In a stagnating town in 1920s Louisiana, Joelle Amais shoots her lover in the back on a hot summer night. Stubborn and unintimidated by threats, she refuses to say why even when her daughter, her lawyer, a judge, and her few friends in town urge her to talk to save herself. The only person truly on her side is her daughter, Geneva, who has returned from college and the convent where she has lived since she was ten, sent there by her grandmother to protect her from the influence of her free-living mother. Where Joelle is loud and coarse, Geneva is reserved and carefully spoken. She feels the disapproval of the townspeople every day, but she won't abandon her mother, nor will she judge her.
As the days unfold while Joelle and the townspeople wait for her trial in a few months, the grumblings begin. There is much resentment in Bayou Rosa, a town once stifling now shaken by unrelenting change--a world war that took precious lives followed by an influenza epidemic that stole even more. Businesses are failing and work is hard to find. This is a tumultuous period of women gaining the right to vote and Prohibition, of Jim Crow and the KKK. The lush land of Louisiana with its sugar canes and bayous seems to be unable to contain itself, sending out more life than any ordinary town can handle.
The characters are as rich as the landscape. Judge Alvis Rousse shows himself to be principled and kind, even though his wife, Maude, is the dead man's sister. Maude is called upon to be the same, and rises to the occasion more than once in ways both surprising and moving. The sheriff is conscientious in carrying out his duty, but his taciturn mien hides an unexpected depth. Mr. Dabadie, owner of the general store, is a stalwart of kindness. Even the more minor figures in the jail, the two deputies, are richly drawn, their personalities and conduct unraveling like fate. Even th children of the town in their roles as messengers are richly drawn.
Giving too much of the plot would spoil the story, and there is a lot of story. Every character has a full life on the page, the details selected to weaving into the larger heartbeat of the town and the main characters. Few mysteries are good stories but also deeply moving ones. This one brought me to tears.