Home > Instructions for Dancing(3)

Instructions for Dancing(3)
Author: Nicola Yoon

   I ride slowly, meandering down street after street, gawking at the enormous, pristine lawns and the enormously expensive cars.

   Eventually I find myself on a street lined on both sides by jasmine bushes and overgrown jacaranda trees. The branches overhang the street and form a canopy of purple petals. I feel like I’m riding through a tunnel into a fairy tale.

   The sun slips behind a cloud, and the air is suddenly colder. I pull over onto the sidewalk and take my jacket from my backpack. As I’m about to ride off again, I spot one of those small wooden neighborhood library boxes. It’s bright blue and looks like a miniature house with a gabled roof and weathered white doors that are latched shut. A small placard reads Little Free Library.

       “You certainly have a lot of books for us, dear,” says a woman just as I’m propping up my bike.

   I scream and whip around. An old woman is standing behind me, not even a foot away.

   “Holy fuckballs,” I say, and then slap my hand over my mouth. “Sorry, I didn’t mean to curse. I didn’t see you there.”

   She chuckles at me and moves closer. Her skin is a pale and thin brown, like weathered paper.

   “Never mind about the cursing,” she says. “Though one wonders what a fuckball might be.”

   I smile but look past her. Where did she even come from?

   “Is this your library?” I ask.

   “Well, I made it, but of course it’s for everyone. Do you know about these? The idea is to get people reading and actually talking to their neighbors instead of just living next door to them.” She rubs her hands together. “Now, what do you have for us today?”

   I swing my backpack to the ground and take out an armful of books.

   She takes some from me and presses them close to her chest. “These are very well loved,” she says, looking down at the titles. She’s one of those people who mouths words as she reads. It makes it seem like she’s chanting a weird spell. Barely There; Cupcakes and Kisses; Destiny’s Duke; Love, Set, Match; Tiger’s Heart.

   “They’re all great,” I say. My voice comes out in a scratchy whisper. I clear my throat. “You should read them.”

       “Why are you giving them away?” she asks.

   She’s standing closer now, still clutching the books she took from me.

   I grab more from my backpack and consider telling her the truth. That the books don’t feel like they belong to me anymore. That love stories are like fairy tales: you’re not meant to believe in them forever.

   I stopped believing in them the day after Dad moved out.

   It’s funny how a day can start out just like any other and end up so different. Sometimes I wish there were a weather report for your life. Tomorrow’s forecast is for routine high school shenanigans in the morning, but with dramatic parental betrayal by late afternoon, ending with wild emotional despair by nightfall. Details after the next commercial break.

   I’d spent the day at school in shock, not quite believing that Dad wouldn’t be there when I got home. By lunchtime I was sure I could convince him that he and Mom were making a mistake. After school, I took the city bus all the way to Santa Monica and then rode my bike across campus to the Humanities building, where his office is. I took the stairs two at a time, thinking about what I was going to say. Maybe the problem was he didn’t realize how much Mom loved him. She isn’t always the most demonstrative. Or maybe they needed some more non-parent time together, a weekly date night or something. Or to find a hobby to do together so they could “reconnect” in the way relationship experts always talk about.

   I ran down the hall to his office, thinking he’d understand. We always understood each other.

   I didn’t knock on his door. I should’ve, but I didn’t. I just opened it and burst inside, hoping he’d be there. He was there. And he was kissing a woman who wasn’t Mom.

       I looked back and forth between them. I tried to convince myself that maybe this relationship was new, that it’d only started in the last two days. But of course, that was silly. It wasn’t a first kiss, and it wasn’t a last one. This kiss said there was a whole history to their relationship. It was one of the many kisses that broke up our family and broke Mom’s heart and broke mine too.

   Dad ran his hand down his face. “Evie, sweetheart,” he said. “You didn’t knock.”

   I’m not sure if he was scolding me.

   When he and Mom told us they were getting separated they said they’d just grown apart. That they still loved each other and loved us. But that was a lie. The reason Dad left us was right here, wearing a jade-green dress and big hoop earrings and pressing her hands to her lips like somehow it could make me unsee what I’d seen.

   I backed away from them and ran through the door and down the hallway and down the stairs until I was outside. Dad called out to me, but what was there to say? There wasn’t anything at all to say anymore.

   That evening, Mom told me Dad had called and told her what happened. She said she was sorry I had to see that. She asked me not to tell Danica. She said she never wanted to discuss it again.

   Of course, I don’t tell the old woman any of that. Instead, I shove the last of my books into the little library. When I look at her, she seems sympathetic, like somehow she heard all the things I didn’t say.

       I latch the door shut. “Well, have fun reading those,” I say.

   She points at the library. “Aren’t you going to take a book, dear? The rules are ‘give a book, take a book.’ ”

   “There isn’t one to take,” I say.

   “Are you sure? I’m certain someone left one earlier.”

   I reopen the door and spy the book she’s talking about in the back left corner.

   The book is called Instructions for Dancing. It’s a slim paperback with water-damaged and dog-eared pages. Underneath the title there’s a simple line drawing of two sets of footprints facing each other.

   I flip through the pages reading chapter titles: “Salsa,” “Bachata,” “Waltz,” “Tango,” “Merengue,” “East Coast Swing,” “Lindy Hop.” Each dance has its own sequence of numbered diagrams with arrows pointing from one set of footsteps to another.

   “Maybe I should leave this for someone who wants to learn how to dance,” I say, and start to put it back.

   “That someone could be you, dear.” She comes closer to me. “I insist,” she says.

   It seems so important to her that I take the book and drop it into my backpack. “Nice meeting you,” I say as I hop onto my bike.

   “You too,” she says. “Take good care.”

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