"I can't believe you..." A strange mix of disbelief and something she couldn't quite identify, is what Erica Dane felt at that moment.
"Kicked out of prom... Really!?" The blonde mother continued in query as she drove, her narrow eyes keeping to the wet road before her.
"You are eighteen years old. Eighteen! You're supposed to be the mature one in your class. Buuuut noooo, you just had to..." Erica stopped mid-sentence, too beset by emotion to even put what she had been told by the principle of her daughter's school into words. She instead just shaking her head, as her gaze drifted across the rain-obscured night sky that lingered over their journey. Her focus at that moment spent on finding the strength to speak past all she felt.
"Mom, I'm sorry, I... She just..." Despite the youth-amplified intensity of the feelings that coursed through her, or perhaps because of them, Allison found it hard to breathe, let alone speak. Despite that, she continued, trying to explain herself, even if such was impossible in her mother's eyes.
"She's just always so mean to me! I wasn't trying to get into a fight with her. I swear!" It was the truth, but even as she mustered it, she knew it wasn't enough. Not enough to quell the growing anger of her mother, whose hands clung to the wheel, squeezing so hard that the leather of it began to squeal beneath them.
It wasn't that sound that made Allison nauseous. For though the 18-year-old high school senior feared her mother's rage, she was also beset by regret. As in a flash of tempers and torment, the young blonde had lost what she had always hoped would be one of the greatest nights of her life: prom night.
"Do you know how many people are mean to me, Allison?" Erica began, her voice having been found and her will to speak forged.
"How many people are rude to me on a daily basis?" Though they seemed like questions, Erica waited for and wanted no answers from her daughter, she instead just continuing to speak.
"A ton. And I don't just..." The blonde mother again paused, as thoughts of what she planned on saying next entered her mind and froze her. Not for reasons she could identify in name, at least, not at that moment.
"...go around pulling their hair or rolling around on the floor with them." When finally the words passed her lips, Erica's eyes closed, as she tried to shake off whatever oddities of thought and imagination she felt nipping at her heels and tugging at her soul.
"What you ... and that girl did, was just ... just ... childish! It was stupid ... and ... and ... dangerous(!), for both of you." Past the comment though she was, and open though her eyes were again, the lonely middle-aged woman could see it. Picture it. Another woman and she grabbing each other's hair and rolling together on the floor.
And though that image played tease to Erica, in the resulting silence, Allison's eyes welled with tears as she tried decide how to respond to her mother lecture. Not sure how to escape the consequences of actions she took in a split-second and at the height of overwhelming frustration.
The 18-year-old high school student, at least in her own mind and at that moment, only defending herself against a girl she felt was not only bullying her in general, but there at prom - the most important night of her albeit short life!
"Mom, where are we going? This isn't the way home." The blonde, curly-haired daughter asked in a panic. Her heartbeat beginning to increase alongside a quickly growing worry about the direction she and her mother traveled.
Without looking to her daughter for reaction, knowing what it would be, Erica just spoke. Telling Allison of her fate, in one pitiless sentence. "We're going to do what you and this Nisha girl should have done: talk this out."
"Oh my god, mom; please!" Terror. Absolute terror took the 18-year-old. "No... I can't... You don't understand!"
"You can, and you will. It's part of being an adult, - dealing with people you have disagreements with. You're not a kid anymore, Alli, you're 18." Erica continued to speak sternly, even if in her voice there was a certain soothing - a tone to help her daughter understand. This was for her good, even if she hated the idea.
"You can't just run away from your problems like your father did. You have to stay and deal with them." Erica added as her own imagination began to settle, the statement unveiling the true reason behind her decision to force Allison to try to work out the issues that existed between she and her bully. That being a sensitivity to any decision that resembled one Allison's father's might have made. A father who had left them both when finances and parenthood got hard.
Revealing though the comment was, Allison was too young and too distracted by fear to catch it. "Mom, no, you don't understand. Nisha hates me. She hates ... us!" Without clarification or context, Allison pled, trying to convince her mom to turn the car around and just take her home.
"What do you mean she hates us? That doesn't even make any sense. I've never met her." For the first time, the wavy-haired mom seemed shaken. Not deterred, but confused. Off-put by the very suggestion that somehow, she played a role in what happened that night.
"She doesn't like US! White people... I don't know why, she's just rude. Rude, hateful, and mean. Please, just take me home." For a moment, after her own words ended and her mother failed to respond, Allison thought she had done it - successfully talked her way out of seeing Nisha again that night.
"Well ... I'll be sure to bring that up with her mother..." Like a an arrow loosed from a thousand yards away, the blue-eyed mother's response drove through Allison's heart and hopes of escape. And though Allison continued to plead and argue to avoid the humiliating fate of facing not only Nisha but her mother, Erica could not be dissuaded.
Set and certain as she was, after a few more turns and wet roads, did the two arrive at Nisha's home. The address texted to Erica by the mother of one of the girls' rare, mutual friends. Arrived though they had, Allison continued her efforts to talk her mom out of the meeting.
Even as they together exited their car.
Even as they walked from that car to the door.
Even as she knocked, her pleas only ending when the handle to the door turned and thereafter opened.
"Hello." Was the greeting. "How ... can I help you?" Was the question thereafter asked by the Indian woman who answered the door. Her skin a dark brown, and her hair a jet black. The strands of which were wet-sprayed in crisp, luxurious curls.