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
They know? I thought, and then, of course: his watch.
The tears threatened. I turned my head. Then I
looked back.
On a small sapling that leaned over the grave
someone had hung photographs. I saw one of Lita,
obviously taken at some school event, solemn and alien
in a dark dress with a white collar and a little wreath
of flowers in her wild hair. There was one of a smiling
young couple in front of a great wedding-cake church:
Luis and his bride on their wedding day. Oh, dear
God…the last one was a photograph of Lita on Nissy,
taken at my house on the marsh. I recognized the steps
up to the deck. Luis’s dark-furred hand held a rope
that had been slipped around Nissy’s neck, and she
had pulled it taut, but was standing, still and mulish,
with the grinning child on her back. Behind them, al-
most out of focus, I stood, smiling, the light from the
creek silhouetting my flyaway hair. I remembered that
day: it had been New Year’s Eve, the day we had all
spent at my house, the day of the night when I first
stayed alone at the house after the great fear had be-
gun, and did not drink. The day that Luis had told me
about finding what you would die for, and then living
for it…
I felt my knees give again, and Sophia tightened her
hold around my waist. I knew that she had taken the
photograph and that she had prob
454 / Anne Rivers Siddons
ably placed it there with Luis’s other sparse treasures.
I did not think, after all, that I could do this.
As if at a signal, though I heard none, the people
began to hum quietly, and to sway back and forth to
the rhythm of the music. It had no words, and the tune
was atonal and sounded very old in the cold, quiet
glade. Outside the wall of trees the wind moaned, but
in here it did not stir the bare branches. The people
hummed and hummed, and I closed my eyes and let
the sound take me where it would.
When I opened them again, the humming was
slowing, and then it stopped. Ezra Upchurch came out
of the small crowd and stood beside the open grave.
He wore overalls over a flannel shirt, clean but worn
thin and faded almost patternless. He had a great, vivid
camellia in his overall strap, and he looked down at
the coffin of his friend and put his hand lightly on it.
There were silver tear tracks on his dark face. He took
a great breath and looked up at the crowd, and said,
in a voice that rang out over the clearing and into the
woods: “Our friend Luis felt that cycle leavin’ him, and
he say, ‘Uh-oh, Lord, I think I’m coming home.’ And
the Lord say, ‘I know you, Luis. Come on home…’”
And I knew that I could not stay. Murmuring to
Sophia, I turned and stumbled back out of the clearing
and through the vines until I
Low Country / 455
stood again in the muddy road. Tears flooded my face
and soaked into the collar of Clay’s jacket, and my
chest heaved and bucked. The big grief was back, but
there was something else, too. It was a simple, one-
celled gratitude. I had wondered if it was the right
thing, laying him to rest here so far from anyone and
anything that he had known. And I saw now that it
was. He would be a part of them forever now. They
would make him so. They would make a song of him
and for him. They would make a great tale of him and
for him. He would belong to them in a way that many
of their own never did, and their children would sing
of him, and their children, and as long as Dayclear
stood, Luis Cassells would be at home.
And Dayclear would stand.
Looks like we’re stuck with you, I said to him in my
head. Looks like you’re stuck with us. You’re ours now.
Sleep tight, Luis.
And I went back down the road to Auntie Tuesday’s
house.
“It ain’t over, is it?” she said. She had been nodding
by the stove. Its red was fading to gray, and I stooped
and opened the door and poked at it until it leaped
into life again.
“No. I…I just couldn’t be there anymore.”
“That all right. We knows you come. He knows,
too.”
We sat in silence for a bit, and then I sighed
456 / Anne Rivers Siddons
and said, “I’d better go see what I can do about Lita.”
She nodded. “I tol’ her you was on your way. She
just turned her head. I ’spec it be all right now,
though.”
“Don’t count on it, Auntie.”
“Well, you know, I seed that it was.”
I shook my head and got up and went into the bed-
room where Lita was.
It was darkened, obviously in the hope that she
would sleep, but she was not asleep. She lay very still,
curled on her side, facing the door. Auntie had covered
her with the same beautiful quilt she had laid over her
after the mare had died, but it seemed to me that the
little body under it was vastly diminished now, much
smaller than the one I had seen here before. I could
not make out her face, both because of the darkness
and the tangle of hair that had fallen into it. But I could
see the gleam of the whites of her eyes. They did not
seem to blink.
I sat down on the bed beside her. She did not move.
I reached out to touch her hair, and she flinched
slightly, so I let my hand fall to the quilt.
“Hello, baby bug,” I said. “Auntie told you I’d come,
didn’t she?”
She did not move.
“I know that you don’t feel like talking right now,
and that’s okay,” I said. “It’s all right to be sad. I’m
sad, too. Your abuelo was the most won
Low Country / 457
derful man, and we’ll miss him terribly. But there are
still a lot of people who love you, and we’re all worried
because you won’t talk to us. Do you think you might
just try a word or two?”
Nothing.
“Well, then, I’ll just sit here with you for a while. I
think Auntie’s making us some supper. In a little while
I’ll go get it and bring it in on a tray, and we can have
it together right here. Like a picnic. Would you like
that?”
She did not speak, but she put one hand out and
clamped it onto my wrist. The strength in it was almost
frightening.
“You don’t want me to go?” I said, looking into her
face.
This time she shook her head, very slightly, no. No.
“Then I won’t. Auntie will bring in our supper.
Would you…” And I knew that it was something I
must do. “Would you like me to stay here with you
tonight?”
