Edith seemed confused, then nodded and gave a little smile. “You’re on television. We see you all the time.”
Jodi moved toward Edith Boudreaux. “Mrs. Boudreaux, I believe that you and I are related. State records indicate that I was born to your mother, Pamela Johnson, thirty-six years ago. But I don’t believe that. I believe that you gave birth to me. Is that true?”
The color drained from Edith Boudreaux’s face, and her lips parted and she said, “Oh my God.”
The two women in their sixties turned toward us, one of them holding a rust-colored dress that had to be four sizes too small. “Edie, do you think this works for me?”
Edith didn’t hear them. She took a half-step back and then stepped forward again, gripping the Formica counter to steady herself. I smiled at the two women. “I’m sorry, but Mrs. Boudreaux is busy, now.”
The woman with the rust dress made a face and said, “I don’t think anyone asked you.”
Edith blinked six or eight times, then said, “Jill, will you help Maureen, please?” You could barely hear her.
The blond clerk went over to the two women, but Maureen wasn’t happy about it.
Jodi said, “There are some questions about myself that I’m hoping you will answer.” She said it without emotion or intimacy, as if she had no more stake in the answers than a census taker.
Edith reached out as if to touch Jodi, but Jodi took a half-step back, her hands at her side. I said, “Why don’t we go for a walk?”
Edith told the clerk that she had to go out for a while, and the three of us walked across to the square, me telling Edith what we knew and how we knew it. I thought she was going to deny it, but she didn’t. I thought she might evade us, or start screaming for her husband, or make a big deal about how dare we invade her life like this, but she didn’t do any of that. It was as if she had been waiting thirty-six years for Jodi to walk through the door, and now Jodi had and Edith couldn’t stop looking at her. They walked on either side of me, keeping me between them, Jodi with her hands in her pockets, staring straight ahead, Edith anxious and staring at Jodi, as if Jodi might suddenly disappear and Edith wanted to have her committed to memory. When I finished, Edith said, “I can’t believe how much she looks like me. She looks more like me than the children I raised.” She said it to me, as if Jodi was a dream, and not really there.
I said, “If the state papers Rebenack had were legitimate, then Jodi is the child that Pamela Johnson handed to the state welfare authorities. There aren’t any papers that indicate that the child was born to you. Nor are there documents that establish fatherhood.”
She shook her head. “No. No, there wouldn’t be.”
Jodi said, “Then you don’t deny that you’re my birth mother?”
Edith seemed surprised. “No. No, of course not. Why would I?”
“You denied it thirty-six years ago.”
“Oh.”
I said, “Well, now that we’re all together, maybe I should wait in the yogurt shop and let you two talk.”
They both said, “No!” and Jodi grabbed my hand. She said, “I want you to stay. This won’t take long.”
We walked past a couple of wrought iron benches to a little gazebo in the square. An older man in coveralls and a red engineer’s cap was on one of the benches, head back, mouth open, eyes closed. Sleeping. He had a tiny dog on a leash with him, the leash tied to the bench. The dog sat in the shade beneath the man and whined when we passed. The little dog was black and shaggy and its hair was matted. I thought it must be hot, with all the hair. We walked up the steps onto the gazebo and stood there in the shade. It was still hot, there in the shade.
Jodi stood well away from Edith, still holding my hand. She said, “So.”
Edith uncrossed her arms, then recrossed them. She started to say something, then stopped. The little dog crept out from under the bench and tried to follow us up onto the gazebo, but reached the end of its leash and cried. Both Edith and Jodi looked at it.
I said, “Don’t everybody talk at once.”
Jodi frowned. “That’s not funny.”
“Nope. I guess not.”
We stood there some more. The gazebo was sort of nestled in a stand of three mature magnolia trees, and the air was heavy with their scent. The big bumblebees zigged in and around the gazebo like police helicopters on patrol.
Edith said, “I’m sorry. I don’t know what to say. I always thought you might come back to me. I would think of you, sometimes, and try to imagine what this moment would be like, and now here we are.”
