Eliza and Her Monsters(42)
He throws the pillow back to the bed and follows it. He is much less intimidating while supine. I sit on the edge of the mattress and turn toward him.
“I’m sorry he has to be like that,” I say.
Wallace covers his eyes with his hands. How easy it would be to lean over and kiss him now, but it doesn’t feel like the time. Maybe it will never be the time. It will never be the time because I’m Eliza Mirk, great avoider of life and all its consequences. How can I want something so badly but become so paralyzed every time I even think about taking it?
“I’ve already spent twelve years of school doing what other people have told me I have to do,” he says. “And I know what happens when someone’s forced to do something they hate. Is it too much to ask for a few years of what I want? Do your parents do this to you? Are you really going to major in graphic design?”
“Oh, no. I said that so Tim wouldn’t throw me out of the house.”
Wallace snorts.
“I don’t know what I want to major in. I just don’t want to be . . . here. My parents like to remind me that I still have to finish high school to know if I get to go to college, and they think once I go I’ll become some dorm hermit who never leaves her room and stares at her computer screen all day. But no, they don’t tell me what I should do—not all the time, anyway—and I guess that’s better.”
But the only reason they aren’t trying to whip me into shape anymore is because I’ve raged against it for so long that I wore them out. They still mention it sometimes, in Mom’s little jabs about doing better in school, and Dad’s mentions of scholarships, but it’s not the same issue. Mom and Dad don’t know how much money I make, but I do, and I have at least that peace of mind. Wallace only has fanfiction, and that can’t help him.
“I’m sorry,” I say again. He lowers his hands, stares at the ceiling, and shrugs. Then he looks at me.
“Are you cold?”
My hands are clamped around my upper arms, my torso curled into my legs to keep the heat in.
“Um.”
“Here.” Wallace sits up and pulls a thick knitted blanket from beneath the other sheets on his bed. “Insulation layer. Hope it doesn’t smell bad.” He wraps it around me. It’s already warm. Probably warm from him, considering he sleeps with it touching him every freaking night.
“Smells like Irish Spring and spicy boy shampoo,” I say.
“Is that good or bad?”
“It’s great.”
I have never been so close to something that smells like Irish Spring and spicy boy shampoo, unless you count anything my dad goes near, and I do not. I’m not entirely sure my brothers shower. I curl up in his blanket but stay turned away from him.
“You didn’t correct Bren when she said I was your girlfriend.”
Wallace shifts behind me. “Oh. Yeah. Well, I thought—you know, it would bring up more questions than it answered . . . and she’s kind of persistent . . . and I didn’t want to make the situation awkward. . . .”
“Oh.”
“Hmm.”
Someone flushes a toilet upstairs; water rushes through the basement pipes. I bury my face in Wallace’s blanket. Wallace shifts again behind me.
“Unless you want to be,” he says.
I look over my shoulder. “What?”
He sits against the wall with his arms wrapped around his knees, his eyes wide. When I look at him, he looks down at his feet. His voice drops, and his words come out in terse little bunches. “I didn’t know if—if you wanted to be my girlfriend, so I didn’t want to get into a big thing about it at dinner.”
“Do you want me to be?” I choke out.
He glances up. “I mean, yes.”
Ball in your court, Mirk.
“Yes,” I say.
“Yes?” He frowns.
Aghh. Wrong word.
“I mean, okay.”
The little smile appears. “Really?”
“Yes.”
It becomes the big smile. He lowers his head and drags both hands through his hair. I throw my arms up over me and hide myself in his blanket. Too much, too much, out of control. A moment later his chest presses against my back and his arms wrap around me and his legs box me in on either side. The weight of his head falls on my shoulder.
A moment of silence passes. The world doesn’t fall apart. I lower the blanket and twist in his arms, and he lets me, and then we’re facing.
I don’t want to be the girl who freezes when confronted with new friends, or the outside world, or the smallest shred of intimacy. I don’t want to be alone in a room all the time. I don’t want to feel alone in a room all the time, even when there are other people around.
I lift the blanket open so Wallace can come inside, and when he’s holding me again, I lay my arms over his shoulders and trap us both in the warmth. He lets out a contented sigh.
I become acutely aware of my limbs, how quickly I breathe, and every twitch of my lips and my fingers. It helps me stop thinking about what I’m doing wrong. It’s not too much. I’m not out of control.
I’m here. He’s here.
CHAPTER 23
I say good-bye to the Keelers—and Lucy, who is technically a Warland—before I leave. They’re all grouped in the living room, Lucy tucked under Tim’s arm on the couch next to Bren, Vee with reading glasses perched on the end of her nose, squinting at the television as she looks for a channel they can all watch. Wallace walks me out to my car. I think he might pull the surprise kiss then, but he doesn’t.