Tell Me Three Things - Julie Buxbaum Page 0,31

the breeding part, but why April? Why is it crueler than any other month?” I ask.

“I don’t know. But I kind of hate April,” Ethan says, and then stops. He squints at me, almost angry. He didn’t mean to say that. A slip, somehow. But about what? I don’t get it. What does it even mean to hate April? I hated January in Chicago because it was effin’ cold, but we’re not talking about the weather here. He shakes himself out of it. “Do you like to walk? Why don’t we do this walking?”

Ethan doesn’t wait for my agreement, just gathers his books and his laptop, and so I follow him outside.

“I thought people in LA didn’t walk,” I say once I hear the school door close behind me. I always feel relief at that sound, another day done and survived. He slips on sunglasses, Ray-Bans, and now he’s even harder to read because I can’t see his eyes.

“I think better when I’m moving. It wakes me up. Want to hear what else I learned from Google?”

I nod, which is stupid because he’s not looking at me.

“Sure.”

“Eliot didn’t originally start the poem this way. Ezra Pound told him to cut, like, forty-three lines or something. So the whole April thing was supposed to come later. And back then, presumably he had to literally cut and paste, with, like, scissors and stuff.”

I close my eyes for a second and picture it, though I have no idea what T. S. Eliot looked like. But I imagine an old white guy with a monocle, a heavy pair of scissors, and a glue stick.

“I can’t imagine writing without a computer,” I confess. “When I use paper, it feels too…slow or something. My mind is faster than my hands.”

“Yeah, me too. So tell me something else I don’t know about you.” He cocks his head to the side, and this time he is looking at me. I’m grateful for his sunglasses, that extra layer of protection. His gaze is too strong. This, surely, is one of the many things that keeps the girls coming to his chair, these little moments of connection dished out sparingly, like tiny gifts. Maybe he’s intentionally stingy with them; too much and no one would ever leave him alone.

“I don’t know,” I say. “Not much to tell.”

“I find that hard to believe.”

“Okay, there’s lots to tell, but not so much you would want to hear.” December, that’s the cruellest month, I think. Dead mothers’ birthdays and Christmas cheer. April too. The month of endings. And I like your Batman T-shirt and your scary eyes and I want to know why you don’t sleep enough. When I close my eyes at night, I see last moments, impossible goodbyes.

But I don’t dream anymore. Do you dream? I miss it.

“So, what about you?” I ask.

“ ‘Lilacs out of the dead land, mixing / Memory and desire, stirring / Dull roots with spring rain. / Winter kept us warm, covering / Earth in forgetful snow, feeding / A little life with dried tubers.’ ”

“You memorized ‘The Waste Land’?” I ask. “For real?”

“Most of it, yeah. I read poetry when I can’t sleep. I like to memorize it.”

“Seriously?”

“Now I’m totally embarrassed. Stop looking at me like that,” he says, but I’m the one whose face is red. I’ve been looking at him in, well, wonder. The guy reads poetry. For fun.

Swoon.

“I know it’s weird.”

He smiles, and so, so do I.

“No, that’s really cool.” I resist the urge to touch his shoulder. Who is he? I am officially Dri. All I want are more details. “Dried tubers?”

“I know, right? Like what the hell are dried tubers?”

Later, I lie down on my day bed, prop my feet up on its curved edge. IM with SN.

SN: you’ve been quiet today. SO HOW WAS YOUR DAY. GO!

Me: Look at that. You do have a shift key. Day=not too bad. Yours?

SN: good, actually.

Me: Tell me three things I don’t know about you. You know, besides your name and, well, everything else.

Heh. Apparently my afternoon with Ethan has left me braver. Reckless. When we said goodbye, next to my car, he put his hands in his jeans pocket, rocked back on his heels, and said, “Till next time.” Till next time. Three words that sound good together like that. All in a row. Poetic.

SN: okay. (1) I make an amazeballs grilled cheese.

Me: Amazeballs?

SN: yup, so good it justifies the use of the word “amazeballs.” (2) I went through a Justin Timberlake phase in

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