âWell, I feel like shit,' I said, more sharply than I intended, and Loraine jumped back as if I'd slapped her. The church kids never swore. The church kids never told lies either, at least, none I knew about. That was two sins right there, and on the Sabbath, too.
Lorraine sniffed and turned away. âHope you get better. I'll ask Pastor Matt to add you to our prayers.'
âThanks!' I called after her. Chelsea waved from the car and I waved back. I wondered if Jay would miss me, and felt a twinge of guilt. I'd sort out Jay later.
Mum stepped into the hallway in her dressing-gown. She must have been listening, spying on me. âNot going to church today?'
âDoes it look like I'm going to church?' I snapped. I felt bad enough already, without Mum sticking her nose in.
But she didn't seem to register my tone. âOh, thank
God
. I knew you'd come to your senses eventually.' She held out her hand. âIt was partly my fault, I know. I suppose you've been looking for some kind of father figure.'
I stepped back. âNo, I haven't.'
âWell, it doesn't matter. Now that phase is overââ'
âWho says it's over?'
Mum wrapped her dressing-gown more tightly round herself. âYou just said you weren't going back!'
âI said I wasn't going
today
. I didn't say I was
never
going back.'
âBridie, be reasonable. You must see how sillyâ'
âI'm not going to your stupid evolution forum, either. You can't force me to think like you. You can't take over my brain.'
âThat's a
ridiculous
thing to say.'
âJust leave me alone!'
âHow
dare
you speak to me like that?'
I can't remember exactly what we said next, or rather, what we shouted at each other. In the end, Mum's expression froze stony cold, and she slammed her bedroom door in my face. I yelled at her, and then marched out of the house and down the street, choking down sobs of rage and fury.
I strode along so fast I gave myself a stitch. I didn't even know where I was going; I only knew I couldn't go back.
At Northside they told us,
You're never alone. Jesus is always
with you.
Jay said that Jesus was his friend, always there to listen and to help him. Like Stella said, an invisible friend; an imaginary friend? I'd never quite managed to achieve that sense of Jesus being in the room with me that the other Northsiders seemed to have. They'd sway in ecstasy, holding up their hands to Jesus. Strangely enough, I found it easier to believe in God â a mysterious, unknowable spirit â than in the living person of Jesus.
Hello, Jesus?
I thought experimentally.
Are you there?
No answer. Maybe he was off with his mates: the tooth fairy and the Easter bunny.
That was a wicked, blasphemous thought, I told myself. But God didn't strike me down.
How rapt would Mum be if she knew I was having thoughts like that? I sped up, my runners smacking on the footpath.
Once, when I was a little kid, I'd overheard Mum talking about me to one of her friends.
Bridie's a follower
, she said.
Bridie's always looking for someone to tag along behind
. I hadn't thought about that for ages, but I remembered it now. Since I started high school, I guess I'd tagged behind Stella. This winter I guess I'd hung off Elliot and Jay. Was Jesus one more figure for me to trail behind, someone else to tell me what to do?
I crossed the bridge and followed the path beside the river. People were walking their dogs, riding bikes, plugged into iPods. I hadn't been down there for weeks. The river was alive this morning, foaming and tumbling over the weir. A light rain sprinkled. The low morning sun caught the tiny droplets, and the air filled with dancing specks of gold.
The news from the war was bad. The invasion force had met unexpected resistance, fighting in the streets. Last night there was footage on TV of a little boy with his arms and legs blown off, his big eyes glazed with shock and terror. Was he being punished for his sins? If he died, would he go to hell? It seemed he was the wrong religion; he hadn't accepted Jesus as his saviour, that's for sure. How could I believe in a God who was cruel enough to let that little boy feel so much pain and fear?
I crossed halfway over the next bridge and leaned on the rail, staring down into the murky brown water.
âHey, Bridie!'
I jumped. It was Paul, on the far side of the bridge. He waved, and jogged over to lean on the rail beside me, wiping sweat from his forehead. âLong time, no see.'
I felt shy. âUm, yeah.'
âYou girls had a fight?'
âKind of.'
â'Bout time you made it up, don't you think?' He squinted at me sideways.
âS'pose,' I mumbled.
A woman jogged past us and the bridge wobbled and swayed.
We stood there for a minute while Paul caught his breath.
âPaul?' I said suddenly.
âShoot.'
âI know you're not in the church, but do you believe in God?'
âStarting with the easy ones, eh?' Paul stared down along the river. âI wish I could, Bridie,' he said at last, wistfully. âI just can't quite force my head around it, you know? But I'll tell you what, I believe in
this
.'
He swept his arm out, across the trees dancing in the sunlight, across the cool brown water of the river, the church spires and mosque minarets poking into the sky from the hilltops; across the silver towers of the city beneath the scudding clouds and the transparent circle of the moon; across the suburban rooftops and all the people sheltered beneath them. A flock of birds rose and swooped over the river, calling high and wild and sweet.
Paul turned to me. âCan't this old world be enough?' he said.
I looked, and I saw that it was beautiful â that the world was full of wonders and mysteries and hope and love and work to be done. All of that was just as real as the fear and suffering and loneliness and cruelty. And I wanted it to be enough; everything would be so simple, if this old world was enough.
But somehow, for me, it wasn't. Something in me yearned for something bigger, something
more
, something beyond what we could see and comprehend. I didn't know what it was, but there had to be more.
I looked at Paul, and I shook my head.
He put his big warm hand on my shoulder. He smelled of sweat. For a second I thought he was going to laugh at me, but he didn't.
âI had a big fight with Mum this morning,' I said.
