trying to ruin my life? You’ve already ruined Colebrook for me! What is your problem, Asher? If you’d had any decency, you would have come to the doctor’s appointment and then you would have KNOWN I WASN’T PREGNANT!!!!!!”
Asher flinched as her voice rose higher and higher. Even the reverend looked taken aback, like he didn’t know his own daughter had that kind of fight in her.
Faith kept going, “It was just a problem with my thyroid that caused me to skip my period and the home pregnancy test was wrong. I’m not pregnant, you asshole!!!!”
Reverend Wilkes broke in to calm her down. Looking very flustered, he said, “Now hold on just a minute, that’s ENOUGH talk of pregnancy and…other—”
“No, she’s right,” Asher said, cutting him off. “I am an asshole. It was selfish of me to come here. I should have tried to talk to Faith again first, rather than coming to you. But don’t you realize, Faith,” he said into the phone, “that I did this because I love you? I’ve been a terrible boyfriend—hell,” he said, flinching again at his word choice as the reverend winced. “I mean, heck, I haven’t even been your boyfriend. But I want to. I love you. I want us to stay together always.”
Faith sobbed in the phone. She said something that Asher couldn’t understand. Neither, apparently, could her father, because he said, “Faith, honey, can you please say that again?”
“I said, ‘I will see you at Colebrook, Asher.’” Then she hung up the phone.
A few minutes passed in silence. Asher looked down at the floor. He looked at the wall just above the reverend’s shoulder. Finally, he dragged his unwilling gaze to meet the reverend’s.
“Um, yeah, so, apparently, she’s not pregnant,” Asher said. “I am so sorry I came here. I probably ruined your faith in Faith.”
“There are some things a father never wants to know about.” He opened the door of his study. “I think you should go now.”
“Yes, sir. Thank you, sir.” Asher held out his hand.
Reverend Wilkes looked at it.
Asher pulled his hand back in and stuffed it in his pocket. “Well—I’m sorry.”
“You should be. I will forgive you, in time. But right now, I just want you out of my sight.”
That was fine by Asher. To him, the more important question was, what did Faith want? I will see you at Colebrook. But what did that mean?
****
It was snowing again when Asher arrived back at Colebrook. He was dying to see Faith and ran around the school like a madman, trying to find her. Most of the students had returned from the long weekend and there was a crush of them in the dorms, the lounges, the common rooms. But no Faith. Where could she be?
He looked up at the clock and realized with a jolt that it was nearly 7:00—time for the Abstinence Club meeting. Nah, she wouldn’t