Kent charts two childhood friends’ bumpy progress since one of them was convicted of killing the other one’s father.
One night 20 years ago, Afton Teachout found herself standing over Shelter Rock High School football coach Rick Carson, who was seated on her mother’s sofa. Since Carson was both the father of Afton’s best friend, Sydney Carson, and the lover of her mother, Evangeline, it was no surprise that he was in the Teachout home, but it was utterly shocking that he’d been stabbed to death by a knife in Afton’s hand. Her public defender, John Gregory, used Afton’s sorry family history and her story of a blackout to lessen the charge against her to voluntary manslaughter, and now, as she says, “I’m free as a bird, though it’s never felt that way.” Alternating present-day narrations by Afton and Sydney with their memories of the fateful year 2003, Kent shows Afton in shaky mental health, popping a variety of pills, and Sydney in a debt-encumbered marriage to her cheating high-school sweetheart, Drew Westfeldt. The discovery that she’s won a $33 million lottery prize promises to change Afton’s life. Or did she just imagine it, the way she apparently imagined that she met with her beloved grandmother a month after Beatrice Murphy died? Indeed, the extraordinary measures Afton must take to get through each day—at one point she lists 10 medications that have been prescribed for her continuing dissociative episodes—make her everyday existence seem as unsettling as her renewed attempts to pierce the veil of her hallucinations to find out just what did happen on the fateful night Rick Carson died.
Even readers who see the murder's inescapable solution coming long in advance will be deeply shaken when it arrives.