Read The Heart Specialist Online
Authors: Claire Holden Rothman
Laure was in the doorway, mittens covering her mouth, her eyes starting to roll up in their sockets. She swayed, her pupils expanding into black holes.
I swung my hands in back of me. “Laure,” I said quickly. “It’s all right. Nothing. I’ll wash it away.” I plunged my hands into the bucket.
My sister is a very particular case. She cannot watch the gutting of a chicken. We have to make sure the kitchen door is shut fast and she is safely off in her bedroom when we prepare flesh for dinner.
Laure had now stopped swaying, which I took to be encouraging, but her pupils had shrunk to pinpricks. She was standing as stiff as the squirrel on my table. While she stood there like a corpse, I rushed about, covering everything with the potential to upset her. I pulled the strip of flannel back over the squirrel, but immediately a ruby eye appeared on the abdomen and began to grow. I tore off my apron and once again plunged my hands into the icy bucket to scrub them.
Laure moaned. Tears always followed the trance phase, with a headache that could keep her in bed for days. I called to her, but of course she was past listening. After another minute or so she was able to move and limped off toward the house, weeping and mumbling for Grandmother. The doctor we consulted gave it a French name:
Petit Mal
. He said it was less serious than
Grand Mal
, which was a full-blown epileptic seizure, but nonetheless, it was a condition we had to watch. No one knew the cause, although trauma — a childhood fever or even an emotion — was often at the root. The primary symptom was absence. Laure slipped into a trance and nothing anyone said or did could shake her out of it.
The squirrel’s body was growing stiffer by the second, yet all I had managed were the preliminaries. I felt like weeping myself, in pure frustration. Laure almost never came to the barn. Why had she picked this of all possible days to try and find me? The squirrel grinned in silent mockery. You see, it seemed to say. Stick your fingers in the belly of a corpse and see if trouble doesn’t follow. I closed my eyes to shut out his yellow teeth. If I wanted to do any work at all it had to be now. Perhaps Laure wouldn’t be coherent and Grandmother would simply put her to bed. It was a slim chance but it was not a crime to hope. I reached for my apron.
By the time Grandmother arrived I had managed to locate the heart and what I suspected must be the liver. Grandmother marched into the barn, her old eyes narrow and grim. She is a short woman, barely five feet tall, but people think she is taller because of how she walks. She would have made a great general in the Army, and not just because of her posture. She was wearing my dead grandfather’s workboots, the ones she kept by the kitchen door for emergencies, and she had forgotten her hat in her haste. Her hair had come partially undone and a couple of silver strands were snaking, Medusa-like, down her back. I had never before seen her in such disarray, and we stood gaping at each other for several seconds, quite unable to speak. Worse still, she was not alone. She had dragged Miss Skerry along with her from the house. Miss Skerry was the new governess, brought in expressly to “smooth my edges,” as Grandmother put it, and assist my passage into womanhood.
Their eyes took in my knife and the filthy butcher’s apron. Then they saw the squirrel with its abdomen slit open.
“Agnes,” said my grandmother. It came out quietly, a sigh, and suddenly she seemed to shrink. Her eyes, often hard, had something new in them, which alarmed me even more than the shrinking had. It was fear, I suddenly realized. My grandmother was afraid.
She took the corner of my apron least marred by squirrel gut and tried to yank it over my head, but it caught on my ear. By then she had glimpsed my bloody coat. She let go of the apron and covered her eyes with her hands.
I had never seen my grandmother cry. I had never imagined she was capable; she was so steady, so grim. I was the opposite, erupting into tears at the smallest provocation, slouching off to the barn or to the woods behind the house to vent my rage and sadness. Grandmother disapproved of these episodes, calling them “performances” and warning me that if I did not put such childish things away I was doomed to a hard and lonely life.
But here she was crying herself, right in front of me and Miss Skerry. My mind went spiralling back what seemed a hundred years, although it was really less than ten, to another day and another adult weeping. My emotional nature, I had always thought, came from him — my father. In fact, Grandmother herself said this when she was angry, calling it my “Gallic blood.” I was the family misfit — dark and teary, with a mind that must have seemed disturbingly foreign in that small Presbyterian town.
