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
ture, looking like a great mahogany yacht in a tiny
harbor. I wondered where Auntie might have come by
it; it would have been at home on Legare Street. It
gleamed with care and polish. Lita lay curled in the
middle of it, covered with an exquisite ivory quilt so
old that it was yellowed and brittle. Her fist was
doubled under her chin, and her face was smooth and
calm and flushed with sleep. I listened; her breath came
slow and deep and even. For now, she seemed all right.
For now…
“Where’s Auntie?” I said.
“She down to the cemetery. She grow some things
down there that help this child. Plant ’em there so the
ancestors bless ’em. We gon’ put ’em in this here soup
when she git back, and they perk her up right good.
You, too. You looks like the hind axle of hard times.”
“I feel like it. It was so awful about the ponies. Has
anybody heard from Luis and Ezra yet? I hate to think
of that poor old mare just lying there in the sun.…”
My eyes filled up and I fell silent. It seemed too cruel
for the mind to encompass.
“She ain’t lie there,” Janie said. “Esau and two, three
of the others took Esau’s tractor and some log chains
and move her to the woods over behind the creek, back
of our cemetery. There a big hole there, go way down
in the ground. Been there a long time; don’t nobody
know who dug it. Our good old animals goes there.
It deep and
370 / Anne Rivers Siddons
cool and real quiet. Esau drops pine branches over
them.”
I put my face into my hands.
Sleep well, dear old Nissy, I said in my mind. Down
there in the deep, cool, quiet ground with all the other
good animals, under your green blanket.
“Here, you take some of this now,” Janie said,
handing me a bowl of the soup. I took it and sipped;
it was wonderful, silky and thin and tasting of green
things and sea salt.
“What is it? You could make a fortune in any restaur-
ant in Charleston with this,” I said.
“Fiddlehead soup. Found the first fiddleheads
yestiddy, out in the woods. They real early this year.
Auntie say they has power, but I just thinks they taste
good.”
They did. Gradually the cold, hard knot of grief and
the red lick of submerged anger deep inside me
loosened and cooled. I went and stood on the doorstep
of the cabin, looking off across the bare garden plots
to the edge of the marsh and the creek. The sky was a
tender, washed blue and in it specks wheeled and dove.
Ospreys. I wondered if they were nesting already in
the dead cypresses along the distant river. If so, we
could kiss this terrible winter good-bye. The ospreys
never miscalculated.
Behind me I heard a thin little voice: “Caro? Caro…”
Low Country / 371
I turned and ran for the bedroom. Janie stood in the
doorway, smiling.
“Somebody wake an’ talkin’,” she said.
I sat down on the bed and smiled at Lita. She was
half sitting, tangled in the quilt and frowning with sleep
and confusion. Her wiry curls spilled over her forehead
and cheeks, and she had the imprint of a quilted square
on one of them. Her skin was lightly pearled with
perspiration. She reached her arms up for me even
before her eyes were fully opened, and I gathered her
against me.
“You had a nice long nap, didn’t you?” I said into
her hair. It did not feel at all like Kylie’s, or I don’t
think I could have done it.
“Are you hungry?”
“I don’t know. Where’s Abuelo? Caro, I had the
most awful dream.…”
I sat her up and brushed the hair off her face and
looked into it.
“I’m afraid it wasn’t a dream, sweetie pie,” I said.
“You found the horses, and they were real sick, and it
made you very sad. Your grandfather and Ezra have
gone to take Yambi to the doctor so he can be well
again. They’ll be back before long, and they can tell
you about it.”
Please let it be so, I said to the distant God who
took children and horses.
“They didn’t take Nissy with them, did they?” she
said in a tiny voice. I saw that she was screwing her
face up with the effort not to cry.
372 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“No, baby. They didn’t. Nissy was too sick, and she
died. We didn’t see any of the other horses sick,
though, so maybe they didn’t eat the apples.…”
Her breath drew in, and I winced.
“You need to know that it was not your apples that
made them sick, Lita,” I said. “Somebody came and
put something bad in the apples after you left them
there. We know you would never hurt the horses. They
know that, too. It was some bad people, and we’ll find
out who it was, don’t you worry about that.”
She was silent for a while, breathing deeply. Then
she looked up at me. Her eyes were entirely ringed
with white, remembering.
“Her teeth were sticking out all yellow,” she said.
“And there was flies in her eyes. I knew she was dead
then. There was flies in my mama’s eyes, too.”
I pulled her back hard against me, my own eyes shut
tight against the pain. I would have given anything on
earth if I could have scrubbed the memories out of her
head.
“You’re a brave girl,” I said. “It was a bad thing to
see, but she isn’t suffering now. Esau took her and put
her with all the other good animals from Dayclear who
have…died. They’re all together.”
She sighed deeply and relaxed against me a little.
Low Country / 373
“Yambi stayed with her,” she murmured against my
shoulder. “That was the right thing to do, wasn’t it?
He wouldn’t leave his mama.”
“That was just the right thing to do,” I said, seeing
in my mind the image of a small child huddled in a
wrecked mountain hut, her shivering flesh pressed to
the cold flesh of her mother. I did not think I was going
to be able to bear this.
Suddenly she gave a great sob, and then pressed her
fists against her mouth. Her whole body shook with
the effort not to cry.
“It’s all right,” I said, beginning to rock her. “It’s
good to cry. It’s the right thing to do. It’s a way of
honoring Nissy. She would be pleased with your tears.”
And then they came, a great, wild storm of them, so
hard and primitive and somehow ancient that I was,
for a little while, frightened for her. She wept and
howled, and sometimes lapsed into a phrase or two
of anguished Spanish, and then howled again. I could
almost hear this sound rolling out over a jungle
somewhere, as old as time itself and as implacable.
