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
He turned his face away.
“I don’t need it. I think I knew when you told me.
Hayes…something has eaten Hayes up inside, like a
worm. There’s nothing left but rottenness. I don’t know
why I never saw it happening. He’s going with South
Ward, by the way; it’s been in the works for months.
He hit me with that, too. He was to deliver the project
and then go in as chief counsel and a managing part-
ner. He’d have been out of Peacock’s before the dust
settled. The deal was that he’d be able to stay in
Charleston, too; Hayes had it all figured out.”
“Well, he’ll have to refigure then.…”
“No, I think they’ll still take him. Oh, he won’t be
chief anything, and he’ll have to move to Atlanta, and
that will kill him and Lucy, and he’ll never make any-
where near the money he stood to make this way…but
Hayes is good about finding venture capital. He ought
to be able
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to smell out enough for South Ward so that they’ll
keep him. I think, for Hayes, living in a suburb of At-
lanta near a strip shopping mall and being a middle-
level money cruncher for South Ward will be worse
than jail. Maybe there’s some justice in the world after
all. I’d like to think there’s a little, after what I’ve
done.…”
“But if you’ve pulled out of the Dayclear project,
what harm
have
you done?” I said, reaching out to
turn him around so that he faced me. His shoulder felt
familiar again all of a sudden, muscle and bone that I
knew.
He turned. His face shocked me. I felt my breath die
in my chest.
“Ezra came for another reason,” he whispered.
“Tell me,” I said.
And that is when he took both my hands in his cold
ones, and told me that Luis Cassells had spun the
Harley off a long curve halfway between Edisto and
Columbia near midnight the night before, and crashed
into a tree, and died, the state patrol thought, on im-
pact.
T
he storm the newscasts had promised us
came a
day early, screaming in from the west on a fast-running
river of upper air. It hit about three o’clock that after-
noon, out of a sky gone inky black and lurid with
flickering lightning, and stalled out over the Lowcoun-
try. It crouched there for twenty-four hours, alternately
flooding the sea and marshes with torrential cold rains
and scourging them with great, punishing winds.
Sometimes there was the spatter of hail on the house’s
tin roof, and sometimes the light went queer and thick
and green and Clay would stand me up and walk me
hurriedly into the middle hall, where there were no
windows, until the dull bellow high overhead passed
and became ordinary rain again. Several tornadoes
spun out of the low, flat clouds; I learned later that
North Charleston had been nipped by one, and a
couple of blocks were tree
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less and shingleless in Peacock Plantation, and the
usual trailer park casualties had occurred. Much later
Lottie told me that the trailer that Luis and Lita had
borrowed was rocked off its foundation, though no
real damage was done. It was as if the very air howled
in grief and outrage for Luis Cassells.
I remember very little of the storm. For almost its
day-and-night-long duration, I cried.
I began to cry at Clay’s words that morning. I felt
as though a lance had gone straight into a monstrous
sac of pain deep within me and let it erupt. I cried
great, shuddering sobs and moans that rose sometimes
into real screams, and gasped for breath that would
not come until my chest heaved and black specks
danced before my eyes, and then sobbed again. I cried
so much that I thought I would die of it; I did not think
that the human heart and lungs could process that
many tears, withstand that kind of savage, battering
grief. When I stopped momentarily, gasping and
rocking back and forth, I could feel a profound aching
deep in the muscles of my stomach and under my ribs
that felt mortal. I frightened myself badly with the ve-
locity and duration of my grief and my inability to stop
it, and I know that I frightened Clay. After an hour or
so of rocking me in his arms on the sofa while the
world outside blazed with lightning and boomed with
thunder, and I wept, he picked me up and walked with
me into the bed
438 / Anne Rivers Siddons
room and laid me under the covers and crawled in
beside me. For the rest of that roaring afternoon, he
held me hard against him and I cried in my grandfath-
er’s old bed.
Sometimes, in a momentary lull, I would try to ex-
plain to him that it was not just for Luis Cassells that
I cried, and I knew that that was true, although the
thought of that lonely death on a dark country roadside
would send me back into a fury of tears whenever it
came, unbidden, into my mind.
“It’s everything, Clay,” I would hiccup. “It feels like
it’s just everything that ever happened to me. He was
never…like that…to me. It’s just…he gave me back
Kylie, in a way. He showed me how to let her go so
she could come back. And, Clay, he showed me how
to stop the drinking; I haven’t drunk anything since
way before he…” And the tears would start again,
endlessly, endlessly.
“I know,” he would murmur against my hair. “I
know. I know who you’re crying for. You never did,
did you? It’s all right. Cry all you need to.”
He didn’t know, not really; I did cry for Kylie, of
course, but through all of that vast storm of anguish I
felt her, that fiery living kernel of her, within me,
burning steadily. I cried, I think, for not having gotten
her back sooner, and I cried for Nissy and her colt,
and I cried for the awful,
Low Country / 439
slinking thing that had ripped Clay away from me and
had given me back this man who, even while I clung
to him, was a stranger to me. I cried for the life that I
had not even liked very much, perhaps, but that had
been the one I knew. I cried for the fear that my fool-
ishness had permitted the Gullahs of Dayclear. I cried
for the gangling, vulnerable teenager who had grown
to manhood waiting for me to really see him again. I
cried for the man who had grown so nearly old waiting
for the same thing. I even cried for Hayes Howland,
for the young Hayes in tennis whites who had brought
me my husband on a summer day.
All that I knew. Still, I could not stop.
