"Is that all it will take?" I asked. "Yes," he said. "Just five inches of hair."
He had shifty eyes. Night shifty eyes. More comfortable with cold, uncomfortable fluorescent light.
"That's not a lot of hair," I said. "It's enough," he said.
I looked around his office. The place was untidy, like a teenager's room. It smelled of coffee stains & unfinished tuna salad sandwiches.
"What're you looking for?" he asked. "A ruler," I said. "If you don't have a ruler - or a tape measure - there's no way to know if it's exactly five inches of hair."
Being exact was important to me at that time in my life. It was a kind of mental punctuality.
"An inch is about as big the length from knuckle to tip of the average finger," he said, pointing one finger at me & using another (from the other hand) to demonstrate.
I hadn't looked at his hands yet, & now I wish I hadn't. They looked like they'd been broken at least twice in the past, & repaired by an arthritic doctor.
"I guess that's fair," I conceded, pushing his hand out of my way. "Five inches of hair is fair."
He clapped his malformed hands together & it made a pathetic noise. He was happy, & I saw him reach into a desk drawer & remove a pair of scissors that could have doubled as shears.
"No, no," I said. "Not now!" "Not now?" he repeated as a question.
I made strange gestures over my head that I initially thought might be self-explanatory, but instead looked like I was trying to clumsily mimic a fashionable dance popular with trendy commercial music.
"I'll need to grow it first!" I finally explained.
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