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
beach road and our house. I stepped on the gas when
I got through the traffic circle; I had no wish to meet
the first of the media gathered at the bridge over to the
island. But when I approached it, it lay empty and
dreaming in the first sun, only a couple of Gullah
crabbers tossing their lines over into the black water.
I lifted a hand and smiled, and they smiled back. I
knew them but did not remember their names. I knew
that they lived in Dayclear, though. I wondered how
much longer they would be free to crab in this little
estuary.
I flicked on the radio and found the station in
Charleston that played baroque music in the early
mornings. “Spring” from
The Four Seasons
uncurled
into the Jeep, and I smiled. I turned off onto my dirt
road and swept around the curve to the live oak ham-
mock in a shower of glittering notes.
Clay’s Jaguar was parked under the trees. Even as
my lips framed the word “shit,” my heart leaped like a
gaffed mullet in my chest.
I stopped the Jeep a little way from the Jaguar and
looked around. I saw no evidence that he was in the
house; it was still dark, and no smoke came from the
chimney. I did not see him on the hammock or out on
the boardwalk to the dock,
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either. I sat still, trying to decide how I would think
about this, how I would act when I saw him. I could
not even imagine why he was here, on this of all days.
I decided on Dorothy Parker.
“What fresh hell is this?” I said aloud, in what I
hoped was a coolly amused voice, as I got out of the
Jeep.
No one answered me but an outraged squirrel in the
live oak over my head.
I was almost up to the steps when I heard the faint
putt-putt of the Whaler out on the creek. I went down
to the edge of the boardwalk over the reeds and dark
water and stood watching as it came out of the glitter
of the morning sun and glided to rest against the dock.
He got out and stood looking toward me. He was
bathed in the dancing light, as he had been the first
time I saw him, and he was as tall and flame-tipped
and lithe as he had ever been then. This was not fair.
I felt a great, simple, abject grief start in my chest.
“I want that back,” I whispered aloud. “Oh, I want
that back.”
I went to meet him.
I was perhaps fifteen feet away from him before his
face came clear out of the dazzle, and I gasped aloud
and stopped. Clay had been crying. His long face was
as red and congested as Carter’s when he was a toddler
and just coming out of a spell of weeping; his eyes
were bloodshot
Low Country / 427
and slitted, and the silver scum of dried tears glittered
in the silvery stubble on his chin and cheeks. His hair
had not been combed, and was wildly tangled from
the wind on the Whaler.
I had never seen Clay cry. Not like this. I simply
looked at him.
“I couldn’t find you,” he said, and his lips shook,
and his voice broke.
“I wasn’t here,” I said stupidly.
He shook his head hard, and tears flew out into the
warming air. His face contorted and he turned it away.
“I know. I know you were over at Cassells’s trailer.
I went over there, but the lights were out.…”
“He wasn’t there, Clay,” I said. “He went to Colum-
bia. I was staying with Lita.”
“I know. I didn’t mean I thought you…I just…I just
wanted to see your car, to know you were safe some-
where. I thought you’d have called by now.…I came
over here to wait for you.”
As if by agreement, we began to walk back toward
the house. The boardwalk squeaked and swayed under
our weight. We walked side by side, but we did not
touch. None of this felt at all real. I might have been
watching a movie of myself, walking along a boardwalk
on a spring morning with a man who could not stop
crying. A man I knew only slightly, from another time.
“How did…how did you know where I was?” I said,
more to break the silence than any
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thing. I simply could not get a sense that this was my
husband.
“Ezra Upchurch came to see me last night,” he said.
“He told me. Among other things. Christ, if that wasn’t
a scene…it’s two in the morning and Ezra Upchurch
is knocking on the door yelling for me to open up. I’m
surprised somebody didn’t call the cops.”
“Ezra?” I said stupidly. “I didn’t know you knew
Ezra.”
“I guess he figured it was time he introduced him-
self,” Clay said, and to my surprise began to laugh. It
was not so far removed from tears, that laugh, but it
was a laugh. I laughed, too. I could not imagine why.
At the beginning of the boardwalk my grandfather
had built a pair of facing cypress benches, weathered
now into a silky silver gray, and when we reached them
he sagged onto one of them and I sat down on the
other. We looked at each other across the boardwalk
where we had met, all those years ago.
“Ah, God, Caro,” he said presently. “So much shit.
So much misery. So much…waste. I don’t know what
I was thinking. I really don’t. Well, I
wasn’t
thinking,
of course…Listen, can we talk a little bit? Will you just
listen to me without saying anything? I don’t mean
you should…change your mind about anything, but if
you’d just listen…”
Low Country / 429
“Clay, I will always listen to you,” I said. “When did
I not?”
“Well, do you think…could you make some coffee?
I couldn’t find the cord to the pot.…”
“Come on,” I said. “Let’s go to the house.”
All the way across the grass and up the steps my
heart was hammering as if it would explode in my
chest. What was this? What could this possibly mean?
I made the coffee while he took a shower. I saw that
he had slept on the sofa under a welter of quilts. The
fire was cold and sour, and I relit it. It was really too
warm for it, but I wanted the intimate hiss and snicker
of it, and the dancing light. The living room was still
in darkness, from the sheltering oaks. I turned on the
lamps and brought out a tray of coffee and some of
the Little Debbies that were Esau and Janie Biggins’s
sole gesture toward breakfast food.
