don't you see what I see?!"
She only looked at the floor, a heavy silence descending between us while I returned to the preparation of another screwdriver. For the first time, I noticed that my hands were shaking, bare nipples hard while a shiver ran down my back.
"I'm sorry," she finally said, still looking at the floor. "I told you, I should have... I just wasn't thinking about your sensitivities, and I'm sorry I've upset you. You know I love you, and I'd never intentionally want to-"
"Yes," I interrupted, "I know you love me, and I understand that you didn't purposefully upset me, but what you're not getting is that... what the fuck
are
you?!" I demanded, a sneer of disgust on my lips as I beheld her, beauty and all.
"I told you," she tried to reply, "I don't know what-"
"People don't do that, Donna!" I interrupted again. "People have more feelings for others, more basic respect for life than to so casually snuff it out! And look at me! Look at what I did to that poor man at the bar last night! I practically lobotomised him! For God's sake, I'm almost as bad as you, the only real difference being that I actually
understand...!"
I couldn't even finish. What I was trying to tell her should have been obvious, was in fact so basic that I found it impossible to explain. However, it wasn't only this that had me so unable to verbalize my feelings. I started crying, not bawling or sobbing, but just crying. I suppose it was for the humanity that I felt I'd lost in exchange for my inheritance, however melodramatic that may sound. I couldn't even finish making my drink. Without a word, Donna stepped close, her perfumed presence an ironic comfort as she began finishing the process for me. When she took my elbow, leading me to the couch, I only went with her, sitting before taking the drink she handed me. As much revulsion as I'd felt concerning what she'd done and the way she'd done it, I didn't shrink from her proximity when she sat beside me, taking the hand I wasn't using to hold my drink to hold in her lap. She allowed a quiet moment to pass before making a genuinely shocking statement.
"I was born in seventeen-sixty-one."
I wasn't even sure I heard her correctly at first. In fact, it took a moment for the words to sink in before I looked up at her with surprise. The expression on her face told me that I'd indeed heard her correctly and that she wasn't kidding. Furthermore, in light of the other incredible things I'd come to find out about her, and an innate surety that she wouldn't lie to me about such things, I believed her. Somewhat distracted from my inner turmoil, I listened as she continued.
"This was in Markham, Ontario, though it wasn't known by that name then. This was a time before it was even called 'Reesorville', when it was called 'Lapointe', named after one of the original French settlers there. He was an asshole. All lost details of history now. Of course, pretty much everything of Lapointe has been lost to history.
"As I've told you, and as I'd been told by my adoptive parents, my birth mother was crazy. Probably schizophrenic, judging from the things that they and others told me about her and from what I now understand of that affliction, but I couldn't say for sure. Anyway, she was gone long before I was old enough to have any memories of her. She lived there in Lapointe with her husband, Armande Roy, until knowledge of the advancing English Army convinced most of the French to flee the settlement, her husband included. Without his wife. That left my mother, a beautiful, crazy, useless person rattling around her little house, often going to the fields where her husband worked to wait for him.
"Obviously, somebody had to take the time to go out there and make sure she was okay, that she was feeding herself and whatnot, so people would take the time to do this and... I do know that my adoptive father wasn't the first person to rape her. Who knows how many men did? I wonder that the women of the settlement even allowed them to go out there, that they didn't see to Marie themselves, but I guess they thought their men were more trustworthy than that. I don't know, nor do I have any idea who my biological father was. Nobody back then did and, since they all said I look exactly like Marie, there was never any resemblance to any men of the settlement to give any obvious hints, so...
"About seven months along, Marie began making wild claims that nobody paid any attention to because, at that point, nobody was listening. She'd previously been ranting about the men who'd raped her and... Well, it was a different time, Tara. These days, such accusations would be all over the media, practically as they left the victim's lips. Women's rights groups would be demanding blood and all the rest but, back then, things were different. There were no women's groups and men had certain de facto rights that were... Well, let's just say that her accusations were shameful and embarrassing, actually in bad taste. People didn't want to hear them, and it was easier to chalk them up to her condition than to actually give them any credit, despite the fact that they all knew them to be truth. As far as they were concerned, her pregnancy was accomplished by her own husband just before he abandoned her. Of course, she didn't start to show until five months after he'd left, but... whatever, right?"
"That's awful," I commented, my revulsion half forgotten in favour of my attention to her history.
"Yes, it is," she agreed. "But times were tough. And when I say that, I don't mean like how we see times as being tough. I'm not talking about rising interest rates tough, 'got laid off' tough, things like that. I'm talking, 'what you accomplish during the summer determines whether or not you and your family will live through the winter' tough. There was no time for people who couldn't hoe their own row, no time for foolishness and absolutely no time for drama from the mouth of a crazy person, be it truth or no. Pioneering was not for the weak, or those who couldn't focus on what was important. Marie Roy was nothing more than an impediment to begin with, and to get caught up in her shit only made things worse. The policy toward her- necessarily- was like this: Armande is the baby's father; we're stuck in doing what decency demands; our crops need rain; we almost have enough wood to keep us from freezing to death this winter; ignore the crazy bitch because her 'truth' doesn't keep us alive."
My expression elicited a shrug from Donna, and she said, "I lived in that settlement too, and I'd be the first to defend their attitude. It's hard for you to understand from your modern and- if you'll please forgive this- lavishly spoiled perspective, but the fact was that some of these little colonies never made it, and some of the ones that did... well, you'd be very surprised at some of the things people might do when they get hungry enough.
"Anyway," she sighed, continuing on from that dark statement, lightly tracing the cuticles of my fingers as she spoke, "aside from her rape accusations, Marie was making some other claims, the kind you might expect from an untreated paranoid schizophrenic. Among these claims was one in particular, a repeated one that the other settlers paid no more mind to than they did her others until... well, until some years after I was born. She was still going out to the fields her husband had worked, though now she was having fantasies about spending the day out there with him, fantasies that she could no longer separate from reality. Then, one day she came back from those fields and claimed that the devil had raped her.
"As I said, nobody paid any attention at the time, but this particular claim became a thing for her. She wouldn't go out to those fields any longer, stopped talking about Armande as though he were still in the settlement and soon started making claims that her baby was possessed by Satan. Still, nobody paid attention, not until she started talking about hurting her unborn baby, that being me. At that point, it was decided that Marie couldn't be left alone and that somebody had to take her in. Somebody would have eventually had to take her in anyway, and that somebody turned out to be a young French couple, Flavien and Adalie Larouche.
"They were of the few French settlers who hadn't run off before the English Army could arrive. They simply didn't have the resources to start all over again somewhere else and, as it turned out, the English never much bothered the French settlers when they eventually made their way through that area anyway.
"Part of the reason it was this particular couple who took her in was because they had no children and, since it was obvious that Marie couldn't possibly raise me herself, they would become my adoptive parents. Anyway, because of Marie's accusations, Adalie was aware of exactly how Flavien had been
helping