1937
Faith Dunkeld clutched her distended abdomen and leaned against the kitchen sink.
Faith’s younger sister-in-law, Beverly, a fidgety, fair haired girl who was
steaming in a black wool swimming costume, dropped the raspberry she had been
hulling.
“What is it?” she squeaked, crimson-stained fingers going to her lips.
Faith gasped, “I’m not feeling well. Her lovely face drained to grey and she
stifled a groan. “Go ... GO get someone. Hurry!” She slid to the floor, her arm,
shoulder, and the side of her head bumping along the green cupboard door beneath
the sink.
Beverly squealed and dashed out by the kitchen door. It banged behind
her as she clattered down the stairs and across the back porch. Instead of going
around by the dirt road and across the ridge over Dunkeld Creek, she shot across
the back yard past the giant maple, scrabbled through Faith’s garden, squashing
lettuce, and leaped from stone to stone in the shallow creek that sang its way
from the bush to the Ottawa River beyond the village. Thistles scratching at
her, burdock snatching her bathing costume, grasshoppers leaping for safety,
dust and pollen sticking to her sweat, mouth open to catch what oxygen there
was, she struggled up the hill behind Cruickshank’s store, stumbled across the
field, and careened screeching down the rise to the swimming hole. The people in
the water, coloured tea brown during Dunkeld Creek’s long journey through the
surrounding forest to the Ottawa River, gaped in astonishment. A boy forgot to
jump from the swing rope and hung there on the knot like a bug on fly-paper.
“Faith is having a fit!”
The women came running, bathing costumes scratching
against sunburned flesh. Plump Cousin Bridget Dunkeld, a newly graduated nurse
home for the summer, arrive first at Faith’s grey stucco house and sent a
snivelling Beverly up the road to fetch Faith’s mother-in-law, Jeanne Dunkeld.
She and Bridget carried Faith, a slight burden, up the painted stairs and into
her bedroom.
Jeanne almost dropped Faith’s legs. “What’s that on your mouth?
Blood?”
Faith laughed a little hysterically. “No. It’s raspberries!”
The three of them, giggling and crying, Faith stopping to bow her back in agony, Bridget
trying to act like a professional nurse and then forgetting herself and ripping
Faith’s clothes away, Jeanne going on about having left biscuits in the oven at
home, which sent them into another fit, sobered as Faith cried out.
Jeanne said, “Faith, my darling girl, the pains are coming too fast, too soon, too soon!
We’ll have to help you ourselves. You must be brave, child,”
“Never mind being
brave! Scream and yell. It’ll help,” said Bridget out of the depths of her
two-month experience in birthing at the Pembroke General Hospital.
But little Faith didn’t scream. She moaned like a trapped forest animal, and her eyes got
bigger and bigger and more lost. They feared for her life. Jeanne, her blazing
red hair curled crispy-wet and trailing from its old fashioned pompadour, tore
down the stairs. Her youngest son, the delicate, fair-headed one called Patrick,
stood at the bottom.
“Go for the doctor and send someone for Richard,” Faith’s
tall young husband, forced by the Depression to work like a mule on the
railroad.
Jeanne summoned Bridget from the bedside. The pains had stopped for
the moment and little Faith lay against the pillows, semiconscious. “The new
bedroom suite from Freiman’s in Pembroke hasn’t arrived. Faith will be mortified
when the doctor gets here.”
Bridget, her brown eyes expressing the opinion that
Jeanne had gone mad, breathed. “I don’t think she cares.”
“Nevertheless.” Jeanne, widow of Dunkeld Village’s leading citizen, once rich, still proud and a
respected teacher, church organist, mother to all, was obeyed. They crossed the
road to Bridget’s log house nestled among pines and carried her chest-of-drawers
across the dusty surface and into Faith’s house and up the stairs to the room
where Faith lay whey-faced and heaving once more. It took three men to jockey
the chest-of-drawers downstairs when Faith's new suite came on the train from
Pembroke. The doctor also arrived too late, pontificated, and left after
consuming a bowl of raspberries. But nobody cared because Faith was alive and
safe in Richard’s arms.
Later that night, Jeanne stood in front of Richard while he nursed his new baby in the green rocking chair, three-year-old Colleen
sitting on the mat by his feet. “You have two girls now. You’ll not want her to
have another, Richard.”
Bridget frowned and changed the subject. “What a time.
This baby better be special. I’ll not let her forget the trouble she’s caused.”
Faith, Bridget, and Jeanne recovered. Beverly had a fainting fit and had to have
camphor waved under her nose, which greatly impressed the boys from the swimming
hole.
The new baby, Anna, proved small and sickly and later almost died of
whooping cough, but she had intelligent blue eyes and curly brown hair and was
the bonniest baby ever born in Dunkeld Village. She was raised in a cocoon of
love in a family that cared for its own and everyone else's, too. And she
emerged an innocent, determined butterfly into the light.