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
tanned women in little golf skirts and T-shirts and sun
visors, piloting their private golf carts across the road
from the harborside villas to the golf club. It spurted
into my nose and throat like lava as I threaded my way
around the lushly planted traffic circle that led into the
main street of the tiny village center and saw the green-
uniformed Peacock’s Island ground crew tearing out
great clumps of blooming pansies and setting in their
places flat after flat of rioting impatiens and mature
ferns. Instant tropical paradise; why had I always
thought it beautiful? My hot eyes wanted the tangled,
littered coolness of the dank marshes and the forest;
wanted, instead of this studied, expensive order, wild-
ness and the vast amplitude
388 / Anne Rivers Siddons
of water and sky. By the time I pulled into the parking
lot at the company’s headquarters, I was shimmering
all over with rage.
“Well, goodness, Caro, where you been? We been
lookin’ all over the place for you. Your wandering boy
is back and rarin’ to see you, and here we thought
you’d run off with the hired help or something.…”
Shawna was often familiar with me, when she
thought she could get away with it, but she would not
have dared go so far if she had not had an audience.
It seemed to me that three-fourths of Clay’s female of-
fice staff lingered in the front office where her desk sat,
finding this and that to do while they waited for me
to come. Lottie was wrong, I knew; the office staff
knew about the horses even if Clay did not. They must
have known I would be furious.
“Shawna,” I said, smiling savagely at her, “eat a shit
sandwich.”
I did not hear the gasps and the murmurs begin until
I had reached Clay’s door, opened it, and gone in.
“…completely lost her mind,” I heard Shawna
squawk as I slammed the door shut behind me.
Clay was standing at the window wall that over-
looked the little enclosed courtyard behind his office.
It had been planned to look like an old Charleston
garden, sheltered with tabby and old
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brick walls and lushly planted with vines and shrubs
and brilliant oleanders and cape jessamine and camel-
lias. The camellias were out now, hanging from the
great bushes like ripe, perfect fruit. The twisted trunk
of the massive live oak that grew in the center of the
garden was brilliant green with resurrection ferns. The
little wrought-iron table against the back wall held the
remains of a coffee and pastry breakfast for three or
four people. I did not wonder who had shared it with
Clay. I did not care. I knew before he turned to face
me that I was going to say something that would
change us both, would divide time. I could scarcely
breathe around the anger.
He swung around. He needed a shave and looked
a little faded, as he always did when he was very tired,
but there was nothing of the past holiday’s joy or the
pain of Puerto Rico on it. Just the habitual remoteness
that the office called out in him, and a cool impatience.
I knew that he hated slammed doors. I could not ima-
gine that anyone had ever slammed this one before.
He wore one of his immaculate gray tropical worsted
suits and a fresh shirt. On the lapel of his coat was a
gold pin shaped like a ten-gallon hat. It said, REMEM-
BER THE ALAMO.
I had never seen even a Rotary button on Clay’s
person before. I stared. For some reason this object
made me want to rip it off his coat, rip the coat off
him, shake him, scream.
390 / Anne Rivers Siddons
He looked down at the button and then back at me
and made a small, fastidious face.
“The South Ward brass came back with us,” he said.
“They’ve gone over to the island with Hayes. I guess
I can take this thing off now. How are you, Caro?”
He did not call me “baby,” as he sometimes did. The
smell of anger must be coming off me like smoke.
“I am not really very good right now, Clay,” I said,
and was appalled to hear that my voice shook so that
I could hardly get my words out. Where was all this
rage coming from? This was Clay.…“While you were
gone somebody poisoned the horses. The ones on the
island. The mare—you know, Nissy, Kylie’s
mare—died. Her colt just barely lived. We don’t know
about the rest of the herd. It was botulism toxin. The
vet is sure of that. Ezra thinks he’s going to be able to
find out who bought the stuff, or stole it. Then we’ll
know who…authorized it. You may know already, of
course.”
He sat down slowly in his chair and put his hands
flat on his desk, and leaned forward, staring at me.
The color went out of his face.
“What are you saying?”
I just looked at him.
“Do you mean to tell me that you think that I…that
I…authorized somebody to kill those horses? Is that
what you think? Have you lost
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your mind? I would never on this earth…I didn’t
know. God, Caro.
God
…”
He looked sick. It did not dampen the fire of my fury
at all. The horrified face over that awful, silly Alamo
pin made me angrier than I have ever been in my life.
What right had he to mourn that old horse, if indeed
that was what he was feeling, when what he planned
for its island was so much worse than anything I could
even imagine.…
“Don’t be a fool, Clay. Of course I know that you
did not authorize it. I don’t think you had to authorize
it. Do you remember, when we saw
Becket
, in
Charleston? And Henry the Second said, ‘Will no one
rid me of this meddlesome priest?’ and looked around
at all his…his henchmen? He didn’t say, ‘Somebody
go kill Thomas Becket’; he didn’t have to. They all
knew what he meant. And pretty soon a couple of them
got up and kind of slid out of the room and you
knew…Who said it here, Clay? Somebody did.
Somebody poisoned those horses in the name of this
company. If you didn’t know about it, you ought to
be able to figure out who did. I could give you a pretty
good guess right now. He’s back over there right now
with that bunch of snake-oil salesmen you plan to sell
my island to. Okay, I came to tell you what I decided
about that. Listen up. There’s not going to be any sale.
