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
out to see you and talk to me some about what hap-
pens next; he’ll stay at the
444 / Anne Rivers Siddons
house and make the office his headquarters for a while.
I don’t think I’m going back in there. He can run it.
Everybody’s jobs are okay for a while, until something
happens. I’m going to give him carte blanche to fire
Shawna’s ass if she mouths off to him, though. Caro,
I’m just amazed at that boy. He’s breathing fire to get
hold of this; he really thinks he might be able to work
something out with the investors so we can keep some
of the Plantation. I’m going to let him try. I’m going
to let him try. I’m going to sign the whole thing over
to him. If it goes under the onus will be on me, not
him, and if he can salvage anything, he’ll be a legend
before he’s thirty. Why didn’t I know he could do
this?”
“Why didn’t I?” I whispered with my cracked voice.
“He’s very like you at that age, isn’t he? I think I knew
that, but not really…I haven’t been very interested in
Carter for a long time. I don’t know if I can make that
up to him or not.”
“He understands. He’d heard about Luis, by the
way; apparently he’s some kind of folk hero among
the Gullahs and the grounds staff.”
I nodded. They would make a song about him now,
I knew, about the big Latin man who rode out on the
motorcycle to save their village and died for it.
Oh, Luis, you idiot, I thought, the tears rising again.
Why couldn’t you just have lived for it?
I shook the tears away. I knew that they
Low Country / 445
would come back, but not yet, and perhaps never again
in such a surf of anguish.
“Tell me about the funeral,” I said, and Clay did.
They were going to bury Luis in the little old
cemetery in the woods beyond Dayclear. There would
be a graveside service only, and Ezra would preach it.
I was invited to come, and Lottie Funderburke, but no
other white people would be there. Clay was not in-
vited.
“Well, I shouldn’t be,” he said. “I didn’t know him.
And yeah, they know by now that I’m not going ahead
with the project, but I haven’t given them much reason
to trust me. I’m going to have to earn that, if I ever
can. It wouldn’t be right for me to be there. I wouldn’t
go if they asked me. But I want you to, if you’re up to
it. And Caro…afterward, you do whatever you need
to do.”
I looked at him.
“About what?”
“Anything. Anything at all.”
For the rest of the afternoon, I slept again, off and
on. The rain stopped and a cold wind blew the tattered
clouds away, and a hard blue sky glittered like steel
over the marsh. Clay built up the fire in the living room
and we moved there on the sofa, and between my naps
we talked. Not about much of import, and not for long,
for the sleep would take me almost in mid-sentence,
and I
446 / Anne Rivers Siddons
would go under. But we talked. It was a beginning.
Out of that afternoon came one thing that shines for
me like a Christmas star. We decided that the entire
island, “my” part of it, would become an irrevocable
trust called the Elizabeth Kyle Venable Foundation,
and that it would hold the land as it was, against any
development, in perpetuity. It was Clay’s idea. I did
not doubt that it would happen. This was not the same
man I had left in his office a few days back, calling
angrily after me.
Early that evening Carter came. I was asleep on the
sofa and could not seem to wake enough to do any-
thing but smile at him and hold him as he bent over
me. He looked so like the young Clay that it was al-
most laughable; the same messianic glint in his blue
eyes, the same hunger as he looked out over the dark-
ening marsh and creek.
“I hope you never lose the look in your eyes, but you
can’t have my island,” I said sleepily to him.
“I don’t want it, Ma,” he said, kissing me on the
forehead. “Gon’ have my own island.”
I slept again. When I woke it was to a cold, blowing
blue morning, with the marsh grass rippling silver be-
fore the wind. The gold was gone. January was back,
and Luis Cassells’s funeral loomed like a great, dark
rock.
Low Country / 447
I drove to Dayclear alone, and parked the car at the
Bigginses’s store. No one was there and it was locked.
I knew that all of Dayclear would be at the cemetery
except Auntie Tuesday. Sophia had called that morning
and told me that Auntie was staying with Lita, and
asked that I stop by on my way to the service.
I walked down the rutted road, Clay’s down jacket
pulled tight against the cutting wind. I dreaded this
visit. Sophia had said that Lita was very bad and Auntie
was worried, but she had not said in what way the
child was damaged. I knew, though: the great, dead
silence would be back. Of course it would. Lita had
lost the one great, fine, solid thing she had left in the
world.
“Has she asked for me?” I said to Sophia, dreading
the burden of Lita’s need, for I still felt frail and hollow
and as transient as milkweed. But she had not.
“She hasn’t spoken. She hasn’t moved. And she
hasn’t slept. This is for two days now, Caro,” Sophia
said. “She lies in Auntie’s bed all curled up like a fetus,
and she just stares at the wall. Auntie says she doesn’t
think she’s closed her eyes since Lottie brought her.
She won’t take the tea or the broth. She’s like she’s
dead.”
“What will happen to her?” I whispered in pain.
“I don’t know. Auntie can’t keep her forever;
448 / Anne Rivers Siddons
this is wearing her out, and she’s God knows how old.
Ezra doesn’t know of anybody in Cuba, but he’s going
to get his people to look around in Miami and see if
there’s anybody who can take her. I might sometime
in the future; Mark’s crazy about her, but I don’t know
yet what we’re going to be doing after this, and if
there’s anything she doesn’t need it’s more uncertainty,
more dislocation. I could wring Luis’s neck if he hadn’t
already done it. Anybody responsible for a child has
no business running off in the middle of the night on
a motorcycle…”
I agreed with her, but I did not want to hear any
such talk about Luis.
