Authors: Anne Rivers Siddons
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Married Women, #Real Estate Developers, #South Carolina, #Low Country (S.C.), #ISBN-13: 9780061093326, #Large Print Books, #Large Type Books, #Islands, #HarperTorch, #Domestic Fiction
going. It is a devilish seesaw, but it provides a sort of
balance.
I looked away from him and out the French windows
to the lawn and the seawall, and the beach and sea
beyond. When Clay first began to develop Peacock’s
Island as a resort and permanent home community,
he decided that we must certainly live there if anyone
else could be hoped to, and so he chose the best lot
on the island and had this house built for us. It
is
beautiful; even now, when I cannot look at the ocean
without darkness and sickness starting in my stomach,
I have to admit that it is a lovely house and an even
lovelier situation, a perfect marriage of shore and sea.
It was the first of the famous Peacock Island Plantation
houses to be built, the model for that rambling, unob-
trusive, graceful style of architecture that has become
rather standard for beach and marsh houses in the
various Lowcountry resort developments now. The
architect who began it all is credited with our house,
but it was Clay, all those years ago, who leaned over
his shoulder for long hours at the drafting table, seeing
in his mind’s eye what the future homes of Peacock
Island Plantation should be, and prodding until Dudley
found the proper architectural metaphor for his vision.
They dot the Lowcountry like beautiful fungi now, lying
close along the shoreline under the twisted old live
oaks and
8 / Anne Rivers Siddons
among the dark, cool thickets fringing the marshes on
the landward sides of the barrier islands. They vary,
of course; there is room for individual taste and inter-
pretation, but no house is built in Peacock Island
Plantation that does not meet the company’s rigid
design codes and so there is nothing intrusive here,
nothing raw or ragged or incongruous, like you might
see in other, newer and less carefully provenanced de-
velopments. Clay was adamant about that when he
was young and new to the business and stood to lose
a lot of money with his lofty design standards, and he
has never loosened or amended them in this or any
other of his projects. He likes to say that his family has
loved and lived the Peacock’s Island life ever since its
beginning. And so we have, or at least lived it, for the
past twenty years, when he moved us here from the
cheerful suburb full of new ranch houses and young
professional families where we started out, in Colum-
bia.
Our son, Carter, was only a year old when we came
to the island. Kylie was born here. They were children
of the sea and beach and marshes; it was, to them, a
known world, taken entirely for granted. It was, to me,
like living permanently on a kind of extended vacation.
I was born in Greenville and grew up in a succession
of small South Carolina towns, all long hours from the
coast, and came to the Lowcountry only during the
summers, to visit my Aubrey grandparents. I
Low Country / 9
still feel that way about living here. Sometimes I wake
up before dawn, when it is too early to see that peculiar
nacreous gray morning light that the beach and sea
send backward to the land, when the wind is down
and the surf is so sluggish that you cannot hear it past
the dune line, and I think, Have I overslept? I didn’t
hear the garbage trucks. I’m going to be late for
school.…
My lucky children, I have often thought, to gauge
the rhythm of their days by surf and wind and the
dawn chorus of a hundred different shorebirds, not
ever to have known anything else. It seems exotic to
me, foreign somehow. I used to say this to them, when
they were very small, to try to explain this strange,
suspended feeling that sometimes woke me in the
earliest hours of the day, but I could never do so, at
least not to Carter.
“That’s dumb,” he would say. “I don’t see how you
can still feel that way when you’ve been living here so
long. This is better than garbage trucks and traffic any
day. This is better than anything.”
Carter, my pragmatist, so like Clay. To this day, I
do not think anything out of his earliest childhood
stalks him in the dark.
Ah, but Kylie…Kylie always knew. How, I don’t
know, but she did. She would ask endlessly for the
story: “Tell about what you heard in the morning when
you were little, Mama. Tell about the garbage trucks
and the lawn
10 / Anne Rivers Siddons
mowers and the carpool horns…”
My small towns did not have noise ordinances like
the island does; I realized early on that to Kylie, my
childhood morning cacophony of manmade hubbub
was as exotic as this profound, mystical sea-silence still
is to me.
“Why do you want to hear that?” I would say. “This
is much nicer. This is nature pure and simple; very few
people are lucky enough just to hear natural sounds
when they wake up.”
But she was unpersuaded.
“Will you take me to see the garbagemen some-
times?” she would say, over and over. “Will you take
me where I can hear a carpool horn?”
Kylie and Carter went to the island country day
school, and were picked up at the head of our lane by
a smart, quiet little school bus painted in the muted
Peacock’s Island tan and green.
Finally I gave in: “All right,” I said. “Okay. We’ll go
spend a weekend in Columbia sometime soon, and
you can see the garbagemen and hear the carpool
horns.”
We never did that, though. Somehow, we just never
did.…
The sea at the horizon line was banked solid with
angry purple clouds this morning, as it often is in au-
tumn, but as I sat staring at it, the clouds fissured and
broke and a spear of cold, silvery sunlight streaked
through, stabbing down at the sea and lighting the
tossing gray to the
Low Country / 11
strange, stormy pewter of November. At the same
moment the ocean wind freshened, lifting the fine, dun-
colored sand from the tops of the primary dunes and
swirling it spectrally into the air, rattling the drying
palm fronds at the far edge of the lawn where the
boardwalk down through the dunes to the sea began,
stirring the moss on the live oaks that sheltered the
house. It seemed for a moment that everything was in
swirling, shimmering motion: air, sea, land, swimming
in diffused light, drowning in silver. I looked away,
back to the breakfast table and then up at Clay. On
such a day, I knew, my stomach would roil queasily
with the shifting light and wind, and my heart would
beat queerly and thickly with it, until the wind dropped
at sunset and the benevolent golden light of sunset
spilled in from the west.
