Banana Split (14 page)

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Authors: Josi S. Kilpack

Tags: #Cozy Mystery

BOOK: Banana Split
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Sadie nodded and wondered if Mr. Olie was going to say more, but he remained silent. Sadie followed his lead.

 

When they reached Puhi, she asked if he would drop her off by the local market instead of at her condo a few blocks further west. Mr. Olie pulled over at the corner of the small business district. She thanked him as she stepped away from the car. She expected him to say something more, but he just nodded his head again. She shut the door, and a moment later, he pulled back into the street, disappearing around a bend in the road.

 

Well, that was interesting,
she thought.

 

Sadie adjusted her bag as her phone dinged to alert her to an incoming text message. It was from Gayle.

 

I land in Honolulu at 8:00 am Friday. Kaua’i by 10:30. Will send more info later.

 

Sadie texted back a smiley face, but then she caught her reflection in a storefront window. She was so different from the woman Gayle had said good-bye to in Garrison three months ago. Sadie raised a hand to her head, where a thousand little hairs had come out of her bun and corkscrewed around her face. She didn’t want Gayle to see her like this.

 

She stopped walking and looked at the shops around her on the main street of Puhi. She hadn’t noticed the sign for The Salon before, but now she moved forward and looked at a paper sign in the window that said “Walk-ins Welcome.”

 

There is no way I can let Gayle see what I’ve allowed myself to become,
she told herself. With that in mind, she took a deep breath and pulled open the door.

 

Chapter 14

 

 

Even though Sadie had made the conscious decision to go into the salon, she realized that part of her hoped they wouldn’t be able to help her so she could feel good about the
idea
but not have to follow through. Fortunately—or unfortunately depending on the perspective she took from any one moment to the next—a Filipina stylist by the name of Lou was just finishing up a trim and could help Sadie right away.

 

“I was planning to go home early,” Lou said as she put some gel in the hair of the woman sitting in front of her. “But all I’ve got is my no-good boyfriend waiting for me so I may as well stay and earn some rent money.”

 

Lou was open and friendly, and Sadie tried not to be terrified of her. Two other hairdressers and a nail tech were bustling around the salon and chatting with their customers. One conversation was in a language Sadie didn’t recognize, maybe Filipino since both women seemed to be of that ethnicity; she hoped they weren’t talking about her. It had been a long time since she’d been around so many busy people, and she found their energy surprising.

 

“So, you want it colored?” Lou asked after Sadie took a seat in the chair facing the mirror. She took Sadie’s hair out of the bun; it looked even worse than she remembered it. Lou ran her fingers through the jagged curls, her fingers catching where the split ends tangled together.

 

“I want whatever will fix it,” Sadie said.

 

The stylist rubbed a section of hair between her fingers. “Blonde?”

 

“An attempt,” Sadie said, embarrassed. “It looked nice for the first two weeks.”

 

“It always does,” Lou said, still smiling as she appraised Sadie carefully. “Blonde is a tricky color, though. Requires maintenance, yeah?”

 

Sadie nodded. The salon smelled like acetone and perm solution, zinging her nose, which wasn’t used to such aromas.

 

“How do you feel about giving into the gray?” Lou touched the two inches of grown-out roots that connected Sadie’s brassy-ash-colored blonde to her scalp.

 

“I’ve never thought about it.” Sadie had always equated gray hair with old women, and yet she knew a handful of women her age who had transitioned to all gray and looked amazing. Pam Sandival from the library committee had gone gray in her late twenties, and never colored it a single day. Now, in her early fifties, her hair was snowy white and beautiful. Then there was Paula Deen—she was a knockout, too. “Wouldn’t you have to cut off all the color? I don’t want it that short.” Short hair would make her look like a man, she was certain, and that wasn’t a look she was going for.

 

“We can blend it with some other colors while you grow it out so you can keep some length, then work with it until the transition is complete.”

 

Sadie had forgotten to mention she’d only be in Kaua’i for another month.

 

“If I trim it up, maybe to about here”—Lou lifted the last couple of inches of Sadie’s hair off her neck, so that the bulk of her hair was to her chin—“and put in some fun, choppy layers that would give you some sass without taking you all the way to punk, I could weave in some brown, black, and platinum. That would give you a more gradual change toward your regular gray.” She dropped the hair and inspected the roots again. “You have really healthy hair, and it’s not thinning. With the right product, we could control your curl just enough to keep it full without being too . . . amplified, if you know what I mean.”

 

“Really?” Sadie said, looking at herself and wishing she could see the vision this girl had.

 

“Gray’s all the thing right now, anyway, and you can always go back, to, uh, blonde if you don’t like it, but, honestly, I think you can pull off gray better than most.” She ran her fingers through Sadie’s hair again. It was strange to be touched after so much isolation. “You’ve got great texture and tone, and with a little training on how to style your hair here on the island, I think you’d be really happy.”

 

Sadie looked at herself in the mirror, really looked, and made peace with the idea of bringing a little more of the real Sadie to the surface. She imagined the cut Lou was suggesting, and then imagined people seeing her looking that way. Her goals stuck to the fridge at the condo came to mind again:
Do something brave every day.
She’d already done many brave things today, what was one more?

 

“Let’s do it,” Sadie said, smiling widely at the stylist’s reflection in the mirror, excited to become the woman Lou saw.

