There was a moment that winter. I was kneeling on the carpet,
listening   to  Dad testify of  Mother’s    calling as  a   healer, when    my  breath
caught  in  my  chest   and I   felt    taken   out of  myself. I   no  longer  saw my
parents or  our living  room.   What    I   saw was a   woman   grown,  with    her
own mind,   her own prayers,    who no  longer  sat,    childlike,  at  her father’s
feet.
I   saw the woman’s swollen belly   and it  was my  belly.  Next    to  her sat
her mother, the midwife.    She took    her mother’s    hand    and said    she
wanted  the baby    delivered   in  a   hospital,   by  a   doctor. I’ll    drive   you,    her
mother  said.   The women   moved   toward  the door,   but the door    was
blocked—by  loyalty,    by  obedience.  By  her father. He  stood,  immovable.
But the woman   was his daughter,   and she had drawn   to  herself all his
conviction, all his weightiness.    She set him aside   and moved   through
the door.
I   tried   to  imagine what    future  such    a   woman   might   claim   for herself.
I   tried   to  conjure other   scenes  in  which   she and her father  were    of  two
minds.  When    she ignored his counsel and kept    her own.    But my  father
had taught  me  that    there   are not two reasonable  opinions    to  be  had on
any subject:    there   is  Truth   and there   are Lies.   I   knelt   on  the carpet,
listening   to  my  father  but studying    this    stranger,   and felt    suspended
between them,   drawn   to  each,   repelled    by  both.   I   understood  that    no
future  could   hold    them;   no  destiny could   tolerate    him and her.    I   would
remain  a   child,  in  perpetuity, always, or  I   would   lose    him.
—I   WAS LYING   ON  MY  BED,    watching    the shadows my  feeble  lamp    cast    on  the
ceiling,     when    I   heard   my  father’s    voice   at  the     door.   Instinctively   I
jerked  to  my  feet    in  a   kind    of  salute, but once    I   was standing    I   wasn’t