‘Is he going to make me ride in the back of his truck?’
‘He’s trying to make peace, Eleanor. You promised that you’d try, too.’
‘It’s easier for me to make peace from a distance.’
‘I told him you were ready to be part of this family.’
‘ I ’ m already part of this family.
I’m
like
a
charter
member.’
‘Eleanor,’ her mom said.
‘Please.’
‘I’ll just ride the bus,’ Eleanor had said. ‘It’s not a big deal. I’ll meet people.’
Ha, Eleanor thought now.
Giant, dramatic ha.
Her bus was going to leave soon. A few of the other buses were
already
pulling
away.
Somebody ran down the steps next to Eleanor and accidentally kicked her bag. She pulled it out of the way and started to say sorry – but it was that stupid Asian kid, and he frowned when he saw that it was her. She frowned right back at him, and he ran ahead.
Oh, fine, Eleanor thought. The children of hell shan’t go hungry on my watch.
CHAPTER 3
Park
She didn’t talk to him on the ride home.
Park had spent all day trying to think of how to get away from the new girl. He’d have to switch seats. That was the only answer.
But switch to what seat? He didn’t want
to
force
himself
on
somebody else. And even the act of switching seats would catch Steve’s attention.
Park had expected Steve to start in on him as soon he let the girl sit down, but Steve had gone right back to talking about kung fu again. Park, by the way, knew plenty about kung fu. Because his dad was obsessed with martial arts, not because his mom was Korean. Park and his little brother, Josh, had been taking taekwando since they could walk.
Switch seats, how …?
He could probably find a seat up front with the freshmen, but that would be a spectacular show of weakness. And he almost hated to think about leaving the weird new girl at the back of the bus by herself.
He hated himself for thinking like this.
If his dad knew he was thinking like this, he’d call Park a *. Out loud, for once. If his grandma knew, she’d smack him on the back of the head. ‘Where are you manners?’ she’d say. ‘Is that any way to treat somebody who’s down on her luck?’
But Park didn’t have any luck – or status – to spare on that dumb redhead. He had just enough to keep himself out of trouble. And he knew it was crappy, but he was kind of grateful that people like that girl existed. Because people like Steve and Mikey and Tina existed, too, and they needed to be fed. If it wasn’t that redhead, it was going to be somebody else.
And if it wasn’t somebody else, it was going to be Park.
Steve had let it go this morning, but he wouldn’t keep letting it go …
Park could hear his grandma again. ‘Seriously, son, you’re giving yourself a stomach ache because you did something nice while
other
people
were
watching?’
It wasn’t even that nice, Park thought. He’d let the girl sit down, but he’d sworn at her. When she showed up in his English class that afternoon, it felt like she was there to haunt him …
‘Eleanor,’ Mr Stessman said.
‘What a powerful name. It’s a queen’s name, you know.’
‘It’s the name of the fat Chipette,’ somebody behind Park whispered.
Somebody
else
laughed.
Mr Stessman gestured to an empty desk up front.
‘We’re reading poetry today, Eleanor,’
Mr
Stessman
said.
‘Dickinson. Perhaps you’d like to get us started.’
Mr Stessman opened her book to the right page and pointed. ‘Go ahead,’ he said, ‘clear and loud.
I’ll tell you when to stop.’
The new girl looked at Mr Stessman like she hoped he was kidding. When it was clear that he wasn’t – he almost never was – she started to read.
‘I had been hungry all the years,’ she read. A few kids laughed. Jesus, Park thought, only Mr Stessman would make a chubby girl read a poem about eating on her first day of class.
‘Carry
on,
Eleanor,’
Mr
Stessman said.
She started over, which Park thought was a terrible idea.
‘I had been hungry all the years,’ she said, louder this time.
‘My noon had come, to dine, ‘I, trembling, drew the table near,
‘And touched the curious wine.
‘T’was this on tables I had seen,
‘When turning, hungry, lone, ‘I looked in windows, for the wealth
‘I could not hope to own.’
Mr Stessman didn’t stop her, so she read the whole poem in that cool, defiant voice. The same voice she’d used on Tina.
‘That was wonderful,’ Mr Stessman said when she was done. He was beaming. ‘Just wonderful. I hope you’ll stay with us, Eleanor, at least until we do Medea. That’s a voice that arrives on a chariot drawn by dragons.’
When the girl showed up in history, Mr Sanderhoff didn’t make a scene. But he did say, ‘Ah.
Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine,’