chapter fifteen
To Be Continued
By some miracle the salon was quiet, except for the rain pounding the metal roof like noisy nickels. Richard had three no-shows in a row (no one wants to get their hair done in a deluge). Mildred had four (apparently, no one wants their nails done in a deluge either). Mildred threw a cover over the manicure station and went home early. Mother left for a hair show in Murfreesboro even though, as Grandma Georgia would say, she looked like death on a cracker.
While Miss Bertha and I updated client information cards, Richard spun round and round in his chair and ranted about the inconsiderate behavior of clients. “They don’t call when they’re not coming! They don’t say thank you half the time! They just take me for granted, completely and absolutely for granted! And the tips! Don’t even get me started on the—”
“You could go on home and enjoy the rest of your afternoon, ” Miss Bertha interrupted. She might as well have suggested he play a game of rugby. Richard lives alone. He needs an audience when he vents. Unless we could think of some way to divert his attention, his tirade was likely to continue until closing time.
“I could use a haircut,” I offered, which was true. It had been six months since my last trim, and that one I’d done myself at home with a pair of nose hair scissors.
“When did we do you last?” asked Richard, instantly perked up by the idea.
“Six months ago,” I confessed (I knew better than to tell him about the nose hair scissors).
Richard stared at me in horror. “Six months?” he asked. “Six
months
! Oh. My. God.” Richard strode over to the shampoo chair and patted its seat as if he were coaxing me to the operating table. “Right this way, please,” he said. “And FYI, Daughter of Hair Salon Owner. It’s not a hair
cut
. I’m not Floyd down at the barber-shop. It’s called a hair
style
.”
Obediently, I sat down at the shampoo station. Richard sang a Sting song falsetto while he lathered me up, and when he’d finished, he led me to his chair.
When Richard was done combing and cutting and pulling at strands to check the lines and blow-drying and styling, he twirled me around to face the mirror, but I could barely look at myself. “You have the hair of a goddess!” He clapped his hands together like an overly excited child. “I swear, you could be in shampoo commercials, Rosie!” I stared at Richard. His smile was wide and flashy. His skin, flawless. His cornflower blue eyes, full pouty lips, and Steven Cojocaru spiky haircut made him look like something out of a Calvin Klein ad (I suspect Richard would be very good at pouting and writhing around in his underwear).
“
You’re
the one who should be in commercials,” I corrected him.
“Oh, puh-
leassse
!” Richard protested, but I knew for a fact he thought the same thing. He was always talking about becoming a model. “Rosie, let’s do some makeup.” Richard’s reflection was talking to mine, and my reflection made an unpleasant face in response to his suggestion. “Come
on
! You’ll look great, I swear, honey. Just a tad to accentuate your features. You need to
work it
a little, girlfriend. Know what I’m sayin’?” he said, using his sista voice. Miss Bertha let out a cackle.
“Okay. Okay! Just a little,” I agreed, mainly to make him stop. “But if I end up looking like some character out of a John Waters film, you’re in big trouble.”
I settled back in the chair again and closed my eyes. Richard hummed an old Rod Stewart song, and I could tell by the light strokes that he was, in fact, taking it easy. There’s only one thing worse than being a regular fat girl, and that’s being an overly made-up fat girl. A blush brush is not a liposuction wand.
The concealer and base went on first, and Richard blended it with a sponge wedge. Next, he applied eye shadow and blush and eyeliner and mascara. He dusted my face with a coat of sweet-smelling powder, and I knew when he smudged my lips with gloss, he was finished. “You can open your eyes, Rosie,” he whispered.
“No.”
“Come on.
Look
in the mirror,” Richard insisted.
Reluctantly, I opened my eyes. The dark chestnut hair was sleek and shiny, as if it might belong to some really pretty, skinny girl. It certainly didn’t seem to belong on
my
head. The makeup was faint, an enhancement instead of a cover-up. Minus the extra person I was lugging around under my skin, I might’ve actually been pretty—brown eyes, small nose, full lips.
“Well?” asked Richard.
“I love the hair,” I said, which was true. “And the makeup isn’t bad.”