“It’s not what you think,” I said. “I didn’t kill it.”
I was trying to reassure her, but I managed to do the exact opposite. It was the word “kill.” I should not have used it, for my grandmother was thinking of her son-in-law — my father — and his poor dead sister.
I have never seen a picture of my father — we kept no photograph after he left so I could not see it for myself — but everyone in St. Andrews East said I was his spitting image. They were careful about saying it, not wanting to upset Grandmother, but sometimes it slipped out. Archie Osborne, the town doctor, said it almost every time he saw me. And I was keenly aware that I looked nothing like Laure, who was blue-eyed and fair, with the delicate bone structure of the White family women. My skin was like a gypsy’s, and my body stocky and squat. The ladies who came for tea at the Priory always remarked how pretty Laure was. It was hard not to, she looked so much like an angel with her flowing, corn-silk hair. When they realized I was in the room, serving lumps of sugar, an embarrassed silence followed. “Agnes is so
intelligent
,” they would add, trying miserably to make amends.
My intelligence, it was generally assumed, also came from my father — bookishness, an unfortunate trait for a girl, especially one who is not nice to look at. Grandmother’s theory was that I spent so much time reading I’d ruin my eyes. I did not believe her because she herself had bad eyes and the only book she ever opened was the Bible, and then only once a week, on Sunday.
Grandmother believed my father was a murderer. She never said as much; in fact, she avoided all mention of him after he left. It was as if he had died, just like my mother. Grandmother even went so far as to change our name. Two years after my father disappeared, and several months after Mother’s funeral, Laure and I officially dropped Bourret and became Whites, and the accent was dropped from Agnès so that I became Agnes. My grandmother became our legal guardian.
The squirrel was just too much for her. I only realized it after the fact or I would have been more careful, performing the dissection in the woods, where neither she nor Laure would ever have looked. It was like a sign that all my grandmother’s efforts to guide me, to provide me with a decent Christian home and name had been for naught. Nothing could change the fact that I was a squat, dark person with a foreign brain and foreign ways. For what was a thirteen-year-old girl doing out in the barn on one of the coldest days of January slicing open a squirrel?
Bourret derives from the French word
bourreau
, which, strictly speaking, means “executioner.” In Quebec, however, it has other idiomatic uses. There is
bourreau des coeurs
, “lady-killer.” And
bourreau d’enfants
, “batterer of children.” In the case of my father’s family the name was prophetic. His youngest sister, Marie, was found battered to death and drowned on the shore of the Ottawa River, not far from the family’s home in Rigaud, about a day’s drive west of Montreal. It turned out, however, that the girl had actually been living in Montreal, in the attic of our home, for months before her death, although no one besides my parents and me had known this.
The violent circumstances of her death and the fact that she had been secreted in our attic directly before it were considered sufficient grounds to charge my father with murder.
Marie Bourret was a cripple and a deaf-mute, alone in the world once her parents died. I have absolutely no recollection of her, although I have since returned to my father’s former house in Montreal and stood in the rooms in which she allegedly spent her last days.
The prosecutor argued that she would have been a burden to my father, who was her oldest sibling and the most successful of his large family — a doctor teaching at the University of McGill with a young wife and family and prospects shining brightly ahead of him. The prosecutor convinced the public of this motive but had insufficient evidence to prove it. My father was acquitted by the jury but not by general opinion in the City of Montreal.
He was allowed to keep his practice, an empty gift, for after the trial no patient would come to him. Then McGill gave him notice. The murder was the biggest scandal the city had seen for years and all kinds of people who had not met my father spent hours speculating about his guilt in the affair. We had to take refuge in St. Andrews East with Grandmother White. Throughout that winter and spring rumours flew. Letters were printed in the newspapers. An anonymous poem appeared in the Montreal
Gazette
.
Here is the city of Mount Royal
Built on a river of strife.
Here is where Dr. Bourret once stood
Pledging to save human life.
