Authors: Debra Gwartney
After the graduation ceremony, which would culminate in the most sophisticated dinner the school kitchen could put together for the hundred or so of us on campusâaluminum vats of chicken and whipped potatoes and chocolate mousse for dessertâRobert planned to bring out the projector and, accompanied by a loop of sentimental pop music, flash before the onlookers the transformations of Stephanie and the eight other kids. Now he leaned toward
Barry and me to ask again in a low voice: did we want to meet him in the administration building later for a preview so Barry could see the slides? I told him yes, we did, and I made note of the room and the hour, but even thenâeven in my eagerness to see evidence of my daughter growing out of what she had been and growing into what she had becomeâI wondered if I could handle being walloped with these images of what I'd missed, with all that had gone on without me, all I hadn't seen or heard or experienced because I'd sent Stephanie away to this school instead of sticking it out with her, instead of being the one who'd helped her forge her way to this change.
At this same time, Amandaâwho'd flown in for Stephanie's ceremonyâwas in the middle of her own metamorphosis. She was going to school at Prescott College in Arizona. She'd taken on big student loans to attend that private school, but she'd set her heart and mind on Prescott and now was there, allowed in with her GED scores and the offer of extra help from teachers to make up for lost high-school years. She was, for the first time since the age of fifteen, actually creating a future for herself rather than remaining stuck in the flattened possibility of each single day at a time.
I'd traveled to Prescott with Amanda the summer before Stephanie's graduation, for a first visit of the school. Amanda, who was nineteen years old then, and I wandered around the town of Prescott and then drove to the campus to pick up paperwork and look at classrooms and eat at the small student café that served deep bowls of lentils and brown rice along with piles of organic kale and spinach. The student body was dressed, to a one it seemed to me, in earth-tone variations on the color brown. Sweaters and wool hats, Dickies or Carhartt's pants, and big work boots. Amanda would fit in with the no-makeup, tousled-hair crowd, with these mountain hikers and kayakers and bikes-not-cars drivers. She was still shaky in ways, and had just begun to separate herself from Billy. She felt ready, she told me, to leave Eugene behind for a few years. We'd gone to Prescott to see exactly how she might do that.
All that day, as we met college folks here and there and saw the
kinds of classes the school offered, I watched Amanda brighten, felt her lighten. In the middle of the day, it occurred to me that she was a steady young woman who'd finally left adolescence behind and not the person I'd made her out to be for too long: an ageless just-off-the-street waif.
We stayed a few hours in Prescott, then drove back down the mountain to the valley to spend the night in an upscale Scottsdale resort, all dreamy pink architecture, translucent fountains, and manicured cacti. We'd live it up for a few hours; for the first time since she was a toddler, just Amanda and me for a whole night. Once in our room, we pulled the stiff polyester covers from our queen-size beds and lolled around on the cool sheets and checked out cable television, which neither of us had back home. I decided that before having dinner in the hotel dining room we should each take advantage of one service from the resort's spa. I moved to Amanda's bed, sitting thigh to thigh with her, and together we read over the thick brochure I held in my hands. It described massages, manicures, mud baths, hot rocks, facials, the hour with a personal trainer, the class with a nutritionist. "Can people actually afford this?" I said, running my finger down the prices column, my nail scraping one hundred-dollar-plus charge after the other. Amanda giggled. Amanda fell backward on the covers.
Though it had seemed like a good idea when I'd suggested the treatments, five minutes after pondering the brochure I wasn't so certain. Suddenly I was picturing myself in a strange room naked except for a stranger's sheet, facedown in one of those doughnut pillows with soft music humming overhead and a stick of incense burning in the corner, and I wanted nothing more than to talk Amanda into staying put in our room. She wouldn't be surprised by my sudden switch, my mild panic. She'd seen me act this way when I got around people I didn't know. The parent meetings at the middle school, for instance, where I sat in the back believing that every whisper and glance in my direction had to do with me and my bad-girl daughters. I'd wander to the perimeter of the room during punch-and-cookies time, pretending to read the book titles on a teacher's shelf or look at the art on the wall, and I'd
hurry to the parking lot as soon as possible once the meeting was finished, before someone could say,
Aren't you Amanda's mother? And Stephanie's?
Over a seven-year period I showed up regularly at the school that all four of my daughters eventually attended, but I never bothered to learn one other mother's name.
