Meryl Lee is one of
Holling's classmates. According to Holling, she's in love with him and has been since the third grade. In reality, she makes mean jokes about hurting Holling and joins
Danny Hupfer in making death threats if Holling doesn't bring the class
cream puffs. She does, however, act as a voice of reason when Holling is paranoid that
Mrs. Baker is out to get him. Though Holling is mostly unaware, Meryl Lee's father owns Kowalski and Associates, an architecture firm that is Hoodhood and Associates’ direct competitor. This rivalry explains much of Meryl Lee’s behavior that Holling finds confusing: Kowalski and Associates is, for much of the novel, not doing well because they keep losing business to Hoodhood and Associates. This means that there's a very real chance that Meryl Lee's family will suffer financial hardship or have to move. Despite this, Meryl Lee accepts Holling's invitation for dinner and a night at the theater for Valentine's Day. She loves Shakespeare and is thrilled to see
Romeo and Juliet with him, and they spend a long time talking over Cokes at Woolworth's afterwards. The next week, she's extremely upset when she realizes that her father used Holling's drawing of his own dad's plan for the remodeled junior high school to revise his proposal. She finds herself caught between familial loyalty and her affection for Holling, who shuns her and calls her a traitor. After he finally forgives her, he and Meryl Lee start spending more time together and are partners on many of their school projects.