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
inches. It roared out of the yard, made a circle, and
came burring down on us again. The two men called
greetings and laughed loudly. I could not make them
out for the fantail spray of wet black mud.
Mark Bridges made a high, strangled sound like the
squeak of a rabbit caught in a snare and threw himself
down on the steps and rolled into a ball. Sophia
hurtled off the bottom step like a missile. She ran into
the path of the motorcycle and stood there, fists balled,
screaming with fury. I could not seem to move.
“Stop that, you sons of bitches!” she shrieked. “Can’t
you see you’ve scared my child to death? Stop it this
second or I’ll get the police on you!”
The motorcycle skidded to a stop. The silence rang
like a brass gong. Sophia did not move. The two men
dismounted and came toward her slowly. I recognized
Luis Cassells first, mud-spattered and
236 / Anne Rivers Siddons
windblown, his big, dark face crestfallen. Then I saw
that the other man was Ezra Upchurch. He was even
more mud-slimed and wind-savaged, but one would
have known that squat, tanklike build and the massive,
overhanging brow and the perfect blue-black of his
skin almost anywhere. Practically every man, woman,
and child in America had seen it in newspapers and
on television since the late seventies.
“Jesus, lady, I almost hit you,” he said, and the
beautiful, coffee-rich voice seemed as familiar as a
neighbor’s, because I had heard it so often over the
air.
“You almost hit my son, too, you complete, capering
asshole,” Sophia spat, and I gasped, simply because
the words were so at odds with her chilly elegance.
“What’s the matter with you that you think you can
come roaring in here on that thing and run children
down? Mark is a sensitive child; it’s going to take me
days
to get him calmed down! I’m of a good mind to
report you to the authorities
and
to Clay Venable. If
you aren’t aware of it, this is his land you’re trespassing
on. I happen to work for him, and this lady happens
to be his wife.”
Ezra Upchurch looked down at the crouched ball
on the steps that was Mark Bridges. I had sat down
beside him and put my arms around him, and I could
feel the profound trembling that shook him like an
ague.
Low Country / 237
“I’m sorry,” Ezra Upchurch said. “I didn’t see the
boy. I know whose land this is, ma’am. Hello, Caro.
Haven’t seen you since you were in training bras.
Come a long way, I see. Ma’am, my name is Ezra
Upchurch—”
“I know who you are,” Sophia said. “It doesn’t make
you any less an asshole.”
Luis Cassells laughed.
“She’s got you pegged, Ezra,” he said. “Caro, I apo-
logize. This is my fault. Shem was crabbing under the
bridge when you came over and when we stopped to
talk to him he said he’d seen you come this way with
a…real fine-looking young lady. He didn’t say anything
about the boy. We wouldn’t have scared him for the
world. We were just…having fun.”
“Oh, God, Luis,” I said, my heart still hammering.
“You could have killed somebody. Mrs. Bridges is new
with the company, and I was about to bring her over
to Dayclear. She’s doing…some research for Clay. But
I think maybe we ought to get the little boy home.…”
Ezra Upchurch walked close to Sophia Bridges. His
coal-black eyes, lost in ridges of pouched flesh and a
network of fine wrinkles, lingered on her, taking in the
exquisite carved face and the long, slender body and
the safari outfit.
“I do apologize,” he said. “Let me make it up to your
boy…”
He started for the steps, where Mark had
238 / Anne Rivers Siddons
begun to sob. He did not move to uncoil himself from
the anguished ball. Through the silky fabric of his little
Shetland sweater I could feel his heart going like a trip-
hammer.
Sophia Bridges moved like a cat. In a split second
she stood in front of her son on the bottom step.
“If you touch my son I’ll scratch your eyes out,” she
said in the cold, pure voice I had first heard at the guest
house. “That’s before I call the police.”
He stopped and studied her. Then he smiled. It was
a lazy, insinuating, completely sexual smile. I felt its
sheer wattage even though it was not directed at me.
“Unnnh…
uh
!” he drawled. “What we got here?”
The lapse into street black was as deliberate as a
pinch or a leer. Sophia Bridges’s face blanched with
fury.
I stepped in then.
“Sophia, there are chocolate chip cookies and fresh
milk in the fridge, and the coffee’s still hot,” I said.
“Why don’t you take Mark in and give him some, and
I’ll just say good-bye to these two…gentlemen. I agree
with you, they were foolhardy, but I know they didn’t
mean any harm. Mr. Cassells here has a granddaughter
that he dotes on; you know, the little Cuban girl I was
telling Mark about. And Mr. Upchurch
Low Country / 239
was born and grew up in Dayclear. If you can find it
in your heart to forgive him, he can tell you almost
anything you might want to know about it. You
couldn’t have a better tour guide. He knows things I
never will.”
She said nothing but lifted her child up and carried
him bodily into the house. I would have thought his
weight, frail as he was, would be too much for her
slender arms, but she carried him easily. I could hear
Mark still sobbing into her shoulder, but it seemed to
me that the sobs were growing fainter. Sophia did not
look back.
“I thought maybe the little boy might like a nice,
slow ride on the cycle,” Ezra Upchurch said, pitching
it just loudly enough for Sophia and Mark to hear.
“The kids in Dayclear love it.”
“Over my dead body,” she flung back over her
shoulder.
But Mark lifted his strange, tear-drowned little face
for a moment and looked at Ezra Upchurch, and then
at the motorcycle, before lowering it again to his
mother’s shoulder. Ezra made the old peace sign with
his fore and middle fingers and smiled broadly at the
boy. That smile had bent tougher spines than Mark
Bridges’s. Just before he tucked his face back into its
nest of expensive Armani khaki, I thought I caught the
faintest ghost of an answering smile.
