Chapter One
Excerpt
Throughout the long summer before my mother's trial began, and then during those
crisp days in the fall when her life was paraded publicly before the countyher
character lynched, her wisdom impugnedI overheard much more than my parents
realized, and I understood more than they would have liked.
Through the register in the floor of my bedroom I could listen to the
discussions my parents would have with my mother's attorney in the den late at
night, after the adults had assumed I'd been sleeping for hours. If the three of
them happened to be in the suite off the kitchen my mother used as her office
and examining room, perhaps searching for an old document in her records or a
patient's prenatal history, I would lie on the bathroom floor above them and
listen as their words traveled up to me through the holes that had been cut for
the water pipes to the sink. And while I never went so far as to lift the
receiver of an upstairs telephone when I heard my mother speaking on the kitchen
extension, often I stepped silently down the stairs until I could hear every
word that she said. I must have listened to dozens of phone conversations this
waystanding completely still on the bottom step, invisible from the kitchen
because the phone cord stretched barely six feetand by the time the trial
began, I believe I could have reconstructed almost exactly what the lawyer,
friend, or midwife was saying at the other end of the line.
I was always an avid parent watcher, but in those months surrounding the trial I
became especially fanatic. I monitored their fights, and noted how the arguments
grew nasty fast under pressure; I listened to them apologize, one of them often
sobbing, and then I'd wait for the more muffled (but still decipherable) sounds
they would make when they would climb into bed and make love. I caught the gist
of their debates with doctors and lawyers, I understood why some witnesses would
be more damning than others, I learned to hate people I'd never met and whose
faces I'd never seen. The state's medical examiner. The state's attorney. An
apparently expert midwife from Washington, D.C.
The morning the judge gave the jury its instructions and sent them away to
decide my mother's fate, I overheard her attorney explain to my parents what he
said was one of the great myths in litigation: You can tell what a jury has
decided the moment they reenter the courtroom after their deliberations, by the
way they look at the defendant. Or refuse to look at him. But don't believe it,
he told them. It's just a myth.
I was fourteen years old that fall, however, and it sounded like more than a
myth to me. It had that ring of truth to it that I heard in many wives'and
midwives'tales, a core of common sense hardened firm by centuries of
observation. Babies come when the moon is full. If the boiled potatoes burn,
it'll rain before dark. A bushy caterpillar's a sign of a cold winter. Don't
ever sugar till the river runs free.
My mother's attorney may not have believed the myth that he shared with my
parents, but I sure did. It made sense to me. I had heard much over the past six
months. I'd learned well which myths to take to my heart and which ones to
discard.
And so when the jury filed into the courtroom, an apostolic procession of
twelve, I studied their eyes. I watched to see whether they would look at my
mother or whether they would look away. Sitting beside my father in the first
row, sitting directly behind my mother and her attorney as I had every day for
two weeks, I began to pray to myself,
Please don't look at your shoes, please
don't look at the judge. Don't look down or up or out the window. Please,
please, look at me, look at my mother. Look at us, look here, look here, look
here.
I'd watched the jurors for days, I'd seen them watch me. I'd counted beards, I'd
noted wrinkles, I'd stared beyond reason and courtesy at the way the fellow who
would become the foreman had sat with his arms folded across his chest, hiding
the hand disfigured years earlier by a chain saw. He had a thumb but no fingers.
They walked in from the room adjacent to their twelve chairs and found their
seats. Some of the women crossed their legs at their knees, one of the men
rubbed his eyes and rocked his chair back for a brief second on its rear legs.
Some scanned the far wall of the courtroom, some looked toward the exit sign
above the front door as if they realized their ordeal was almost over and
emancipation was at hand.
One, the elderly woman with white hair and a closet full of absolutely beautiful
red flowered dresses, the woman who I was sure was a Lipponcott from Craftsbury,
looked toward the table behind which the state's attorney and his deputy were
sitting.
And that's when I broke down. I tried not to, but I could feel my eyes fill with
tears, I could feel my shoulders beginning to quiver. I blinked, but a
fourteen-year-old girl's eyelids are no match for the lament I had welling
inside me. My cries were quiet at first, the sound of a mournful whisper, but
they gathered fury fast. I have been told that I howled.
And while I am not proud of whatever hysteria I succumbed to that day in the
courtroom, I am not ashamed of it either. If anyone should feel shame for
whatever occurred that moment in a small courthouse in northeastern Vermont, in
my mind it is the jury: Amidst my sobs and wails, people have said that I
pleaded aloud, "Look at us! Oh, God, please, please look at us!" and still not
one of the jurors would even glance in my mother's or my direction.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from "Midwives"
by Chris A. Bohjalian.
Copyright (C) 1998 by Chris A. Bohjalian.
Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.