She nodded her head, still not speaking. Yes. Her
fingers tightened on my wrist.
“If I stay, will you try to close your eyes and sleep a
little bit? After our supper, I mean.”
No. Her head shook back and forth, harder and
harder. No. There was fear in her white-ringed eyes.
Well, I could not blame her. The last time she had shut
her eyes her grandfather had died.
458 / Anne Rivers Siddons
But we could not sit here like this forever, her hand
fastened in a death grip on my arm, her eyes staring,
staring.
Then I had a thought.
“Would you like to go see Yambi? He’s right up
there behind Janie and Esau’s store, and every time
anybody goes by he says, ‘Where’s Lita? Where’s
Lita?’ I bet he’s lonesome, too. He lost his mommy,
just like you lost your abuelo.”
She stared into my face intently for what seemed a
very long time. Then, very slowly, she pulled her arms
out from under the quilt and held them out to me. I
could literally see them quivering with fear, but she
did it.
I reached out and took her into my arms and held
her close to me for a while, feeling the rabbitlike tremor
of her heart, and then got up and carried her out into
the living room. Auntie looked up and smiled.
“MMMM hmmm,” she said. “Yes
sir
.”
“We’re going to walk up and see Yambi,” I said over
Lita’s head. She had buried it in my neck, and was
clinging for dear life. “I think we might like a bite to
eat when we get back.”
“Got me some vegetable soup and corn bread,” she
said. “And got a warm yam here for that colt. Been
savin’ it. He like to eat me out of yams, but this one’s
special. Wait a minute, let me put somethin’ round
her.”
She pulled herself up out of the chair and tot
Low Country / 459
tered stiffly over to a hook behind the back door and
took a thick old maroon cardigan from it and wrapped
it close around the child. I settled her deeper into the
circle of my arms and went out of the house into the
wind.
She weighed almost nothing, but I was still breathing
hard when we reached the store, partly because of the
fear that gripped my heart. What if she did not speak?
What if she never did again? Who was there that could
heal this child?
We did not see the colt at first, but I called softly,
“Yambi, Yambi,” and then he came, trotting around a
little lean-to that Esau had obviously made to shelter
him from the weather. His legs had grown longer, and
his mane and tail were more luxuriant than the little
stiff brushes I remembered, and he looked altogether
better than I could have expected. The Bigginses or
someone had been currying him; his coat was as sleek
as I supposed a marsh tacky’s ever got, and on his
narrow little head was a soft rope snaffle. He stopped
and looked at us.
“Look, Lita,” I said. “He’s waiting for you.”
Against my shoulder, she shook her head. But then
slowly she turned it, and she looked. I felt a tremor go
through the little body.
I reached into my jacket pocket and pulled out the
yam. It was still warm and ashy from its tenure in the
coals of Auntie’s stove.
“Why don’t you give him this?” I said, and
460 / Anne Rivers Siddons
she held her hand out very slowly, and I laid it in her
palm.
She looked up at me, and then she held it out over
the barbed wire fence.
The colt was still, his head cocked. We were not
among the callers he was used to. On the other hand,
we came bearing yams. I watched while he worked it
out. The yam won.
He came trotting with his springy step up to the
fence and put his black nose into Lita’s palm and took
the yam with his rubbery black lips. He gulped it with
one great swallow, nosed at her hand, and then put
his head over the fence and began to nose and sniff at
her arm and neck and face and hair. I felt rather than
saw the beginning of the smile on her face.
We stood there for a long time, the silent child and
I, she smiling now, her eyes closed, as the colt nuzzled
her face and neck with his wet black nose. Tears ran
down my face in sheets, and I did not even realize it
until much later, when my wet collar began to grow
cold.
We must have stood there for ten or fifteen minutes
when she turned her face back into my shoulder and
gave a great sigh and said, so softly that I almost did
not hear her, “It’s time to go home now, Caro.”
I stood very still, holding her. The colt began nosing
at my arms and hands. I looked far into myself, feeling
with my heart. Yes, she was still
Low Country / 461
there, my daughter, the tiny, focused, radiant essence
of her, burning steadily.
“Can we do this?” I whispered.
And as if she had said it, I knew that we could, knew
that the point of flame that was Kylie Venable could
warm both me and this cold child, and could do so
forever. I put my chin down on the top of Lita’s head.
“Yes,” I said. “Yes, it is. So let’s do it. There’s some-
body I want you to meet.”
There is no Peacock’s Island on St. Helena’s Sound,
or anywhere else, that I know of, but perhaps there
might have been, and if there had, I think it would be
a lot like this one. There are no actual people like the
ones in this book, but perhaps if there had been, they
might have lived on Peacock’s Island. There is no
Gullah settlement called Dayclear, and indeed, the very
name is my invention; the accepted Gullah word for
dawn is “Dayclean,” though I have seen “Dayclear” in
one or two places. There
are
wild ponies, or marsh
tackies, still on some of the Sea Islands, and there are
resort developments on almost all of them, many of
them called plantations, but Peacock Island Plantation
is my own hybrid. There is, thank God, an Ace Basin,
and it contains all the wildlife mentioned in this book
and more, except a twenty-foot alligator named Leviath-
an and a one-hundred-and-twenty-five-year-old pan-
ther—and after all, in the Lowcountry, who knows?
My thanks and love to Barbara and Duke Hagerty,
who shared their friendship, their library, their house
and home, and their passion for Edisto Island and the
Ace Basin; to Sandra Player, whose miraculous teenage
years provided Caro Venable with a provenance of her