Per the quote I posted, that's not what she said. It is, I admit, the most common and arguably the most logical interpretation, however.
Per the quote you posted, that's
exactly what she said.
"My mother passed it on to me," she replied. "As I was born, just as she received it when she was born."
She's clearly saying this is how the Archive works.
Per the quote I posted, that's not explicitly/literally what she said. It is, I admit, the most common and arguably the most logical interpretation, however. It all hinges on whether she was interpreting the question of her "gig" as Archive being the Fate/Duty of it, or the actual "Comforted" is a pretty big stretch. That implies positive emotions, or really any emotions at all, which were not evident in that scene. The closest she gets is referring to her mother as "Free of It". Otherwise she jsut tells Harry that she has no need to be Sorry for her mother dying because she knows
Yes, that is what she said. She says that she got the Archive the same way her Mother did, in a way that is clearly meant to say, "This is how it works." She says she doesn't even understand why Dresden would be sorry, because her mother lives on in her head. That's the opposite of what you'd expect if the mother living in her head hated her so much and was so disgusted that she killed herself to spite her.
She's not saying, "I got it from birth, which put my mother in a vegetative state, just like my mother did to her mother. Oh, and we're the only ones it's happened to, every other Archive worked in a completely different way." She's clearly intending that this is just how the thing works.
Ivy's being very clear in what she's saying and intending. She has no reason to make things up here, and if she had anything to hide, she could hide just as easily and a heck of a lot more simply by simply not saying anything. Harry would
expect a supernatural thing like the Archive to clam up, if she just said, "I'd rather not say," he'd have understood.