“Maybe it’s the perfect ammudence,” Fred said.
“So it looks like a trial is really going to happen,” Jiminy said quietly. “With the Brayer connection and the governor’s race, there’s a lot of pressure to see if there’s anything to all this. It could happen really quickly.”
Lyn nodded, keeping her thoughts to herself. “Quickly” was an extremely relative term.
Jiminy had found her on Willa’s side porch steps, eating her lunch in the shade. She’d just sat down and started talking, not bothering to ask if Lyn wanted company.
“The car could play a key role,” she continued. “The FBI’s ordered DNA testing.”
Lyn didn’t want to think about that. She knew it could be helpful, but she didn’t want to revisit the specter of the people she’d loved most in the world being part of violence that had spilled and snagged and crushed and torn, leaving little pieces of them behind. She set her plate on the ground, willfully surrendering it to the ants.
“Are you okay?” Jiminy asked.
Lyn stared at her, noting that her face was darker from time spent in the sun, and that there was something more certain about her features. Willa and Henry’s granddaughter seemed to be settling into her body, slowly and steadily.
“I mean, I’m sorry if you didn’t want any of this,” Jiminy continued. “I should have been more sensitive about that.”
Lyn recognized that in addition to the physical changes, Jiminy was nowhere near as hesitant as she’d been when she’d first arrived. And despite her intrusiveness, or maybe because of it, Lyn appreciated her.
“This needed to happen,” Lyn said simply.
Jiminy took this in, and nodded slowly. After a moment, she reached into her bag.
“I’d like to show you something,” she said.
She’d made some copies of her grandfather’s photos. Carlos had reprimanded her for her preoccupation with her family’s personal connection to the case they were investigating, but what if that link held some valuable key? What if, in the end, it was the whole point?
Jiminy handed Lyn a copy of the photo of her that had been taken over forty years before. Lyn held it lightly, examining her younger self.
“Do you remember when that was taken?” Jiminy asked. “It seems like some kind of occasion.”
Lyn gazed a bit longer, then shrugged.
“Your grandpa was always taking photos,” she replied. “I was bound to be in one eventually.”
Jiminy handed her a copy of the photograph of her grandfather.
“What about this one?” she asked. “I thought it was a self-portrait, but I found out they didn’t have timers back then. Do you know who might’ve taken it?”
Lyn glanced at it, then shook her head.
“No idea.” she replied.
Jiminy nodded.
“Well, I couldn’t stop looking at it when I saw it,” she said. “He looks so sad, and so old for thirty-two. I couldn’t stop staring at his eyes.”
The hazel eyes that she’d inherited. Her grandfather had worn glasses, and the sunlight was glinting off their edges in the photo, winking at the camera.
“There just seemed like there was more of a story there,” Jiminy continued. “So I took it to the photo zone at HushMart and got a little help, and sure enough, there was something.”
Jiminy handed another photograph to Lyn. In this one, the eyes filled the entire sheet, and their magnified proportions revealed that the reflection in Henry’s glasses that had initially seemed like clouds or trees was actually a person, sitting opposite, holding a camera. Henry’s gigantic eyes were mirrors that showed a young Lyn snapping his photo.
“Does that help you remember?” Jiminy asked.
Lyn met Jiminy’s gaze.
“I think it’s time we took a ride together,” Lyn said.
A short time later, Jiminy was standing, hushed, holding her hand to her mouth. She closed her eyes reverently, then opened them again to gaze at the etched gravestones. One read “Edward Waters—beloved husband.” The other simply said “Sweet Jiminy.”
Lyn was standing beside her, swaying ever so slightly, like a sturdy tree in a strong breeze.
“This is a church,” Jiminy said reverently. “You’re a church.”
Indeed, as often happened when Lyn communed with her lost ones, she felt filled with something holy.
“Listen to what I tell you,” she replied. “Because I’ll only say it once.”
Jiminy nodded. She felt like she might be falling into some sort of trance.
“Your grandfather had more than one daughter.”
It was almost as though Lyn was telling her a bedtime story.
“He had your mother with Willa,” she continued. “But before that, he had another daughter. With me.”
Jiminy remained completely still. She didn’t even breathe.
“My Jiminy was your mother’s half sister, your grandpa’s first daughter, born five years before he even met your grandma.”
Now Jiminy blinked rapidly as her brain whirled into action. She didn’t feel as shocked as she thought she should. It was almost as though she’d known all along. She couldn’t have, she realized, yet still, that was the feeling. She needed to hear more.
“Does my grandma know?” she asked quietly.
Lyn sighed.
“We’ve never discussed it, and Henry never told her far as I know,” she replied. “But I think she figured it out.”
Jiminy nodded.
“It was an accident . . . a mistake,” Lyn said.
She closed her eyes a moment, then took a long, slow breath.
“I was in St. Louis, preparing to leave my sister and my folks and move down here to marry Edward,” she continued. “Edward and I fell for each other quick and didn’t see a point in waiting. I knew we belonged together within a minute of seeing him. Edward used to say it took him a minute and a half, but that I was always a step or two ahead of him.”
Jiminy smiled. She liked romantic stories about other people’s courtships. They were her favorite kind of fairy tale.
“By this point, Edward was living on Henry’s farm and they’d started their carpentry business. One of the Brayer cousins bought a place in St. Louis and wanted a replica of the dining room table and chairs at Brayer Plantation, so he hired Henry to take the measurements and start the job.”
“Okay,” Jiminy said, struggling to keep the judgment from her voice. “And you and Edward were engaged.”
“Till Henry got to St. Louis we were,” Lyn replied sadly. “But he brought a letter for me from Edward that broke it off. It said I shouldn’t come to Mississippi, that I’d have a better life in St. Louis, that I should go on along without him.”
“Why?” Jiminy asked.
“He didn’t say. My folks figured I’d done something wrong and kicked me out. Which is when I did do something wrong.”
“You slept with Henry,” Jiminy said softly.
Lyn looked off in the distance, at the rolling hills and the many bends in the river.
“Once. And hated myself afterwards. Then Edward showed up the next day asking for me back.”
“Oh God, why’d he break it off in the first place?”
Lyn closed her eyes for another long moment.
“The K.S.O. burned his mother’s house the week before, and he said it didn’t feel safe or right to bring me down to Fayeville to live. He said he loved me too much to have me be in a place that would only cause suffering.”
“Why didn’t he just leave himself?” Jiminy asked. “You guys could’ve lived in St. Louis, or anywhere.”
Jiminy felt the same sense of frustrated agitation she got when she watched Romeo and Juliet or Titanic—she desperately wanted to alter an unchangeable ending. Lyn shook her head.
“He had to stay in Fayeville to look after his mother and be close to his brothers and sisters. He wanted me, but he understood if I wouldn’t come.”
“And you obviously told him you would.”
“I married him that day,” Lyn said.
“So Jiminy could still have been Edward’s daughter, then,” Jiminy exclaimed. “I mean, Edward could have been the father just as easily as my grandpa.”