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
ANNE RIVERS
SIDDONS
LOW COUNTRY
For Gervais, Curry, Richard,
and Hart Hagerty,
the next keepers of the Ace
Nature’s first green is gold
Her hardest hue to hold.
Her early leaf’s a flower
But only so an hour
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So Eden sank to grief,
So dawn goes down to day.
Nothing gold can stay.
—ROBERT FROST
Contents
I think I’ll go over to the island for a few…
1
When I was sixteen, the son of the local
undertaker…
39
When I came downstairs, showered and more or
less together,…
79
The five rules of sleep according to Kylie Venable: 123
I sat down abruptly on the steps and looked at… 147
This time it was Lottie who woke me.
169
It’s funny how a night’s sleep can change the
complexion…
203
In fact, he had done just that. When we got…
242
Ever since I was a small child I have had…
261
It was a curious time, the first hours of that…
304
I didn’t tell him for over a week. For the…
325
But I did not do that, after all, because when…
357
When Ezra Upchurch set out to ruin an ass, he… 398
The storm the newscasts had promised us came
a day…
436
462
464
I
think I’ll go over to the island for a few days
,” I said
to my husband at breakfast, and then, when he did
not respond, I said, “The light’s beautiful. It can’t last.
I hate to waste it. We won’t get this pure gold again
until this time next year.”
Clay smiled, but he did not put down his newspaper,
and he did not speak. The smile made my stomach dip
and rise again, as it has for the past twenty-five years.
Clay’s smile is wonderful, slow and unstinting and a
bit crooked, and gains much of its power from the
surrounding austerity of his sharp, thin face. Over the
years I have seen it disarm a legion of people, from
two-year-olds in mid-tantrum to Arab sheiks in same.
Even though I knew that this smile was little more than
a twitch, and with no more perception behind it, I felt
my own mouth smiling back. I wondered, as I often
do, how he could do that, smile as though
2 / Anne Rivers Siddons
you had absolutely delighted him when he had not
heard a word you said.
“There is a rabid armadillo approaching you from
behind,” I said. “It’s so close I can see the froth. It’s
not a pretty sight.”
“I heard you,” he said. “You want to go over to the
island because the light’s good. It can’t last.”
I waited, but he did not speak again, or raise his
eyes.
Finally I said, “So? Is that okay with you?”
This time he did look up.
“Why do you ask? You don’t need my permission
to go over to the island. When did I ever stop you?”
His voice was level and reasonable; it is seldom
anything else. I knew that he did not like me to go over
to the island alone, though, for a number of reasons
that we had discussed and one that we had not, yet.
The island is wild and largely undeveloped now,
except for a tiny settlement on its southwestern tip,
and there are wild animals living on it that are hostile
to humans, and sometimes dangerous. It is home to a
formidable colony of alligators, some more than twelve
feet long, and a handful of wild boar that make up in
ferocity what they lack in numbers. Rattlesnakes and
water moccasins are a given. Even the band of sullen
wild ponies that have lived there on the
Low Country / 3
grassy hummocks between the creeks and inlets since
time out of mind are not the amiable toys they seem.
A small child from the settlement was badly kicked
only last year, when he got too close to a mare nursing
her foal. Clay knows that I have been handling myself
easily and well on the island since I was a child, but
he mistrusts what he calls my impetuosity more than
he trusts my long experience and exemplary safety re-
cord.
Then there is the settlement itself, Dayclear. That
beautiful word is Gullah, part of the strange and lyrical
amalgam of West African and Colonial English once
spoken by the handful of Gullah blacks still living in
pockets of the South Carolina Lowcountry. They are
the descendants of the slaves brought here by the first
white settlers of these archipelagos and marshes, and
some of the elders still speak the old patois among
themselves. When I was a child I knew some of it
myself, a few words taught me by various Gullah
nurses and cooks, a few snatches of songs sung by
gardeners and handymen on my grandfather’s place.