He came into the room in an old pair of madras
shorts and a sweatshirt. His feet were bare and his hair
was wet and standing straight up in spikes from the
towel. The sweatshirt was a horror of Carter’s that
said, RUGBY PLAYERS EAT THEIR DEAD. I was sure that
Clay had no idea it said anything at all. I felt wild,
braying laughter behind the tears in my chest. I bit my
lips and waited.
“All right,” he said on a long, exhaled breath. “Listen.
The press thing at the bridge…the
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march, you know…that’s off. Ezra’s Washington
people have been calling all night. And the project, the
development, you know, the Dayclear thing…that’s
off, too. I pulled out of it. I called the SouthWard guys
at the guest house while Ezra was still at the house and
told them to hit the road. He wouldn’t leave until I’d
given him the deed and he’d torn it up. Burned it, too.
He’s one tough cookie, Ezra Upchurch. And he still
wouldn’t leave until I’d called Hayes and fired him.
That did it, though. After that we broke out the Glen-
fiddich and drank until about four, and then he left to
get things straightened out with the press, and I went
on over to Edisto, and then came back here. I hadn’t
been out on the water for fifteen minutes before you
came.”
He stopped and looked at me. I could not think of
a single thing on earth to say to him.
“Why did you fire Hayes?” I said finally.
“Suspicion of equicide,” my husband said, and began
to laugh. I did, too. We sat in the growing light of this
day I had dreaded and laughed and howled and wept
and sobbed and laughed some more, and pounded
our thighs with our fists, and when we finally subsided,
Clay began to cry again.
I moved over to the sofa and sat down beside him
and put my arm around his shoulder, very tentatively.
I felt that I was trying to comfort a total stranger,
someone I had met on an airplane
Low Country / 431
or something, who had become suddenly inconsolable.
It was almost…unseemly.
“Did you really do those things, Clay?” I said finally.
“Did all that really happen?”
His face was buried in his hands, but he nodded.
I sat back and thought about that.
“Then…nothing is going to happen over here. There
isn’t going to be anything built on Dayclear?”
He nodded.
“Do you mean for now, or ever? You still own it;
will you change your mind somewhere along the way?
Will we go through this again?”
He raised his head and looked at me. It was painful
to look at him.
“Caro,” he said, “Last night, when I finally lay down
to try to sleep, I thought Kylie was here. I could have
sworn on a stack of Bibles that I heard her laughing,
that I heard her walking outside; I’d know her step
anywhere. I thought I heard her…talking, but I
couldn’t hear what she said. And when I got up to see,
I heard…I heard the panther. And I knew then that if
I did anything to this island I would be haunted for
the rest of my life by it. I knew that it was theirs, not
mine, yours and theirs, and your grandfather’s, and
the Dayclear folks…I knew that I never had belonged
here and never would, not the way all of you did and
do. They told me that, that pan
432 / Anne Rivers Siddons
ther and my dead baby. I know it’s not possible, but
that is what I heard. I started crying then. If I’m losing
my mind…then so be it.”
I felt joy and peace flood into my heart like an
artesian well.
“If you’re losing you mind, then I am, too,” I said.
“I’ve heard her here. I’ve talked to her. I’ve thought I
saw her. And Luis and Lita heard the panther the
morning…that Nissy died. I think…I think…that either
that panther must be about one hundred and twenty-
five years old or this island knows what we need to
hear, and somehow…sees that we do. In any case, it
doesn’t matter. If you heard them, then maybe it can
be your island, too.”
He shook his head, no.
“But I’d like…I’d like to stay here on it with you, if
you think you could let me do that. I thought you’d
gone, Caro. I didn’t think you would come back. I
didn’t think I could live with that.”
I reached out and touched a tear track on his face.
He covered my hand with his and pressed it into his
bristled cheek.
“We’ll lose everything, won’t we?” I said, not pulling
away. “If you don’t do Dayclear? The company, the
house…Is that why you’re crying? Surely, Clay, there’s
something else you can do, some other way you can
put your gift to work…and I don’t care about the other
stuff. I can live
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over here for the rest of my life. I was going to; I
thought that was what I would do. I can sell my
paintings. We could manage.…”
He shook his head and grinned, a small, watery grin.
“We’ll do okay,” he said. “I’ll find somebody decent
to sell the company to, somebody who’ll be generous;
there have been good offers along the way. The Pea-
cock Island Plantation Company is not chopped liver.
I have a ton of stock. We could keep the house if you
wanted to, but somehow I don’t think I could live there
now, and I was sure you wouldn’t want to. Carter may
want to be a part of it, and we can work that out with
the new owners. I don’t give a shit about any of that
stuff; it’s history. I want to see if I can earn my right
to be part of this over here. That will be enough to
hold me a few thousand years. No, what got to me
was…I guess the thought of Kylie, and how she would
feel about what I had become, and then that poor
goddamned horse, and the colt…Kylie loved those
horses…and Hayes. Hayes was my friend, Caro. Hayes
was my first friend in this place, almost my first friend
period.…”
“Did he admit…that he had anything to do with the
horses?”
“He didn’t say he didn’t. He just blustered and
threatened and yelled; he really lost it when I told him
there wasn’t going to be any project.
434 / Anne Rivers Siddons
Said I was ruining him. Said I had betrayed him, after
everything he’d done for me. I remembered what you
said about Becket…I think he did it, or had it done.
God help him for that.”
“There may be proof by now that he was behind it,
Clay,” I said. “That was why Luis went to Columbia.
He has a contact there who’s going to tell him, who
can name names and places and all that. He was going
to bring it back with him for the press conference. You
should have it soon.…”