I felt acutely out of place at this resort, as muchâor moreâthan I did at the girls' schools or at the few parties and social affairs I'd been unable to skip after my daughters had started running off. While they were gone, I avoided others' scrutiny, avoided others in general, not yet understanding that I was only deepening the girls' alienation by hiding away from people myself.
The brochure, printed on thick adobe-colored paper and embossed on the front with the hotel's insignia, grew heavy in my hands. The spa was beyond meâand, I thought, beyond Amanda. We couldn't show up in this locker room in our old jeans shorts and T-shirts and worn sandals and undress with the wealthy guests of the desert. I didn't see how it would be good for us to squirm in discomfort in a place we didn't fit.
I was on the verge of saying that we should stay in and watch movies, order room service, and forget about the other half of our plan as well, which was to get dressed up for dinner in the resort's restaurantâbut before I could say much of anything, Amanda started to push. Sweetly push.
"When are we going to have another chance?" she asked, sitting up and taking the brochure out of my hands. "Let's just do one thing each. It'll be fun." She linked her arm with mine. "You deserve it, Mom," she said, smiling and bumping her shoulder against my shoulder.
A few minutes later, I picked up the phone to order our treatmentsâmoving back into a world alongside my daughters; yes, I could try that. I decided I'd have a plain massage, the standard fifty-minute type that might get out some of the potato-size knots that had formed in my shoulder muscles in the wake of Stephanie's return, and Amanda would get her long, thick hair cut for the first time in over a year.
***
By the time I'd finished my treatment in the jasmine-scented room and then enjoyed the fifteen minutes in the sauna I was allowed as a bonus, twilight had fallen. The blue sky was dusky now out the high windows in the women's locker room. I pulled on old sweats that were rough against my tingling legs, my skin hot and hair wet against my neck. Out in the hallwayâwhere the salon had for some reason shut down early, its shades drawn and a
CLOSED
sign in the windowâI looked around for Amanda, a damp towel and my swimsuit rolled up under my arm. After a few minutes of wandering, I found her outside. She was sitting on a concrete bench, legs crossed, smoking a cigarette under the golden arc of the exterior light. Her hair was shoulder length now, with a gently curved bounce at the perfectly snipped ends. I reached out to touch those soft locks.
"Wow," I said. "You look good."
But when she glanced up at me, her face was dark, closed down. Since the time we'd gone our separate ways, about an hour earlier, she'd retreated inside herself, and I had no idea why.
"What's going on?" I said, heart sinking already. "What happened?"
Amanda shrugged and stood up, twisting the bottom of her flip-flop on the cigarette butt to put it out. "Nothing," she said. "No big deal."
We started back to the hotel room in silence, and only after we were away from any other people on the path and walking in dusk's dimness did she let me in on the scene with the hairdresser. Amanda's hair had been washed and trimmed, and the woman was starting to blow it dryârunning a fine-tooth comb through the wet strands and using a sharp pair of scissors to catch any stray hairsâwhen she found first one nit, then another, then a bunch of them at the base of Amanda's skull. Tiny lice eggs that had no doubt been passed to her from one of the children she watched every morning and every afternoon.
I felt my own face turn beet red as she told the story. Every fall the four girls had come home from school with the itchy bugs in their hairâdamp western Oregon turned out to be a perfect breed
ing ground for the crawling parasites, and a classroom the ideal place to encourage their spread. But a resort in Scottsdale, Arizona, is not the place anyone would expect to find even a single shiny white lice egg, and I writhed in discomfort for my daughter.
"She freaked out," Amanda went on. "She called the other woman over and they started throwing the brushes and combs and everything else in the sink and pouring disinfectant all over them. Then they told me I had to get out of there."
The hairdresser had yanked the plastic covering from around Amanda's neck and hustled her to the front door. Once Amanda was on the other side, the woman flipped the lock, pulled down the shades, and slapped up the sign to close the place down.
"I'm so sorry," I said, reaching over to touch her. She veered away from me, clasping her arms tight to her chest.
"I don't care. It's nothing. I'll never see them again," she said, shrugging her shoulders, but everything about her bodyâthe way her back bent slightly as she walked under the path lights, the set of her jaw, as she'd held herself in the old daysâwere sure signs that it did matter. I pressed the damp towel in my arms against my own chest, frustrated and silent.
