Under Magnolia: A Southern Memoir (20 page)

BOOK: Under Magnolia: A Southern Memoir
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A local florist asked my mother to help him out a few days a week, since she was a founder of the Magnolia Garden Club and known for flower arrangements. She went to his greenhouse a few times then decided that she didn’t want to. The humidity made her hair sticky. Then there was something about the owner’s bad taste—red anthuriums and screaming red ribbons—and not being able to stand looking at his mossy teeth. She bought a typewriter and enrolled in an English course at a college thirty miles away. To get there, she had to get up at seven, even before Willie Bell arrived. She lasted a few weeks, and then gave the typewriter to me and I used it all through high school and college. I brightly suggested that we move to Atlanta, where my sister and her husband lived. Surely there was a job she’d like in Atlanta. “What do you expect me to do, clerk in a store?”

They’d always tipped the bottle. Now Frankye sometimes drank a bit in the daytime. After school, I’d find her at the kitchen table with a gin and tonic, not even looking at a magazine. What was she to do? She always wanted to go somewhere,
anywhere. She had the vibrancy, the looks, the determined helplessness that made you step forth to take over, even if you were eight or nine years old. She had nowhere to go. I watched her energy start to fizzle. Neither my sisters, who were nowhere near, nor I knew depression; we knew bad mood. We didn’t know drinking as disease, but as character flaw. Weakness. We didn’t know “dysfunctional,” but we lived it. We knew that if you were miserable, you brought it on yourself. She taught us.

She gazes in the mirror of her dresser, with two side mirrors reflecting her three-quarter profile. She is multiplied, faceted, broken into aspects. I look at her with blame. When I mention a job, she stares at me as though I’d suggested she walk the streets. Work is not going to work out. She becomes interested in competitive bridge. Unlikely as it is, she’s an excellent bridge player and begins to accumulate masters’ points. When Daddy Jack says she can go on a duplicate bridge cruise in the Caribbean, she has several linen sundresses made, packs her bags, and leaves.

Bridge was the focus of the trip but I knew my mother hoped to meet someone exciting. She’d already surveyed Fitzgerald and found no one presentable. Or, instead, just found no one. During Daddy’s illness, when he still had the wherewithal to drink bourbon, gin, and vodka, I overheard him say, “You’ll be remarried before I’m cold in the grave.” She did not dispute that.

During the day while Frankye cruises, Willie Bell tends to the house and I get myself to school. I’d started driving when I was nine. By twelve, while they were away at the hospital in Atlanta, I’d back out of the driveway then speed back in, over and over. I still can back up as well as I can drive forward. By fifteen, I drive everywhere.

After school, my friends and I “ride around.” Up Lee, down Pine, out the ten-mile stretch where I floor the blue Buick and see how fast it speeds up to 110 mph. At night, I read
The Foxes of Harrow
and other Frank Yerby novels one after another, although the librarian had called my mother to report that I was reading “unsuitable” books. (Yerby was a mulatto.) Reading omnivorously across the library, I by fluke choose Jane Austen, Hamilton Basso, Willa Cather, Flaubert, Hemingway, Thoreau, Fitzgerald, Dreiser, Steinbeck, and Turgenev. (I know this because I still have the blue Reading Log I kept for fifteen years.)
Propped in my white spool bed, a tin of cheese straws within reach, a stack of library books on the table, the house quiet, protective. I am perfectly happy. Imagine, writing a book. What else could you do with your life that could compare with that? I began to keep lists of good words and quotes, to underline sentences I liked, and write notes in margins. Carson McCullers, from right over in Columbus, how did she do it? “In the town there were two mutes, and they were always together.” You can begin a book like that, and, yes, the heart is a lonely hunter.

Every day Willie Bell leaves a pan of chicken and some deviled eggs, or a pot roast and a plate of icebox cookies. I spend some nights at friends’ houses, sometimes one of them stays with me, and once or twice I stay at Daddy Jack’s, but usually during the two weeks Frankye is gone, I am alone. No one seems to think this odd, so I don’t either. We never locked our doors. I read late, listening to LPs that I ordered from a record club. Often they sent the wrong choice so I ended up hearing Rachmaninoff, Tchaikovsky, and
Concierto de Aranjuez
and
Boléro
. My favorite is a dramatic reading of
John Brown’s Body
by Stephen Vincent Benét. The spinning rhythms and haunting repetitions of the story of the War Between the States expressed my sense of the land I lived on. I underlined “the old wise dog with Autumn in his eyes,” and descriptions that named my feelings:

For, wherever the winds of Georgia run
,

It smells of peaches long in the sun
,

And the white wolf-winter, hungry and frore
,

Can prowl the North by a frozen door

But here we have fed him on bacon-fat

And he sleeps by the stove like a lazy cat
.

Here Christmas stops at everyone’s house

With a jug of molasses and green, young boughs
,

And the little New Year, the weakling one
,

Can lie outdoors in the noonday sun
,

Blowing the fluff from a turkey-wing

At skies already haunted with Spring—

Oh Georgia … Georgia … the careless yield!

The watermelons ripe in the field!

The mist in the bottoms that tastes of fever

And the yellow river rolling forever …!

With the lights out in my room, I listen as the lively voice reads to me, imprinting the Old South myth. What if you could write something that sings? I know the breeze does not smell of warm peaches, but it seems as though it does. And the Lost Cause, that’s a subject still reverberating. It had occurred to me that there was another side to the whole story but at that time I was like the Mayas, who used the wheel in toys but never made the leap to chariots and carts.

