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
ing canceled their plans and drifted in, distraught and
aimless. The two new couples had both left earlier in
the week, but Sophia Bridges, who had not planned
to go back to New York until Christmas, came. I was
a little surprised at that. She had not known Jeremy,
and knew few of the others; I had heard that she kept
pretty much to herself and did not attend the formal
and informal social occasions the company provides
its employees. Shawna said, sniffling, that she seemed
to prefer the company of her son to anybody else’s,
and that that was probably a good thing, since nobody
could find a baby-sitter that suited. The child was in
the company’s modern day-care center when his
mother was at work, but the rest of the time he was in
her company. I wondered what she had done with him
218 / Anne Rivers Siddons
this evening. She had obviously come to our house in
haste; her sleek black hair was disarrayed, and she still
wore the slim jeans and sweatshirt she had obviously
changed into when she got home that evening. Who-
ever she found for the boy would have to have been a
last-minute solution.
I had asked Estelle to stay, and she had ordered
groceries and made sandwiches and cheese straws and
baked a ham while I went to the liquor store and
picked up deli potato salad and a couple of carrot cakes
from the little specialty pastry shop in the mall. Clay’s
youngsters picked at the food, but they lit into the li-
quor as if they were dying of thirst. By eight that
evening more than a few of them were slurring their
words, and some were weeping aloud. I didn’t blame
them. If it had not been the time and place that it was,
I would have loved to have drunk bourbon and cried
along with them. I had known Jeremy, too, and loved
him, as they did. It had been impossible not to. I knew
that the tears were not only for his death but for the
sad, shocking trajectory of failure and waste that led
up to it. The word flies fast in a close, ingrown com-
pany like Clay’s. Everyone there knew about the col-
lapse of Calista Key. Most knew that it would be a
severe blow to the company, although few if any could
have known just how severe. Under the grief and in-
credulity was fear. Fear of what the
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catastrophe might mean to both the company and to
them personally, and a deeper and older fear: the fear
of the golden, vital young when the first and the best
of them falls.
I moved among them, patting shoulders and kissing
cheeks and hugging whoever held out their arms. Some
of them are only ten or so years younger than I am,
but they have always seemed like my children to me,
or rather, like young kin that I do not see often but
still feel a vague responsibility for. With the exception
of Sophia Bridges, I have known them all for some
time, and many for years. It was as easy and natural
for me to mop tears and exchange funny or bittersweet
fragments of remembrance about Jeremy as if we had
all been students together or denizens of the same small
town. The only thing I could not seem to share with
them was the tears. Mine lay, clotted and swollen, just
at the base of my throat, and would not fall. I remem-
ber wondering if I could not cry for Jeremy Fowler,
who on earth would I ever weep for again?
In a way I was glad it was just me on this first
evening. In deep distress Clay goes still and silent, and
sometimes seems cold and correct but little more. This
is not true, of course; inside he suffers and bleeds like
everyone else. I have often thought of Emily Dickin-
son’s “After great pain, a formal feeling comes”—when
I think of Clay in grief. It is his only armor, and I bless
it for what
220 / Anne Rivers Siddons
ever ease it may afford him, but others, the young es-
pecially, need to be wept with and held. I could do
that or, at least, the latter. Clay could have done
neither. Later was when his iron and stillness would
serve them. And as for Hayes, it seemed to me that he
could only gibe. This night was not the time for that.
By nine o’clock most of them had gone home to
drink some more or drive the baby-sitters home, to sit
up into the small, cold hours of the morning talking
about it, to cry again, and finally to sleep. I poured
myself a cup of coffee from the big silver urn and went
over and sat down beside Sophia Bridges. She was
sitting where she had been for most of the evening,
alone on the white sofa beside the fireplace in the big
living room that looks out to sea. I had forgotten to
draw the curtains, and, following her gaze, could see
the distant line of white lace that was the surf curling
in on the dark beach. The fire had burned itself nearly
out.
“I’m sorry I haven’t had more time to spend with
you,” I said, sitting down on the arm of the sofa. “This
has just about done us all in. Jeremy was something
special. I wish you had known him.”
She smiled up at me faintly. Her face under the un-
tidy hair seemed younger this evening, and softer. I
thought perhaps it was because I had never seen her
smile before.
Low Country / 221
“Oh, but I did,” she said. “I’ve heard nothing but
Jeremy since I got here. By now I feel like I know him
like I would know my brother. I think maybe it wasn’t
such a good idea to come tonight, but I thought it
would be worse if I didn’t. He was obviously a
powerful icon. I didn’t want to seem to diss him.”
She smiled again, as if to show me that her use of
the slang was intentional. Two smiles in one evening,
back to back. Through the fatigue that suddenly
swamped me, and the numb, dumb desire just to go
to bed and sleep, I felt a small sting of sympathy for
her. It is not easy in the best of circumstances to walk
into the Peacock Island Plantation Company and be
instantly accepted. How much harder it must be if you
were black, alone, and known to be “the best of the
lot.” I knew that I had seen no one in conversation
with her for any length of time all evening.
“It was just the right thing to do,” I said. “They’ll all
appreciate it when they’ve got a little perspective on
this. I know it’s not so easy at first, getting your feet
wet down here. It must seem like the other side of the
moon from…where was it? New York?”