It was days like these that I most needed to be over
on the island.
I speak of it as if it were a different island; we all do,
though it is not, really. Technically, the island is the
back third of Peacock’s Island, the westward third, the
marsh third. It is separated from the larger bulk of
Peacock’s Island proper by a tidal estuary that is full
only twice a day; during the other times you could
wade through the ankle-deep muck in the empty, cor-
rugated rivulet that cuts the island like a snake, though
no one wants to. The mud is deep, and stinks of
12 / Anne Rivers Siddons
ancient livings and dyings. You can better cross it, as
I do, on a sturdy if raffish wooden bridge just wide
and stout enough to hold a truck or a Jeep; the island
is never truly cut off from the larger bulk of Peacock’s.
It might as well be, though. It is another place en-
tirely, eons older, wilder by millennia. I don’t think it
ever had a name, since it is of course a part of the lar-
ger mass. In my lifetime, in my time here, it has always
been known simply as “the island,” just as the larger,
more hospitable two-thirds of it has been known as
Peacock’s Island, usually shortened to Peacock’s. I
think the inept old pirate for whom it is named would
have agreed with the practice. If legend is true, he had
no truck with the marsh-bound back third of the island,
either, except to leave some of his hapless live captives
there staked out for the alligators and the wild pigs
and the savage, swarming insects and to dispose of the
dead ones in the black, silent tidal creeks and rivers
for the nourishment of who knows what. It is shifting,
unquiet land, and it is no wonder to me that the un-
happy victims of Jonathan Peacock are said to be un-
quiet, too, stumping about and murmuring querulously
in the close, still nights. The Gullahs of Dayclear are
said to be as familiar with them as they are with the
terrible duppies and other assorted haunts who came
with them in their chains to these shores, and on the
whole, per
Low Country / 13
haps, prefer them. An unhappy ghost can be cajoled,
soothed, propitiated, but there is no reasoning with a
duppy.
Clay was still looking at me, studying my face as
calmly and gravely as he had been studying the
Wall
Street Journal
. Waiting, I knew.
“I’m almost through with the studies for the new
painting,” I said. “I’ve got everything but the light on
the Inland Waterway at sunset. It’s different from
anywhere else; it’s deeper there, and the water moves
a lot more. That changes the light entirely. I really want
to get that. I think a night or two would do it. I’ll take
the camcorder and see if I can get enough of the change
from sunset to full night so I can finish it back here, if
you need me. Is there something special?”
At first, when I started to spend time over on the is-
land by myself, I used as an excuse the creation of a
series of paintings of the marshes in all seasons and at
all times of day. It was believable, if barely; I had not,
then, painted in twenty years, but I did a lot of it once,
and I have two solid years of training in fine arts at
Converse. I was good then, good enough so that when
I quit school in my junior year to marry Clay Venable,
several of my instructors begged me to wait, begged
me to get my degree first and then go somewhere spe-
cialized, like the Art Institute of Chicago, where two
of them had taught, for further serious study. But I did
not, and after Carter
14 / Anne Rivers Siddons
was born, I did not paint anymore. I never seemed to
miss it, not consciously, and yet, when I pulled it out
to excuse my flights to the island and began to actually
dabble once more in oils and watercolors and pastels,
it felt right and easy, supremely satisfying. After a while
I was spending a great deal of time there trying to catch
the fey, flickering faces and moods of the marshes and
estuaries; it became important to me to do it as well
as I could, to give the island its full due. After a longer
while, even I could tell that the work I was doing was
good, and getting better. Now, when I went to the is-
land, it was not only that I was leaving Peacock’s, I
was going to something that was important to me on
many levels.
Clay knew that, even if he did not approve. I was
good enough so that the handful of small galleries on
Peacock’s and a few on some of the larger islands, and
even one in Charleston, carried my work. He could
not argue that it was self-indulgence alone that drew
me back and back to the island. And to be fair, I knew
that he was proud of me.
He had another weapon in his arsenal, though, and
I knew now, without his saying so, that he was about
to employ it. About five years ago he had asked me,
almost casually, if I would involve myself with the
young families who came to the Plantation to work for
the company, to act as a sort of chatelaine-hostess-
troubleshooter-
Low Country / 15
confidante to them, especially the young women, most
of whom were wives.
“You know,” he said, “give dinner parties for them
when they get here so they can get to know the others.
Show them around, put them in the hands of the right
real estate people so they won’t end up spending
money they can’t afford for decent housing. Tell them
about doctors and dentists and schools and play
groups, and such. Maybe take the wives over to
Charleston once or twice a month, show them the best
shops and galleries and the right hair places, take them
to lunch at the Yacht Club or somewhere flossy and
fun. Just listen to them. It’s not an easy adjustment for
some of them. Some of them have never been closer
to the ocean than a couple of weeks in the summers.
I’m aware that it can get sort of cliquey and ingrown
here; especially if they’re slated to stay here for a long
time. You could be a godsend to them.”
Clay’s company now encompasses properties as far
away as Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands; each