Leila was thinking about Rapunzel, and her long golden hair reaching down from her castle turret for the handsome prince to climb up and rescue her. Her mother had trimmed her hair in readiness for her holiday at Aunt Dotty’s, and Leila was rather concerned that perhaps it was rather too short, by an inch or two. Her father had returned home just at the wrong moment, when she had been telling her mother about the school nurse who’d arrived that day, with her sharp pointed comb and her bottle of disinfectant. The children had all lined up outside the secretary’s office where the nurse had stood, looking very official in her navy blue and white uniform, wielding her comb like a sword.
As each child then had their head held in her vice-like grip, she parted and sliced the hair searching for nits. Leila had never heard of any of the children in her school ever having been discovered with such, but the prospect immediately horrified her father and his philosophy of doing nothing was momentarily forgotten.
“Cut her hair shorter, just in case,” he said. “ Long hair will only encourage the spread. Cleanliness is next to Godliness.”
It was one of those rare occasions when Leila’s mother was swayed by his reasoning. However, Leila was sure that Rapunzel had never suffered from such problems, as she’d managed to grow her hair for years and years without the need for the school nurse, or suffering from anything so boring as nits.
Leila sat staring out of the carriage window, unconsciously pulling at her hair trying to stretch it in length. Her father was suddenly struck with the enormity of this action. People under great stress were inclined to pull their hair, he’d heard. In fact, people in asylums were known to actually pull it out at the very roots in their torment.
Perhaps Amy had been right after all, and Leila was suffering. Perhaps, being a mere male, he was just not tuned in to these things. He suddenly felt quite useless, and rummaged in his raincoat pocket for his pipe. Not to light it up. Just to be able to grip the stem between his teeth would make him feel more confident. It helped him to think, to concentrate.
“You’re making that sucking noise, Dad,” said Leila in mild rebuke. “It sounds like you’re finishing a milk shake and there’s nothing left in the bottom of the glass when you do that.”
“Sorry.”
He removed the pipe from his mouth and wiped the mouthpiece carefully with his handkerchief, blowing air out from his cheeks at the same time.
“What’s the matter Dad? You’re puffing and blowing like an old steam engine.”
“Sorry,” he said again. He shoved his pipe back in his pocket, and then started tapping his foot on the carriage floor.
Leila stared at him, folded her arms across her chest and tilted her head on one side as though in question. He saw her looking at him and stopped immediately. “Shall we have a sandwich?”