“New York; right,” she said, stretching her long arms
and rotating them in their sockets. Even in the sweat-
shirt she looked as elegant as a Modigliani.
“We’ve lived in the Village since…for a cou
222 / Anne Rivers Siddons
ple of years. On Bleecker Street. A fabulous little car-
riage house; I was so lucky to find it. There was a wo-
man next door…a lovely Swedish woman; she got to
be a real friend…who came in and stayed with Mark
every day. I wouldn’t have been able to finish my
doctoral degree other-wise. I guess you can see why I
was so hesitant about having an African-American
woman stay with Mark. He’s never had one. For a long
time I didn’t realize that he’s actually afraid of people
with dark skins. Now I see that I was not only foolish
to insist on that, but I was doing him actual harm. I
need to apologize to you about that little remark, Mrs.
Venable, among other things. When I’m scared I get
snotty.”
“Call me Caro, please,” I said, liking her, all of a
sudden, very much indeed. I could see precisely why
she pulled isolation around her and her son like a
cloak. She probably had few peers. How many young
black women could imagine being where Sophia
Bridges was in her life? How many young white wo-
men could imagine the life itself?
“You have absolutely nothing to apologize to me
for,” I said. “As I said, there are a million things easier
than walking into a tight little society that has existed
quite nicely without you for a long time. They’ll come
to you eventually; I’ve seen it happen over and over
again. Though not many of them came here with
reputations like
Low Country / 223
yours preceding them. That may be part of the prob-
lem. Clay thinks you’re awfully special.”
The easy smile vanished and the remote Ibo princess
was back. I knew that there would be no easy victories
with this one. But it was good to know, too, that there
were chinks in her armor.
“I’m glad to have his high opinion,” she said form-
ally. “I’ve worked very hard for a long time to be spe-
cial. It’s what I have now in place of friends or a nice
house in Connecticut or a husband. In the long run,
I’ve always known that when you’re black you’d better
be special, because you can’t count on the rest of it.
It’s something I want Mark to learn young. But you
were right that first day; he has to live in the world he
finds himself in. My baby-sitter tonight is an African-
American woman, and he was doing fairly well when
I left him. He’d almost stopped sniffling. She’s as old
as his grandmother, and she’s lighter than me.”
“Well, good,” I said, unsure whether it was the right
thing to say or not. Was that going to be her criteria?
Black women might tend her son only if they were
mulatto matrons? I wondered if she had ever seen the
movie
Six Degrees of Separation
.
She made no move to leave, and declined coffee or
a bite to eat or another glass of wine. So I hauled my-
self up by my mental bootstraps and said, “How is
your work going? Clay said you
224 / Anne Rivers Siddons
had a degree in cultural anthropology; are you finding
it useful here?”
“Yes, that was my master’s,” she said. “Up to now
I’ve mainly been doing orientation, and you know of
course that that’s the same for everybody. I’m starting
now to research the Gullah culture, though. I’m going
into Charleston to the library next week. It should have
something. I understand that there are several neigh-
borhood units in this area, almost intact. It would be
interesting to tie that in with the new development
somehow; I think a lot of prospective home-owners
would find that sort of ethnicity an attractive part of
the whole picture. It would give such texture and res-
onance to the package.…”
I thought of the dilapidated little gray houses in
Dayclear, warm with pine and kerosene lamplight
against the winter twilight, and the sweet, liquid, and
nearly incomprehensible music of the Gullah tongue
that was still sometimes spoken over on the island,
and about the immense dignity and beauty of the old
faces I knew from there. They would be amazed to
know that they could be considered texture and reson-
ance. My liking for her faded. I realized that I would
love nothing more than to take her out to the settle-
ment and fling her into the middle of it and leave her
floundering there among her theories and pretensions.
“Then you should really come with me some
Low Country / 225
day soon to my part of the island, back on the
marshes,” I said. “I spent most of my summer vacations
there, in my grandfather’s house, and the house is still
mine…ours. There’s one of the oldest Gullah…ah,
units in the Lowcountry near there, a little settlement
called Dayclear. Why go to the library when you can
go to the source?”
“Clay mentioned something about Dayclear,” she
said. “I didn’t realize it was actually part of the island.
That would be a real opportunity for me, Mrs. Ven-
able…Caro. I could take my tape recorder and a cam-
era, and I’d love for Mark to see something like that
in situ
. Could we take you up on it soon?”
“Oh, yes,” I said, baring my teeth in a smarmy smile.
“We can go early next week, if you like. I’m tied up
with this Thanksgiving oyster roast thing, but maybe
the Monday or Tuesday after that?”
“I’ll put it down,” she said. In another five minutes
she was gone and Estelle and I put the kitchen to
rudimentary rights, then I sent her home and went up
to my little study and fell asleep almost before I hit the
daybed.
It was nearly a week later before I got Sophia Bridges
and her son, Mark, over to the island. Late on
Thanksgiving evening our crisp weather gave way to
a long spell of fog and murk, with
226 / Anne Rivers Siddons
occasional fretful spatters of rain. Despite the com-
pany’s advertising brochures, our late fall weather is
seldom anything to cheer about; it is the start of our
tenacious fits of sulking humidity that the Gulf exhales
all across the deep South. Lingering leaves and moss
hang sodden and sticky at eye level; doors swell and
shoes go furry gray-green in closets, for the temperature
is not cool enough for heat and too cool for air-condi-