“Isn’t
bad
! Are you kidding me!”
“I love it!” I said, hugging him quickly. With Richard you have to make amends fast or he develops a grudge, and Richard-grudges can last months. He was just coming out of one with Mildred because she’d used his hair dryer on a client’s fingernails without asking. “I love this eye shadow and the way you contoured it in the corners here. And the blush! What’s this color called again?” The words came out so fake I reminded myself of a Bluebird.
“Berry Glow,” he replied flatly, putting all his brushes away. “Miss Bertha, will you clock me out. I’m all done here.”
“Richard.”
I tugged at his sleeve. Thankfully, the phone rang and distracted Miss Bertha. With Richard I could tell the truth about my lack of self-esteem. He wasn’t exactly brimming with the stuff himself, but I didn’t want Miss Bertha to overhear. “Richard, you did a great job. I love my hair. I’d love the makeup, too, if it were on another head, a less fat one. Please don’t be mad, okay?”
“I’m not mad. It’s just a sucky Valentine’s Day eve is all.” He glanced at himself in the mirror. “God, my hair is one giant frizz ball!” His hair was perfect, so I knew he wanted to change the subject.
Richard left, grudge-free, thankfully, but I knew I’d been the final thing to tip his rotten-mood scale. Sometimes the bad feelings I have about myself rub off on other people.
Miss Bertha dropped me off in front of my dark, empty house a little after five. The rain had stopped, and the street had that Krispy Kreme glaze about it. “We have a church supper tonight,” said Miss Bertha. “I’d love it if you’d come.” Miss Bertha always feels guilty dropping me off at an empty house.
“No, thanks,” I said. I squared my shoulders and bounded up the sidewalk with as much fake cheerfulness as I could muster. On the way home I’d started obsessing about Kyle’s basketball game invitation again. Maybe his invitation was real. But even with nice makeup and a new hair
style
, attending a basketball game alone on a Friday night was too much. I just didn’t have the courage.
“When I find myself in times of trouble, Ben and Jerry come to me . . .” I was creating blasphemous lyrics and staring into our empty freezer when I noticed the red light flashing on the answering machine.
Probably Richard,
I thought and pressed the button.
Message one:
Beep.
“Hi. It’s Kyle again. Just wanted to let you know the game starts at seven-thirty. In case you decide to come.”
Beep.
Message two:
Beep.
“It’s a home game, by the way.”
Beep.
My heart hammered in my throat. I glanced over at the fridge. The door hung wide open, and its interior light cast a haunting glow across the kitchen. I slammed it shut and looked up Melvin Plunkett’s Cab Service in the phone book. Quickly, before I lost my nerve, I dialed the number.
“Hi, uh . . . Mr. Plunkett, this is Rosemary Goode over on Stewart Street. I need a ride to Spring Hill High School tonight. I’m going to the basketball game,” I announced, as if Mr. Plunkett might comprehend the magnitude of this social stride.
I banged through the gymnasium door hideously early. According to the clock on the wall, which was protected by a metal cage, it was six-forty. The only other people there that early were a few of the overly involved parent types and their elementary-age kids. A brunette chattered animatedly about an upcoming fruit sale while her children slid up and down the sidelines and got their socks dirty.
Kyle stood at half-court. He was bulky-looking in his basketball uniform—thick arms that were not entirely muscle, beefy legs, a rounded middle. Right away, he smiled and waved. A basketball smacked him right in the mouth. “Eyes on the ball, Cox!” Coach Lord yelled. I jerked my head away and pretended not to notice the mishap.
The climb to the top and very isolated (just to be on the safe side) row of the bleachers made my heart pound. My deprived stomach growled. My low-blood-sugar head spun. The Pounds-Away I’d downed in Mr. Plunkett’s cab did nothing to stave off my hunger. I settled on my hard seat and watched Kyle practice.
