登陆注册
22024000000004

第4章

Operation Trow isn't going so well. Not that I actually know what its objective is, mind you. I'm not good at that kind of planning. I try to read the stars about it, about him, but I've never been able to read other people's stars, just my own. Mom can read other people's stars. I've asked her to teach me how to do it, but she says not to worry about it. Worry about it. Like I'm sitting around at night fretting about Mom reading other people's stars. It's not like people believe in witches anymore in this day and age; she's not going to be burned at the stake. And anyway, it's not like she can actually tell the future. She usually just says things like, It doesn't seem good, but it's all fuzzy. What good is that? I love Mom, but really, anybody can make up something like that.

But anyway, back to Operation Trow. I consider it while I'm supposed to be doing shavasana at the end of yoga class the next day. In my head, I have a clear mental list of the ingredients for Operation Trow. Although "ingredients" makes it sound more like a recipe than an operation. What are the components of an operation? Steps? That's boring. Surgical instruments? More likely.

The surgical instruments of Operation Trow are: Smile. I'm good at smiling. Mother says I'm like Mom and I smile all the time, so that's good. Do not be high-pitched like a Sophie pack girl. Yup, I can handle that as well, since high-pitched is just so not me. Invite him to yoga. That's kind of the only thing I can think of to do. I feel like other girls go out for ice cream and stuff. They pop in and out of the sushi and crepe and pizza places on Wickenden Street, twirling hair and flirting and having dates. They go to WaterFire and sit hand in hand, watching the bonfires up and down the river that slices through Providence. It all seems super cute and romantic, and I've tried a million times to imagine myself in that situation and can't. I am Merrow Rodriguez-Chance, with two mothers and rainbow-colored hair and split-personality clothing and a hippie yoga studio. I don't think I'm allowed in normal-people places like everyone else. I just don't fit there.

Trow isn't in school the second day or the third. This is really throwing a wrench into the Operation Trow ingredients/surgical instruments/plans, such as they are. I wonder if he's ever coming back.

On the fourth day, I am sitting in homeroom doing three-part breaths and counting the number of red cars going by outside, just to have something to do—because homeroom is such a waste of sleeping time, let's face it—and then there's a little rippling breeze of squealing from behind me, sweeping through the Sophie pack girls, and then there's Trow. He settles into the seat in front of me with no warning, and I sit up straight, annoyed, because I didn't have time to implement my Operation Trow surgical instruments, damn it.

Sophie comes over, complete with pack, of course. They really are mostly a package deal.

"We missed you!" squeals Sophie. "Where were you? Were you sick?"

"No," replies Trow. He sounds abrupt. I am delighted. I refuse to consider that maybe he sounds abrupt because of my wishful thinking.

If he really does sound abrupt, Sophie doesn't notice. "Don't worry," she continues. "I made sure I was taking really good notes for you."

"Thanks," says Trow.

I stare at the back of his head and wish that I could see more. It's so frustrating that Rodriguez comes after Reading alphabetically. Why couldn't his name have been Roswell or something?

The bell rings, and Se?ora Trillo calls us to order. Sophie and the pack girls scatter to their seats, and we all go through the routine of attendance—Se?ora Trillo says, "Good to see you back," when Trow says, "Here"—and announcements, and before I know it, homeroom is over and I haven't gotten a chance to implement any of Operation Trow.

He stands up and slings his backpack over his shoulder, and I know this is my last chance—until tomorrow, yes, but it feels more dramatic than that, last chance—so I blurt out, "Hi." Did that sound ridiculous? I bet that sounded ridiculous. "Hello," I correct myself. And now I've greeted him twice, which makes me sound like even more of an idiot, but I still hear myself saying, "Hi," again, as if that's going to cancel out the last two stupid greetings I made. Operation Trow is turning out to be a disaster. I should abort Operation Trow, I think.

Then he looks up at me. And smiles. He looks tired, but he has such a lovely smile. He's smiling at me even though I'm an idiot. I bet he smiles at everyone like that. He's probably just that nice. He seems like he's just that nice. But still. I like the smile. It's a glorious smile. He should stop smiling like that—he's going to snarl up traffic with a smile that beautiful, because everyone will stop to stare at him.

"Hey," he says.

I remember belatedly that Operation Trow is supposed to involve me smiling. Not just staring at his smile foolishly. So I smile. Sometimes we make ourselves smile during yoga. It's supposed to relax the body more, trick our brains into thinking we're happy, concentrating on the many muscles involved in a smile instead of the muscles being a bit uncomfortably forced into chair pose. When I smile now, it is not a smile of effort. It is not many muscles working together; it's just one muscle—it is just a pure smile. It is the easiest smile of my life. Trow is so easy to smile at.

"Hi," I say again, and I'm so busy enjoying how much his smile makes me smile that I don't even realize that I've stupidly greeted him yet again.

He gives me a little half wave and goes out to start his school day, as if we did not just have a truly momentous moment together.

And then I admit that I may be in trouble.

