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We Have Always Lived in the Castle
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Spoiler Thread: We have always lived in the Castle
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Paul
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Oct 16, 2015 06:12AM

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Was anyone surprised that Mary Catherine turned out to be the killer? At what point did you figure it out? I think I figured it out about halfway in.


I am amazed at Constance's attitude. She knew Mericat killed almost all of her family and yet she cheerfully took care of her. She even went on trial and didn't say a thing.


I think Constance was so lonely with just Mericat and Uncle Julian for companionship she was willing to overlook the monster that Charles was.

I think I thought about it, a bit, but never really realized the whole truth. This whole book made me very sad, yet happy and I loved the book and loved the love in the book.

I think Constance was willing to go on trial for Merricat's murder, to cover for her, because she truly loved Merricat. Constance was old enough to know what would happen to a twelve-year-old girl who had poisoned her entire family. She wouldn't go to an orphanage, or to jail; she'd be locked up in an institution for the criminally insane, all the rest of her days. I don't think Constance could have borne that. So instead she went to trial, where (as several characters point out) she was acquitted -- though the villagers seem hell-bent on making her pay for it anyway.
I do not think Julian believes that Merricat is alive. There are several instances in the book where he grows confused about whether it all happened, who the people are around him. This may be because he is an old man or due to some lingering mental damage from the arsenic. But if you were an invalid, and some hidden part of your brain knew you were living with the person who had tried to murder you, how would you respond? In Uncle Julian's case, to cease to recognize the existence of that person. And if you notice, in the six years since her family's murder, Merricat has come to accept that Uncle Julian does not acknowledge her; any time she thinks to be kinder to Uncle Julian, she brings some small unobtrusive item such as a leaf, or goes to Constance and asks her to do something for Uncle Julian by proxy.
In truth, all three remaining members of the Blackwood family are a little mentally off; Julian is becoming senile, Constance has terrible agoraphobia and social anxiety after the trial, and Merricat -- well, she murders people who send her to bed without dinner. (I wonder about that fragment of argument that Uncle Julian remembers from the day they died -- where their mother is saying "I won't stand for it" and the father is responding "We have no choice" -- was not about money at all, but was about whether Mary Katherine should be institutionalized. They must have realized something was wrong with her. And it sheds new light on Constance's outburst to the police that they all deserved to die. Perhaps she knew what they had planned; they might even have discussed it with the family at dinner before the blackberries at dessert. Perhaps that comment wasn't entirely made to cover for Merricat.)

