No way in
heaven.
Tatum took Sully's plate and got up. “I don't know why I rattle on to you every time you come in here. Must be because you actually listen.”
Sully scooped up the folder. “You're easy to listen to. Hey, thanks for the cake.”
“Someday you have to tell me why you keep eating this stuff,” she said.
“I'm hooked on it.”
“Liar,” she said, and disappeared behind the counter.
I
called South Kitsap Middle School that morning to have the office get a message to Jayne, saying I would meet her out front after classes. Then I spent the entire day at the Daily Bread torturing myself with all the reasons that was a mistake.
What if she left school because she'd rather be suspended for truancy than have to face me?
What if Christopher told Rich, and Rich had the school ban me from seeing her?
What if Child Protective Services swept her away out a back door before I could get to her because Rich had reported I was an unfit mother?
“And what if monkeys fly out of my nostrils?” I said to the lentils I was pouring into a pot.
“That would be something to see.” Oscar paused on his way to the gas range. “I hope you're winning that fight you've been having with yourself.”
I looked into his whiskery-cherub face. Could there
be
any more compassion in this place?
“I'm going to try to see my daughter today,” I told him. “And frankly, I'm freaking out.”
He nodded his head of curls. “I get that. Mickey flopped around like a flounder all night worrying about Audrey.”
I shiftedâgratefullyâto the dropping corners of his eyes. “She still having man trouble?”
“Who knows?” Oscar said. “She's in a funk, but she won't talk to either of us about it.”
“I'm so sorry,” I said. I covered the beans and headed for the door.
“The only person she'll talk to is you,” he said.
I stopped in the doorway. “Is that a hint?”
“No.” He didn't look up from a pot of steam. “It's a straight-out request. Mickey won't ask you, but I hate to see that kid suffering.”
I was an expert on suffering, but that didn't make me an expert on fixing it. I was beginning to think there
were
no fixers. Only listeners.
But I went in search of Audrey and found her staring at a pot of oolong tea that had long since finished steeping. “Who does this go to?” I said.
She jumped.
“Pour a cup of chamomile for yourself,” I said. “And meet me back here. I'll take this out.”
Once I got the couple in the corner settled with their couscous and zucchini bread and their pot of oolong, I whispered to Mickey that Audrey needed a break.
She whispered back, “You are an angel from heaven.”
By the time I got to Audrey and the chamomile, she was crying, big hunky sobs that shook her whole body. I folded her into me and rocked her back and forth. For a moment all I could think of was whether anybody was doing this for Jayne.
“It's official,” she cried into my chest. “Boy dumped me.”
“The cad.”
“Oh, please don't, Dr. C.” She shook her head against me. “I love him. He can't be a jerk if I love him.”
Sure he could. My mouth tasted bitter, but I kept it shut.
“What did I do wrong?”
I held her tighterâas much to keep from going out and finding the Boy so I could smack him as to comfort her down to the bone marrow.
“I asked him,” she said. “But he said it just wasn't working for him.”
“Sometimes it isn't the right fit,” I said through my teeth.
“But I tried everything! I was the perfect girlfriend!”
I pulled her out to arm's length and held her by the shoulders. “You shouldn't have to be perfect to please a guy, my friend. Either he loves you for who you are, or he doesn't.”
She searched my face with her raw, streaming eyes, as if she were waiting for more.
“I know this hurts so bad you feel like you're going to split in two,” I said.
“It so does.”
I cupped her face in my hands before it could crumple again. “But when it stops, you are going to be so thankful to be rid of this person, Audrey.”
She tried to shake her head, but I held on. “I know his kind. He probably thought he loved you, but he doesn't even know himself, so how can he possibly know you? He's a user.”
“Then I'm an idiot!”
“No. He made you believe he was Mr. Wonderful. Nobody is savvy enough to see through that.”
She nodded finally, and her face relaxedâbut only for as long as it took for a new thought to crash in. She pulled away and buried her face in her hands.
