Followers

Monday, 29 August 2022

The Greenhouse

 Paula's story

We are a very Catholic family. That’s an important detail for you to know, because it informs every decision that came afterward.

 

My name is Maya O’Malley. I am 13 years old. And in the course of one day, my understanding of my world changed forever. 

 

I come from a big Irish Catholic family. I am the youngest of five; my older brothers and sisters are each two years apart, then there’s a five-year gap, then me. My dad has six siblings, so I have aunts, uncles and cousins almost too numerous to count. Although we are scattered across the country, we are together at every family wedding and funeral, during holidays, and summertime reunions every other year at one of my uncle’s place in Nova Scotia, up in Canada. 

 

Of all the many, many members of my family, my absolute favorite is my cousin May. She’s a lot  older than me, and she is just the coolest. She’s single, and she lives in a loft apartment like you’d see on Instagram or something. She’s a senior analyst at a big investment firm — whatever that means — but she says that’s just to pay the bills. In her spare time she creates the most beautiful collages out of fabrics and ribbons and bits of things she finds, well, I don’t know where she finds all the stuff that she uses to create her art. She is starting to be recognized by local art galleries — she has had a few exhibitions — and I just know she is going to be a famous artist one day. I want to be just like her when I grow up. 

 

Anyway, one summer afternoon, I was home doing a whole lot of nothing — isn’t summer wonderful? — when May came to the house, looking a little out of sorts. She said she was fine, but her hello kiss was a little distracted, and instead of talking to me as she always does, full of questions about my latest crush or what I’ve been doing lately, she just asked, “Where’s your mom?”

 

I told her Mom was out puttering around in the greenhouse, checking her roses and no doubt cooing to her plants. My mom can be weird that way.

 

May disappeared out the back door, and I walked out onto the back terrace to watch as she walked down the path to the greenhouse, then greeted my mom. The two of them hugged, talked, but then they cried, hugged some more, sat down, then talked a long time. By then, I was curious but bored, so I went back inside, and upstairs to my room to read the latest murder mystery in a series set in the Dordogne region of France. I’m going to go there one day!

 

At some point, May must have left, because Mom came into the house, came upstairs, stuck her head in my room and asked me if there was anything special I wanted for dinner. I asked for her homemade Mac and cheese, my favorite.

 

Later that night, long after dinner was over and the kitchen was cleaned, Mom and Dad came into my room. “There’s something you need to know,” Dad said quietly, taking my desk chair, as Mom sat down on the bed next to me.

 

And here’s what they told me:

 

My cousin May was raped when she was 15 years old. Amid all the trauma of that event, she and her parents decided together that she would have the baby and put it up for adoption, because, well, that’s what good Catholics do.  That’s when one of May’s uncles and his wife asked if they could adopt the baby, keep it in the family, raise it as their own child, give it all the love it deserved. May and her parents, not really too surprised at this display of generosity and faith and family strength, happily agreed.

 

About a month before the baby was born, the man accused of raping May went on trial, and my cousin May testified against him. Eight months pregnant, she took the stand in the courtroom, and in a strong and clear voice, identified the man at the defense table as the man who attacked her that night, months ago. It didn’t take long for the jury to convict him and send him to prison.

 

Soon afterward, May’s baby was born, a little girl who had so much O’Malley in her — her eyes, her wide smile, her thick, dark hair —that her new parents could hardly believe it. She took her place in the family, a sweet and happy child who grew tall and strong and smart.

 

Twelve years later — just two days ago! — the man was paroled from prison, and immediately tracked down my cousin May. He called her, and threatened to find the child and tell it the awful secret of its birth, but said he would stay silent if May came up with several thousand dollars.

 

My Irish Catholic family closed ranks. There was no awful secret: every birth is a miracle, and this one was no different. And blackmail is blackmail: it would never end. So the family decided to call the rapist’s bluff, report the attempted blackmail to the police, send the man back to jail, and tell the child the story themselves, in their own way.

 

And that’s how I found out that my adored cousin May is actually my mother, my parents are my aunt and uncle, my siblings are my cousins, my other aunt and uncle are my grandparents.

 

So I ask you dear listeners, to put yourself in my place. Does this change anything? Does it change everything?

 

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