"Keep in mind, I told you this would be a humdinger," Zeke said. "The woman crying in front of the bank was the birthday girl herself, your great-aunt Shanah. The very person who Donna bought those earrings for."
"Oh! And Trevor stopped in his tracks because he felt bad that he stole them?"
Zeke pulled his granddaughter onto his lap. "Yvette, you have a good heart. The truth is, I don't think Trevor even saw Shanah. There was another women there too, and Shanah was crying and hugging her like she had just found all the lost diamonds in the world. I guess it was that other lady who Trevor saw, but he may as well have been looking at Shanah. Those two women had one and the same face."
Evvy stared at her grandpa with wide eyes. "They both had the same face?"
"I don't suppose you've heard about Aunt Lana," Zeke said. "We still don't talk about her too much."
"Oh! And Trevor stopped in his tracks because he felt bad that he stole them?"
Zeke pulled his granddaughter onto his lap. "Yvette, you have a good heart. The truth is, I don't think Trevor even saw Shanah. There was another women there too, and Shanah was crying and hugging her like she had just found all the lost diamonds in the world. I guess it was that other lady who Trevor saw, but he may as well have been looking at Shanah. Those two women had one and the same face."
Evvy stared at her grandpa with wide eyes. "They both had the same face?"
"I don't suppose you've heard about Aunt Lana," Zeke said. "We still don't talk about her too much."
* * *
Frozen in place on the sidewalk, the diamond-earred Trevor -- or Caitlyn; at this point he wasn't sure which -- cried out louder than he meant to: "Ma!"
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