the robe will float about them like algae. Not me. Weighting a robe in my mind transformed meaningful ritual into pretentious theatrics. Besides, I liked wearing blue jeans into the water, I liked the way they represented the ordinariness of our daily lives as we presented ourselves to God. And the fact is, I actually performed very few baptisms by immersion. This is Vermont. Our church, a union of the old Baptist and Congregational fellowships that had thrived in the nineteenth century when the community had been larger, didn’t even have a baptismal tank, and Alice was the only person I baptized that summer by immersion, the sole parishioner to join the church in that manner.
“That was so powerful,” Ginny said to her friend. “Aren’t you glad you did it?” When they pulled apart, the front of Ginny’s shirt was almost as damp as Alice’s.
“I am,” Alice said, and I saw that she’d begun to cry. Katie noticed, too, and did what she probably did often when she saw her mother’s eyes fill with tears. She patted her on the back as if she were their family’s springer spaniel, Lula, offering gentle taps that were about as close as a fifteen-year-old with a stud in her nose gets to an embrace in public with her mother.
The Brookners, the family whose pond we used, were summer people, a wealthy family who came north to Haverill from a suburb of Manhattan sometime around Memorial Day weekend and lived at the top of one of the hills that surrounded the village. Michelle Brookner and the three children did, anyway. Michelle’s husband, Gordon, was an attorney who would drive up for weekends and a two-week vacation in August. From the Brookners’ pond, it was impossible to see the town itself, not even the church steeple, but we could see the verdant hollow in which the village sat, as well as the cemetery at the top of the distant ridge. I looked that way to avert my eyes from Alice’s tears.
Members of the Women’s Circle gathered around Ginny and Alice, embracing Alice as Ginny had, and I found George’s absence conspicuous in ways that it wasn’t at a routine Sunday-morning service. I wondered briefly whether I should have visited him prior to the baptism and asked him to come. Convinced him. Later, of course, I would blame myself for not insisting that he attend, just as I would blame myself for not understanding the meaning of the ritual in Alice’s mind—for denying in my head what I must have known in my heart.
When the medical examiner did the autopsies on the Haywards, he reported that Alice’s rear end and her back were flecked with fresh contusions, which meant that George had beaten her the Friday or Saturday night before she was baptized and none of us knew. At least I didn’t. Her kidneys were so badly bruised that she might very well have peed blood before she’d come to church that morning.Nevertheless, I don’t think it was that finding that set me off, because I wouldn’t learn that particular detail until much later. In my mind at least, I was gone from the church the moment Ginny had called me the day after the baptism, that Monday morning, sobbing uncontrollably, with the news that George and Alice were dead and it looked like he had killed them both. In the midst of Ginny’s wails—and she really was wailing, this was indeed a lament of biblical proportions—I somehow heard in my head the last word that Alice had addressed solely to me, that single word
there
, andthe seeds of my estrangement from my calling had been sown.
There.
I’d nodded when Alice had said it; I’d echoed her word. I’d known exactly what she’d meant. She wasn’t referring to Romans or Colossians, to the letters of Peter or Paul. She wasn’t thinking of any of the passages in the Bible explaining baptism that we’d discussed at a table outside my church office or in the living room of her house as her immersion approached.
She was thinking of John, and of Christ’s three words at the end of