The spectators trickled in slowly at first, then all of a sudden the gymnasium was filled, and the game started. Clearly, anybody who was anybody sat on the lower bleachers—Bluebirds, NBs, miscellaneous popular kids—SGA officers, homecoming and winter dance stars (queens and kings were elected at both). I sat in the loser nosebleed section unnoticed, of course, which wasn’t all bad. Being unnoticed was way better than being spotted and subsequently tortured. Besides, I could stare at Kyle openly without feeling like some weird stalker chick.
For such a big guy, Kyle was in great shape. Effortlessly, he bounded up and down the court. He blocked shot after shot. He stole the ball. At halftime, I watched a parade of Bluebirds file out to the concession stand. Diet Cokes in hand, they filed back in again just as the buzzer sounded.
Kyle started the second half, too. Machinelike, he passed and shot and dribbled and rebounded. I didn’t know who to be more proud of—myself, for simply showing up, or Kyle, for playing so well. Finally, with only ten minutes left on the clock, Enormous Strapping Jock Boy came out for a break. We were a solid twelve points ahead, but he didn’t sit down. Instead, he paced the sidelines and gulped water. With five minutes left, Coach Lord put him back in again.
At Kyle’s return, Kay-Kay Reese and the other cheerleaders went wild. “Hey, hey hey,” they chanted, “another one bites the dust.” The bleachers vibrated. The scoreboard flashed. It struck me then that people did this every Friday night. While I was home with my head in a bag of peanut butter cups, the world went right on turning. Without me. I thought of Aunt Mary’s mantra:
Don’t waste your youth being fat.
The Wildcats, our opponents, tried and failed to score. Thirty seconds. Fifteen. At ten, the crowd started counting down. The victory horn sounded. The Spring Hill Raiders won! I felt myself leap to my feet and cheer right along with everyone else. For that shimmering, victorious moment, I was a Spring Hill High School Raider. Not a fat-girl Raider or a misfit Raider, but a regular Raider.
I watched as Misty Winters led the other Bluebirds out the door. More than likely, they were off to some postgame keg party. After everyone was gone (except for the clean-up crew), I made my way down the bleachers. It struck me then that I didn’t have a ride home, so I headed to the lobby and dialed Mother from a pay phone.
“Hey.” I felt a tap on my shoulder. “You came,” he said when I turned around. A freshly showered, still somewhat sweaty, but smiling Kyle towered over me.
He
is
delightfully enormous,
I thought to myself.
And handsome. God!
“Great game,” I managed to say.
“I had a feeling if you came you’d bring me luck.” He smiled.
Mother picked up. “Hello? Hell-
o
?” I held up a just-a-minute finger to Kyle.
“Mother, can you pick me up at school?” I spoke as if I were making the most normal request in the world.
“School? What are you doing at school? You didn’t ask me if—”
Kyle was mouthing something I couldn’t hear. “What?” I asked him. “No, not you, Mother. Hold on a sec.”
“I can take you home,” Kyle whispered.
My heart doubled in size and banged against my rib cage. “Are you sure?” I asked.
“Sure,” said Kyle, licking the small cut on his lip.
“Never mind, Mother. I’ll be home later. Bye,” I said, hanging up before she could ask questions.
Kyle’s ancient blue and white Suburban smelled of wet dog and mildewed athletic equipment. He hoisted a set of golf clubs over the seat, then tossed a pair of cleats, a basketball, and several mysterious padded items into the way-back. “Sorry.” He grinned. “We have a lot of jocks in our family. I mean . . . um . . . athletes,” he corrected himself.
Smokey Robinson’s "Cruisin’ ” played on the oldies station, and Kyle sang along,
loudly.
His voice (Kyle’s, not Smokey’s) was slightly off-key, but I liked his easygoing, sing-out-loud confidence.
All too soon, we reached my house. Kyle shifted the gear to Park and turned to face me. “Did you do something to your hair?” he asked. I nodded. “It looks nice.”
“Thanks,” I replied. “I work at my mom’s salon. One of the stylists there talked me into getting it done.”
“Kay-Kay told me you worked there.”
“Kay-Kay Reese?” I asked, even though there wasn’t another Kay-Kay in the whole town as far as I knew.
“Yeah. She says you have a great shop. Or your mom does.”