Hairdresser on Fire. Daniel LeVesque
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It was a magical world, the back of Spencer Gifts, and my time there was always ruined by some zit-faced asshole who wanted some fake dog shit or punk sticks or a Cheryl. Eventually, RIPTA would take me past the mall all the way to Providence where I’d find the smaller bookstores, with not only great books I’d never heard of, but entire rows of filth way better than the suspender fireman shit at Spencer’s.
My bus pass lasted another year before I got my license, the giant Volvo tires of the RIPTA bus kneeling to the yellow curb with a hydraulic pssssttt, dropping me off to find the sleazy alleys and parking lots where I would at last come to understand “oral passive” in a very physical way. I even made a little lunch money.
I wasn’t one of those kids who’d need to be prodded to get a license at sixteen and move out at seventeen. Providence laid over a hump in RI Route 146, its small skyline flickering with two windows of my first apartment.
My sublet was with some Goth kids from just over the Massachusetts border. They were real Goths, too. It was the late ’80s so there was no trending, no #Goth. These were the kids who would later end up on Jenny Jones or Sally Jessy Raphael or some other daytime talk show, talking about piercings or hairdos or nightlife. They weren’t talking in public about cutting yet, just the look. The Goth Look.
I didn’t have the Goth look, or any look at all. Not that I didn’t try. When I moved out of my mom’s, my hair was past my shoulders and frizzy, beholding a brown that didn’t have warmth or ash, just ratfur brown. One week at the Goths had me deciding to tint it black. Jet Black was the color on the box. Instead of lending an edge to my look, Jet Black only washed me out, making me look even more like the hippie clown I already was. Better wigs could be found at the Salvation Army, outside the store, next to the big red box. Same with my clothes.
To remake myself in my new Big City Life, I called a hair salon to do something about my look. My mother paid. She’d always told me, “You cut that hair, Francis, and I’ll pay. I don’t care if it’s fifty dollars.” I phoned in the favor.
The salon was all brass and glass, called Glitz Iz Hair! It was the closest place to my house. When I walked in there was a dash for the back by all the available stylists. They poked their heads out one by one, each one assessing from afar whether I had bugs crawling in and out of the mass of black pill on my head.
“No way,” they all said, until finally the owner had to come out. I wasn’t leaving.
“Hi! Welcome to Glitz Iz Hair!”
“Oh… hi.”
“I’m Krissy, the owner.” She lifted her arms in a wide V and slowly lowered them in an Everything You See Here Is Mine sweep.
“Cool…” I looked around. I hadn’t been in a whole lot of hair places and they all looked the same to me, only Glitz Iz Hair had more chairs than other places I’d been. All those empty chairs, someone would have to take me.
“How can we Glitz you up today?” Krissy was being hopeful. I was the last person that belonged at Glitz or in any place of beauty. I felt as foreign as she thought I did, looking around at the style books and expensive products.
“Well, I need a haircut…”
“Mmm-hmmm!” she said.
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