Jim Bond is the son of Charles Etienne and Charles Etienne’s unnamed wife. The novel implies that he was born with intellectual disabilities. He is Thomas Sutpen’s grandson by birth, though Sutpen wouldn’t acknowledge him as such (nor could he, as Sutpen died before the child was born) due to the boy’s Black ancestry. Clytie raises him in the old slave cabin on Sutpen’s Hundred. After Clytie sets the house on fire at the end of the story, killing herself and Henry Sutpen, onlookers hear Bond’s agonized wail coming nearby, but he flees before anyone can locate him. Quentin says people still hear his wailing from time to time. As the sole surviving Sutpen, his suffering—his being “doomed to live,” to employ a phrase Rosa Coldfield uses often—symbolizes the enduring and unacknowledged trauma of slavery in the post-war South.