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Authors: Mary Alice Monroe

Last Light over Carolina (6 page)

BOOK: Last Light over Carolina
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Lizzy looked at the clock above the cash register. “Listen, I’ve got to get back to work.” She started to rise.

“Lizzy, wait.” He seemed suddenly shy, unable to meet her gaze. “I really stopped by to see you and invite you to dinner. I have to drive over to Fort Johnson to get some paperwork finished, then crash for a while.” He glanced up, squinting. “I could come by later, say five o’clock?”

“Sure. That’d be nice.”

He rose, then leaned slightly over the table to say, “I’d like to talk more about what’s holding me back.”

Her breath held as he straightened; then he added, “You smell real nice. Lavender, right?”

Lizzy nodded with a shaky smile, then watched him walk away, waving once before he closed the door behind him. She stared at the door, hearing his words again, understanding full well their import and wondering if she could learn to love a good friend like that in time.

“Lizzy, got a minute?”

Nancy had emerged from the back room, drying her hands on a towel. It occurred to Lizzy that she’d been waiting for Ben to leave. The restaurant was empty. Lizzy groaned
inwardly, expecting another lecture about how she shouldn’t be dating the “pickle guy.”

Nancy slid into Ben’s chair across from Lizzy. She narrowed her eyes and said, “Looks like things are getting tight between you and
him
.” The way she said
him
spoke volumes of her disapproval.

“We’re just friends.”

“Uh-huh. What’s that phrase you kids use now? Friends with benefits.”

Lizzy barked out a laugh, surprised Nancy would know it. “Isn’t there some phrase about harassment at work?”

“Come on, girl, I’m just worried about you. You know he’s never going to be accepted by your daddy.”

“You’re making too much out of this, really. Like I said, we’re just friends. End of story.”

Nancy picked a bit of flour from her nail and said cagily, “I thought you and Josh were friendly again.”

Lizzy puffed out a plume of air, thinking, Is my whole life up for public scrutiny? “We are.”

“He’s a good boy. He might’ve got himself into a bit of trouble before, but he was young. It’s to his credit that he cleaned up his act. I’ve seen it for myself down at the Crab Shack. Josh is there sometimes with his friends, and the most I ever seen him drink was a beer or two. He’s never rowdy. Always polite. I’m telling you, the boy has changed.” She nodded her head in affirmation. “The Truesdales are a good family.”

Lizzy fixed her smile and wondered if her mother and Nancy hadn’t plotted out this PR campaign for Josh.

“Take some advice from an old married lady.”

Lizzy sighed. Here came that old chestnut about how men might be the captains of the ship but women were the navigators.

“Even the best marriages have bad patches. All those talk shows have folks airing their dirty laundry in public—and some of it is damn stained, if you know what I mean. I’m not whispering out of house when I tell you there were days Toomer and I didn’t think we’d make it. The difference comes in whether or not you can forgive and move on. No matter if it’s his fault or yours. Because at the root of forgiveness is love. Pure and simple. You either love him or you don’t. And if you do, you make it work.”

Nancy was fiddling with the slim gold band on her ring finger. It was common knowledge that back in the day when Toomer was a shrimper, he’d fooled around with loose women up and down the Florida coast. One day Nancy had had enough, packed up, and left him. When Toomer fell from the rigging and almost died, she’d come back to his house to care for him and never left again. Toomer never went back to shrimping, and instead they’d taken over the restaurant from his parents.

At least Nancy didn’t bring up the notorious exploits of Lizzy’s grandfather, Oz Morrison, with his three mistresses and two wives. And nobody ever talked about the separation between Bud and Carolina.

“It’s our way,” Nancy added, bringing home again the point that there was a code of solidarity in the shrimping community.

Lizzy looked up at the nets that hung from the ceiling, feeling trapped in them. “I’ll try to remember that. Thank you,” she said, beginning to lift herself from her chair.

“Lizzy, honey…that’s not what I meant to talk to you about.”

Lizzy relaxed back into her seat, surprised. “Oh?”

Nancy took a deep breath and heaved a ragged sigh. “Well, Lizzy, there’s no easy way to say this, so I’ll just speak plainly.”

Lizzy’s gaze sharpened, noticing again Nancy fiddling nervously with her ring.

“You know things have been slow. The summer crowd wasn’t what it should have been, and with the local economy…” She shrugged. “We held on as long as we could but, well, I’m afraid we have to close the restaurant.”

Lizzy sucked in her breath. “Close Graham’s? You’ve got to be joking! It’s been here forever.”

“Don’t you think we know that, honey? And don’t you think knowing that made this decision the hardest one we’ve ever made? Toomer is sick about it. We been over and over this, and there really isn’t any decision we can make except to close.”

