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
tioning. The air is the color and consistency of veal
stock. If we are lucky, this climactic tantrum will run
itself out a couple of weeks before Christmas, and those
holidays will be bright and crisp and mild, the stuff of
rhapsodic letters home from vacationing Canadians.
Christmas is the true time of the snowbird, the season
of the blue-fleshed but determined ocean bather, but
we had a few of them even over our soggy Thanksgiv-
ing weekend. I saw them from the living room win-
dows and was doubly grateful that Clay had canceled
the Thanksgiving oyster roast. The weather, coupled
with the painful knowledge that it was on a Peacock
Island Plantation Company beach that Jeremy Fowler
had made his final exit, put paid to any notion that a
seaside revel could be enjoyed. Instead, we had every-
body back to our house and used the oysters as on-the-
half-shell appetizers, and Estelle and her niece and I
cooked four turkeys and panfuls of corn bread and
pecan dressing and made enough gravy to float a cata
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maran. By the time the last of our guests drifted home,
I was drooping and stupid from fatigue. Clay kissed
me on the top of the head, sent Carter to take Estelle
and Gwen home, and pointed me upstairs to bed.
“I owe you for these past four days,” he said. “You’ve
fed and succored my flock twice now. I’m going to
start cleaning up. Carter can help me when he gets
back. You sleep in tomorrow. Don’t get up till you
wake up.”
“You’re walking on your knees yourself,” I said, and
it was true. His narrow face was actually sunken with
fatigue and strain, and his crystal-blue eyes were dull.
I knew the trip to Puerto Rico had been terrible for
him. Jeremy’s shattered parents had come from Texas,
savagely seeking somewhere to lay the blame for their
pain, and word had come that Lila Fowler had col-
lapsed back in Philadelphia and been hospitalized at
a discreet and prodigiously expensive private institution
that specialized in treatment for substance addiction.
Lila, it turned out, had been eating Percodan like after-
dinner mints and washing them down with 150-proof
Mount Gay rum. Her parents were threatening legal
action. On top of his very real grief for Jeremy and the
specter of the company’s collapse, I wondered how
Clay could bear it all.
But he insisted.
“I couldn’t sleep,” he said. “I’d just toss and
228 / Anne Rivers Siddons
turn. Let me do this. I need to talk over some things
with Carter, anyway.”
“Does he know…about the company?” I asked.
“Yes. I told him when I went to pick him up in
Charleston. He took it better than I thought. In fact,
it seems to be a challenge for him. He had some pretty
good ideas right off the bat. He wants to stay here after
this semester is over and help out, and I think I’ll let
him. He might as well get his feet wet now as later,
and a real crisis is not the worst way to learn a busi-
ness. Everything after it will look awfully good.”
“Well…if you think so,” I mumbled, hoping that
there would be an after. “I’d like for him to go on and
finish school, but it’s nice that he wants to come home
and help you show the flag. It’ll be wonderful to have
him around.”
“Well, actually, he’s going to be in Puerto Rico,”
Clay said. “There’s a lot of mopping up to do, and I
thought he could take care of some of that for Hayes
and me. We’ve got our hands full here and in Atlanta.”
“Have they…have the Atlanta people gone back?” I
said, not wanting to talk about it but feeling that I must
ask. It was, after all, his future. His and mine.
“Yep. They weren’t very happy about us wanting to
go back to the drawing board, but they want this
project awfully bad. They’re will
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ing to give us a couple of months to come up with
something else. Then we’ll see where we are.”
“Clay…” I said, going to him and laying my head
against his shoulder, “thank you for that. Thank you
for trying again. Thank you for…not making me the
heavy in this, and for not making me deal with it quite
yet. I’ll do better about it a little later, I promise. I
just…I can’t…”
“I know,” he said, sighing into my hair. “Go to bed.”
And for the next three days, I slept, off and on, as
though I had been drugged. When I finally did wake
up enough to know that I was slept out, it was the
following Sunday evening, and the rain was still falling.
So it was not until the Wednesday after that that
Sophia and Mark and I set out in the Cherokee to see
the Gullahs of Dayclear, as Sophia had said,
in situ
.
It had faired off clean and crisp, but the ground was
still waterlogged, and I knew the marshes would be a
virtual soup. I wore the oldest jeans I had, and an an-
cient waxed cotton waterproof jacket, and the over-the-
ankle L.L. Bean rubber boots that had been my winter
marsh footwear for a decade. They were so salt-
bleached and mud-caked that it was impossible to tell
what color they had been. When I picked the two
Bridgeses up at their smart little condominium in the
harbor village, Sophia wore a linen
230 / Anne Rivers Siddons
safari suit almost the precise color of her skin and a
smart felt Anzac hat. She was strung about with expens-
ive leather cases holding cameras, a tape recorder, and
a bottle of Evian. She looked, I thought, like Ava
Gardner in
The Snows of Kilimanjaro
.
Her little boy looked like a miniature Michael Jack-
son.
“I’m not kidding,” I told Lottie later. “He’s so sort
of carved and delicate and perfect that he doesn’t seem
alive, and he’s paler than most white children; if it
weren’t for a slight crinkle to his hair, you’d think he
was Norwegian or something. And his eyes are this
strange ice gray. I’m sure his father is white. But the
real thing that stops you is this incredible air of…I
don’t know, fragility. Otherworldliness. He reminded
me of Colin in
The Secret Garden
. He looks like he
might have been ill most of his life. And he’s so shy it
seems like outright fear. He stood behind his mother
the entire day, almost, and he didn’t speak a word
until it was almost time to leave the island. And I saw
him smile exactly once. I’d love to know what’s going
on there. If he’s that frail, no wonder she guards him
like a lioness. I keep looking for the right word for him,
and I almost have it sometimes, but it gets away.…”
“Fey,” Lottie said.