“Well, she has a hero for a grandfather. That’s no
small thing, is it?” I said crisply.
She laughed a little.
“No. I guess not. It’s just that a dead hero isn’t going
to take care of her right now, is he?”
So I walked the few muddy yards to Auntie Tues-
day’s house in pain and dread of what I would find. I
did not know if I could get through the funeral without
the endless salt surf of the tears breaking over me again,
much less take the weight of this mute, shattered child.
Auntie was in her rocking chair before the roaring
stove. The little shack was dim and warm to stuffiness,
but it felt good. Auntie smiled up at me but did not
get up, and I saw that she was weary down to the very
bird’s bones of her. I
Low Country / 449
wondered how long she could withstand the sucking
tiredness before she simply crumpled before it like tis-
sue. Ezra would have to get her some help when this
funeral was over; bring in a nurse or a girl from another
village, something. She was simply too frail to tend
this stricken child.
“How you doin’, chile?” she said, and I sat down
opposite her on the old rump-sprung Morris chair.
“I’m better than I was, thanks to your tea and your
soup,” I said. “I was in awful shape, Auntie. I should
have been over here helping you, but I was…I don’t
know. Almost crazy, or something. I think you saved
my silly life.”
“No, you find the way to do that by yo’self,” she
said. “I just hurry it along a little. You need to git them
tears out; I’ve knowed that ever since yo’ baby died.
And Luis, mmm, mmmm. He’s one of God’s good
ones. We gon’ miss him, yes, we are. You done right
to cry for him. I cried, too. We all did. I just wish his
grandbaby could cry for him, but she in there like a
little stone baby. Don’t look like any of the old things
gon’ work for her now.”
“You want me to go see if she’ll talk to me?”
“Not till after the service,” she said. “You needs to
go to that. You needs to bear witness with the others.
After that you come on back here and we’ll see does
she want to talk to you. The thing is, she think you
done gone, too. I say you’s
450 / Anne Rivers Siddons
coming this afternoon an’ she just look at me. I know
what she thinkin’. She don’t even want to go see that
colt. I know she thinks he dead, too. An’ why wouldn’t
she? Everything and everybody she love done gone
and left her.…”
I looked down into my lap. The tears were very near.
“Go on now. The cemetery’s just through them
wooden gates behind my house. You cain’t see it from
the road, but it there. The others are already down
there, I reckon. Been workin’ since early morning.”
I followed her directions through the wet tangle of
undergrowth behind her cabin. Sure enough, there
were the old rail gates, weathered silver and half-col-
lapsed. I went through them, and pushed through a
thicket of vines, and the cemetery was there.
It was little more than a clearing in the woods, and
I remembered that Ezra had said the woods around a
Gullah cemetery were left thick so that the souls of the
dead would not become confused and wander. Would
Luis want to wander from here? I thought. He knew
little else but wandering.…
The headstones were small and listed in the wet
earth, and some were very old. I could not read most
of them for the encroaching moss. Most had the dried
carcasses of wreaths and faded plastic flowers around
them, and many
Low Country / 451
were hung with what seemed to be photographs and
small household objects. Hadn’t Ezra said that the
Gullahs often adorned the graves of their loved dead
with the things they had cherished in life? There was
a bleached and unraveling rag doll on a small grave,
and a rotting pair of boots that had once been fine on
another, and most of them had framed photographs
that had gone yellow and brown and indistinguishable
in the Lowcountry humidity. Around the perimeters
of the little cemetery the sheltering moss hung down
to touch the ground, like curtains that had been drawn
to enclose it. How cozy it was, this tiny village of the
dead of Dayclear, I thought. Nothing could reach you
here.
Almost the entire village stood around a new oblong
in the black earth at the far side of the cemetery, near
the hanging curtain of moss. Beside the hole a raw
yellow pine coffin stood beside a mound of fresh earth.
My knees felt as if they would buckle. I don’t know
what I had thought, but somehow not that I would
really stand and look at the box that held the still body
of my friend who had never in his life been voluntarily
still. Everyone looked up as I came into the clearing,
and most of them smiled. The silence was as thick as
air. They had been waiting for me.
Sophia Bridges stood in the small crowd. She held
her hand out to me, and I went and stood beside her.
She put her arm around me. I let her
452 / Anne Rivers Siddons
take part of my weight; my knees seemed reluctant to
stiffen. As the silence spun out, I made myself look at
the grave and the coffin beside it. “Bear witness,”
Auntie Tuesday had said, and I would do that. I would
not forget this place where we were going to leave
Luis.
The hole in the earth had dark water in the bottom
of it. A bucket sat beside it, and I thought that they
had been trying to bail it out, but I knew that it was
groundwater and that bailing was useless. The water
was never far from the surface of life on this island.
That was all right. Let the clean, dark old salt water
take him. Better that than the arid earth of some per-
petual care field in an anonymous city. I had wondered
if Luis would have wanted to lie here, so far from the
country that he had never, after all, gotten back to,
and had thought that perhaps Ezra should have looked
into a burial in Miami, among other Cubans, some of
whom Luis was sure to have known. But this, this felt
right.
I looked more closely. There were a few florists’
wreaths around the grave, which had cost their senders
more than the florist would ever know, but most of
the flowers were cut from the first of the marsh’s
blooming things: jasmine, and camellias, and great,
drooping fronds of willow that were always the first
to green up. In the middle of the coffin lid was a clock
banked in flowers, stopped at eleven fifty-two. How
did
Low Country / 453