âYou duffer,' said Paul. âWant to come back to our place?'
I hesitated.
âCome on,' said Paul. âThink of all the times Stella's run away to your house. We owe you.'
âStella won'tââ'
âDon't be daft. She misses you.'
My heart leapt. âI miss her, too.'
Paul inclined his head. âSo what are you waiting for?'
âOF COURSE, YOU can stay as long as you like,' said Mish at once, and Scarlet clapped her hands.
âCan she sleep on our floor?'
Stella pushed her sister. âDer, where else could she sleep?'
I smiled. I was still shy with Stella, but she did seem pleased that I was there.
âThere's plenty of space at my house, Bridie,' Nana Kincaid said. âLovely big spare room all to yourself.'
âThanks,' I said. âBut â¦'
Tark lolled against his grandmother. âAs if Bridie wants to stay with a crusty old bat like you.'
âCheeky,' said Nana. She always let Tark get away with murder.
âJust one thing.' Mish held up a finger. âYou have to call Lisa and tell her where you are. Or would you rather I did?'
âI'd rather you did,' I mumbled.
âHmm.' Mish narrowed her eyes. âAll right.'
She took the phone into the front bedroom and stayed there a long time. When she came out, her face was grave, but she didn't say anything. Much later, after Nana had gone home, when Paul was off on some refugee errand, Tark and Scarlet were fighting over the TV, and Stella was rehearsing her concert piece in the girls' room, Mish beckoned me into her room and shut the door.
âLisa says you can stay here as long as you have to. I'll send Paul over to pick up your things when he gets back. And you know you're welcome here as long as you can bear it.'
âAs long as you can stand having me,' I said, out of politeness, because just then I felt like living with the Kincaids forever.
âLisa says to tell you she's sorry for calling you selfish and pig-headed and immature.'
âGood,' I muttered. âSo she should be.' I looked up and smiled weakly. âBecause I'm not immature â no way.'
Mish smiled back. After a minute she said, âLisa wouldn't tell me what you called her.'
I looked at the floor. âI said she was an interfering, narrow-minded, judgemental bitch. Something like that.'
Mish drew in a breath. âAnd then you stormed out of the house?'
âYeah.'
âBridie, darling, don't you think that might have reminded your mother of something?'
I drew circles with my toe on the shabby rug. âMaybe that's kind of what she said to her mum when ⦠when she left Brisbane?'
âMmm, maybe.'
I rubbed my nose. âI didn't think of that.'
âOkay.' Mish patted my knee. âIt probably won't hurt you two to give each other a bit of space, let yourselves breathe. It's not easy for Lisa, you know, to see you growing up, growing away from her. You've always been such a tight little unit, the pair of you.'
I hadn't really thought of that, either.
âAnd what about this church group? Are you going back, or not?'
I wrinkled up my nose. âI'm not sure,' I admitted. âI think I need to go back, at least one more time, to see how I feel.'
Besides, I felt like I owed it to Jay to speak to him face to face. And if Elliot
happened
to be still hanging aroundâ I didn't let myself finish the thought.
âWednesday, isn't it?' said Mish. âI'll drive you.'
â
Bridie
!'
Jay rushed up and crushed me into a hug that lasted about half a minute too long. I extracted myself and he studied my face solemnly. âHow
are
you? Where have you been? I've been calling, but you never pick up. Did you lose your phone?'
âMy phone â¦' I almost said,
my phone is busted
, but I swallowed down the lie.
âAre you okay? Chelsea said you were sick. I was worried!' He shook my shoulders, half playfully, but there was an accusing light in his eye.
My gaze slid away from his. I'd come to youth group tonight, maybe for the last time, specifically to explain myself. But a public cross-examination wasn't what I had in mind. I pulled him into a corner, and stretched the truth a little. âI had a fight with Mum; I was feeling a bit down. Not really in the mood for church.'
âBut it's when things go wrong that you need Jesus the most,' said Jay earnestly. âAnd your friends, your whole community. To
lift
you into joy.'
âI just felt like being sad,' I said.
âBeing negative's a waste of time,' said Jay. âWe've got so much to thank the Lord for.'
âI guess,' I said helplessly.
âAnyway, you're back.' Jay squeezed my hand. âThat's all that matters.'
âActually, Jay, I have to talk to you about that.' I took a deep breath. âThe thing is, I've been thinking, and I'm not sure ⦠I'm not sure I can really believe everything that you believe. I'm not sure all this is right for me.'
Jay's green-gold eye fixed itself on me, surprised and sorrowful. âYou can't give in to doubt, Bridie. That's letting the devil in.'
âSee â
the devil
, that's the kind of thing I mean. I don't think I can believe in
the devil
.'
Jay looked shocked. There was a silence, then he asked abruptly, âIs this anything to do with Elliot?'
âElliot?' I echoed.
âHe's not here. He's quit youth leadership.'
âYes, he told me.'
âDid he?' Jay was so startled he dropped my hand.
âHe just, you know, mentioned it in passing.'
âWhen was this?'
I know it was stupid, but Jay glaring at me, with the eye-patch and everything, made me feel as if I was being interrogated by the SS. All he needed were the jackboots and the leather cap.
âUm, on Saturday?' It seemed like years ago.
âHe talked to
you
about it,' said Jay, half to himself. âHe talked to you and then ⦠It was Saturday night he told Dad. What did he say exactly? What did
you
say?'
âI can't remember,' I said. âAnd I don't want to talk about it. It was a private conversation.'
âOkay,' said Jay slowly. âI see.' There was a pause. I knew everyone in the room was listening, though they were pretending to ignore us. I felt hot and angry.