“But…business might pick up.”

“We can’t afford to keep our doors open. It’s as simple as that.”

“Maybe someone else wants to buy it. To keep it going.”

“If you know someone who does, send them our way.” Her face softened in sadness. “Oh, Lizzy, I know this puts you out of a job, and I’m sorry. You’ve been with us for so long you’re like family to me and Toomer. I always said, if we’d of
had a son, I’d of wanted him to marry you. As it is, you’re the daughter we’d like to have had. So it pains us to let you go.”

Feeling shell-shocked, Lizzy looked at her hands clenched on the table.

“Don’t look so down in the mouth. We’ll advertise to sell the place, and just maybe someone
will
come up and buy it and keep it going. Wouldn’t that be nice?” She wiped an imaginary spot off the table with her towel. “Anyway, I just wanted you to know from me.”

Lizzy was floundering. Her one security—her job—had just slipped out from under her. But it was more. There had been signs all over town for years that the shrimping industry was in trouble. Boats were being docked. A walk down the block showed one house for sale after another. Now it affected her, and she knew fear.

“I never thought I’d see this day.”

“Me neither, honey.”

“Everything is changing,” Lizzy said mournfully.

Nancy reached out to pat Lizzy’s hand. “Why don’t you get some fresh air? I’ll hold the fort for a while.”

6

September 21, 2008, 10:05 a.m.

On board the
Miss Carolina

I
t was the
pain that brought Bud back to consciousness. A constant throbbing of intense hurt. He blinked heavily, his eyes stinging from a salty crust of sweat and tears. His left arm ached like someone had tried to rip it from its socket. Turning his head, he saw that he was hanging from his left arm, half slumped on the winch and half lying on the deck. He’d pulled muscles that he didn’t even know existed. They burned both hot and cold.

He tried to raise himself but cried out and collapsed as though he’d been shot. Burning pain exploded in his left arm.
Bud retched and gasped for air, trying to steady his balance. He was pinned. Through the blur of pain his memory kicked in, and his heart began to pump wildly. In his mind’s eye he saw himself slipping, and in a rush he realized what had happened.

His hand was caught in the winch.

His mind repeated this over and over, not wanting to accept it.

“Noooo,” he groaned, closing his eyes. “No, no, no. This can’t be happening to me. How could I have been so
stupid? Stupid. Stupid.

Bud lowered his head into the crook of his arm. The salty trickle down his face mingled with sweat. Bud wept for the loss of his hand. He wept for the loss of his livelihood. He also wept from fear. For in his heart he knew he’d been wrong to go out alone today, a fool to travel so far out in off weather without a crew. He was pinned here, helpless as a baby. He couldn’t get to the radio, couldn’t call for help. He was going to die out here.

Bud gulped hard, warding off nausea as he worked up the courage to try again. Not that he wanted to—he had to. He had to fight for his own survival.

Gathering his wits, he figured his arm was dislocated from the fall. Bud held his breath and, grunting with the effort, lifted himself to his knees. Shifting his weight, he paused, gulping for breath as sweat poured down his face. Slowly, he tried to straighten his back, rising in degrees. Blood drained from his head and he almost keeled over from dizziness, but
he gripped the winch with his good hand and waited for it to pass.

When he felt ready to face the damage, he wiped his forehead against his sleeve, took a breath, and looked down his left arm. His arm was wet with blood and what was left of his hand was crushed between cable and drum. What had once been a thing of God-given beauty was now a mutilated mass of torn muscle, bone, and blood. He jerked his head up, eyes wide, instinctively looking for help.

The first-aid kit was in the pilothouse. So was the radio.

He felt bile rise in his throat as the full reality slammed into his brain. He was pinned to the winch. He couldn’t move, couldn’t get himself free. Couldn’t call for help. All of the misery, pain, and fear was compounded by the fact he was alone, deathly alone. Bud wasn’t a man who shook easily, but he was scared of what might be coming.

“Stay calm, stay clearheaded,” he chanted as a mantra. Bud knew his survival depended on it. He’d been in bad patches before. Once Pee Dee had fallen from the rigging and the bone from his leg had stuck clear out from the skin. Man, could that kid scream. Bud had kept his head and done what he had to do to help Pee Dee, but it was harder to help himself. He gritted his teeth and shook his head with a guttural growl. You can do this, he told himself. He had to take stock. Putting on his war face, Bud forced himself to look at the carnage again.

A trickle of blood dripped from his hand to a pool on the deck. It looked like veins were severed. First, he had to stem
the bleeding. If it were a major artery, he’d already be dead. A bit of good news, at least. His arm was slightly raised; also good. How much blood had he lost? He squinted and looked closer at the pool of blood. It was surreal to feel so detached, as if the blood had come from someone else. Then he almost retched; a severed finger lay on the deck.

