Lillian Moats

Legacy of Shadows


Скачать книгу

      

      THREE ARTS PRESS

      1100 Maple Ave.

      Downers Grove, IL 60515-4818

      Text © 1998 by Lillian Moats

      Artwork © 1999 by Lillian Moats

      Cover and text design by Corasue Nicholas

      Published 1999 by Three Arts Press. All rights reserved. This book may not be reproduced in whole or in part without written permission from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or other, without written permission from the publisher.

      Publisher’s Cataloging-in-Publication

      (Provided by Quality Books, Inc.)

      Moats, Lillian

      Legacy of shadows / by Lillian Moats. — 1st ed.

      p. cm.

      LCCN: 98-96937

      ISBN: 0-9669576-0-1

      Ebook ISBN: 978-0-9669576-7-9

      1. Mothers and daughters—Fiction. 2. Mental illness—Fiction. I. Title.

      PS3569.O6523L44 1999

      813′.54

      QBI98-990012

      Printed in U.S.A. on acid free paper by Thomson-Shore

      1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2

      First Edition

      Also by the Author

      The Gate of Dreams,

      a collection of stories for all ages

      written and illustrated by

      Lillian Somersaulter Moats

      To obtain

      Legacy of Shadows or

      The Gate of Dreams,

      contact your bookseller

      or visit:

      THREE ARTS PRESS

       threeartspress.com

      With love and thanks to these,

      in order of their appearance in my life:

      Chris, JP, Virginia, Michael and Dave;

      and in grateful memory

      fo my parents’ creativity

      which instilled in me

      what I most needed to survive.

      Preface

      Now that I stand in this sunlit clearing beyond a forest, menacing and deep, why do I want to take your hand and walk again through these woods? Perhaps because I’ve found they can only threaten me if I try to leave them behind forever; and while I’ve learned to travel alone from light into darkness and back again, it would be lovely to have a companion now and then.

      With these words as introduction I began, twelve years ago, to write a factual account of a desperate emotional breakdown—my own. Though it was well behind me, I hoped that probing its mysteries would protect me from a recurrence of the horrific symptoms which had seemed to strike from nowhere. As I reopened my past, I was overwhelmed by memories and startling insights. Eventually I came to understand that my illness had not been mine alone, but the inexorable culmination of a story set in motion with the death of my grandmother’s two-and-a-half-year-old child, eight decades earlier. Stunned by this discovery, and torn by issues of accuracy and privacy in relating the lives of others, I put my writing aside.

      But the story would not let me go. In exploring the particulars of my psychological history I had awakened, ironically, to its universality. Understanding the causes of my prolonged fragmentation ended my feeling of isolation, reconnecting me to the human family. I realized that the severity of my symptoms cast in high-relief a pervasive but illusive truth: that each of us is deeply directed by the legacy of unresolved emotion passed from generation to generation.

      The book you are about to read is very different from my original attempt. Years after I abandoned my documentation, I approached the work as fiction, giving myself license, at last, to broaden the scope of the story beyond my own lifetime. I began to project myself empathically into the minds of the two women whose lives had funneled into mine, calling up images which might have captured their emotions at pivotal moments in their lives. A reader searching for the sensational will not find it in these pages; the story is not one of abuse, but of the best parental intentions gone awry—the most common of all human tragedies.

      To release my unconscious understanding of an emotional legacy so deeply silent and encoded in symbol, I needed to call upon metaphor and meter. The resulting work is as much poetry as prose. Focusing on the interior lives and perceptions of a mother, daughter and granddaughter in turn, I adopted the format and intentions of the journal rather than the novel. As a granddaughter’s transformation of family tragedy, Legacy of Shadows is an expression of faith that in our deepening self-knowledge lies the hope of liberation for ourselves and our children.

      Lillian Moats

      1999

      BOOK ONE

      Through Christianna’s Eyes

      Christianna Pemberty

      1882–1919

      Lincolnshire, England. November, 1904

      The doctor’s verdict has just been nailed outside our door: WHOOPING COUGH. I press my face against the glass to wail in silence. How can my child who, only twelve days past, conjured a menagerie in my lap, who roared and trumpeted, snarled and purred, nuzzled to be petted—how can she now lie torpid in her bed, in terror of the next spasm?

      I rush back to her side. Oh, Anna, I am no child! Am I not twenty-two—old enough to mother you—old enough to save you? Have I grown up only to grow powerless? Her disbelieving eyes engage mine with a plea. They cannot comprehend I haven’t the magic to transform her.

      Dear God, could such a creature who, just twelve days past, ruled a wild kingdom from my lap, be vanquished at two-and-a-half?

      II

      Once Anna’s eyes drew mine like magnets. Now they repel my gaze. I cannot look in them without blaming myself. Instead it is her hand on the rippled sheet, spread-fingered—like a little starfish—that attracts my soul.

      Being a mother is all water and tides tonight. Each recurrent wave of her coughing engulfs us both. Yet it recedes only to drag her farther out to sea. I take her starfish-hand and hold it on my belly. I WANT TO GO WITH YOU, ANNA! If only the sphere under your hand were the moon; then the tide would pull you toward me.

      But within this globe of my belly, your unborn sister or brother turns in its own salt-sea. And I must remain steadfast on this shore, torn in two.

      Lincolnshire. February, 1905

      The midwife says, “Quiet y’self, Mum—or you’ll exhaust y’self before it’s done.”

      I defiantly shake my head to signal, “Hush!