squeaked with pond water.
âHanalee?â
I shoved the derringerâstill tucked inside the holster, still holding one remaining bulletâinto the depths of a hollow log ten feet from the opening in the woods. I wrapped the leather in an oilcloth that I kept hidden in that spot specifically for times when I couldnât sneak the pistol back into the house, and I scattered leaves over thelump. Dirt clogged my fingernails; mold from the leaves tickled my nose. I sneezed so hard, my ribs hurt.
âHanalee?â called Mama again, her voice high and panicky.
âIâm coming,â I called back, and I kicked off my wet shoes and moseyed out of the woods with my best attempt at a casual strut. Mama hated guns. She didnât know that my former friend Laurenceâonce my staunchest protectorâhad given me a pistol when I was just fourteen.
My mother relaxed her shoulders when she saw me coming her way, but her face looked paler than usual.
âI heard a gunshot,â she said.
I shrugged. âIt was probably just Laurence, shooting squirrels again.â
âWhere were you? I thought you said you were going to pick raspberries for our Sunday dinner.â
âI remembered something I forgot to tell Fleur at church this morning.â I picked up the wicker basket I was supposed to be using for berrying. âIâm sorry if I scared you.â
She put her hands on her hips and scowled at the woods. Loose strands of honey-blond hair fluttered around her eyes, which she narrowed into slits. âI donât want you going over there if Laurence is shooting his fatherâs guns again,â she said. âI donât know why his mother allows him to do that.â
âItâs his way of grieving for his father.â
âThat war killed Mr. Paulissen five years ago.â
âSometimes it takes a while to recover from a fatherâs death, Mama.â
She swallowed and averted her gaze, her lips squeezed together.People told me that she and I had the same mouth, especially when we looked as vexed as she did at that moment. âA white girlâs lips,â the older ladies in church would say when sizing me up like a county-fair squash, debating the degree of my whiteness. Iâd also inherited my motherâs hazel eyes and long, slender neck, but my nose, my brown curls, and the shape of my eyes âderived from that Negro father,â the ladies often added in their bored-old-biddy evaluations. My skinâa medium shade of golden brownâwas a few shades lighter than my fatherâs had been, but it caused all my troubles.
âDid you hear that the prison let Joe Adder out early?â I asked Mama.
âYes.â She fussed with a lock of hair that had fallen out of its pin and coiled down the nape of her neck. âI overheard all the whispered rumors at church.â
âHis parents wonât let him live with them anymore.â
âI heard that, too. I understand theyâre ashamed of what he did, but I hope to God they can learn to forgive him.â
âForgive him?â
âYes.â Her eyes met mine. âThat accident that killed your father was just a stupid mistake made by an intoxicated sixteen-year-old boy. He served seventeen months in the state penitentiary. Thatâs a lot for a person that young.â
âButââ
âYouâve got to learn to forgive Joe, too, Hanalee. Otherwise, that hatred will eat you up.â
I dug my teeth into my lower lip. âDoes Uncle Clyde know heâs out?â
âI donât know.â She tightened her apron strings behind her back. âHeâs been at the Eversesâ house since church, checking on the childrenâs measles. Mrs. Evers planned to serve him a little lunch to thank him.â
âHmm.â I tapped the basket against the side of my right leg where the holster had so recently hung. Joeâs tale snaked around
Sophocles, Evangelinus Apostolides Sophocles
Jacqueline Diamond, Jill Shalvis, Kate Hoffmann