"Mom? I was thinking about going to the fair this Saturday."
"You know what? That sounds like fun! What time did you want to go?"
Her daughter hesitated then said, "By myself."
"What? Honey, no. We...we always go together. We've gone every year since you were born. It's a mother-daughter event. And when Daddy was alive, he went with us," she reminded her 13-year old.
"Okay. First? I don't remember anything before I was maybe four or five so that doesn't count. Dad died when I was nine, so I do remember going as a family a few times until I was ten. But...I'm 13 now, Mom, and lots of girls my age go alone!"
Her mother, Lauren, knew this day was coming but kept hoping against hope it wouldn't come this soon. It was one of many such days to come in which her baby would begin cutting the proverbial apron strings one at a time as she became her own person.
Makayla was 13βand a halfβand was a very mature girl for her age and rarely asked for anything. And yet the thought of letting her go to the county fair all by herself sent chills through her mother.
Over the years, Lauren had heard one-too-many horror stories from friends with teenage daughters who'd gotten themselves into serious trouble at parties with drugs, alcohol or older boys. Then there were the 'cop shows' on TV in which young girls were kidnapped and worse.
As bad as those hypothetical thoughts were, there were also her own teenage years to remind her that even good girls sometimes did bad thing. Those thoughts and more simply wouldn't allow her to let her daughter hang out with thousands of strangers scared her to death.
Beyond the obvious worries of being taken, Lauren couldn't help but be concerned about Makayla meeting a boy there. Her daughter was not only pretty, she was 'blooming' early and attracting a whole lot of attention. Lauren had too, and that was just one more thing to add to her growing list of worries.
She wasn't afraid Makayla would run off and do anything terrible, but a girl who was 13 but looked 16 was just too young to be alone with any boy for any length of time. Especially if the boy was say 15 or 16. Or even one named Noah, a cute, 14-year old neighbor boy who'd been paying much too much attention to Makayla all summer
since they moved in across the street.
Lauren shivered at the thought before answering her daughter.
Without bringing up the older boy Lauren didn't know anything about beyond his face and name, she said in a calm, even tone, "I'd really like us to go together, honey. It's one of the things I look forward to each year, and not going with you would...well, it just wouldn't be the same."
"Mom. You're the one who always says doing something differently doesn't mean it's bad. Besides, you also say life is about change and how we have to adapt to it. Like losing Daddy. Well, I'm growing up. I'm changing. And you need to adapt."
"I hate it when you throw my advice back in my face," her mom said, feeling completely deflated.
"So can I go?" Makayla asked, a smile back on her face.
"No. Not by yourself," her mom said just as calmly and firmly as her daughter's smile evaporated.
"Why not?" her daughter asked with a rare intonation of pouting in her voice. "It's not like I'm a little kid who's gonna get snatched or something."
Already tired of the testing, Lauren looked right at her daughter then said, "You're meeting Noah there, aren't you?"
When Makayla broke her stare immediately, Lauren knew.
"Honey. You're too young to date boys."
"We're not...dating, Mom. No one even says that nowadays, anyway. We're just...friends."
"Fine. Then when you turn 14, you may ask him to come over here for dinner where the three of us can get acquainted."
"That's so unfair!" Makayla said, raising her voice for quite possibly the very first time in her life.
"Life isn't fair, honey," her mother calmly replied.
It one sense, she'd been 13 just yesterday. In another it seemed like forever since Lauren had been her daughter's age, and at 36, maybe it had. And yet she could still clearly remember her first crush, and for that matter, every crush she'd ever had, and how 'in love' she'd been with every one of them. She could also remember her own mom reminding her she was too young to date and how angry she'd been at the time. But she was the mom now, and no amount of pressure was going to cause her to cave.
"What about going with Madeline?" her mom suggested as pleasantly as she could.
Madeline was Makayla's best friend, and the two of them did virtually everything together.
"I...I don't want to go with Madeline," her daughter said rather snidely.
Makayla wasn't about to tell her mother that her best friend knew she had plans to meet Noah. Madeline hadn't met Noah in person yet, but she knew her best friend had a serious crush on some new boy, and Makayla was asking for her help.
"Just promise me you won't tell," she made her best friend say after Madeline did her best to talk her out of it. Madeline reluctantly agreed even though she thought this was a very bad idea.
The King County Fair was an annual event that took place out in the small town of Enumclaw, Washington, and was at the extreme of edge of King County where Seattle was also located. It was the biggest annual event in the town of about 10,000 people which was the gateway to Chinook Pass on Highway 410 which took travelers into the eastern half of the state after crossing the Cascade Mountains.
With the exception of going to college, Lauren had lived there all of her life, and had met and married her late husband, Carl Holly, an Enumclaw police officer, right after she graduated from Washington State University located near the Washington-Idaho border in tiny Pullman, Washington.
When she returned home, Lauren had big plans to start a career until a mutual friend convinced her to go on a blind date with a friend she promised was unbelievably handsome. And nice.
After saying 'no' twice, she finally gave in and agreed to a single date; a date that turned out to be life changing after resulting in a second date and then a third with the most amazing man she'd ever met.
By the fourth date she'd fallen in love with him, and when he asked her to marry him four months later, her career seemed unimportant in comparison to being Mrs. Carl Holly. Of course, that meant she was to become Lauren Holly, and had heard every possible question, joke, or comment about the beautiful actress ever since.