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
did not speak, he went on.
“We’d buy out the village and pay each family a
handsome annual salary to stay and take part in all
this. We’d provide the clothes and the tools and craft
materials, and of course we’d offer insurance and
health coverage, maybe get them on some kind of
regular medical and dental services from the county.
Oh, and we’d electrify the houses that didn’t have
it…Sophia says some of them don’t…and keep the
houses and outbuildings in good shape, and see that
everybody has plumbing and heating and televi-
sion.…It’s more than they could aspire to in their lives,
Caro, and the best part is, they won’t have to move
and they won’t have to scrabble for a living anymore.
How can they lose?”
I looked at him. Black spots wheeled before my eyes.
“The ponies…” I whispered.
“We’d like to make a kind of wild, natural island out
in the river where the two creeks run into it, dredge it
there and build it up and landscape it and put some
picturesque little lean-tos
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on it for shelter, and keep it planted in grass, and put
the ponies there. They’d be fed grain and hay on a
regular basis, and we’d have a vet look them over
periodically, and if they tame up a little, maybe even
curry them once in a while.”
“You think they’ll go for condos?” I said. My ears
were buzzing. “I think they’re more the timeshare types
myself.”
He ignored that.
“We thought we might have a kind of monthly pony
swim, from the new island over to Dayclear and back.
Like they do when they bring the wild horses in from
Chincoteague and Assateague, on the Outer Banks.
They’re a big favorite with families. That way the
ponies would be healthier and better cared for than
they’ve ever been in their lives, and they’d be a real
asset, instead of parasites.”
“I thought Clay was kidding,” I managed to whisper
through lips that felt blanched and swollen. “I thought
he was teasing me. He laughed when I called it Gullah
World.…It’s a theme park, Hayes. How can you even
think of it?”
“I can think of it because it’s what your husband
thought it would take to get you to agree to this, Caro,”
he said. There were mottled white spots on his clamped
jaws now. “I can think of it because it’s the only way
either of us can see to save that goddamned flea-bitten
settlement and
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those goddamned mangy horses, and Clay says we do
that or we forget it. I wonder if you know what would
happen to all of us if we forgot it, Caro?”
“Clay’s told me about all that.…”
“I wonder if he’s told you just how bad it could be?
But the important thing is that SouthWard loves it,
and we took an awful chance by insisting on revising
the first plan. They didn’t even want to listen to any
changes at first. If you knew what Clay and I and
everybody else has gone through to work this thing
out for you…”
My hand flew to my mouth.
“SouthWard! My God, Hayes!” I cried.
“They’re going to save your ass, Caro,” he said. “All
our asses, plus some black ones and some hairy horse
ones. Nobody else would even listen. Clay and I have
been all over the country with this. Nobody else even
gave us an appointment.”
SouthWard…
Once, when Clay and I had been newly married and
the children had not yet come, we took a driving trip
through the lower Southeast, so that Clay could show
me other resort communities and tell me how his vision
for the Peacock Island Plantation Company properties
differed from anything yet in existence. We saw some
well-done properties and some merely rather ordinary,
and a few that I thought were ghastly in concept
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and execution. Of these, one or two were unique to
me in their sheer bizarreness of taste.
One of these was in the mountains of North Georgia
and was called Hillbilly Hollow. I would like to think
that the name was someone’s idea of tongue-in-cheek,
but after we had driven through it, I abandoned that
idea. Hillbilly Hollow was a caricature of every bad
joke anyone had ever heard about the Appalachian
mountains and the people thereof. By the time we left
it I did not know whether to laugh hysterically or
simply cry.
At the gate was a security guardpost gotten up like
a miniature log cabin. Artificial chickens, pigs, and
dogs dotted the little backyard. On the leaning front
porch a guard sat in a rocking chair, dressed in tattered
overalls and with a torn felt hat pulled down over one
eye, holding a shotgun in his lap. A rustically lettered
sign on a piece of knotty pine said, STATE YO’ BIZNESS
POLITE-LIKE. This particular guard wore wraparound
yellow sunglasses and was reading
Rolling Stone
, but
the effect was hardly diluted.
Inside the gates was a sales office in the same cabin
style, but much larger, dripping with calico and ging-
ham and more rustic sayings burned on pine. A woman
in a calico dress and apron, with breasts like, as Clay
said in wonder later, the bumper of a 1953 Studebaker,
gave us literature about the different styles of resort
homes and rentals available, and the amenities enjoyed
by
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the future residents and visitors to Hillbilly Hollow.
They included a general store for vittles, a brush-
shrouded “still house for wines and likkers,” a large,
supervised playground and activities cabin for little
billies, a lake with paddleboats and motor rentals for
when you needed to make a fast water getaway, a
miniature golf course for when the city cousins came
to visit, a shuffleboard and hoss shoe complex, Ping-
Pong and bowling facilities, and an RV campground
and mobile-home theme park with hillbilly rides and
attractions for the rugrats. A senior citizens cabin
community was planned for “when grandmaw and
grandpaw need a place to hang their hats,” and a
shooting range and gallery were under construction,
so that “Bills and Billies could keep their shootin’ eyes
sharp against the revenooers.” A smaller sign in the
office said that if you required tennis or handball or
regular golf or equestrian facilities, Atlanta was ninety
miles south thataway.
