Father Dominic looked up from his drawer. "Why ever not? It will serve our purposes exactly. Keep him out of harm's way long enough for you and I to talk some sense into Miss Chambers, and – "
"You can't put lice in that guy's hair," I said again, more vehemently than was, perhaps, necessary. I don't know why I was so against the idea, except that … well, he had such nice hair. I'd gotten a pretty close look at it when we'd been sprawled on the ground together. It was curly, soft-looking hair, the kind of hair I could picture myself running my fingers through. The thought of bugs crawling around in it turned my stomach. How did that kid's rhyme go?
You gazed into my eyes
What could I do but linger?
I ran my hands all through your hair
And a cootie bit my finger.
"Aw, jeez," I said, sitting down on top of the desk. "Hold the lice, will you? Let me deal with Heather. You say you've been talking to her for how long, now? A week?"
"Since the New Year," Father Dominic said. "Yes. That's when she first showed up here. I can see now she's just been waiting for Bryce."
"Right. Well, let me take care of it. Maybe she just needs a little dose of girl talk."
"I don't know." Father Dominic regarded me a little dubiously. "I really feel that you have a bit of a propensity toward … well, toward the physical. The role of a mediator is supposed to be a nonviolent one, Susannah. You are supposed to be someone who helps troubled spirits, not hurts them."
"Hello? Were you out there just now? You think I was just supposed to stand there and talk that beam into not crushing that guy's skull?"
"Of course not. I'm just saying that if you tried a little compassion – "
"Hey. I have plenty of compassion, Father. My heart bleeds for this girl, it really does. But this is my school. Got it? Mine. Not hers, not anymore. She made her decision, and now she's got to stick with it. And I'm not letting her take Bryce – or anyone else – down with her."
"Well." Father Dominic looked skeptical. "Well, if you're sure...."
"Oh, I'm sure." I hopped off his desk. "Just leave it to me, all right?"
Father Dominic said, "All right." But he said it kind of faintly, I noticed. I had to get him to write me a hall pass so I could get back to class without getting busted by one of the nuns. I was waiting for one of them – a pinch-faced novice – to finish scrutinizing this pass before she'd let me go on down the corridor when a side door marked NURSE opened, and out stepped Bryce with a hall pass of his own.
"Hey," I couldn't help blurting out. "What happened? Did she – I mean, did something else happen? Are you hurt?"
He grinned a bit sheepishly. "No. Well, unless you count this wicked splinter I got under my thumbnail. I was trying to brush all those little pieces of wood off my pants, you know, and one of them got under there, and – " He held up his right hand. A large bandage had been wrapped around his thumb.
"Yikes," I said.
"I know." He looked mournful. "She used Mercurochrome, too. I hate that stuff."
"Man," I said. "You have had a rotten day."
"Not really," he said, putting his thumb down. "At least, not as bad as it would have been if you hadn't been here. If it weren't for you, I'd be dead." He noticed that I'd come through the door marked PRINCIPAL and asked, "Did you get in trouble, or something?"
"No," I said. "Father Dominic just wanted me to fill out some forms. I'm new, you know."
"And as a new student," the novice said severely, "you ought to be made aware that loitering in the halls is not allowed. Both of you had better get to your classes."
I apologized and took back my pass. Bryce very chivalrously offered to show me where my next class was, and the novice went away, seemingly satisfied. As soon as she was out of earshot, Bryce said, "You're Suze, right? Jake told me about you. You're his new stepsister from New York."
"That's me," I said. "And you're Bryce Martinson."
"Oh, Jake's mentioned me?"
I almost laughed out loud at the idea of Sleepy mentioning much of anything. I said, "No, it wasn't Jake."
He said, "Oh," in such a sad voice that I almost felt sorry for him. "I guess people must be talking about me, huh?"
"A little." I took the plunge. "I'm sorry about what happened with your girlfriend."
"So am I, believe me." If he was mad that I'd brought the subject up, you couldn't tell. "I didn't even want to come back here after…you know. I tried to transfer to RLS, but they're full. Even the public school didn't want me. It's tough to transfer with only one semester to go. I wouldn't have come back at all except that … well, you know. Colleges generally want you to have graduated from high school before they'll let you in."
I laughed. "I've heard that."
"Anyway." Bryce noticed I was holding my coat – I'd been dragging it around all day since I couldn't use my locker, the door having been dented permanently shut when I'd knocked Heather into it – and said, "Want me to carry that for you?"
I was so shocked by this civility that without even thinking, I said, "Sure," and passed it over to him. He folded it over one arm, and said, "So, I guess everybody must be blaming me for what happened. To Heather, I mean."
"I don't think so," I said. "If anything, people are blaming Heather for what happened to Heather."
"Yeah," Bryce said, "but I mean, I drove her to it, you know? That's the thing. If I just hadn't broken up with her – "
"You have a pretty high opinion of yourself, don't you?"
He looked taken aback. "What?"