Was the oath all noise like the rapids,
As empty and light as the foam?
And what says the poor murdered inmate
In the still upper room of his home?
This was the story of my father, Honoré Bourret. In a way it is also mine. Although my grandmother clearly tried to do her best by me, it was in her mind the minute she saw the squirrel.
Miss Skerry, who had been at the Priory for only three days, looked on with narrowed eyes. The muscles of her face were pulled down in what appeared to be a permanent scowl, which was why I had dreamed up a nickname for her the day she arrived.
The Scary One
. So far she had managed only one lesson with me and Laure, which had been an utter bore. We had had to read aloud a random passage from the Bible and scribble out an explication. It was no different from lessons with Grandmother, who believed that the Gospels were the only reading material to reliably produce young women of virtue.
Grandmother removed her glasses and wiped her eyes. “I must get back to Laure,” she said, straightening her shoulders and looking a bit more like her usual self.
“What an introduction to our home, Miss Skerry,” she said to the governess. “One girl faints away at the sight of blood and the other delights in skinning squirrels.”
“I wasn’t skinning it!” I protested. No one looked my way.
The governess put a hand on Grandmother’s arm. “Please don’t worry, Mrs. White. Just tell me how to help.”
Grandmother nodded, relieved I think that the governess was practical. “If you can bear it I would like you to stay here, Miss Skerry, and oversee. That would be the greatest service to us all while I tend to Laure.”
Grandmother then turned to me. “And you, young lady, will clean all of this up, every last bit.” Indignation had brought blood back into her cheeks. For once I was almost glad she was angry. “Miss Skerry will stay here, although I do not expect her to help you. This is your doing, Agnes White, and you must put things right. The carcass is to be buried. And I want every trace of squirrel blood removed. The barn,” she said, looking around for the first time at my specimens, “is to be emptied of all these dead things.” She paused, taking in my father’s Beck microscope squatting beside me in the straw. “And that is stolen property. Am I correct that it’s the property of your father?” She stared at me hard, her jaw trembling slightly. “I cannot imagine how you ever stole it away and kept it hidden this long.”
As soon as my grandmother had left, taking three empty jam jars with her, Miss Skerry removed her spectacles, exposing squinty mole eyes. “Well,” she said. “This is a surprise.”
She walked over to the microscope and squatted. “You said this was your father’s?”
I did not answer. It was my grandmother who had said it, and even if the words were true I didn’t feel I owed anyone, least of all the governess, an explanation.
“I will take your silence as an affirmation,” she said.
“I didn’t steal it,” I finally muttered. “That instrument is my birthright.”
This earned me a look. “He was a doctor?”
I nodded.
The governess did not seem angry so I continued, enjoying the furtive pleasure of talking about my father. “Yes, but not a country doctor like the ones out here. My father worked at McGill. His specialty was morbid anatomy.” I looked at her, hoping she would be impressed.
“Morbid anatomy,” she said. “How gloomy sounding.”
“Morbid means disease,” I said, for I had looked it up in the dictionary right after I’d learned the term and my father’s association with it. “It comes from the Latin,
morbidus
.” I was showing off now, parading my cleverness and subtly putting the governess in her place.
To her credit she did not react. “So he studied diseased anatomy?”
“That’s right.”
“Under the microscope,” she said, bending to examine my father’s sleek Beck model. “May I?” she asked.
I nodded. I had not shown it to anyone. A mixture of pride and protectiveness surged inside me. “Do you wish to see how it works?” I picked it up by its three-pronged base and put it on the work table. “It is not all that difficult to manoeuvre once you get the hang of it.”
“You know how to work it?”
“Of course.” I showed her how to fit her eye to the eyepiece and explained about the slides and the focus knob.
“Your father taught you this?”
“Not really. He did not sit me down to give me a lesson as I have done for you. I was four when he left.”
Miss Skerry became interested. “You could not have taught yourself these skills at the age of four, Agnes. It is not possible. This is a highly complex instrument. You could not have figured out how to use it and the slides and how to collect all these things in bottles on your own?”