“Fey…yes. But, Lottie, that means…”
“Doomed. Soon to die. I know.”
Low Country / 231
“Well, I didn’t get that impression; I don’t think he’s
sick. He just looks like he might have been. But yes,
that’s the word.…”
It was a long time before I could think of little Mark
Bridges in any other terms but “fey.”
He sat silently and correctly on the backseat of the
Cherokee as I drove us over the bridge to the island,
and got out at the house when his mother told him to,
but he stuck just behind her, and his eyes, as he took
in the old gray and silver live oak grove the house
stood in, and the vast sweep of the lion-colored marsh,
and the tangle of silent green that was the river forest
beyond it, were wide and white-rimmed. I did not think
he had often been in places like this. Nor, it was appar-
ent, had Sophia.
“It’s stunning,” she said. “Primeval, really, isn’t it?
We’ve been to several beaches around New England,
but there are no marshes there, and nothing as wild
as this. Look, Mark, see that big white bird? I’ll bet
they have birds like that in Africa.” Turning to me, she
said, “We plan a photo safari to Kenya when Mark is
a little older. This will be a good start for him.”
But I did not think Mark Bridges would be ready for
Kenya anytime soon. The marshes of Peacock’s Island
seemed to intimidate him thoroughly. He took hold
of the edge of his mother’s jacket and did not let go
until we had gone into the house. Then he sat on the
sofa that faced
232 / Anne Rivers Siddons
away from the glass window wall, sipping the apple
juice his mother had brought in one of her assorted
leather pouches, and did not look at the marsh.
Sophia did not prod him to be more adventurous,
or try to explain his timidity, as many other mothers
might have done, and I liked her for that. This kind of
fear, I thought, could only be healed by the boy him-
self. He would find his own talisman against it, or not.
“The place where we’re going isn’t so wild, Mark,”
I said to him. “It’s a regular little village, where people
have lived for a long, long time. There are little houses,
and a store, and a tiny little church they call a pray
house. I don’t think there are many children, but I
know of one who might be around. She’s about your
age, and she’s a little Cuban girl, from a country way
down south in the ocean below Florida. She may not
be there, though; she goes out with her grandfather a
lot. He’s a very special kind of gardener, and he works
all over the island. But the old people there know some
wonderful stories and songs. Maybe they’ll sing some
for you. And there’s a little herd of ponies somewhere
close by, and one of them has a baby. Maybe we’ll see
them.”
Mark edged a little closer to his mother. Apparently
ponies were not a part of his special reality.
Low Country / 233
“We had a rather bad little scene with a horse in
Central Park,” Sophia said matter-of-factly. “I’d rather
Mark didn’t experience horses again until later.”
“Well, these are very small horses, and quite shy,” I
said. “But I doubt we’ll see them. They don’t hang
around the village much. How about chickens? Is he
okay with them? They’re all over the place in
Dayclear.”
“He’s seen them at the Central Park petting zoo,”
she said. “I think he’ll be fine with them, if nobody
talks about eating them. He gets upset when he thinks
he’s eating anything that was alive.”
“Well, I hope we don’t come across anybody
wringing a hen’s neck for the pot,” I said more crisply
than I intended. I was getting a bit weary of this pair
and their strange, self-constructed universe.
“Surely they don’t do that,” Sophia said, clearly dis-
approving.
“Sophia,” I said carefully, “this is a real Gullah settle-
ment, one of the longest-standing that I know of. They
are quite isolated. They still live much the way they
did a hundred years ago. They sing the old songs that
originally came from Africa, and do the old dances,
and tell the old stories, and raise their food and prepare
it much the same way as they always have. They are
quite poor by our standards, but they are self-sufficient
234 / Anne Rivers Siddons
and they do very well with what they have, all told.
Their lifestyle is not the sanitized one we live. They
kill chickens and they trap rabbits and they eat them.
If that’s a problem for Mark—and I can see why it
might be; that’s not a criticism—then maybe we should
do this another day when he’s in school or something.
You can let him experience it gradually and it will
probably be okay.”
She stared at me, as if to determine whether or not
I was, indeed, implying criticism, and then shook her
elegant head. Her hair today was sleeked back and tied
with a leopard-printed chiffon scarf. The hat hung
down her back from a cord.
“No. It’s an authentic ethnic culture, and I don’t
want him to be afraid of that,” she said. “We’ll talk
about it all, he and I, when we get home and make a
little parable of it. We do that a lot.”
We finished our coffee and Mark his apple juice, and
went down the steps toward the Cherokee, to set off
for Dayclear. Just as we reached the bottom one, a
great grinding roar burst into the clearing, and a
spuming cloud of fine black mud swept, tornadolike,
down the sandy drive, and we heard, over the roaring,
shouts and catcalls and huge, raucous laughter. A
hurtling shape burst out of the mud spray and I saw
what it was: a great black motorcycle with
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two men astride it. They were shouting and beating
on the sides of the machine, and laughing, looking for
all the world like demented gods on a terrible
deus ex
machina
. They were singing, too; under the bellowing
motor I made out the roared words to John Lee
Hooker’s
Boogie Chillen
: “‘I was walking down Hast-
ings Street/I saw a little place called Henry’s Swing
Club/Decided I’d stop in there that night/And I got
down…’”
We stood frozen on the steps. The motorcycle swept
into the yard and past us, missing us by what seemed