· · ·

So I tell my mom that night. We are closing up the yoga studio, and Mom is saying that we're almost out of wheatgrass and we need to get some. I am standing on the narrow, tree-lined street, looking out at the Providence skyline. I love the yoga studio at this time of year, when the days are on the wane but not yet abysmally short. When we leave, we can stand here on the edge of a gently sloping hill and the sun is just tipping beyond downtown, red just escaping to splash over the sky.

Mom hits the unlock button and her car chirps at her where it's been parallel parked in front of the studio. This is two-hour parking here, but the cops look the other way for us. Mom says it's because Mother is such a hotshot lawyer; Mother says it's because Mom is a good flirt.

"I think I'm in trouble," I hear myself say, and then I get in Mom's car.

After a moment where I think she must be frozen with shock, Mom gets hastily into the driver's seat. "What?" she exclaims. "In trouble how? You can't just say something like that and then get into the car! I thought your aura was off. It's been off for days. I knew it! I told Marty, but she said I was reading it wrong. I know I've been making some mistakes lately, but I'd never mess up your aura. What is it? What have you done? Don't worry, don't panic about it. We'll fix it. Let's take a three-part breath."

I look across at Mom as she sucks in the beginning of a three-part breath, and I love her so painfully much. Her short, shaggy blond hair is an artless mess all over her head, and her yoga shirt has slid off of her shoulder and her pale blue eyes are full of concern. My mom has the most beautiful eyes. I've always been sad I didn't get them.

"I'm not really in trouble," I say, and I realize I'm grinning, and I can't help it. I just thought Mom freaking out so immediately was cute—what can I say? I have the best mom. "It's just that there's a boy."

"Oh." Mom relaxes and gives me a knowing smile, and this is kind of why I didn't want to tell her. Knowing smiles. Like everyone else in the world knows more about all this stuff than I do. Okay, maybe that's true, but I don't like to admit it. "A boy. I knew there had to be something." Mom turns the car on and maneuvers it out of the space.

"No, you didn't," I say affectionately.

"I was reading your stars. And there was something. Something I couldn't quite see. Had to be this boy."

"Uh-huh," I say, dubious but indulgent.

"So. Tell me about him. What's his name?"

"Trow."

"Trow." Mom draws her eyebrows together. "That's an unusual name."

"You named me Merrow."

"Yeah, but I'm me."

"Well, I think it's a nice name. It suits him. Trow Reading. Isn't it nice?"

Mom smiles, like his name is funny or something when it's just nice. But she says, "It is. So tell me what you two talk about."

And then I feel like an idiot.

Because…we don't talk, really. Almost not at all. And how can I like him so much when I almost never talk to him? I don't want to be one of those Sophie pack girls who just likes a boy because he's cute, even though Trow is undeniably cute. But no: I should have a reason for liking him. Shouldn't I?

If he came to yoga, I think, frowning, I could get him to go for a smoothie afterward, and then we would find out how much we have to talk about.

"He's just nice," I say, because I feel too stupid to say that we've never really talked.

"Nice is a good start," Mom says, and looks at me and grins.

同类推荐
  • 不可不知的欧洲100所名校

    不可不知的欧洲100所名校

    本书从历史等其他角度发掘欧洲每一所名校的创立,同时传播了这些一流大学的教育精神。通过图片和文字结合来介绍名校的各自特色,让广大读者了解欧洲名校的情况,让国内的大学可以吸收经验,同时为学生出国留学铺一条捷径。
  • 英国学生文学读本(套装共6册)

    英国学生文学读本(套装共6册)

    《英国学生文学读本(套装共6册)》以英文原版形式出版,图文并茂。编写体例统一严谨,包括生词、课文、语音、拼读练习、词汇解释等,同时还附加了单词拓展练习。可以伴随学生从小学直至高中或大学阶段。同时也适合成人英语学习者提高英语阅读水平使用,让众多国内读者在了解西方文学的同时,也感受英语语言的魅力。
  • 人生处处充满选择

    人生处处充满选择

    精选名人经典演讲:本书精选奥巴马、乔布斯、马克伯格、J.K.罗琳等现当代名人演讲,他们现身说法,通俗易懂地讲述了他们在人生中的选择与处世之道,给人以极大的启示和借鉴意义。过去的选择造就了你现在的一切,现在的选择就是你未来的命运。如果你知道去哪儿,全世界都会为你让路。
  • The Girl Who Read the Stars

    The Girl Who Read the Stars

    Romantic, suspenseful and witty all at once--ALICE IN WONDERLAND meets NEVERWHERE.--Claudia Gray, New York Times bestselling author of the Evernight series on The Girl Who Never WasSet after Skylar Dorset's debut The Girl Who Never Was and before the thrilling conclusion to her Otherworld duology, The Boy With the Hidden Name, this novella is told from the perspective of Merrow, the Fay of the Summer Equinox.
热门推荐
  • 鱼在金融海啸中