These were not a child’s tears.
Presently she began to subside into simple sobs and,
after a long while, sniffles. When she finally pulled
herself away from me and looked up, her eyes were
swollen nearly shut, and her face was congested with
red anguish. But her breathing was slow again, and
deep.
374 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“I think I’m hungry,” she said.
Auntie was back by now, and she brought in a bowl
of the soup, presumably bearing its cargo of herbs,
and a piece of hot cornbread. She sat down on the bed
beside Lita and began to feed the soup to her by the
spoonful, crooning wordlessly. I stood and stretched
and looked down. The front of my shirt was soaking
wet with Lita’s tears.
“You go in that drawer in the front room an’ git one
of them ol’ undershirts,” she said. “Th’ow that shirt of
your’n in the wash pot. Don’t do to sit around in it.
That’s poison there.”
I looked at her.
“It’s what come out of her,” she said, smiling. “The
song and the tea drawed it. Look like it got most of it,
too, but you don’t want it soakin’ into you. I bile it
with lye soap when I does my wash and Ezra bring it
to you.”
“Oh, Auntie, I don’t care about the shirt,” I said.
“I’m just so glad she’s better, and so grateful to
you.…What was in that tea? What was in the soup?”
“This ‘n’ that. Little feverfew, some goldenseal, some
seamuckle, jimsey, little life everlasting. You couldn’t
make it, chile. It’s all in the words you says over it. I
make some up before you go and you can give it to
her if she git bad again, though.”
“I don’t think she’ll be with me,” I said. “I think she’ll
be staying with her grandfather,
Low Country / 375
unless he’s really late getting back. I’ll be glad to stay
with her until he comes, though.”
“I give you some anyway,” she said.
Lita fell asleep again, and we three women sat in
chairs that Janie dragged out into the dooryard, talking
idly of nothing much, taking the sun. It was slanting
low when the noise of an old truck came down the
road, followed by the angry burr of Ezra’s Harley.
I met them up at the store. Luis’s face was drawn
and grim.
“Lita?” he said.
“Sleeping. She’s been awake, and talked, and cried
most of it out, I think. And she ate a good lunch. I
doubt that she’ll forget it, Luis, but I think she’ll heal
from it. Auntie…Auntie has been beyond wonderful.”
“I don’t think you’ve been so bad yourself, Caro,”
he said, relief making the tight muscles around his
mouth sag into a tired smile. “You know, it was you
she cried out for before she stopped talking.”
“Oh, Luis…” I said softly.
I can’t take the weight of this, I thought.
“It’s okay,” he said, understanding. “It’s more than
enough that you were here today.”
I found some beer in the cooler and opened it for
him and Ezra and Esau, who had come wearily into
the store behind him. They all took deep swallows,
but no one spoke.
376 / Anne Rivers Siddons
Finally I said, “The colt?”
“The colt is alive,” Ezra said, and his voice was hard
and remote. I had not heard this voice before. His eyes
were distant, too. I could not imagine what they saw.
“The vet thinks he’ll make it. He didn’t eat many of
the apples, apparently.”
“He likes sweet potatoes better,” I said, and felt the
tears sting again.
“Well, that saved him then, because those apples
were full of it, whatever it is,” Ezra said. “The vet isn’t
sure, but he’s got a friend with his own lab who’s
running tox tests right now. He thinks probably botu-
lism toxin. Nothing else is really powerful enough to
down a grown horse so fast. He thinks that they ate
the apples last night early. It would have been put in
by injection. He found the holes in some of the apples.”
“My God, you don’t think it was a doctor!” I cried.
Somehow the thought was horrifying beyond words.
“No, no. You can get the stuff; plastic surgeons use
it, and other kinds of doctors, too. It’s around. There’s
probably a real good black market for it, if you know
where to go. And you can get hypodermics at any
drugstore. I don’t think whoever did it got the stuff
himself, but I think somebody he knew did. We’ll know
more when the test comes in late tonight. If it’s botu-
lism toxin,
Low Country / 377
I think I know where to start looking for the source.”
“Where?”
“Better you just don’t ask,” he said. “I’ve got some
friends in not very high places.”
We were quiet again for a bit.
“Do you think any of the rest of the herd got into
the apples?” I asked.
“Doesn’t look like it right now,” Luis said. “Simon
Miller and his boys from Greenville rode and walked
every inch of the creek and the bottoms where they
usually are. They didn’t see anything. And there were
an awful lot of apples left. It looked to me like the pile
we took day before yesterday was mostly still there.
They’re in a croker sack in the back of the truck. I’m
going to drop them in the incinerator at the dump on
Edisto when I go tonight.”
“When you go?”
“Walk me down to Auntie’s,” he said. “I need to see
Lita. We’ll talk on the way.”
We walked side by side down the rutted sandy road.
The swift darkness was rolling in from the Inland
Waterway, and the shadows of the Spanish moss laid
long fingers across the road. The air was cooling rap-
idly. Luis walked with his hands in his pockets, his
stride heavy and slow. I cradled my elbows in my
hands against the chill. The old white Fruit of the
Loom men’s undershirt was decent and clean, but it
was worn thin.
378 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“I’m taking her over to Edisto,” he said finally, not
looking at me. “Ezra has a friend over there who’s not
using his trailer. He left the key with Ezra. I can’t stay
here with her, Caro. Everywhere she looked she’d re-
member…And who knows what’s going to come next?
I can’t take the chance. I’m quitting your husband’s
company, too, as soon as I can give notice in the
morning. I’m not going to make myself a sitting target;
she’s the one who’s vulnerable.”
I stopped dead in my tracks, looking at him.