We put our few things away in the room and I picked up my purse and the keys to our rental car. With Amanda in the passenger seat, I drove out of the resort and into the more residential part of town, where we fairly soon found a strip mall full of ordinary shops. At a chain drugstore, I bought a container of lice shampoo nearly identical to the dozens of others I'd purchased since my children had started school. Back in our room, we took the sheets off Amanda's bed and the cases off her pillows and wadded up any towel and washcloth she might have used, shoving the bundle under the bathroom counter. Amanda knelt on the floor and hung her head into the bathtub, and I scrubbed the thick gray liquid through her freshly washed and cut hair, the long strands of it smooth between my fingers. The water from the bathtub faucet roared, steam wafted around my wrists, and a familiar medicinal smell rose in the airâthe sting of insecticideâthat devoured the dainty scents of Amanda's new shampoo and rinse and of the
rich oils a masseuse had rubbed into my skin. I wrapped Amanda's soapy hair in a clean towel and we went out to watch television for the few minutes the chemicals needed to sit on her head, to soak in and do their killing. Then we did the rinse.
By eight o'clock I was finishing the treatmentâshe in the desk chair, me standing behind her working through small sections of wet hair with the metal comb included in the box with the shampoo. I scraped the teeth against each area of her scalp, raking out the dead nits, dead lice, wiping the comb clean with tissue, and starting again. Drips of water traveled down the sides of her face and fell off the edge of her chin and now and then she'd reach up to wipe one awayâbut she didn't say anything. She didn't make any sound. She didn't complain about the rough metal against her head or the harsh chemicals on her recently softened hair. Mostly, she didn't say a word about being embarrassed or humiliated or hurt.
A short while later, Amanda and I made our way to the outdoor Jacuzzi in the middle of the hotel grounds, next to the long, blue, and very still pool. We'd decided to sit in the hot water and relax for a bit, then go back to the room and order hamburgers from room service and watch a movie on cable television. She and I were the only ones around the water and for that I was thankfulâthe other guests in for the night, or busy with other plans. I took off my sandals, tossed my towel across the back of a webbed patio chair, and slipped into the bubbly hot water, Amanda coming in after me, her damp hair bunched in a knot on top of her head.
The starsâeven competing with the hectic lights of Phoenixâwere brilliant, popping into the black cloth of the sky one after the other. The air was a perfect temperature, not too hot, and I pressed into the jets of water that kneaded the muscles of my back. I closed my eyes and listened to Amanda sigh next to me. We floated in the absolute quiet of the evening for a few minutes, until the sound of a man's voice boomed out over a loudspeaker. I sat up and looked through rows of cultivated saguaro and strands of ocotillo cactus bursting with orange blossoms toward the hotel's
ballroom, trying to figure out what was going on. Earlier, when we'd returned from the store, Amanda had noticed the parking lot jammed full; we'd spotted gaggles of teenagers and their parents dressed to the hiltâtuxedos and formal gowns and glittery tiaras nestled into piles of hairâsweeping into the hotel's lobby. We figured it was a prom, but now, as the loudspeaker man began his introductions, I realized he was announcing a debutante ball.
"Rebecca Rowe, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Wilson Rowe," the voice trilled in that
Masterpiece Theatre
accent.
"Heather Jenkins, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Frederick Jenkins."
Doctors to the wealthy retirees of Phoenix now led their pretty daughters to the dance floor; even though we couldn't see it happening, only heard the sounds of music and controlled frivolity, Amanda and I should have burst out laughing. But we didn't. From across the pool, she grinned at me, and I grinned back, but there were no guffaws or cackling parodies of the announcements. A raw, strange vulnerability had come up in both of us. All evening Amanda had glanced at the phone, expecting the front desk to call and say that the hairdressers had reported in and we should gather our things and leave. Or maybe an army of housekeepers was about to pound on our door and douse us and everything we'd touched with disinfectant. I'd worried about the sameâabout this small incident in the salon ballooning into a reason for Amanda to shut down again, maybe for a long time. But such a phone call hadn't come, and it seemed that until we checked out the next morning, the hotel would leave us alone and we would leave the hotel staff alone. Until it was time to return to the airport and make our way home, Amanda and I would keep to ourselves and take care of each other.