I stood looking at the two men.
“Good work, guys,” I said. “Maybe she
240 / Anne Rivers Siddons
won’t call the police, but she’s going to tell Clay, sure
as gun’s iron.”
“Not Mengele! Oh, no,” quavered Luis Cassells, and
I glared at him.
“I’ll take my chances,” Ezra Upchurch said equably.
“Look, I
am
sorry, Caro. I guess she’s got a right to be
pissed. What’s the matter with that boy, anyway?”
“I don’t know,” I said. “I think maybe he’s been sick.
And he’s a long way from home, and he probably
misses his father. They’re divorced. She’s pretty pro-
tective of him.”
“She’s pretty, period,” he said, grinning. “But that
mama is way too much mama for me. Whoo-eee!”
Then he fell back into the perfect, Harvard-inflected
English that was one of his hallmarks.
“I hope you’ll persuade her to bring the boy on over
to Dayclear,” he said. “I’d like to make this up to both
of them. If it’s…ah, research I believe you said…that
she’s after, I’d be delighted to play cicerone for her.
You, too. I’d like to catch up with you. I know what
you’ve been doing since I saw you last, but not how
you feel about it. Will you try to change her mind?”
“I will, but don’t count on it,” I said.
But to my surprise, Sophia Bridges decided to go on
to Dayclear. When I got inside she was sitting with
Mark at the kitchen counter drinking coffee while he
finished his milk and cookies, and
Low Country / 241
both of them were neatened and brushed and face-
washed and composed again.
“Mark has decided he wants to go,” she said. “So we
will. We’ll leave now. But I’m adamant that I don’t
want that motorcycle anywhere around. I must insist
on that, Caro.”
“I’m sure Ezra can hide it in the swamp or some-
thing,” I said, amused and not a little annoyed at her
peremptoriness.
She stared at me hard.
“He better do that,” she said without smiling, and I
sighed, and we left for Dayclear.
I
n fact, he had done just that. When we got to
the
general store, I saw the motorcycle deep in the tangle
of scrub and kudzu out back, hardly showing at all.
Only its crusted headlights were clearly visible. But I
was looking for it, and had no trouble spotting it. I do
not think that Sophia Bridges saw it. She had begun
photographing when we reached the sand road that
led in through the woods to the settlement, leaning
out the window and imploring me to go slower. When
we rounded the last curve and the general store was
in sight she was intent on capturing a back view of an
old man leading a spavined mule down the road. Both
wore straw hats. Mark may have seen the cycle, though.
I heard a soft gasp from the backseat that I somehow
did not think was alarm, but whether he was intrigued
by the motorcycle or the chapeau-clad mule and its
owner I did not know.
Low Country / 243
As we approached the old man and the mule I put
a hand lightly on Sophia’s shoulder and said, “I
wouldn’t photograph them head-on. Not right now.
They’re very shy about strangers until they get to know
them, and they don’t like cameras. Later on, after he
gets used to you, he’ll probably pose for you all day.”
She turned a glowing face to me.
“They don’t by any chance think the camera steals
their souls, do they?” she breathed reverently.
“Not since they got here from Africa a couple of
hundred years ago,” I said acidly. “It’s just not con-
sidered polite. I think the soul thing was that tribe in
New Guinea that had never seen a white man, anyway.
Maybe you ought to leave the camera and tape recorder
here the first time out.”
She did not want to do that.
“I want to be very clear about what I’m doing,” she
said. “Really up front with them. I don’t want to seem
as if I’d just come to gawk.”
But I thought that without the tools of her trade she
felt uncertain, somewhat at sea, and perhaps afraid
that the people of Dayclear would not perceive her
authority and expertise at first.
“You’re with me, and they know me a little,” I said.
“That’s the only entree that’s going to work, believe
me. You better hope Ezra
is
around. That’s the best
way, by far. Next to being long-lost kin, to be known
by a native to the village is the
244 / Anne Rivers Siddons
most acceptable way to come into a Gullah community.
Their sense of family is tremendous; we don’t have
anything like it in our culture, not really. The family
structure, the ancestors, the tribe…it’s everything. Mark
will be a real draw, too, even if he doesn’t want to say
a word. They won’t care about that. Children are al-
most magical to the Gullahs. Back in Africa they were
the responsibility of everybody in the village. Hillary
Clinton’s right about that.”
In the end she left the camera and the recorder in
the car, but she was more ill at ease than I had ever
seen her when we walked into the little general store.
I could not imagine why. Surely her fieldwork in cul-
tural anthropology had led her into stranger and more
threatening places than this. Mark lagged behind her,
clutching the hem of her jacket.
Janie Biggins was at the store counter again today.
She wore, over a shapeless black cotton dress that
looked as if it might have been a maid’s uniform once
and probably was, a man’s heavy wool cardigan
missing its buttons. The little store was chilly. There
was no heat except for the iron stove in the back, but
that was glowing red against the nip of the bright, cold
day. Several old men sat in chairs around it. They
stopped their talk when we came in and stared at us.
Janie Biggins did, too. There was no cheerful wel-
come for me today. I knew that it was partly
Low Country / 245
because I had brought strangers with me into the fort-
ress of Dayclear, but I thought, too, that they had all
probably heard by now about Clay’s plans for the
settlement and the land surrounding it. I knew that
they would wait, now, to see what I would do about
that. I felt a twist of pure misery, and a stronger one
of anger. I hated being in this position.
“Good morning, Janie,” I said politely. “I’ve brought
some friends of mine to visit Mr. Cassells. Do you
happen to know where he is?”
She shook her head slowly, not looking directly at
me.