A couple of postcards arrive. One day in Barbados, natives who shouted
Yankee, go home
pelted the cruise group with rotten fruit as they walked around the port buying straw bags. The card, a view of the harbor, said how insulting to be called a Yankee when she was with Southerners and Canadians and that her turquoise linen dress was ruined.

When Frankye returned, she confessed that she’d been quite taken with a man from Vancouver. His name, Cliff, caused me to imagine my mother in the arms of Montgomery Clift, leaning into his kiss on the top deck of a ship sailing farther and farther south, as south as you could go. Cliff, slick black hair I saw in the snapshot, was not Montgomery Clift by any stretch. Instead, the word “swarthy” came to mind, and I hoped I never
had to move to Canada (the moon) because of him. He escorted her on the day trips, she said, had been a
grand
dance partner, and my daddy would never dance. A few days later, I asked if she’d heard from Cliff. Then she admitted that she found on checking out the last morning that the bar tabs he’d signed for all the lovely rum drinks they’d shared while the moon rose over the water, he’d signed in her name and room number. He was off the boat by then. Was it then that she realized that her flamboyant college romance days were not going to reappear? That all the men who flattered her when she was married (sending Daddy into apoplexy) somehow had fast-faded into the background?
John Brown’s body lies a-mouldering in the grave
.…

Daddy Jack doles out money parsimoniously. We should be grateful, but we are not. I think
If Daddy had not saved your life, maybe he …
but I’m not sure how to end the speculation. Daddy Jack is rich and stingy, a bad combination, Frankye says. “Tight as Dick’s hatband,” she says with a laugh. “Who’s Dick?” I always ask. No one questions my “allowance,” as Mother calls it.

She rests in the afternoons, reading fashion magazines or condensed books, or she lowers the slant-top desk, pulls out her blue note cards, and writes to my sisters while I browse in her fabric cupboard. The convex mirror above the desk enlarges her forehead and magnifies her eyes when she looks up.

She collects bolts of cotton polka dots, stripes, flower prints, good linen in solid colors, folds of copper or herringbone
wool—enough to make a skirt—sheer dimity, seersucker stripes, gossamer voile. A few remnants remained of prints—cowboys, sailboats, and big cherries—left over from my camp shirts. On the bottom shelf are yards of flowery blue and white chintz, raspberry toile, and a green and brown deco design she’d once chosen for my room. When I’d said I hated it, she explained, “Your sisters had the pink. You can’t do the Degas dancers twice,” so what were my choices?

Some of the fabrics came from the mill, where I’d seen the barefoot women at the looms that looked strung with light in the long room of oiled black machines and bins of cotton. Strong armed, they pulled the warp (weft?) beam across the harp strings of white threads, interweaving heavier threads for texture. I liked the muffled bump with each pull. All the thin women worked in faded cotton shifts they’d run up on their treadle machines. Their lank brown hair swung with each thrust, their eyes, paler blue than my mother’s, smiled at me as I followed Daddy down the aisles.

Wedged among the white fabric for linings, Frankye keeps a box of buttons, which I loved from babyhood—gold blazer buttons with anchors, horn toggles, shirt buttons, mottled tortoiseshell, red and yellow Bakelite that seemed very old, jet-black sparklers, diamond-shaped faceted rhinestones, gold baubles, leather-covered knobs, square metal ones beginning to rust, teardrop pearls, and cloth ones to cover with whatever fabric you chose. “When you see nice buttons, buy them,” she advises. “By themselves, they can inspire a dress.”

If I had become a Coco Chanel or a Diane von Furstenberg, the origins could be traced to these afternoons in my mother’s bedroom, with me spreading out the fabric at the foot of her big canopied bed where Daddy died, drawing a sundress or a bathing suit cover-up or a lavender wool coat with mother-of-pearl buttons. My mother is propped up on pillows in her slip, offering her opinion. “Not that. The coral linen would make a cuter shirtwaist dress,” and “You can’t wear that muddy green. It makes you look like a piece of rat cheese. Look at that
eau de Nil
instead.” Water of the Nile. The name set me dreaming, though I looked like rat cheese in it, too.

“So,” the biography would go, “she developed her heightened sense of texture and line from her mother, whose incisive taste forever influenced her designs.” But I did not become a designer, nor did my sisters. They are better dressed than I, despite my rigorous indoctrination. But always, we are examining the seams, the hem, the quality of the fabric. But, Frankye, there, polishing her toenails with Fire and Ice. I imagine her with parents—experts, say, in the Etruscans—who’d told her as a child about the printed scrap of cloth around a mummy that provided a key to the lost language. Told her that the under-thread in the weave is the “subtle.” (Sub-tela, under the fabric.) They might have taken her to the Cairo museum to see the Coptic cloth or to the wing at the Pitti Palace where the lush brocade dresses of the Renaissance are displayed. They would have explained the relationship between text and textile.
Texere
, to weave, as I’m weaving this memory. Texture: bumpy dotted Swiss, papery watered silk, stiff khaki (from the Urdu/Hindustan word meaning dust colored).

For you, Frankye, a context and a place to go forward.
Yes, that’s my mother’s atelier. Just ring the bell and her assistant, Hortensia, will show you the collection
. But, she has her closet of bolts. Daughters to dress. The afternoon is sweltering and her silk slip clings to her breasts that look saggy when she’s lying back on pillows.

Why were we fabric obsessed? Were we like Adam and Eve, running out of the garden, inventing fabric to cover ourselves? (Probably they grabbed some flax and started weaving.) Who’s to say our designing and dreaming of beauty was not important? Was this how we entertained ourselves? Was it visionary, creative, with the underlying possibility of transformation? Where would we wear these creations? (Everywhere.) Not that she could piece together a pattern.

BOOK: Under Magnolia: A Southern Memoir
9.98Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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