The Studebaker lady told us that Hillbilly Hollow
was already at ninety percent occupancy, and the
waiting list stretched into the next year.
“You folks better get your names in the hat right
quick,” she said, smiling broadly.
Hillbilly Hollow was the first resort property to be
developed by SouthWard of Atlanta.
Over the years, SouthWard prospered, and no one
could quite figure out why. All of its
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properties were themed, and none of them with much
more innate taste than Hillbilly Hollow. Soon they
covered the inland southeast like kudzu, and became
a joke to the developers and residents of newer, more
restrained and upscale communities and a near-bottom-
less source of income to their shameless and canny
young developers. They were cheap to build, cheap to
buy or rent into, and cheap to maintain for the simple
reason that SouthWard did very little of that. After
about ten years stories and news reports began to seep
out about equipment breakdowns, failed inspections,
sewage and gas leaks, pollution of nearby streams and
rivers, and lawsuits against the company by residents
and neighbors alike. SouthWard invariably settled.
There was always a new theme community sprouting
somewhere else to pay the freight. SouthWard was
flush and fat.
They had never managed to get a toehold on the
Southeastern coast, though. Waterfront land was at a
premium by the time they looked seaward. Almost all
of it was either under development, about to be, or
privately owned. In the few instances that they saw a
window of opportunity, local consortiums shut them
out before they could even make an offer. They had
almost resigned themselves to looking to the Texas
coast for colonization, which did not suit nearly as
well, since Texas itself often seemed to be a
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theme park and was therefore less receptive to their
novelties.
Until now.
Hayes had the grace to redden.
“This is altogether different, Caro,” he said. “For one
thing, we’re maintaining design control. For another,
they realize they can’t come into this market with
anything like their others; Charleston and Lowcountry
people would laugh them out of business in a month.
This is going to be a new direction for them, a move
into serious, substantial resort development, with all
the responsible environmental concerns met, the whole
ball of wax. Dayclear would give them the kind of
dignity they want to project now.…”
He stopped. I did not think even he believed his
words. I did not reply. I was trying very hard not to
see it: fishnets and plastic crabs and black people
dressed in aprons and head kerchiefs and faded over-
alls, plowing marsh tackies and picking cotton and
singing. An RV village where the dense Florida mari-
time forest, untouched for eons, stood now. Miniature
golf on the secret green hummocks.
But Hayes gave it a valiant try.
“If you saw the site plan and the density studies and
the environmental proposals, saw that they were
mainly Clay’s and his strictest to date, and you had
our promise in writing about the settlement and the
ponies, would you be willing to
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take the proposal about Dayclear to the folks there?
Just run it past them, see how the wind blows from
that quarter? We thought they’d rather hear it from
you than one of us. You’re known to them, and they
know how you feel about the island.”
“Hayes,” I said slowly, around the nausea and in-
credulity, “in the first place, what makes you think
SouthWard would honor Clay’s plans for two seconds
after they owned the property? And in the second
place…who is ‘we’? You and who thought they’d
rather hear it from me? Does Clay know you’ve told
me all this?”
He puffed out his cheeks and blew a gust of air, like
a man who must now do something distasteful to him.
He looked away toward the dazzling creek, and then
back to me, his hands in his pockets.
“There’s something else I came to tell you. I don’t
want you to get upset, because it’s all right now, I
promise. But…”
“But what? God, Hayes, what?”
“Clay’s in the hospital in San Juan. He had some
kind of collapse or something last night; Carter called
me early this morning. He wanted me to tell you. But
Clay’s okay now…”
He raised his hands toward me as I scrambled to
my feet. I could feel the blood running out of my face
and hands.
“No, listen, Caro, he really is. Carter’s taking
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him back to the hotel right about now. They just kept
him overnight as a precaution. He’s coming home in
the morning. Carter says the doctor thinks it was ex-
haustion and stress plus maybe a mild heat stroke;
apparently he was out all day on a boat, and then spent
the late afternoon tramping around the Calista property
with that guy who was looking to buy it. In the end
the guy nixed the deal. Carter said he offered so low
that they told him to eat shit and hit the road. It must
have been the last straw for Clay. A decent sale could
have changed things. There wasn’t anything wrong
with Clay’s heart, though, or anything like that. They
did find a duodenal ulcer, though. He’s been asking
for that for months; the strain of the business with
Calista, and then the enormous stress of trying to get
this Dayclear thing up and going…he hasn’t been
eating right, and the hours he’s keeping are criminal.
He’s traveling way too much, too. Well, you know all
that. Maybe now he’ll cut back some and let me take
some of the load. I’ve been trying to do it for a long
time, but you know Clay.…”
I sank down on the top step, weak and trembling.
Clay had always seemed to me simply…invulnerable.
Put together from sinew and steel and powered with
an inexhaustible energy, driven smoothly on the current
of his extraordinary intensity. Clay in the hospital?
Clay with an ulcer? What did this say about me?
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“Why didn’t someone call me?” I whispered.
“What could you have done? By the time Carter
heard from the doctor, Clay was almost ready to leave
the hospital. Neither he nor Carter wanted to scare
you, and Clay’ll be home before you could get down
there. They called me because they didn’t want that
motormouth Shawna to get hold of it somehow and