“What?” I said.
“I can't tell you.”
I watched her shoulders crunch together so that they almost met in front of her, and I knew what I was seeing. She was headed into a cave I had frequented myself, and I couldn't let her go there. I led her through the kitchen and out the back door. I once again held her face close to mine.
“You don't have to tell me this,” I whispered to her. “But if you do, you have my word that I will not judge you.”
“You would never do anything like this, Dr. C. How can you help thinking I'm a tramp?”
“Stop,” I said. “I don't care what you did,
you are not a tramp. Do you hear me?”
She nodded miserably. “I slept with him. I knew it was wrong, but I wanted to give him everythingâand I wanted all of him.” She crumbled, and I held onto her until she could catch herself again. “But now I feel so . . . dirty.”
I let her sob. We stood there for a whileâlong enough for Oscar to poke his head out the back door, question me with
Okay?
fingers, and disappear back inside at my nod. Mickey, too, appeared and put praying hands up to her lips. This thing wasn't bigger than the love that surrounded Audrey.
When she was down to shudders, I looked into her face, blotchy with her inner mishmash.
“Let the shame go,” I said to her. “You made a mistake, but it's done. Let it go.”
“How do I do that?”
I bit my lip. Did I know? Enough to keep this child from losing herself in the pit I was only too well acquainted with? What
did
I know?
That I loved. Remember. I could love.
“Here's what you do,” I said to her. “And it isn't going to be easy.”
“Tell me.” Her eyes welled again.
“Go straight to God,” I said. “And dump it right at His feet. You go down with it if you have to.” I squeezed her shoulders. “Then leave it there and go on and do what you know is right
now
. That other is done. It doesn't make you who you are. It just teaches you who to be.”
She threw her arms around my neck, and the tears flowed again. If I weren't a veritable crying fountain myself in those days, I would have wondered where they all came from. But I knew.
“There's not a chance on earth Wyatt Estes would risk using a student for this,” Ethan Kaye said. “I know Van Dillon. Estes would be out of his mind to trust that kid. Or any kid enrolled here, for that matter.”
Sully turned halfway from the window in Ethan's office and tapped the glass. “Somebody's using students down there.”
Ethan pulled himself from his desk chair with obvious effort and joined Sully at the full-length window. Below them a trickle of underclassmen stood, curved like question marks, propping up signs they seemed tired of carryingâas least as far as Sully could tell.
“What's on that one?” he said, pointing to a placard held by a coed with a cell phone in her other hand.
Ethan squinted. The crevices around his eyes deepened. “Feed your faith and your doubts will starve,” Ethan read. He shrugged. “You can't argue with that.”
“Who says you want your doubts to die?” Sully said. “The questions make you think, make you dig.”
“You know that because you're not driven by fear.”
“That's what this is about, isn't it?” Sully said. “Fear.”
Ethan pushed his hands into his pockets. Sully watched his faceâ solid, sure, yet every line deepened with the gathering of thoughts. He'd seen it before in his mentor, but never with this kind of sorrow. Ethan Kaye had the look of a grieving man.
“I can't blame people for being afraid. We're living in chaos.”
Sully glanced out the window. “Or on automatic pilot.”
“They go into automatic pilot because they're afraid.” Ethan sighed. “We were moving in the right direction before Kevin St. Clair came on board. I'm not blaming him entirelyâhe has supporters.”
“Not the least of whom is Wyatt Estes.”
“On the faculty too. But I was making progress there.” He ran a tanned hand over his hair. “The students were speaking up about their concernsâover the war in Iraq, about environmental injustice, about the sickness of our economic standards. They were waking up to the fact that we can't cling to the myth of American innocence anymore, that we have to be self-critical and look at our systemsâ the assumptions that have shaped our values.”
Sully grew stillâreverent. This was the Ethan Kaye who had influenced him as a young man. This was the wisdom Sully had learned to live by in his early twentiesâthat he still embraced.