Jodi frowned, and her face pulled into a tight, uncomfortable knot. “Mrs. Boudreaux, I think I should make something clear.”
“All right.”
“I haven’t come here to find my mother. I have a mother. She’s the woman who raised me.”
Edith glanced at the little dog again. “Of course.”
“Just so we understand.”
Edith nodded. “Oh, yes.” She pooched out her lips, and then she added, “I hope the people who got you were good to you.”
“They were. Very.”
Edith nodded again.
Jodi said, “Was Leon Williams my father?” She said it abruptly, the same way she had gotten out of the car when she decided to go into Edith’s store, like she had to do it that way or it wouldn’t get done.
Edith’s eyes flagged. Knew it was coming and here it was. “Yes. Leon was your father.”
Jodi drew a slow breath, her mouth still the tight knot. “All right,” she said. “All right.”
Edith uncrossed her arms and cupped her right hand in her left at her breast. She looked at me, and then she looked back at Jodi. “That is what you wanted to know, isn’t it?”
Jodi nodded.
Edith again took a single step toward Jodi, and Jodi lifted her free hand, stopping her. She still held onto me. “Please don’t.”
“Does it bother you that your father was a black man?”
Jodi’s face tightened even more. “It seems to bother a great many people.”
“It always has,” Edith said. “I was just a girl, and Leon wasn’t much older. We were children, and we were friends, and it became more than that.” Her eyes grew wet and she blinked several times. “I hope you don’t hate me for all of this.”
Jodi stared at the little dog, and then she leaned against the gazebo rail. Even in the shade it was hot, and a single line of perspiration ran down the side of her face in front of her left ear. She didn’t say anything for a while, maybe trying to put it in a kind of order. A couple of flies buzzed around the old man’s face and he swatted at them without opening his eyes. She said, “Of course, I don’t hate you. Don’t be silly.”
Edith was blinking harder. “Someone was blackmailing you with this, weren’t they?”
“That’s right.”
Edith smiled softly, but there was no pleasure in it. Just a kind of acknowledgment of shared experience. “Yes, well, I know about that, too. When they say getting in trouble, they really mean it, don’t they? It looks like you get everybody in trouble.”
Jodi looked at me, embarrassed, as if she suddenly regretted being here and speaking with this woman and witnessing her pain. Edith said, “You’ve grown into quite a beautiful woman. I’m very proud of you.”
Jodi said, “How did Leon Williams die?”
Edith drew breath and closed her eyes. “My father murdered him.”
“Because he was black?”
Edith wet her lips and thought for a moment, and I found myself wishing that I were not present. I had no right to what was happening, and no place in it, and the sense of alienness made me feel large and intrusive, but Jodi still gripped my hand, and seemed to be holding on all the tighter. Edith said, “I think he shot Leon because he couldn’t bring himself to shoot me.”
Jodi said, “Jesus Christ.”
