I rushed to the school after the principal called to say unfamiliar men were asking for my daughter, convinced grief was about to steal one more thing from us. Instead, a single courageous act of kindness brought my late husband’s love back into that room in a way I never could have expected.
The principal called while I was washing Letty’s cereal bowl and doing my best not to glance at the empty hook where Jonathan’s keys still belonged.
“Piper?” he said. His voice was tight. “You need to come in immediately.”
My hand slipped. The bowl struck the sink and cracked.
“Is Letty okay?”
“She’s safe,” he said quickly. Too quickly. “But six men came in together asking for her by name. My secretary thought we needed security.”
Three months before that, another controlled male voice had told me my husband, Jonathan, was dead.
“Who are they?”
“They said Jonathan’s old plant. Letty heard his name and refused to leave the office. Piper, she’s safe, but everyone’s emotional. You need to come now.”
Then the call ended.
I stood frozen, looking at my phone as the water kept running. Letty’s backpack was gone. Jonathan was gone.
And fear, I had discovered, did not wait to be invited.
The previous night, I had found my daughter standing barefoot in the middle of it.
“Letty?” I’d knocked once on the bathroom door. “Honey, can I come in?”
She was standing before the mirror with kitchen scissors in one hand and a ribbon-tied bundle of hair in the other. Her hair had been chopped to her shoulders, uneven and jagged, and her chin trembled.
First, I looked down at the floor. Then I looked at her. “Letty… what did you do?”
She lifted her shoulders as if preparing herself for a blow. “Don’t be mad.”
“I’m trying very hard to start somewhere before mad.”
That pulled the smallest breath from her, but tears filled her eyes anyway.
“There’s a girl in my class named Millie,” she said. “She’s in remission, but her hair still hasn’t grown back right. Today the boys laughed at her in science. She cried in the bathroom, Mom. I heard her.”
Letty raised the ribboned hair. “I looked it up. Real hair can go into wigs. And mine won’t be enough by itself, but maybe it can help.”
“Baby…”
“I know it looks awful.”
“Like you fought hedge clippers and barely won,” I said.
She gave one small laugh, then wiped her face with the heel of her hand. “Was it stupid?”
Jonathan had lost his hair in clumps across a pillowcase. Letty had never forgotten. I had not forgotten either.
I crossed the bathroom, took the scissors from her hand, and drew her into my arms. “No,” I whispered. “No, sweetheart. Your dad would be so proud of you. I know I am.”
She cried against my shoulder for a while, then pulled back. “Can we fix my hair? I look like a founding father.”
One hour later, we were sitting in Teresa’s salon, Letty wrapped in a cape while Teresa examined the damage and released one quiet sigh.
Teresa’s husband, Luis, walked in halfway through and stopped short when he noticed the ponytail on the counter.
“What’s all this?” he asked.
CONTINUE READING…>>
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