His first thought was to save it. He’d heard stories of body parts being reattached. Pain burst anew as he stretched his good arm toward the finger. Try as he might, it was a few inches too far under the drum. He tried again, then stopped, panting from the effort. It wasn’t going to happen. What was the use, anyway? He couldn’t get to the ice. Here he was, sitting over a vast hold of ice, and he couldn’t get to a single cube. Pee Dee would have a laugh over this one.

“Don’t give up,” Bud told himself. “Stay alert. I just got to hang on. Someone will figure out where I am. Someone will come. Stay alive…that’s it. C’mon. I can do this. I can do this!”

He shook his head in disbelief. Was he losing his mind, talking to himself like this? But it made him feel better. And what the hell. Who was listening?

He needed to make a tourniquet. Bud patted his rear pocket, then pulled out the Swiss Army knife Carolina had given to him as a gift years before. No sailor worth his salt would leave home without a pocketknife. He looked at the black and red case lying in his palm. It was a solid knife with a good, heavy feel to it. Thank God it was his left hand that was mangled or he wouldn’t live long enough to open this thing,
he thought. It was described as a one-handed pocketknife. Bud had never had call to test that claim before and prayed that wasn’t just some fancy name. He slumped with relief when he could actually open the knife with one hand.

He was wearing a long-sleeved shirt over his T-shirt. Spots of blood splattered the white cotton. He managed to cut a narrow strip of fabric from the hem. Sweat stung his eyes as he bent his head to grip one end in his teeth, painstakingly tying a tourniquet using his free hand and his mouth. Simple movements he’d taken for granted as a two-handed man took his full concentration with only one.

He racked his brain, trying to remember facts he’d learned about tourniquets. There was a limit to how long he should wear one…. Was it an hour? Two? Shit, he thought, his dismay deepening. He wasn’t wearing a watch. He wouldn’t know when sixty minutes had passed.

“You really did it this time,” he muttered. “Going out alone…. You didn’t have the sense to tell anyone where you were headed. Secret spot, hell. So secret I’m going to die out here with the stinking gulls. Now no one knows where you are! I should have told Carolina. Or Pee Dee.”

A thought burst in his head, and he held his breath. Pee Dee knew this spot. They’d been talking about checking it out to see if the shrimp were running. If Pee Dee had his wits about him, he might remember. Surely he would….

Bud jerked his head up, but he couldn’t see over the railing. Even if the
Miss Carolina
drifted some, the boat was moving slowly. He took heart, thinking there was a good chance Pee
Dee could find him. He’d tied the tourniquet. All he could do now was wait.

The wind gusted, billowing the frayed edge of his shirt. He looked down at it, ripped and spotted with his blood. Once upon a time, this had been his best shirt. Carolina had given it to him back when he’d gone to see her parents in Greenville to announce that they were getting married. It was his first visit. There hadn’t been many more.

He lowered his head to rest against his arm, feeling the muscles of his neck stretch. Closing his eyes, Bud let his mind wander back to the day this shirt was new.

February 1975

Greenville, South Carolina

It was a cool night, and the heater in Bud’s truck was broken. Carolina cuddled against him, smelling of her own special brand of sweetness, her flame-colored hair blowing in the wind. She’d been chiding herself for forgetting that in the mountains, no matter how warm the day, the air was chilly once the sun lowered. Bud told her she’d been in the lowcountry too long and was getting cold-blooded, expecting a retort. Instead, she’d said softly that the lowcountry was her home now. Bud was of the school where a man didn’t get giddy, but Carolina made him so
damn happy. They were busting with the news that they were going to get married.

The sky was dusky when they arrived at the country club Carolina’s parents belonged to. Bud paused at the pretentious black-iron gates. They stood open, more a statement about exclusivity than serving any real function. Bud lifted his arm from around Carolina’s shoulders to lean forward and cut off the music. Quiet suddenly descended, save for the truck engine purring like a well-fed cat. Talk ceased between them, too, as anxiety tightened their throats. Carolina sat up and with prim strokes smoothed her pink cashmere sweater.

Bud leaned over to give her a quick kiss. She smiled, seemingly relieved. They both knew they might not get another chance in front of the old man.

With a deep breath, he rammed the stick into first gear. Shadows dappled the winding driveway as they passed a meandering creek, towering hardwoods, and the rolling fairways of the golf course. A couple of die-hard golfers were trying to squeeze in a few holes before the sun set. Bud felt apprehension tighten his gut at seeing the white pillars of the country club, looming like a facsimile of Tara or the White House on top of the hill. Closer, he saw a young valet, probably a college boy from Clemson, leap forward to open the door of a Cadillac for a woman in a fancy dress and high heels. The driver, a middle-aged man in a gray suit, handed his keys to the valet with hardly a backward glance.

