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
“It was a shitty idea,” he said. “I’m sorry, Caro.
Please forget I even mentioned it. I’m as bad as Ezra,
trying to get you to march with us.…Fuck.”
416 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“No,” I heard myself say. “I’d love to stay with Lita.
You need to do this. Do it for the folks at Dayclear
and the ponies; do it for Nissy and Yambi. You’re
right. If it was Hayes, God help him, then everybody
ought to know it was. Apparently I don’t know my
husband as well as I thought I did, but I do know that
he would never on this earth harm those horses, or let
anybody do it for him. Do it for me if you can’t do it
for Clay. Please, Luis.”
He took a deep breath and nodded. He turned to
Lita.
“Will you stay with Caro and not give her any grief
about going to bed, and not pester her for more than
three stories?”
“I promise,” Lita said. “She can have my bed and I’ll
sleep on the sofa, like you do. I’ll be as quiet as a
mouse. You said fuck, Abuelo.”
“I did, and I should know better. I owe the jar a
nickel. Go cut you and Caro a piece of pizza while she
walks me out to the Harley. Look, Lita, I’m going to
wear Uncle Ezra’s helmet and leather jacket; will I look
like James Dean, do you think?”
“Who’s that?”
“Ay,” he said, rolling his eyes. “I am too old for this.
But I can’t wait to straddle that hawg and eat that as-
phalt up. Think of it, Caro, a breath-held crowd waiting
at the bridge, and I come thundering in on that thing
with the proof of the
Low Country / 417
pudding in my pocket…What more could a man ask?”
“Brains enough to be careful?” I ventured. “I don’t
like the sound of this clandestine stuff, Luis. If your
guy knows that kind of stuff, he’s a criminal himself.
Are you meeting him in a safe place?”
“Deep in the sewers of Columbia at midnight,” he
said. “No, really. I’m meeting him at the VFW hut in
the middle of the parking lot, with a fais-do-do going
on inside. He’s going to wear a red carnation in his
navel and I’m going to carry a rose in my teeth. The
worst danger is that he’ll try to kiss me, and I can al-
ways claim sexual harassment.”
“Then hit the road, fool,” I said as we walked out
into the night. Dark had fallen and the thin curl of
moon had swollen and leaned closer. Someone nearby
had planted Confederate jasmine; the sweet, tender
smell almost took my breath. Even this far inland, the
kiss of salt lay on the wet little night wind.
He pulled on the helmet and shrugged into the
jacket. He should have looked ludicrous beyond words,
but he did not; he looked enormous and rock-solid
and somehow both boyish and dangerous, going off
on this extravagant quest to save something not his
own. But then, had that not been almost his whole
life?
“Do you remember, you told me once to find
418 / Anne Rivers Siddons
what I would die for and then live for it?” I said. “What
is it you would die for, Luis? What is it you live for?
What is it you ride this silly thing to Columbia at night
for?”
He was not smiling when he looked at me.
“For the quaint, old-fashioned notion that people
ought to be able to live wherever the fuck they choose,”
he said. “I ought to be able to go back to Cuba if I
want to. That little girl in there at least ought to have
a choice. The people in Dayclear should, too. You,
too, for that matter. A great deal of this business is so
that you can live on that island of yours if you want
to. Didn’t you know that?”
“I guess I didn’t, really,” I said, around the cold salt
lump in my throat.
He reached out and touched my hair.
“I don’t know what will happen with you,” he said.
“I do know that things change. I think things may
change for you. I don’t know what that means yet. But
when I get back we will talk about it. Can we do that,
Caro? Can we talk about that?”
“Yes,” I whispered.
He stood still with his hand on my head, and then
he leaned over and kissed me very chastely and softly
on the forehead.
“Sleep well with my little girl,” he said. “And I, I will
ride like the wind until my great steed Rosinante brings
me back to you.”
Low Country / 419
“Get out of here.” I laughed, choking on it.
He swung himself into the seat of the Harley and
stomped down on the gas pedal. It roared into life,
throbbing and bucking to get away, to ride out into
the vast black night, to spit out the wind. He wiggled
his eyebrows up and down like Groucho Marx, jerked
back his thumb in the old WWII pilot’s salute, and
gunned the Harley. It leaped forward, roaring, and I
watched it as he leaned into the turn at the bottom of
the street, raised a hand, and was gone.
When I got back into the trailer, the pizza was
waiting, smoking hot, on two flowered Melamine
plates, and
The Lion King
was beginning on the TV
screen.
“I always work the VCR,” Lita said, settling herself
into the rocking chair with her plate of pizza. “It makes
Abuelo say fuck, and then he has to put a nickel in the
jar. It’s half-full now.”
“I’ll bet it is,” I said, beginning to laugh. And that is
what we had for our supper, Estrellita Esteban and I:
pepperoni pizza from the real pizza place, with no
anchovies, and laughter, and a golden lion cub growing
through pain and despair into lordliness.
Lottie came so early the next morning that I was still
in Luis’s old seersucker robe, putting on coffee, and
Lita was still asleep. She had had a restless night,
muttering and whimpering, and I had
420 / Anne Rivers Siddons
heard her from the sofa bed in the little living room
and gone in to her, and finally, when I could neither
fully wake her nor quiet her, crawled in beside her.
She had subsided then, but had rolled against me and
clung there, and I was tired and sweaty when the first
graying of the dark outside the high little windows
came. I got up carefully, so as not to wake her, and
found the robe hanging behind the bathroom door
and put it on over my underwear, and went into the
kitchen. The robe smelled of Luis and somehow of
peat moss, an intimate, earthy smell. I drew it close
around me in the morning chill.
