I'm still not completely satisfied with the flow of this part, but I feel like it's fine for a first draft. Once I see more of how the story progresses I may come back and tweak things- especially since I am having a HUGE amount of difficulty grasping Jude as a character.
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Mara was completely unprepared for the morning when it came. Waking up in jeans and a push-up bra is never comfortable, especially after crying one's self to sleep. Mara felt pinched and squished and poked all over. Her back and shoulders and neck all stubbornly refused to unbend. Her alarm, normally viewed as a pleasant reminder to prepare for the day, seemed like a nagging chirping instead. Mara tried to stomach her annoyances and force herself to be bright and happy. Things could be worse. She could have caught her arm in the bars of her headboard overnight and yanked it off in a night terror, awaking to the horror of a bloody gaping hole in her side and impending death.
Oh, wait, that might not be worse.
Mara sighed and stood. She picked out a dress that covered every inch of her body from her neck downward. She wore thick tights and conservative Mary Jane shoes and her hair in a slightly matronly bun. Everything about her screamed “saving it for Jesus” except for the part where she had nothing left to save. She stared herself down in the mirror as she applied mascara and lip gloss. She ordered herself not to have a total meltdown at some inopportune and embarrassing time. She ordered herself to be okay. She had to be okay. There was no other option.
Mara sat down at the breakfast table glumly. Her dad poured her a glass of orange juice and tilted his head toward the pantry in a non-verbal question. Mara shook her head no.
Her dad stared at her for a minute. If he'd been a cartoon, there would have second hands ticking in his pupils. When the moment ended, he simply smiled and said, “I love you.”
Mara smiled in return, momentarily feeling a jab of real happiness. All too soon it was eclipsed with the awareness that her father said that while probably suspecting nothing more serious than her and Jude fighting over what color the grooms men's cummerbunds would be. Mara's hands started shaking involuntarily and she closed them over her glass, forcing herself to at least drink.
The rest of the morning routine passed in silence. In silence they drank, in silence they pulled on coats and hats and scarves. In silence they rode to the church, rubbing their hands against the vents for warmth and watching their breath freeze against the windows. In silence they walked into the church, Mara taking her usual seat in the front row and her father sitting on the pastor's bench with the elders, to the right of the stage. In silence Mara felt all of the oxygen vacuum itself out of the room. There was a rustling of skirts and one of the Elder's wives sat down beside Mara. Her name was Mrs. Templeton, a name which seemed preposterously formal. Her way of dressing and carrying herself was formal, too. Even her dinner parties seemed a few decades out of place. She smiled brightly at Mara and put her hand on Mara's leg. “So I hear you were accepted into the seminary. Your father must be very proud.”
Mara smiled uncomfortably, hoping that it just looked like humility and not embarrassment. “Yes, it will be a little strange sharing teachers with my dad.”
“Or being taught by him,” Mrs. Templeton said with another indulgent smile. “Do you think you'll follow in his footsteps? Become a pastor? Or are you and Jude going to be youth leaders together forever?”
Mara coughed lightly, trying to buy herself time. A few days ago she would have answered without any thought, on pure instinct. Mara forced herself to give the same answer she always did, hoping it sounded genuine this time. “I guess we'll just see where God leads us. I know that right now getting more schooling seems like the right thing to do.”
Mrs. Templeton nodded, obviously pleased. The worship team was headed to the stage giving Mara a good excuse to tune out of the conversation. Normally worship was something that Mara put her whole heart into. Over the past few months her love for it had started waning. It was hard to sing “How Great is Our God” the day after a friend's funeral. It's hard to sing about wanting to do nothing but give him glory when your only thoughts were about naked bodies intertwining. One bad choice after another had left Mara feeling like she didn't belong here anymore. She was not a proper Christian girl like the girls thronged behind her. She wasn't a good girl like the lead vocalist, she wasn't devoted like the women who were on their knees in prayer before the first stanza. Mara was just Mara, bent and broken on the inside. If people saw what was really in her heart they'd lose all respect for her. She'd failed them.
