He shook his head. Here he was talking Disney World, and this little girl was telling him about museums and ballets. Kyla always had more class than he did.
“What is your job?” Lily asked.
“I’m a private investigator,” Louis said.
“What’s that?”
“Well,” Louis said, “it’s a little like being a police officer, but you work for yourself, not for a department.”
“Are you married?” Lily asked.
“No.”
“Why not?”
“Well, I just haven’t made that decision yet,” Louis said. “It’s not something people should do until they’re ready.”
“Is that why you didn’t marry my mother?” Lily asked. “You weren’t ready?”
Here it was, the first of the tough questions.
Louis glanced back at Channing, but there was no answer there. He stared at the carpet for a few seconds, trying to find the right words to explain something like this to an eight-year-old. But then he realized she had said it more aptly than he ever could.
“I was immature,” he said. “Do you know what that means?”
“Yes,” Lily said. “It means you act like a child when you’re old enough to know better.”
“That’s right.”
She lowered her head, and for a moment, her face was lost behind the cascade of curls. Her voice was almost a whisper. “How old were you when you made me?” Lily asked.
Louis closed his eyes for a second. “Twenty.”
“How old are you now?” she asked.
“Twenty-nine.”
“So, you didn’t get mature at all until now?”
If he could have vanished from the room, he would have. What the hell was he supposed to say? The truth was, he didn’t know she existed. But if he said that, her next question would be
He couldn’t even bring himself to meet those tender eyes until he heard Channing clear his throat.
“Lily,” Channing said. “Mr. Kincaid didn’t know where you were. When he and your mother broke up, they stayed mad at each a long time and didn’t talk.”
Lily seemed to accept that explanation, and she looked back at Louis, her eyes deep with a new thought.
“Do I have more grandparents?”
“My mother has passed on,” he said, “but you have…”
He paused. He was about to tell this girl she had a grandfather whom he not only knew nothing about, but whom he despised.
“You have a grandfather,” he said. “But I haven’t seen him for many years. Not since I was a baby.”
She blinked, a strange shadow coloring her eyes. “So your father never got mature, either?”
She was breaking his heart.
“No, I guess not.”
“My daddy’s father isn’t mature, either,” she said, looking to Channing. “He lives in California and doesn’t care about us.”
Louis glanced at Channing. He shifted his weight, obviously uncomfortable that Lily had revealed this little slice of family history to Louis. But it explained Channing’s motives in telling Louis about his daughter. Channing was a man with holes in his heart, too.
When Louis looked back at Lily, she was studying him, her gaze moving slowly over his face, then to his hair, and finally coming back to his eyes. It was an intriguing stare, and he wondered what her next question would be.
“Is your father white?” she asked.
“Yes.”
Her face scrunched again. Louis wondered why Kyla had never shared at least this part of Lily’s ancestry with her. Or maybe she had told her there was some white blood in her but not where it came from.
“So that makes me a quarter white?” she asked.
“Yes,” Louis asked. “Does that bother you?”
“No,” she said. “I like how I look. Momma says I’m like a bouquet of wildflowers put together by God and all the prettier for it.”
Louis smiled.
Lily sighed and folded her hands in her lap, the little drawstring purse hanging from her wrist. She didn’t seem to have any more questions. But Louis was wondering what she was thinking. Would she simply dismiss this as a necessary but uneventful meeting, or did she want something more? And again, he couldn’t ask. He did not want her to feel obligated to see him again. He looked again to Channing for help.
“Lily,” Channing said, “if there’s nothing else you want to say to Mr. Kincaid, it’s time to go.”
Lily hesitated, then pulled open the drawstring purse. She dug inside and pulled out a photograph. She held it out to Louis.
“This is a picture of me,” she said. “You can have it. If you want it, I mean.”
Louis took it. “Thank you very much, Lily.”
She pushed off the bench and padded to the door in her pink slippers. She turned back to Louis, but before she spoke, she took Channing’s hand. His large fingers closed tightly over hers.
“Can I see you again?” she asked Louis.
Louis glanced at Channing. He gave a tight nod.
“Any time you want,” Louis said.
“Saturday?” she asked.
“Okay. Here?”
Lily looked up at Channing.
“How about you take Lily to lunch Saturday?” Channing said. “I have to work. You know, on patrol.”
Channing was offering alone time but also letting Louis know he wouldn’t be too far away, sitting in his cruiser.
“I’d like that,” Louis said.
Lily wet her lips and for a moment seemed a little lost about what she was supposed to do now.
“Goodbye,” she said softly. “It was nice meeting you, Louis.”
Chapter Twenty-six
Thirty-six years old, and here he was, committing his first crime. Well, not his first, exactly. His first was planting his ex-wife’s bra in the trunk of Jean’s car and asking a decent man to file a false report. But since nothing had come of that, it wasn’t really a crime in his mind.
This
Jake Shockey unwrapped a piece of Dentyne and stuck it in his mouth. He was sitting in his car, an ’85 AMC Eagle partially covered in gray primer. It was one of the few things he’d walked away with after his divorce. He hadn’t minded giving the rest to his ex-wife, Anita: the twenty-seven-inch TV, the new bedroom suite, the canoe he’d wanted so badly for those fishing trips on the Au Sable River he had never gotten around to taking.
And the two kids, Brian and Ellie.