 

Lou gave her a little shoulder hug from behind.
“Ono,” she said with a sharp nod and a bright smile.

 

Lou headed to the back of the salon as one nail customer left and another one came in, a haole like Sadie. The other two stylists started talking about a mutual friend whose husband had left her for reasons undisclosed. A beauty shop always seemed a hotbed of female gossip. The stylists discussed several motives but eventually concluded it had to be another woman. The man had always been a dog. Their clients agreed, and they moved to the next topic—the drug-seeking helicopters that kept waking up one of the women’s children during nap time.

 

“So a farmer grows a few
pakalolo
plants to make up for the shortfall with his mango trees,” one of the stylists said as she pulled a lock of hair up from her client’s head and snipped off the ends. “The
aupuni
need to legalize it and get it over with.”

 

True, Sadie had been a hermit, but she was still aware of the relaxed attitude many people had toward marijuana here on Kaua’i. Kids wore T-shirts with the big green leaf, and many cars sported green-and-yellow bumper stickers that read “2450 steps closer to legal!” referring to bill 2450 that had reduced possession of small amounts of marijuana from a misdemeanor to a civil infraction. Sadie wondered if the amount of the drug found in Noelani’s things was within that limit. Would a civil offense have impeded her reunification with Charlie?

 

“Ah, but to make it legal will bring every pothead from the mainland to our beaches—our neighborhoods.” The other woman shook her foil-wrapped head. “People who need it can get their blue cards; no one else should be messing with it. It’s
pilikia.

 

Sadie didn’t know what pilikia meant, but she had a Hawaiian dictionary at the condo and hoped she’d remember the word long enough to look it up. She had her own opinions on the topic of legalizing marijuana, but she was a malihini, and it wasn’t really any of her business so she let the words move around her, educating her on the community she was sort of a part of.

 

“Those cards are a great start,” the nail technician inserted, filing her client’s nails in a rhythmic pattern as she shook her head. “My nephew has that Crohn’s disease, got himself a card to deal with the pain and now he can hold a job.”

 

“Well, my neighbor has a card too,” the foil-headed lady said. “And he beats his wife when he’s high. His two sons toke up with him, now that it’s legal to do so. I say double the helicopters and draw a hard line—no drugs on Kaua’i. We have the best beaches in the world and the beauty of Mount Wai’ale’ale. What do we need drugs to improve for us?”

 

“Oh,” the first stylist said with a laugh, “you are not paying attention. Fort Street gets closer every day, sistah, and a little pot at the end of the day is nothing compared to the things happening on this island. It’s ridiculous that the government gives a blue card, but makes people buy from a corner dealer. They support the very thing they say they are working against. If pot were legal, they could spend the time and the money to find the
real
drug dealers—the ones who are seducing our children with their meth every single day. Instead, we arrest single moms and out-of-work farmers for trying to put bread on the table.” She shook her head and clucked her tongue. “The real pilikia slides right past the KPD.”

 

“All right,” Lou said as she reappeared from the back, balancing three plastic bowls in her hands and taking Sadie’s attention away from the discussion. Lou carefully transferred the bowls to the counter before pulling out a stack of foil papers from a drawer and arranging them the way she wanted them.

 

“This is going to be great,” Lou said, flashing Sadie a bright smile. “I just love working with brave women.”

 

Brave.
The word washed through Sadie, bringing with it hope that she could be a brave woman again. As Lou started brushing the color on Sadie’s hair and folding over the foils, Sadie allowed herself to look at her successes today. She’d learned about Noelani, and she’d found Mr. Olie and passed on what she knew about Charlie. She’d agreed to have Gayle come, and she was getting her hair done for the first time in months.

 

She let the pride wash over her as she redirected Lou’s questions about herself back to Lou’s life instead. It worked, and before she knew it, Sadie was hearing all about how Lou met her boyfriend who, though he drove her crazy with his lack of motivation to work, was the love of her life—
ke aloha o ku’u ola.
Sadie listened to Lou talk, concentrated on her breathing, and watched herself be transformed.

 

Chapter 15

 

 

Sadie kept catching her reflection in the windows of the shops she passed on her way to the market two hours later. It was difficult to trust her own judgment, but she thought she really liked what Lou had done. The colors she’d woven in worked well together and gave Sadie a kind of salt-and-pepper look that blended into the existing gray of her roots and darkened on the way to her ends, which Lou had showed her how to flip out. Her hair was layered and felt light on her head, and yet the cut gave her a fullness that seemed to balance out her body. Lou had also sold Sadie $30 worth of product that would allow her to do the same thing herself, but Sadie was doubtful it would look as good as when Lou did it.

 

It was nearly four o’clock, and she hadn’t eaten since her bowl of cereal that morning—and the shoyu chicken and rice in the middle of the night—so at the market, Sadie filled her basket with things she hadn’t wanted to commit herself to before now. She added flour and sugar to her list, having decided to make macadamia nut pancakes with Tanya’s coconut syrup for dinner. It was one of half a dozen recipes Tanya had taped to the inside of her kitchen cabinets for easy reference. Sadie had made the meal once, when she had first arrived, and enjoyed it, but then things had gotten dark, and even pancakes felt like too much work. But she was brave today. And hungry.

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