“We were getting the students to look at Jesus in the Gospels to answer their questionsâgrave, courageous questions.”
“
We
beingâ”
“Several of the faculty, including Demi. And Zach Archer, I thought.”
“He was a poser,” Sully said.
Ethan chuckled. “You sound like the kids.”
“Sometimes the kids can nail it.”
“I think
you've
nailed it.” Ethan's face darkened. “I should have fired Archer the first time I suspected him of an affair.”
Sully felt his chin pull in. “He had an affair before Demi?”
“Probably. Last spring. St. Clair was all over it then, but I had no evidence. I should have gone with my instincts.”
“And had a lawsuit on your hands.” Sully tilted his head at Ethan. “You're thinking none of this would be happening to Demi if you'd gotten rid of him then.”
“Yeah, that is what I'm thinking. But then, none of us is entirely responsible for anyone else's decisions, ultimately.”
Ethan moved closer to the window and looked down. The thin sunlight slanted across his face, etching the lines of sadness more sharply. “I don't like the way this is panning out. But I have to believe God's in itâthat there's a purpose.”
He closed his eyes, and Sully let his own drift shut.
“We have to look at our own doctrine of sin in the church and be critical. There is nothing in the Gospels, coming from the mouth of Jesus, that says there are people who can't be forgiven.” His voice dropped so low Sully had to strain to be included in the conversation Ethan was apparently having with God Himself. “I don't want my students to be blinded by a toxic faith that sees anyone as being outside God's concernâthat justifies violence and sexism and racism and greed.”
Sully opened his eyes to see Ethan pour his gaze over the scant line of students below.
“They can live authentic lives, but not by simply buying into doctrines they're not allowed to examine and experience.”
He turned his eyes to Sully, though Sully was sure he was still seeing the fragility beneath his window. “Our striving with them is to be more like Jesusâwho has grace for all.”
Sully waited in the stillness that followed, but he couldn't rest. Not until he cleared the way for Ethan Kaye.
I wasn't in the line of moms-in-cars in front of Cedar Heights Junior High School for two minutes before Jayne emerged like a wisp of smoke from the press of students and moved toward me. I gasped when I saw her.
Jayne had always had a magical quality about her. Slender and supple, like all the tender, elusive things in nature. Blowing willowsâ tendrils of mistâpuffs of lilac scentâshe put them all to shame as she moved lightly, almost above the ground. She was not of this world, my daughterâas much as in her raw adolescence she tried to be.
The child moving toward me was not that Jayne. In four and a half weeks she had grown sunken and sallow, and her hair, darkened with pubescent oil, hung in languid strips on either side of a face I could hardly see because she kept it pointed toward the ground. I forced myself not to leap from the Jeep and scoop her into my arms and carry her to the nearest hospital.
She didn't look at me through the window. She simply climbed in and sat, eyes pointed toward her knees. She didn't even smell like my
daughter.
I breathed in the odor of unwashed clothes and nervous breath, sucked back what was fast turning into shock, and tried to smile at the side of her head.
“Hey, Jay,” I said.
“Hey.”
“Thanks for not bolting.”
She shrugged, as if she'd been practicing.
“Are you okay?”
Again with the shrug.
I struggled. “Please talk to me, Jay. Even a yes or a no.”
“Can we just get out of here? Everybody's looking at us.”
“I know the feeling. Where do you want to go?”
“I don't know! I'm tired of figuring things out!”
It burst out of her like pent-up exhaustâcloudy and foul smelling and unwanted. I put the Jeep in gear and wheeled us out of the school parking lot and took backstreets to get to the main drag. By then Jayne's face was ashen and she clutched the door handle.
“Do you have to throw up?” I said.
She nodded and plastered her hand over her mouth. I yanked the Jeep into a Dollar Store parking lot and reached over to fling open her door. She dove out and doubled over on the curb. I got to her just as she stopped retching. I didn't care what kind of response I gotâI put my arms around her. I might have been hugging a broomstick.