The tall girl headed toward the register, so I put down the book in my hand and I met her up at the counter.
She was buying a Danielle Steel novel. When I rang it up, she said, “It's for my mom. For her birthday,” as if I was judging her. But I wasn't. I never did. I was far too worried that everyone else was judging me.
“I bet she'll like it,” I said. I gave her the total and she took out a credit card and handed it over.
Lindsay Bean.
Immediately, the resemblance was crystal clear. She looked like an older, lankier version of Carolyn. I bagged her book and handed it back to her. Sam, overlooking, pointed to the bookmarks, reminding me. “Oh, wait,” I said. “You need a bookmark.” I picked one up and slipped it into her bag.
“Thanks,” Lindsay said. I wondered if she got along with Carolyn, what the Bean sisters were like. Maybe they loved each other, loved to be together, loved to hang out. Maybe, when Lindsay took Carolyn to the mall to get jeans, she didn't abandon her in the store.
I knew it was silly to assume that Carolyn's life was better than mine just because she had been holding Jesse Lerner's hand yesterday in line for a pack of cookies. But, also, I knew
that simply because she
had
been holding Jesse's hand in line for a pack of cookies, her life
was
better than mine.
The sun was starting to set by then. Cars had turned on their headlights. Often, during the evening hours, the low beams of SUVs were just high enough to shine right into the storefront.
This very thing happened just as Lindsay and her friends were making their way outside. A champagne-colored oversized SUV pulled up and parked right in front of the store, its lights focused straight on me. When the driver turned the car off, I could see who it was.
Jesse Lerner was sitting in the front passenger's side of the car. A man, most likely his father, was driving.
The back door opened and out popped Carolyn Bean.
Jesse got out of his side and hugged Carolyn good-bye and then Carolyn got in her sister's car with her sister's two friends.
Then Jesse hopped back into his father's car, glancing into the store for a moment as he did it. I couldn't tell if he saw me. I doubted he was really
looking,
the way I had been.
But I couldn't take my eyes off of him. My gaze followed his silhouette even as Carolyn and Lindsay's car took off, even as Jesse's father turned the headlights back on and three-point-turned out of the parking lot.
When I spun back to what I was doing, I ached somehow. As if Jesse Lerner was meant to be mine and I was being forced to stare right into the heart of the injustice of it all.
My hand hit the stack of bookmarks, sending them into disarray. I gathered them and fixed them myself.
“So I was wondering,” Sam said.
“Yeah?”
“If maybe you'd want to, like, go see a movie together sometime.”
I turned and looked at him, surprised.
There was too much overwhelming me in that moment. Jesse with Carolyn, the headlights in my eyes, and the fact that someone was actually, possibly,
asking me out on a date.
I should have said, “Sure.” Or “Totally.” But instead I said, “Oh. Uh . . .”
And then nothing else.
“No worries,” Sam said, clearly desperate for this awkwardness to end. “I get it.”
And just like that, I sent Sam Kemper straight into the friend zone.
T
wo and a half years later, Sam was graduating.
I had spent a good portion of my sophomore year trying to get Sam to ask me out again. I had made jokes about not having anything to do on a Saturday night and I had vaguely implied that we should hang out outside of the store, but he wasn't getting it and I was too much of a chicken to ask him outright. So I let it go.
And since then, Sam and I had become close friends.
So I went with my mom and dad to support him as he sat outside in the sweltering heat in a cap and gown.
Marie was not yet home for the summer from the University of New Hampshire. She was majoring in English, spending her extracurricular time submitting short stories to literary magazines. She had yet to place one but everyone was sure she'd get published somewhere soon. Graham had gone to UNH with her but she broke up with him two months in. Now she was dating someone named Mike whose parents owned a string of sporting goods stores. Marie would often joke that if they got married, they would merge the businesses. “Get it? And sell books and sports equipment at the same store,” she'd explain.
As I told Olive, there was no end to the things Marie could say to make me purge my lunch. But no one else seemed to want to vomit around her, and thus, my parents were promoting her to assistant manager for the summer.