Bud ran his finger around his collar. Carolina had purchased the white button-down shirt for him on King Street in
Charleston. She’d also bought him khaki pants and a navy wool blazer. “Just because,” she’d told him, but he knew full well it was because she wanted her fiancé to make a good impression on her parents. Because he wanted the same thing, he wore them.

“This tie is choking me.”

“You look handsome.”

He could hear in her voice that she found him attractive in his new getup. “I feel like I’m about to get lynched.”

“They’ll love you. I promise.”

“I don’t know why we had to meet them at some country club. Why couldn’t we just go to your house for barbecue like normal folks?”

“It’s just a local club. We hang out here all the time. Mama and Daddy like to invite people here for dinner. It’s so easy. Between golf and meetings, Daddy practically lives here, and Mama doesn’t have to fuss. I think cooking makes her nervous.”

Bud looked at her askance. “You’re not going to take after your mama, are you?”

“I’m not a good cook, if that’s what you’re asking.”

“Doesn’t matter, sweet thing, because I’m a great cook. I’ll spoil you with my barbecue.”

“Thank God,” she said, unbuckling her seat belt. “Our marriage is secure. What does any successful marriage need other than a good barbecue recipe?”

“Don’t knock it, babe. No self-respecting southern male doesn’t have a good recipe for sauce.”

The valet took his keys, uttering, “Cool truck!” Bud put his
hand on the small of Carolina’s back and guided her inside. He’d give the boy a tip that made him feel as good as that comment did him.

The moment he stepped into the country club, he felt his skin crawl. The boldly colored walls seemed out of sync with the reproduction American furniture and the oriental porcelain that filled dark wood breakfronts. Carolina slipped her arm through his and led him across the black-and-white-tiled foyer toward the main dining room. The club was bustling with activity. Couples in evening dress talked to others dressed in golf shirts who had finished their games and were looking to have a quick drink or two at the bar before heading home. Bud tried to compare it to a night at the Crab Shack back home, then chuckled. Where were the clouds of cigarette smoke and the Jim Beam?

“Carolina!”

“Mama!”

Carolina released his arm and he followed her across the foyer to a tiny woman with blond bouffant hair. She stood trim and erect in a blue silk pantsuit with hefty pearls at her ears and neck. When Carolina stepped back, Mrs. Brailsford’s eyes darted to Bud. He noticed they were the same blue as Carolina’s, but while Carolina’s eyes were as warm as the embers of a fire, her mother’s were like chips of ice.

“Mama, this is Bud Morrison. Bud, my mother, Allison Brailsford.”

She offered a polite smile. “So, you’re the one we’ve been hearing so much about. Bud is a nickname for…?”

“William, ma’am,” he replied, taking her extended hand. “William Morrison III.”

Her hand was limp, her smile weak.

“Where’s Daddy?” asked Carolina.

“Oh, you know your father. He’s got to stop and say hello to everyone he passes.” She looked down the hall. “There he is now, over by the Pub.”

Bud turned his head to see a tall man about the same age as his father. But unlike the barrel-chested Oz, who loved his plaid flannel shirts, this man looked distinguished in his navy blazer with brass buttons, gray pants, and Italian leather shoes. His hair was the color of burnished copper streaked with gray. His deep voice boomed, and Bud overheard scores shared and quick comments that ended with a burst of hearty laughs and pats on the back. Mr. Brailsford caught his wife’s gaze, signaled with his hand that he’d seen them, and broke from his friends.

Carolina trotted forward to be swept into her father’s embrace.

“Carolina adores her father,” Allison Brailsford said, her gaze on the pair. “She’s never done anything to disappoint him.”

Bud heard the velvet warning.

Carolina’s cheeks matched her pink sweater as she brought her father closer. Bud could see where she got her hair color and height. He saw, too, the same imperial radiance.

“Daddy,” she announced as they drew near, “this is my Bud.”

He saw her father’s brows rise slightly at her emphasis on the word
my
. Bud worried that she was trying too hard.

“Bud, this is the other man in my life, my father, Edgar Brailsford.”

“Mr. Brailsford,” Bud said, extending his hand.

Edgar Brailsford’s eyes were flinty as they inspected Bud, and he let Bud’s hand hang in the air for a second too long.

“Hello, young man.” He grabbed Bud’s hand in his own large paw and delivered a bone-cracking squeeze. In that grip, Bud felt the strength of a man who could deliver a rock-solid punch. No number of years behind a fancy desk in a bank could mask the bully in a man’s handshake.

BOOK: Last Light over Carolina
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