Fortunately the sermon passed quickly, and everyone seemed in a rush to get out after they were dismissed. Mara shook the usual number of hands and hugged the usual number of shoulders, but she wasn't dragged into any more uncomfortable conversations. Mara could smile and say “I'm well, thank you” even with a knife jutting out of the side of her head. Mara ducked out of the building as soon as she was sure she wouldn't be missed. The cold air felt good on her hot cheeks. Mara walked around the side of the building to the prayer garden. Normally it would be a labyrinth of flowers and shrubs and paved walkways- but in the winter it turned into a sheet of white studded with skeleton bushes in brown and gray. Mara brushed snow off of one of the benches and sat, trying to breathe slowly, trying to just exist without having to think about her life for a little while.
It wasn't long before she heard footsteps and knew she wasn't alone. Jude spoke before Mara even turned around or acknowledged his presence. “I didn't know if you'd want to sit together, after... you know.”
“After we spent the last week fighting every time we saw each other?” Mara felt a sinking feeling in her stomach. This conversation couldn't be going anywhere good.
“I just wish you could understand why I want to wait for the wedding. I want to provide a good life for you. Getting married right away, just because...”
Mara closed her eyes slowly and scooted over, giving Jude room to sit beside her. He stood awkwardly instead, shifting from foot to foot. “You need to understand something,” Mara said. “I'm pregnant.”
“You can't be pregnant. There was only the once. The odds...”
“I took a pregnancy test, and those sticks don't lie.” Mara felt tears creeping up her throat and swallowed hard. “I am pregnant.”
“We need to get married.”
Mara glared. “Back up. What happened to this not being the right time in our lives? What happened to you needing to get established in your new position and me needing to go soul searching and decide if I really want a career and wanting to buy a house and not being ready to juggle commitments to a wife and getting to know your job?”
“You're having a baby.”
Mara nodded, “I need time to absorb all of this.”
“We don't have time. If we wait months to get married people will know what's going on. Everything I have is staked on my reputation, I can't afford to lose it.”
“I need time.”
“You need to get a dress, we need to make phone calls, a guest list, the reception... weddings are hard to pull off even months in advance, at best we have weeks...”
“Weeks? Weeks?” Mara laughed, “there's no playing like we got pregnant on our honeymoon. I'm already like six weeks along, if we played it like the baby came two months early and it's fat and healthy people would know.”
“Okay. You're right. We need to think about the best way to handle this.”
Mara shook her head. “I don't know what to do.”
“We need to do the right thing. Get married. Provide a stable life for the baby.”
“I just need time. I'm not ready to have a baby. I'm not ready to give up seminary. I'm not ready to be a mom and nothing else.” Mara hated how cold her voice sounded, hated the implications of her words.
Jude sat down. “Are you talking about an abortion? Mara, you couldn't. I couldn't.”
“You wouldn't be the one getting the abortion.”
“I couldn't let you. I mean, how would it be, if three years down the road we decided to have kids and you'd aborted their sibling?”
Mara couldn't look at him, look at the sincerity in his face. All she could think about was how badly she needed to not be pregnant, how desperately she wanted to turn back the dial two months and start over, to have the life she wanted to have. She now understood why women got abortions. It wasn't about hating the child and not wanting it to live, it was about knowing that you may never love it or give it the life it deserved if you kept it.
Better to kill it than have it live all it's life with the rumors of how it ruined everything.
Mara breathed out slowly and stood. “I think we're both too emotional to talk right now. At least, I know that I am. Let's take a few days and think things through and then try to have this conversation again.”
“Mara...” Jude stood, grasping for her hands. Mara shook him off and walked away. She felt a little like she was dying. She wanted to run back, to say she wanted to get married and be a wife and a mother and nothing else, to let herself slide down the path of inevitability and Christian responsibility. But a smaller part of her was starting to come to life and cry out no, no, no, it was through going with the flow that she ended up here in the first place. Time to stop going with the flow. Time to make the decisions she wanted instead of constantly giving in.