There’s not going to be any golf course, or marina, or
shop
392 / Anne Rivers Siddons
ping center, or Gullah World over there. I’m not giving
it to you. And—”
He got to his feet and came around the desk.
“Caro, let’s go home. We can talk about this at
home. You’re upset about the horses; God, I don’t
blame you. We’ll straighten it out, I promise. I could
use some rest, too. We’ll have lunch out on the patio
and then we’ll—”
I took a deep breath. I don’t want to say this, I
thought, but I did say it. I only knew as I did that I
meant it. At least for now, I meant every word of it. It
almost broke my heart.
“I’m staying over at the island, Clay,” I said. “I can’t
go…home…now. I don’t know when I can again. It
just feels all of a sudden like I don’t belong here and
never did. But the island…at least that’s mine. My
place. Maybe in a little while I’ll feel differently, but
right now…”
“No,” he said.
I stopped and looked at him. There was something
strange and terrible in his voice. He had turned to the
window again. I could see that his neck and shoulders
were held as rigidly as a statue’s.
“No,” he said again. “It’s not your place. It never
was, Caro. It’s still in my name. Technically, I can do
whatever I want with it.”
I could not understand what he was saying.
“But I…I signed that thing,” I said. “You know, the
transfer of title. Remember, you
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brought it home and I signed it, and you said that all
that was left was for you to file it at the county court-
house.…”
My voice trailed off. He did not turn.
“You didn’t file it, did you?” I said.
“I thought I did. Or at least I thought it had been
filed,” he said. “I gave it to Hayes to do; he’s the com-
pany lawyer, after all. He said he’d take care of it.
But…he didn’t. I didn’t know that, Caro. All those
years I thought it was yours, too. He only told me
when the business about Calista came up and it looked
like we were going under. He said…he said that
something just told him not to file that thing, to hang
on to that land for me. He said he knew he should
have told me, but he didn’t think it would ever come
up, and that no harm would be done by you thinking
it was yours. And it wouldn’t have…if things had been
different in Puerto Rico…”
My head swam as badly as I remembered it doing
when I was first pregnant with Carter and could hardly
take an unassisted step for three months. I sat down
abruptly in Clay’s visitor’s chair. He still did not turn
from the window.
“You should have told me,” I said.
“Yes. I should have. But by the time I knew, it looked
as if we really might be able to come up with some-
thing you…could live with…and I could tell you then.
I still thought so until this trip. Even with South Ward
in the saddle, I
394 / Anne Rivers Siddons
thought my…vision for it could prevail. You always
liked my vision for the Lowcountry land, Caro. Your
grandfather understood it, and liked it.…”
“My grandfather would die of shame if he knew
about any of this,” I said. “He would die. And your
children. How do you think Kylie would feel about
this? My God, I’m almost glad…”
I did not finish, but I saw the words hit home. He
flinched slightly, but said nothing. Finally I got up and
walked back to the door. I hoped dully that he would
not turn around. I did not think I could bear to see the
Alamo pin again. I did not think I could bear to see
his face.
“Will you give it to me now?” I said, stopping at the
door. I was amazed to hear that my voice was merely
conversational.
“I…no. Caro, I can’t. Don’t you see? This will save
us. This will save everything we’ve ever worked for,
save everything I’ve ever built here, everything I’ve
ever wanted for this land.…Don’t you see that? Don’t
you see that it’s for your future, too? Can’t you see
that most of it won’t even touch you over at your pre-
cious house?”
“I’ll ask you again. Will you deed it back to me?”
“I can’t do that,” he said. It was a whisper, a terrible
sound. “I can’t just…not have anything.
Low Country / 395
Not after having it all. Not after all this time. Not after
what I’ve made here…”
“It was never yours,” I said. “You were a guest here
from the first time you set foot on this island. I asked
you here. I let you come. My grandfather let you come
because of me. It’s a fine thing you’re doing to repay
us, Clay.”
I went back out through the reception area. Neither
Shawna nor any of the other women were there. The
phones were ringing shrilly. I left them shrieking their
frustration and went out into the sun. After the cool
dimness of the office, it was blinding. Behind me, very
faintly, I heard him calling me: “Caro! Caro!”
I don’t remember thinking much at all while I drove
back to the island except, I don’t know how to be
anything but Clay Venable’s wife and Carter and
Kylie’s mother. That leaves one out of three. I wonder
if it’s enough.
Enough for what, I could not have said.
I drove over to Dayclear and asked Janie to find Ezra
Upchurch for me. She looked into my face and said
nothing, just went out back and rang the big indigo
bell. I sat out front and waited for him, and she did
not join me. It was high noon; no one was about. I
supposed that most of the people of Dayclear were
having their lunches and perhaps their naps. A few, I
knew, would be looking at the beginning soaps. Their
stories, as they called them. For a moment I ached with
the
396 / Anne Rivers Siddons
simple, one-celled wish to be one of them.
Ezra came from behind the settlement, grease on his
hands and shirt. He still carried a wrench. I knew that
something mechanical in Dayclear had to be fixed
every day. I wondered what the settlement would do
when Ezra concluded his business here and went back
to Washington, or wherever his next crusade took him.
I found that I could not imagine this stark, sunny little
street without him.
He dropped down into the chair next to me.
“He told you about the deed,” he said. It was not a
question.
I did not ask him how he knew. He told me, though.
“A deed’s a matter of public record,” he said. “I went
and looked it up at the courthouse when I first knew
what was going on over here. You always check your