In sixth grade, there was this cute little girl assigned to sit next to me in homeroom. Marla was her name and she was the cutest, prettiest thing I'd ever seen. She had short blonde hair, wore glasses and at eleven years old was a little taller than me (I was 5'). I'd first seen her on the school bus on that first day and was immediately taken with her. She'd just moved to the district and lived one block over from me. We slowly became friends but midway through the year, we considered one another best friends.
In seventh grade I had a growth spurt and zoomed past her. Marla had only grown an inch or two. She was raised strictly Seventh Day Adventist and was allowed no makeup or 'stylish' clothing. But there was no denying how shapely she was becoming. I remember the battle she'd had with her folks, just to allow her to have braces to straighten her teeth. I also remember her bed time was 8:30, because while we hung out and played with other kids in the neighborhood, or rode bikes together in the summer, she'd have to be at home by 8. I remember thinking how unfair that was... hell, in the summer, it didn't even get dark until after 9:00, when I had to be home. But, I didn't have to go to bed until 10 at the earliest.
Marla wasn't exactly shy, but was uber-sheltered, bordering on smothered, if you were to ask me. So, she naturally presented as a little bit timid. She used to talk to me about wishing she could wear makeup and dress 'cool' like most of the other kids, but her parents would have none of it.
So, one late summer day, a couple weeks before school was to be back in session for eighth grade, I talked her into riding her bike with me to the department store some 3 or 4 miles away. She was so worried, since we had to ride the last mile or two on the side of a pretty major state road. She wasn't as much worried about being hit by a car, as she was worried about her folks finding out she did it. But she had resolved to, because we had a plan.
I had saved some money from mowing lawns for several of our neighbors and from my paper route tips. I was going to buy her makeup, a pair of cute jeans and top. She couldn't wait! The plan was to, one day a week, put on her makeup and change clothes in the girls locker room, once she got to school!
The clerk in the store was a very nice older woman (maybe in her 40's), who thought it was cute that we were there together doing this. I remember her grinning at both of us, probably thinking back to when she was our age, saying, "You two kids are just adorable! Here, climb up on this stool and I'll fix you up!"
Fix her up, she did! Marla's, now shoulder length, blonde hair was put back in a pony tail and the clerk tried several different shades and taught Marla how to apply it. I watched for a bit, but told them I was going to the sporting good department for a while. When I came back, I was astonished! Marla looked nothing like the cute blonde girl from homeroom.
The clerk cut us a break and gave Marla several 'samples'. I thankfully only had to pay for the eyeliner, mascara and lipstick everything else was pro bono. The clerk even made us stand together with my arm around Marla, so she could take our picture. That was many years ago, but I still remember it so well.
Next we found Marla some cute jeans and top with a smiley face screened on the front.
We rode home laughing all the way and I kept telling her she looked so pretty. Marla was giddy, and insisted she was going straight home, sneaking in and locking herself in her bathroom to wash it all off and practice putting it all on again.
The next day she told me she did it three times and almost forgot to wash it off the last time, before feigning taking a nap and emerging from her bedroom, her parents none the wiser.
Weeks later, eight grade began. We'd actually gone back to the department store a couple more times for more 'cool' clothes, which she'd hid under her bed. Feeling cocky with extra clothes and not satisfied with getting dolled up just one day a week, Marla started the new school year looking like every other cute girl with makeup and stylish clothe... every day! She'd sneak her new clothes and makeup in her backpack and change in the vacant locker room, unbeknownst to anyone but me... and she was a hit!
Her popularity jumped tenfold! We were still best friends, but now there were a lot of other friends in her life... both girl and boy. The latter bothered me, but I was pretty physically mature by 13 year old standards and played starting quarterback for the Junior High football team, by now, and was popular in my own right. Everybody had known we were close friends and nobody wanted to cross me. So, away from school nothing had changed between us, but on campus, we gave each other more space. But seeing her interact with other boys for the first time, sharpened my keenness on just how attractive she was.
As it turned out, her parents never did catch on to Marla's successful attempt to fit in and become more popular. They were both killed in a tragic automobile accident after the last snow storm of that year.