When I had peered out to see who was banging so
peremptorily on the trailer door and let Lottie in, she
grinned, in spite of what was obviously one of her
more advanced hangovers.
“Looks better on you than it does on me,” she said,
indicating the robe. I felt myself color, and she said,
“Oh, for God’s sake. I know he isn’t here. He called
me on his way out of town last night and told me you
were staying, and to come over and get you all going
early so you wouldn’t run into reporters at the bridge.
They’re sure to know your car, and they know about
Lita. He doesn’t want them near either of you. You
ought to know, too, that he and I are what they cus-
tomarily call just good friends now.”
“God, Lottie, I don’t care…”
“Just so you know.”
Low Country / 421
I gave her coffee while I went to wake Lita. She was
fussy and petulant, and clung to me. I had never heard
her whine before, but her manner this morning was
that of a much younger child, and I automatically felt
her forehead to see if she had a fever. She did not.
Well, she was only a small child after all; she was en-
titled to a small regression now and then. I had never
really seen her in any state but her customary cheeky,
sunny one.
“Got up on the wrong side of the bed, did we?” I
said, and she looked in fretful puzzlement at each side
of her double bed.
“It’s just an expression that means fussy,” I said.
“That’s okay. I do it, too, sometimes. Let’s get some
breakfast in you. Lottie’s here to take you over to her
studio with Mark. You all are going to have a great
time. You might not know it, but it’s a real honor. She
doesn’t invite many people over there. She’s a famous
artist, you know.”
She was unimpressed.
“Don’t want to go,” she said, scrubbing fitfully at
her eyes with her fists. “Want to go with you. And I
want to go with Abuelo and ride the hawg in the
march. I want to go home, too.”
“Well, you can’t do all three at the same time,” I said
in the tone I remembered employing with Carter and
Kylie when total unreason ruled. “You were all excited
about going to Lottie’s last
422 / Anne Rivers Siddons
night, to play with Mark. You can’t come with me this
morning, but we’ll do something tomorrow maybe,
or the next day. Where’s home, Lita?”
I should not have had to ask, and felt a frisson of
anger.
“Over there,” she said sullenly, jerking her thumb
back toward the road south. I knew that she meant the
island. What would happen when Luis took her away
from there, as he was bound to do sooner or later?
Where would home be then?
“How about we go see Yambi tomorrow?” I said. “I
hear he’s been asking for you.”
“Promise?”
“I’ll do my best. It’s up to your grandfather.”
“He’ll let me,” she said, some of her sunniness return-
ing. I thought that he would, too.
Lottie made appalling cinnamon toast while I got
Lita into her miniature jeans and T-shirt and running
shoes. When we were ready to go, Lottie said, “Why
don’t you pick out a few toys to take with you?” and
Lita scampered off to gather her treasures.
Lottie turned to me.
“I heard about the island. The deed thing, I mean.
I know somebody who does freelance hits, and in case
you think I’m kidding, I’m not. He would probably
do Clay and Hayes for the price of one. Are you going
to get through this, Caro?
Low Country / 423
Why don’t you come back with us today? It’s not go-
ing to be pleasant, even over where you are. You’re
bound to hear some of it, and there’s always the pos-
sibility that some of those assholes will track you down
at the house. The patrician, betrayed, environmentalist
wife…you’re honey for the flies. Just for today? Luis
and Ezra will keep them away from you after this, but
they’ll be tied up today.…”
“I can take care of myself,” I said. “I think I could
easily shoot any son of a bitch who comes over there
with a camera. I wouldn’t mind a bit. I don’t need Ezra
and Luis to fight my battles for me.”
“Well, don’t shoot anybody. Ain’t none of them
worth jail. Save the bullets for Hayes. Somebody ought
to do it, sure enough. That poor old mare…What will
you do today then?”
“I think I might be ready to paint. If I can do that, I
won’t hear anything from the bridge, and I won’t think
about it.”
“Okay, sweetie,” she said, hugging me. She felt solid
and warm and smelled of bourbon. It was somehow
comforting, and then I realized it was my grandfather’s
smell.
“I’m coming by after I take the children back to
Dayclear tonight, though,” she said. “I’m either going
to spend the night with you or drag you back to my
place. There are nights it’s okay to be alone, but to-
night is not one of them.”
424 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“We’ll see,” I said. The idea of Lottie’s formidable
presence on this looming night was oddly appealing.
When it was over, something very basic to the fabric
of my life would have changed. I knew that. I simply
was not sure what.
It was still early when I pulled out onto 174 and
drove south toward the bridge over to Peacock’s. The
sky was still pink behind the line of black pines to the
east, and there was little traffic in the opposite direc-
tion. The islanders who worked in Charleston would
just be leaving now. I thought that I would get home
and take a long, hot, sulfurous shower and make myself
some real coffee and dig out my camera and take the
Whaler far up the creek. The eleven o’clock news last
night had spoken of a powerful cold front working its
way east through Alabama and Georgia, and predicted
strong thunderstorms and high winds by the evening
of the next day. I knew that meant a return, however
briefly, of cold weather. We were not done with winter
yet. This might be the last of the enchanted gold-green
light on the marshes for several weeks. I remembered
a poem Robert Frost had written about that first gilded
green of spring. It ended, “Nothing gold can stay.”
The line almost brought tears to my eyes as I drove.
Why couldn’t the gold stay? Was it too much to ask?
I crossed over to Peacock’s Island and reso
Low Country / 425
lutely looked neither right nor left as I headed west,
so that I would not have to see the company’s offices
or the artful stand of tropical plantings that led to the