Note: "She Will Be Loved" by Maroon 5 is obviously not my song. In many ways, it is my song, as it seems to be the anthem for lonely young women out there, but I do not own the rights to it. Since I won't be profiting in any way from this short story of the same title or quoting the lyrics, please don't sue me...And yes, some of the lyrics are missing.
Eric Fielding met Amata Malaya at the tender age of five. At this age, nobody ever wonders "is this the person I was meant to spend the rest of my life with?" Instead, his main concern was securing a space in the sandbox. He had noticed that there was a space next to the little dark-haired, brown-skinned girl in overalls, so he took it. He never could remember exactly what he said that caused the impetuous young Amata to kick sand in his face and storm away from the sandbox for the swingset, but he was always certain that he deserved it.
Amata's parents, on the other hand, recalled quite well what caused their daughter to renounce playground society for the comfort of her books. For, as often is the case of international incidents, this was a misunderstanding. At such a young age, Eric could not understand the implications of mistaking a Filipina girl for a Chinese girl. The Malayas had instilled upon their young daughter at an early age a distinct pride in who she was, where she came from. The incident with Eric ended up being merely the first of many such incidents.
The fortunate thing about first impressions is that they don't always determine the dynamic of a future relationship. After a brief geographic explanation and ethnic clarification, Amata and Eric became fast friends. When Amata asked Eric where his family was from, it proved to be an awkward moment. The young boy went home to his parents, determined to find out who he was, but only got a simple explanation of "You're an American, and be proud of it!" from his father, who didn't quite feel that his son was under a good influence around "that foreign girl." When Eric told Amata that he was an American the next day, she simply laughed and said, "Yeah, so am I, but where did your family
really
come from?" Eventually, Amata and Eric gave up their search for Eric's ethnic identity. Instead, they focused on exploring the park and worrying their parents greatly. It was usually Amata's free spirit which got the two of them in trouble, and continued to get her into complicated messes up until their senior year of high school.
By the time she was 18, the solid walls of Amata's identity based on her family and nationality had crumbled. She knew she was not white, but it had always been difficult to fit in, a bit of caramel drowned beneath a sea of chocolate and vanilla in the sundae of middle-class Midwestern society. In elementary school, she got into playground fights which did not end as civilly as her initial introduction to Eric. In middle and high school, none of the cafeteria cliques really accepted her. She did not even feel a sense of belonging with the "outskirts" kids, the pot-smokers, the skateboarders, the kids who often swapped anti-depressant medications in the same way kids used to trade twinkies for bags of chips. Even her home life had deteriorated, as her parents were constantly on the verge of divorce, with many a mismatched set of dishes as a testament of missing plates which had been smashed against the cracked walls.
They were never "boyfriend/girlfriend" mainly because of her parents' strict decree that she was not to date until she graduated from high school. Yet this never stopped her from sneaking around with other guys. She had gotten one of the worst reputations in her high school for her actions, but more often than not, the rumors were unfounded as she was still a virgin. Eric never saw Amata as anything more than a friend until one day when he got into a fight with a guy in the hallway who had called her a slut. As he slammed the asshole into a locker repeatedly, Eric realized that he was not just angry about someone insulting one of his dearest friends. He was actually jealous of the mere implication that she could be sexually interested in anyone but him.
The only secure thing in her life was Eric. After she got her driver's license, Amata would "borrow" her dad's car and go driving. She would often call Eric at the last second and pick him up at the corner by his house. They would hang out in the cornfield outside of town, thinking about how much better their lives would be after they graduated. As troubled as Amata was, she was intelligent enough to maintain her grades. Eric often spent weekday nights studying with her, as it was usually impossible for her to get any work done in her tumultuous house. He never truly understood what it meant to her to spend an evening in a quiet house, but he left his window open for her. As unpredictable as Amata's life and behavior became, Eric was stable. She only applied to one school in California, risking non-acceptance despite knowing that her test scores and grades were more than enough to get into a state school. On the other hand, Eric applied to as many schools as possible, convinced that he would be lucky if one accepted him. He was nothing particularly special: second-string varsity football team, only got into National Honor Society after his second application, occasionally played piano for church services. In yearbook pictures, it was nearly impossible to pick him out from the other white-bread kids. Yet no matter what, he could always find her in any crowd. She had grown up to be beautiful, filling out in a voluptuous figure contrasting against the status-quo of straight stick-figure manufactured magazine beauty. To Eric, she was beautiful because nobody noticed the beauty in her unconventionality. The idiot who had taken her to prom under the pretense of believing that he could gain an easy lay from an insecure girl obviously missed out on that. It was then that he realized that it would be unthinkable for him to approach her with any ideas of being together outside of friendship.
Yet Amata did keep her secrets. It was only after graduation that she confided to Eric about her secret encounters that year. Perhaps she felt the need to escape the academic pressures and tedium of high-school life. Perhaps she wanted to quietly rebel against her parents' and society's expectations of her by being provocative. Sometimes she would end up driving to Eric's house, tapping on his window until he let her into his room. She would lie curled up on his bed while he stayed up writing research papers or scholarship essays. He had no idea where she had been, nor did he care. Eric would sit awake in his desk chair long after he had wrapped up working on his computer to just watch her sleep. Only on a few nights did he dare to sleep next to her, adjusting the errant strands of midnight-black tinged with blue over her face to behind her ear, so he could see her face clearly and trace the curve of her cheeks with his fingertips.
I don't mind spending everyday
Out on your corner in the pouring rain
Look for the girl with the broken smile
Ask her if she wants to stay awhile
And she will be loved
She will be loved
When she finally got grounded and punished to the point where her parents had locked her door from the outside and barred the windows, Eric would drive to the corner of Mission Street and Oxford Drive and park his car. It was May, the rainiest month of the year in those parts. He would get out and stand beneath a large oak tree with no umbrella, his chestnut hair plastered over his eyes. Eric was convinced that she never saw him, but he still hoped for the day when she would run out to him, somehow breaking the locks and bars which held her back. Sometimes throught the driving rain, he was convinced that he saw her wan smile from behind gauzy curtains and black bars. When she was released two weeks before going off to college, she ran back to Eric.