I know that Dayclear means “dawn.” I have always
loved the word, and I have always been aware of the
settlement, even if I did not often visit it when I was
growing up and have no occasion to do so now. I do
know that it is made up now largely of the old, with
a preponderance of frail old women, and that some of
them must be the kin of those workers of my child-
hood, if not the actual people them
4 / Anne Rivers Siddons
selves. I know that there are virtually no young men
and women living there, since the young leave the is-
land as soon as they are physically able to do so, to
seek whatever fortunes they might find elsewhere.
There is nothing for them in Dayclear. There are chil-
dren, small ones, left behind with the old women by
daughters and granddaughters who have taken flight,
and there are sometimes silent, empty-faced young men
about, who have come home because they are in
trouble and have, temporarily, nowhere else to go, but
they do not stay long.
I have not been to the settlement for many years, as
my route across the island lies in the dry, hummocky
heart of it, and the house to which I go is at the oppos-
ite end, looking northwest toward the shore of Edisto.
But when I think of it, I feel nothing but a kind of
mindless, nostalgic sense of safety and benevolence.
Dayclear has never given me anything but nurturing
and love.
Clay fears it, though. He has never said so, but I
know that he does. I can tell; I always know when Clay
is afraid, because he so seldom is, and of almost
nothing.
“There’s nothing there that can hurt me; nobody
who would,” I have said to him. “They’re just poor old
women and babies and children.”
“You don’t know who’s back in there,” he said. “You
don’t see who comes and goes. Any
Low Country / 5
body could come across. There are places you could
wade across. Anybody could drop anchor in the Inland
Waterway and come ashore. You think everybody in
that little place doesn’t know when you’re at the house,
and that you’re by yourself? I don’t like it when you
go, Caro. But you know that.”
I did know, and do. But he does not forbid me to
go to the island. For one thing, Clay is not a forbidder;
he would find it distasteful, unseemly, to forbid his
wife anything, the operative word being distasteful.
Clay is a fastidious man, both physically and emotion-
ally.
For another thing, I own part of the island. And if
there is anything Clay respects, it is the right of eminent
domain.
But the main reason he does not want me on the is-
land alone is that he is afraid that I will drink there. I
do drink sometimes, though by no means often, but
when I do I tend to do it rather excessively. When I
am with him, at this house or the club or the town
house in Charleston, he feels that he can at least control
the consequences of my drinking, if not the act itself.
The consequences are not heinous, I don’t think; I do
not stumble and fall, or weep, or grow belligerent. But
I do tend to hug necks and kiss cheeks, and sometimes
to sit on laps, and sometimes to dance and sing, and
I imagine that to Clay these are worse than staggering
or tears. They might imply,
6 / Anne Rivers Siddons
to some who don’t know us, that I do not receive
enough affection at home. And they tend to dismay
visiting Arab sheiks. So Clay, while he says nothing to
me then or later and never has, stays close enough to
initiate damage control when he thinks it is necessary.
Perhaps if we talked about it, I could tell him that when
I am slightly drunk I feel so much better than I nor-
mally do, that I am happy, exuberant, giddy, and wish
to share the largesse with whomever is close. But we
do not talk about it. To name a demon is to make it
yours. Clay does not wish to own this particular de-
mon, and I do not wish, yet, to give it up. So we do
not speak of my drinking, though the time may come
when we have to do so. Or maybe not. I do fairly well
with it, as long as I have the island for refuge.
This is something Clay does not understand, and
will not unless I tell him: that the island is the one
place where I do not want to drink, or need to. I know
that I could probably ease his mind considerably about
my time over there if I told him so, but again, that
would mean naming the demon, and we both know
that we do not want its disruptive presence in our lives.
It would be like having to acknowledge and live with
an erratic, malicious relative who was apt to break the
china, fart in public, insult our guests, change the very
fabric and structure of our graceful lives.
So Clay goes on hating and dreading my trips
Low Country / 7
to the island but refusing to discuss them, and I go on