Late in the afternoon the phone began to ring and
people began to come to the house. Clay would leave
me for a moment, to talk in low tones on the phone
or to whisper hurriedly to whomever stood in the
streaming doorway, but he always came back and got
into bed with me again.
“Okay,” he would say, pulling me against him. “Let
’er rip.” And I did.
It was a strange state; in a way it was like the feverish
fugue state in which I had painted that night before
Ezra and Lottie had come. I seemed mired in the same
fireshot old darkness, though I realized on some level
that it was only the lightning outside, and the flickering
of the fire in the little bedroom fireplace. I saw images
and heard
440 / Anne Rivers Siddons
things with preternatural clarity: I heard Ezra’s voice
once, from the living room, talking about the funeral
service for Luis, and I heard Sophia Bridges’s cool clear
voice saying, “…I’ll take her, of course, but it isn’t me
she wants,” and knew that she was speaking of Lita,
and could not do anything at all about it. Lita…I found
that I could not even think of Lita.
Later, in the full night, I heard Sophia again, telling
Clay to give me a cup whenever I would take it, and
knew that Auntie Tuesday had sent her magical tea,
and actually smiled to myself before the tears started
again. And I heard her telling him about Lita, about
the horror that had taken her mother and baby brother
and her journey to Luis, and about her silence. I
gathered that she was silent again, once more at
Auntie’s house, and that the tea and the broth were
not working, and that everyone was frightened for her.
I was, too, but I could not make my muscles move me
toward the edge of the bed.
“Ezra and I wanted to bring her over here, but Auntie
says let Caro be. She says a lot of poison has got to
come out before she can help Lita or anybody else.
She says give her the broth and the tea until tomorrow
and then we’ll see. It’s Caro’s time now. Auntie will
tend to Lita.”
Presently she went away, back into the storm, and
Clay came into the room with a tray of Auntie’s
steaming fiddlehead broth, and I took it from
Low Country / 441
him and drank it down greedily. I knew that it would
spin me down into sleep. I thought if I cried anymore
I would surely die.
Sleep came then. A sleep unlike any other I have
ever known. In it fires burned and drums beat and
animals flickered through forests of a primary greenness
I had never known, and children ran laughing and
shrieking, and hot blue seas beat on yellow sand, and
great, hectic flowers hung from vines like boa constrict-
ors. I remember thinking, as you do in dreams, that
this was Eden, and I must be very careful or I would
be cast out of it. It was not a peaceful Eden, not sweet,
not idyllic, but it was so ravenously alive and exuberant
in its fecundity that I could almost feel the fabric of a
still-wet new world forming itself around me.
I woke the next morning with tears still damp on
my face, but this time they were tears of a fierce joy. I
knew, without knowing how, that for a time I would
not cry again.
I was alone in the tumbled bed. I stretched long and
hard, feeling the soreness around my chest and dia-
phragm muscles from the storms of tears, and listened
for the storm outside. It had slunk off in the night,
leaving only a steady rain to patter on the roof. Even
in my drowsing state I knew that it would be a cold
rain. Spring had left us on the wings of the storm.
“Breakfast,” Clay said, coming into the room
442 / Anne Rivers Siddons
with a tray, and I sat up. He was in the ratty old terry
cloth robe he kept out here, and there were damp comb
tracks in his hair. He was freshly shaved, too, but his
eyes were wary and darkly shadowed, and the muscles
of his jaw were as slack as if they had been pounded.
I doubted that he had slept at all.
He brought coffee and pastries that I recognized as
Janie Biggins’s cream cheese turnovers, and orange
juice. And he brought a damp washcloth and a mirror
and comb and a long-sleeved flannel nightgown
smelling of mothballs.
“Good morning,” I tried to say, but my voice was a
painful husk in my sore throat.
“Don’t talk,” he said. “You’ll bust something for
good.”
He handed me the hot washcloth and I scrubbed
my face with it, then looked into the mirror and
flinched. A wild-haired, slit-eyed, mottled-cheeked witch
looked back at me. I combed the snarls out of my hair
and tied it back with the shoelace he had found, and
took a long, scorching swallow of the coffee.
“My God,” I croaked. “That was…extraordinary. I’m
sorry, Clay. I had no idea…I don’t know what…”
“You’re entitled,” he said. “As long as you give me
an hour’s notice if you think you’re going to do it
again. I thought you were dying. I thought you were
just going to…cry up your
Low Country / 443
insides and die. So did everybody else. Only Ezra’s
aunt seemed to know what to do for you. Is her name
really Tuesday?”
“It really is. She’s a conjure woman, they say. A
healer. And she
can
heal. I’d take anything she gave
me, even if it was green and smoking. She sent the tea
and the broth, didn’t she?”
“Yeah. I was afraid to give it to you, but Sophia said
for me to,”
“I thought I heard Sophia. I hope…I know she
resigned, Clay. I hope there’s no hard feelings between
you. She’s a good person. She’s been a good friend to
me.”
“Caro, I didn’t even think about that. I don’t think
she did, either. She told me some more about Luis,
and about the little girl. Did I know about her? I can’t
remember if you told me. God almighty, what is there
left to happen to that child? We need to see if we can
do anything for her.…”
“I’ll have to go,” I said, feeling a great, listless white
fatigue wash over me. “I’ll have to go over there.
Sometimes she’ll talk to me when she won’t to anybody
else. I don’t know if she can get over this, though…but
oh, Lord, Clay, I am just so tired.…”
“I know. You’re not going anywhere today. Tomor-
row, maybe. Carter’s coming in tonight and will be