Nothing Conrad had said seemed to be convincing Zhenya of anything; disappointment and frustration with his own inabilities was starting to seep up his limbs and into his chest, that familiar feeling of inadequacy. At least when it came to Zhenya’s frustration or Zhenya’s troubles, he’d had some success in the past -- but more and more he was feeling like he might have run out of ways to help, like Zhenya might be better off finding a better friend than him.
But he didn’t really want to lose her friendship at all.
I just need to play my part, she said -- by now Conrad supposed he knew what her part was: to do what she’d been asked to do without embarrassing her family. If she was old enough to fly in competitions she was old enough to represent her family -- that made enough sense to him -- but it still bothered him. Her part was bigger than it should have been. He could tell his face was pinched and blotchy -- he was frustrated and confused about why -- it bothered him to imagine her being able to read his expression, but he had never had much control over it.
He wouldn’t have wanted anybody to feel the way he did all the time -- he knew he was an embarrassment to his family, and had for years -- least of all Zhenya. She’d worked too hard for too long to deserve it. But it was inevitable. Athletes’ careers were short, and fame was fickle, and nothing good ever lasted -- she would disappoint her family sooner or later, and the later it happened, the worse it would hurt her. The more effort Conrad had put into pleasing his parents as a child, the longer he’d managed to succeed, the more devastated he’d been when it fell through. Zhenya was just unlucky enough not to have learned that early on.
But for now they were both sitting on the floor of this stupid classroom neglecting their task and he was desolately positive that if he tried to explain this to her, he’d hurt her feelings. He turned the words around his head for a moment -- I just don’t want you to hurt yourself trying too hard -- and said, “I just don’t want you to get hurt.â€
Uncomfortably he shifted onto one knee, picked his rag back up -- if they were going to be done by dinnertime they’d have to get moving again soon, and if he kept sitting here trying to explain what he was thinking without telling her why he was thinking it, he’d upset himself. Already his breath was short; he said, his voice faint, “I’m going to keep cleaning.â€