Johnny America

Fri­day Morn­ing Shearing

by

Illustration of a hair clippers with locks of hair surrounding it

Ron is sit­ting in a chair read­ing the pa­per when I wan­der in­to his bar­ber shop, tucked be­hind a thrift store that leaks the smell of old clothes in­to the car­pet­ed hallway.

Ron sees my sheep­dog mop and wants to make it clear he’ll have to charge me ex­tra, be­cause oth­er­wise peo­ple like me who on­ly sub­mit to a shear­ing every six months would take ad­van­tage of him. He’s not new to this game.

Ron asks me to pull up a pic­ture of what I’d like be­cause he needs to be sure he gets the sides right, and so I com­ply and find a pho­to of one of the Hemsworths to ap­pease him, try to make a dumb joke ask­ing if he can al­so make my face look like that for my wife’s sake, the sort of line I fig­ure a guy my age should say to a guy his age. Ron doesn’t seem to find this very funny.

Ron tells me I could get hair plugs to cov­er the bald spot at the top of my fore­head, one I’ve sport­ed since be­ing scooped out of my mother’s ab­domen. Ron asks me if I got it from hit­ting a piece of fur­ni­ture, and I as­sure him no, I was born this way.

Ron asks if both my kids are the same sex, and when I tell him I have two boys, he says he fig­ured, which makes me won­der what sort of vibe I’m giv­ing off.

Ron sprays a con­di­tion­er on my hair that he says lit­tle girls use, which makes me won­der even more.

Ron wears an ear­piece for his cell phone, and at one point I think he’s tak­en a call; in­stead, he’s ask­ing me if I know some­one named Car­son who has three kids and lives some­where near me. Ron wants to know where I live on 1st Street: the right or left side? Four hous­es down, five hous­es down?

Ron is a fish­er­man and a bird­er, and he tells me about dri­ving over near Lone Rock the pre­vi­ous week and spy­ing a swan amid the thaw­ing ice.

Ron asks if I take any vi­t­a­mins, and when I tell him no, he says I should at my age, which re­minds me of the time a doc­tor ad­vised me to start eat­ing turkey sand­wich­es for break­fast to build more mus­cle mass.

Ron dusts off the bot­tom of my neck, tells me not to move on him, shaves an even line across the base of my scalp.

Ron tells me I owe him $27, by cash or check, which must in­clude that sur­charge. Maybe I’ll see him again in six months.

Filed under Fiction on September 12th, 2025

Care to Share?

Consider posting a note of comment on this item:

—§—

Previous Post

«

Next Post

»

Join our Irregular Mailing List

For very occasional ramblings, word about new print ephemera, and of course exciting investment opportunities.