Edith leaned back against the gazebo rail and told Jodi how Jodi came to be. Jodi hadn’t asked that Edith tell her these t
hings, but it seemed important to Edith, as if she needed to explain herself to Edith as much as to Jodi. She described an impoverished home dominated by rage and a brutal father who beat wife and children alike. She sketched herself as a shy, fearful girl who loved school, not so much for learning but simply because school allowed brief escape from the numbing despair of her home, and that after school she would buy yet more moments of peace by walking along the levees and the bayous, there to read or write in her journal, there to smell the air and enjoy the feeling of safety that being anyplace other than home allowed her. The Edith Boudreaux she described did not seem in any way like the person in the gazebo, but then, of course, she wasn’t. She described a day on the bayou, her feet in the water, when Leon Williams had come upon her, an absolutely beautiful young man with a bright, friendly smile, who asked what she was reading (Little Men, she still remembered) and made her laugh (he asked how tall they were) and who, like Edith, dreamed of better things (he wanted to own an Esso station). When Edith spoke of Leon, her eyes closed and she smiled. She said that they had run into each other again the following week, very much by accident, and that Leon had again made her laugh and how, after that, the meetings were planned and no longer left to chance. As Edith went through it you could see the old emotions play across her face, and after a while it was like she wasn’t with us anymore. She was with Leon, sitting in the warm shade, and she told us that it was she who had first kissed him, how she had thought about it for weeks and wanted him to do it but that all he did was talk until she finally realized that he wasn’t going to cross that line, her being white and him not, and that she finally said, oh, to hell with it, and she took the bull by the horns, so to speak, and kissed him, and when she said it you knew that she was seeing his face as plain and clear before her as if it were happening now. She said the meetings became more frequent and frenzied and then she missed her period and then another, and she knew she was pregnant, thirteen and white and pregnant by Leon Williams, he of the African-American persuasion (no matter how watered-down that might be). She had been terrified to tell her mother and then she grew even more terrified not to, until finally she had, and then, of course, her parents demanded to know the identity of the father. Edith stopped abruptly, as if she realized that she wasn’t Edith Johnson anymore, but was now Edith Boudreaux. She grew very quiet, and her face darkened. She said, “My father wanted me to name the boy. He kept after me for weeks, and I wouldn’t tell them, and then one night he was drunk and he was beating me, and my mother was screaming you’re going to make her lose that baby, and I didn’t want to tell him but I was so scared that I would lose you…” She shook her head and crossed her arms again and began to blink back tears.
I said, “It’s okay, Edith. You were a child. You were scared.”
She nodded, but she didn’t look at us, and the tears came harder. “He went out after Leon and he shot him. Just like that.” A whisper.
Jodi said, “My God.”
Edith wiped at her eyes, smearing the tears and her mascara and the mucus running from her nose. She gave a weak smile. “I must look like such a fool. I’m sorry.”
Jodi said, “No.”
Edith was getting control of herself. “Would you come back to my house? I could make coffee. There’s so much more I’d like to tell you.”
Jodi looked uncomfortable. “I really don’t think I can.” She looked at me like she wanted me to say something, like maybe we had someplace to go and I should check my watch and get her away from there.
Edith’s eyes grew panicky. “You have three sisters, did you know that? I could show you their pictures.” Pleading.
Jodi said, “I’m sorry. I have to get back to Los Angeles.”
Edith shook her head and her face seemed to close and grow fearful. She said, “I didn’t want to tell. I have cursed myself every day for it, but I just wasn’t strong enough to save him.” She put her face in her hands. “I want you to know that I would have kept you if I could. I want you to know that I’ve wondered about you, and prayed for you. God forgive me, I wasn’t strong enough to save either one of you. Please forgive me for that. Please please please forgive me.” Her shoulders heaved and she turned away and put her hands on the rail and wept.
The old man on the bench opened his eyes and sat up and looked at us. He said, “What in hell’s going on over there?”
I leaned toward him. “Shut up or I’ll kick your ass.”
The old man untied the little dog and hurried away. I was blinking fast. Dust in the air. Damn dust is something.
Jodi said, “Edith?”
Edith shook her head.
Jodi said, “Edith, I forgive you.”
Edith shook her head again, and her body trembled.
Jodi looked at me, and I said, “Whatever you want.”
Jodi pursed her lips and blew a stream of air and stared at the rough board deck of the gazebo. She said, “Edith, I need to know one more thing. Did you love my father?”
Edith answered in a voice so small that we could barely hear her. Maybe we imagined it, hearing only what we wanted to hear. She said, “Oh, God, yes. I loved him so. God, how I loved him.”
Jodi went to Edith and put her hands on her shoulders, and said, “Maybe we could stay for a little while, after all.”
The two of them stood like that, Edith crying, Jodi patting her shoulder, together in the heat of the day.
21
We drove to Edith Boudreaux’s house, parked in the drive, then went inside so that she could share her life with her long-lost daughter.
