“‘You ever think,’ Jimmy said, ‘how the most minor decision can change the entire direction of your life?’” -Denis Lehane, Mystic River pg 216
Nobody is perfect. As humans we are always striving to reach perfection even though we know it cannot be achieved. We do things that set ourselves back in the attempt to be the best, but we always come back and try to redeem ourselves. In Dennis Lehane’s Novel Mystic River, each character at one point or another tries to redeem themselves. All of Lehane’s characters in the novel are flawed and each of them attempt to mend their imperfections. Celeste Boyle is a victim of such acts of redemption. It is interesting to see how Celeste’s character evolves throughout the story. However, the decisions Celeste makes in order to try and better herself only backfires on both her and her husband. In the beginning she is loyal to her husband but as the novel goes on she become more and more weary of her husbands past decisions. In the end, she betrays her husband and only further damages herself. In the beginning of the novel Celeste Boyle is a loyal wife. Her husband, Dave, comes home covered in blood after a night out. And being the loving wife she is, Celeste Boyle washes the blood off of Dave’s clothes and helps him get rid of the possible tracks Dave had attached to the crime he just committed (as seen in the picture to the right). As Dave worries that he may have just killed a man, Celeste is calm and tries to comfort her husband; “She wanted to go to him and touch him... She wanted to caress his neck, tell him it would be okay.” (81). She was following the feminine code of sticking by your man and nurturing him. Although yes Celeste was doing something legally wrong, she was not doing anything morally wrong by having her husbands back. However, knowing she helped Dave commit a crime, just being there for her husband was not comforting enough for Celeste to keep herself from feeling guilty. Once