Mama Fay couldn’t recall what she ate for breakfast, but she did remember leading the protest against Clotilde’s teenage exorcism back in 1939.
“Your grandma’d be out there working in the hot sun, getting fits and head pains and all matter a vexins. She had a sickness, but it wasn’t witchery. Her fool daddy was scared a her, that’s what. His back went bad round fall ’39, and he reasoned Clo put roots on him. Jay-zee Ma-dee Jo-seff.” Jesus Mary Joseph. “His back went bad ’cause a fast women and slow horses, not his own daughter. Why women gotta be the cause a evilness in man? Now, I never got married. No, no, no, I ain’t one of those funny ladies. I just won’t fold myself up tiny so as not to put off no man. Anyway, Clo grew up and married a man same like her daddy. Scared. One spring they crops turnt dry, and the husband and the daddy and the same priest, Father Augustin, sprung a second exorcism on her. She let ’em. And went quiet for months. And then shot that husband in the shed. Let folks tell it, she shot him ’cause he was sanging a spiritual in there, and the holy noise poked the demon in her. Which I always took issha with. Won’t no evil in your grandma. She couldn’t long-divide for nothing, but she was a good girl. An excellent cook. And an even bettah shot.”