It was a nice house, furnished in Early American and smelling faintly of Pine-Sol. Everything was clean the way a home can be clean only after the children are older and have moved out. A grandfather clock stood in the entry, and a Yamaha piano was against the wall just inside the door. A cluster of family photographs sprouted on top of the Yamaha. Edith and Jodi moved together ahead of me, and there seemed a careful distance between them, each overly polite, each watchful and uncertain. Jodi said, “You have a lovely home.”
“Thank you.”
“Have you lived here for very long?”
“Oh, yes. Almost fifteen years, now.” You see? Like that.
I sat in a wing chair at the end of the couch as they moved around the room examining the artifacts of Edith’s life, as if we had stumbled upon a long-sealed chamber beneath the great pyramid. This is my husband, Jo-el. This is when we were married. These are our daughters. Pictures of the three grown daughters were spotted around the living room and hanging on the walls. Red-letter stuff: the graduation, the marriage. That’s Sissy, our oldest; she has two boys. That’s Joana and Rick, they live in New Orleans. Barb’s the baby, she’s at LSU. Jodi followed Edith from picture to picture with her hands clasped behind her back, unwilling to touch anything. She didn’t seem particularly happy to be there, but maybe it was just me.
After a little bit of that, Edith said, “Would you like coffee? Coffee won’t take but a minute.” Nervous, and anxious to please.
Jodi looked at me, and I said, “That would be very nice. Thank you.”
When Edith was gone, I lowered my voice. “How are you doing?”
Jodi made a little shrug. “It feels creepy.”
“We can leave whenever you want.”
She shook her head. “I’m here. I might as well learn whatever I can learn.”
“Sure.”
“I won’t be coming back.”
I spread my hands.
Jodi frowned. “Well, I can’t very well be rude.”
“Absolutely not.”
When Edith came back with the coffee, Jodi was looking at the pictures on the piano. Edith had bypassed the Yamaha before, and didn’t seem thrilled when she saw Jodi over there. Jodi said, “Are these your brothers and sisters?”
Edith poured the coffee, then handed me a small plate with three pecan pralines. I hadn’t had pralines in years. She said, “Some of them.” Not looking that way.
/> Jodi said, “Show me who’s who.”
Edith made a little frown as she joined Jodi at the pictures. “This is my mother, standing with my aunt. That’s Jo-el when he was a boy. And these are my brothers and sisters. That’s me. I was sixteen.”
Jodi nodded and leaned closer to the pictures. “Which one is your father?”
Edith seemed to pull herself in. “I don’t keep a picture of my father here.”
“Elvis says you take care of him.”
“Yes, that’s true.”
Jodi stared at Edith for a moment, then looked back at the pictures. “How do you and they live with it?”
Edith started to speak, stopped, then found some words. “Families keep secrets. We’ve never once spoken of it in all this time. My brother Nick was closest to my age. He was twelve, but he’s dead. Sara was ten, and the others even younger. I don’t know if they know or not.”
Jodi made a whistling sound through her teeth. “He murdered a child and he got away with it. Just like that.”
Edith crossed her arms again, as she had at the gazebo. “A man named Duplasus was the sheriff back then. He came to the house, and my father told him exactly what happened and why.” She pulled her arms tighter, protection from the cold. “I’m sure Mr. Duplasus felt that my father’s rage was justifiable, a white girl being ruined by a colored.”
Jodi said, “Jesus Christ.”
Edith came back to the couch. “Yes. Well. Things like this used to be called crimes of passion. Would you like more coffee, Mr. Cole?”
“Yes, ma’am. That would be nice.”
Jodi turned away from the piano and stood in the center of Edith’s living room. “You could’ve said something. You still can.” She looked at me. “There’s no statute of limitation on murder, is there?”
“Nope.”
Edith said, “My father is eighty-six years old. He’s incontinent and he talks to himself, and much of the time he’s incoherent. I care for him now in ways that he doesn’t always like, but I’m the only one to do it.” She shook her head. “I’m not as angry as I used to be. Leon’s been gone a very long while.”