By The Dreamer’s Pause
The bell on the door tinkled, soft as always, though she barely looked up. Thursdays were slow in the small town of Claremont Ridge—except when the rain came in sideways like this.
Mara leaned on the counter, scissors glinting in one hand, a mug of half-cold rooibos tea in the other. Her eyes scanned the street beyond the shop window, tracing the reflections of passing lives. She knew most of them by name. Some she knew by heartbreak.
She’d been cutting hair here for almost seventeen years. That chair by the mirror? It's where Mrs. Kutz told her she was divorcing her cheating husband. That one in the corner? Little Elijah had screamed his lungs out until she bribed him with jelly tots. The mirror in the back? That’s where she caught a glimpse of herself after her sister died.
Hair had memories. And Mara listened.
Then he arrived.
Three weeks ago, under an oversized umbrella, a man with cinnamon skin and quiet eyes walked in. Foreign. Or maybe just tired. He didn’t speak much—just nodded, handed her a photo of the haircut he wanted, and sat. No small talk. No drama. He smelled faintly of sandalwood and wet leaves.
Every Thursday, same time. Same chair. Same silence.
Mara had a rule—she never pried. People gave you what they wanted you to have. But something about him unraveled her restraint. He held himself like someone stitched back together with invisible thread.
Today, she dared.
“You from here?” she asked softly, brushing a stray curl from his temple.
He paused. Looked at her through the mirror. “Not really.”
She nodded, pretending not to notice how guarded he became.
“You got people here?”
His shoulders tensed slightly. “Used to.”
There it was. A seam. A thread she could tug on—if she wanted. But she stopped. She saw the same look in the mirror years ago. It was the look she wore when her fiancé left without warning. The kind of grief that can’t be shaped into words.
Silence filled the space again, but this time it felt... tender. Like neither of them needed to talk.
When he left, he paid in exact cash. But this time, he placed a folded note under the change.
“You remind me of home. Not the place—just the peace.”
Mara stood by the window long after he left, watching the drizzle coat the world in silver. She didn’t need to know his whole story. Some secrets were sacred.
Besides, she had one too.
She wasn’t just a hairdresser. She was a keeper of pieces—of people. And maybe, just maybe, she'd helped stitch a little of him back together.
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