    鱼在金融海啸中

    初入职场之后苏小鱼因缘际会认识了金融业人士陈苏雷,陈苏雷白手起家,是典型的精英三不男。经历过一次失败的婚姻,所以在一开始的时候便向苏小鱼坦率提出只愿意尝试协议爱情,被苏小鱼当场拒绝。突如其来的一场金融风暴,让苏小鱼成为失业大军中的一员,父亲炒股失败,还欠下了大笔债务。一夜之间,她从胸怀壮志的社会新鲜人突然变成了走投无路的绝望小房奴,抱着绝不能让父母一生心血付诸东流的决心,她迫不得已,又回头找到了陈苏雷……她要走下去,可她要走到哪里去?走到他确定的终点,走到没有结果的结果里去?……
  • 帝国的末日

    帝国的末日

    崇尚团队英雄主义的无主极北荒原,遍布魂灵巫术盛行的神秘东方王朝,皇权与教权下飘摇欲坠的魔法王国,以及……紧握剑与理想的骑士帝国!这就是一个热血沸腾的传奇!
  • 中国2010年度诗歌精选

    中国2010年度诗歌精选

    本书精选集结2010年度最有代表性的作品,力求选出精品和力作,力求能够反映该年度某个文体领域最主要的创作流派、题材热点、艺术形式上的微妙变化。同时,坚持风格、手法、形式、语言的充分多样化,注重作品的创新价值,注重满足广大读者的阅读期待,多选雅俗共赏的佳作。
  • 16节职业素质课(下)

    16节职业素质课(下)

    人,是国家的关键,提高人们的素质是国家兴旺发达的根本。人,也是企业的关键,提高员工的素质是企业发展的关键。本书作者一直在职业素质教育的第一线工作,累积了大量的职业素质教育经验,从而创作出这本本土化、适合中国企业的职业素质教育培训读本。书中对中国人职业素质的缺失做出了深入的剖析,更总结出了一套提高个人职业素质的理念与方法,是每一个职业人士的素质提升读本。
  • 重生之豪门弃女:狂女重生

    重生之豪门弃女:狂女重生

    叶紫,被迫毁去肉身,无奈重生到地球,夜明珠,京城夜家的千金小姐,胆小懦弱,愚笨蠢钝,是夜家的耻辱,虽然容貌艳丽无双,却被人泼了硫酸毁去,被未婚夫退婚,被夜家赶出家门,投湖而死,当异世天仙重生为豪门弃女,一切都将改变。本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。
  • 娘亲当道,妖孽靠边站

    娘亲当道,妖孽靠边站

    破产了不要紧,姐请巫师帮忙穿越异世享再世荣华。岂料巫师搞鬼,让她穿越成身怀六甲的大肚公主。被恶母妹妹驱逐,九死一生。五年后,她带着宝宝强势回归。一路打怪升级,血雨腥风不亦乐乎。他是江湖正派谈之色变的邪魔少主,为寻当年不慎丢失的龙精闯入人间。却无端端地掀起江湖中一场滔天巨浪。
  • 妻限99天,霸道总裁太欺人

    妻限99天,霸道总裁太欺人

    别人的成年礼物,五花八门,而唐筱筱的成年礼物,是滔天烈焰,家破人亡。最讽刺的是,送出这礼物的人,是那个她曾经自以为相爱的男人。假借身份,改头换面。她找到机会,再度回到他身边时,听到的却是他痛失所爱的传闻。“韩亦辰,你是不是已经沉浸在你自己的演技里,出不来了吗?”无情的讽刺,换来却是他喜悦的嗓音,“筱筱,你回来了?!”这样一个男人,到底是为什么,明明想要放火烧死她,却又对她如此宠溺?
  • 总裁前夫,离我远点

    总裁前夫,离我远点

    她以为嫁给他就能得到幸福,可他记得给她的女性朋友买礼物却独独忘了她的!她伤心冷情,转身离去!他却又死缠烂打追上来,“老婆,跟我回家!”谁是他老婆,男人,不爱就滚开!(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 没有深夜痛哭过的人,不足以谈人生

    没有深夜痛哭过的人,不足以谈人生

    独自一人,你怎能温暖?作品从心理学角度,结合现实案例,指导人们结束自恋的隐密游戏,打破孤独的墙。它提醒我们,只有真正看到别人的存在,我们才有机会走出孤独。它告诉我们,伤痛是成长的勋章、人生的宝藏,只有经历过深夜痛哭,才能真正强大起来。本书送给每一个曾在深夜痛哭的你。
  • 爱情龙卷风

    爱情龙卷风

    我在城南跟两个朋友合伙开了个不大不小的网吧权当混日子,总比闲着好,再说自己也比较喜欢玩游戏,但是网吧开了几年下来,早已对网络游戏失去了兴趣,平时在网上也就是看看小说,看看电影。日子过的了无生趣!回到电脑跟前就看到“害死大灰狼的小红帽”给我发来一条消息“你牌打的真好!”闲着无事就回了她一条“别逗了!我今天都输了200多分了!”