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
find your own, and so will your little girl. I did.”
Low Country / 115
She managed a watery smile, and we got her fairly
presentable again, swathed in my scarlet cashmere
sweater, and went back to the table. Clay was holding
up his hand for the check. All of a sudden I did not
think I could bear the drive back to Peacock’s Island
in the company of this forlorn child and her little
Prussian husband. I simply could not bear it. Riding
with the Bowdon-Kirklands seemed even worse.
“I think I’ll stay over at the town house,” I said cas-
ually, not meeting Clay’s eyes. “There are some things
for the garden I want to pick up in the morning, and
I want to bring the summer linens back with me and
pack them in mothballs. Clay, you can get everybody
in the Jaguar, can’t you?”
He looked at me. I knew that he thought I was going
to go back to the town house and drink alone. Or
perhaps stay and drink wine with Hayes Howland; I
did not know which he would think more unseemly.
I realized, too, that I was on my way to being quite
drunk. There was a shimmery distance in the air
around me, and though I did not and hardly ever do
stagger, still, I was walking carefully in my unaccus-
tomed high heels and talking very properly. Poor Clay.
Twice now tonight I had broken our bargain. If we
talked about it, I could have told him that I did not
want to drink, did not even feel like it. I simply did not
want to be with these awful, doomed
116 / Anne Rivers Siddons
children anymore. I did not want to be with anyone.
But we do not talk about it, and I did not tell him.
“Suit yourself,” he said neutrally. “Be careful of your
car, though. Lot of traffic tonight.”
I knew that he realized that I was not sober. For
some reason, that made me angry.
“I’ll drive her back to the town house and walk on
home,” Hayes said. “The air will do me good.”
We stood on the cobbles outside Carolina’s, Hayes
and I, and watched Clay drive away in the Jaguar with
the two captive couples. No one spoke for a moment
and then Hayes said, “You want to go back in and
have a nightcap? That was pretty awful.”
“No, I really don’t. Thanks, though,” I said wearily.
“I think I’ll just go on back to the house and turn in.
You’re right. It was awful. I feel very bad about it. I
really didn’t do much to keep things going.”
“Wasn’t your fault,” Hayes said. “You tried. We both
did. There wasn’t any way those two were going to let
you draw them out. You were doomed before the night
even started.”
“Why?” I said, surprised.
“Christ, Caro, look at them,” he said. “And look at
you. One of them looks like a fat little brewer’s wife
in a too-tight Sunday dress and the
Low Country / 117
other one looks like Seabiscuit, and there you sit
looking like…I don’t know, a Persian princess or
something in that red silk, with all that black hair down
your back, and you twenty years older at least than
either one of them, and a million times richer…What
do you think?”
“I never thought about it that way, Hayes,” I said
honestly. “I really never did.”
“Well, it’s true. You’re something special, Caro.
Time you knew that, if you don’t already. Clay ought
to tell you.”
“Well…thank you,” I said.
The car came, and we got in and drove the short
distance to the town house in silence.
“Would you give me a nightcap if I came in for a
minute?” he said, not looking at me.
What is this? I thought. This is Hayes. I don’t know
what this means.
“Lucy would kill me,” I said lightly, and then, “And
I’m really tired. Why don’t we make it one night soon
when Clay and Lucy can join us?”
“You got it,” he said affably, and saw me to the door.
I shut it behind me, but then I went to the front bay
window and watched as he walked away down Eliott
Street toward Bedon’s Alley, where he would cut over
to Church Street and home. In the light of the corner
streetlight he stopped and looked back at the window,
and I stepped back involuntarily, as if he could see me.
But, of course, he could not.
118 / Anne Rivers Siddons
For an instant, it was as if I had never seen him, was
seeing him now for the first time. Only then did I
realize that, whenever I looked at Hayes Howland, I
had been seeing the young man who had been Clay’s
friend when I first met him, the irrepressible roommate
from the University of Virginia, broad of shoulder and
flaming red of hair, freckled of snub face and irreverent
of tongue, a kind of sprite, an elf, an Ariel of sorts.
But now I saw that Hayes was middle-aged. It was
funny; I did not see that in Clay, nor really, even, in
myself, when I looked into my mirror. But it was true
of Hayes Howland. He seemed older by far than any
of us, older than he should by rights be. I saw that the
broad shoulders were a little stooped now, with the
beginning of a roundness to the back, and the red hair
dulled and streaked with iron gray and worn away on
top so that it was almost like a monk’s tonsure. It made
his pale face seem longer, and the glossy mustache he
cultivated, which made him look, as Clay once said,
like he was eating a chipmunk, was thinner and
gingery. Even from my window I could see that the
freckles on his face had run together in places, and the
ones on the top of his head, so that he seemed
splotched with darkness here and there. His raincoat
had a rip in the lining, and part of it hung down below
the hem. That meant nothing; Hayes wore wonderful
Low Country / 119
clothes, but they invariably looked as though he had
slept in them. But somehow tonight, the draggled hem
and the bleaching lamplight and the rounded shoulders
all added up to something else. Hayes looked…de-
feated. Seedy. I thought of Willy Loman.
I went upstairs and undressed and crawled into one
of the pretty rice beds in the master bedroom. The
sheets smelled a little musty but were smooth and cool.
I turned off the bedside lamp and lay in the darkness,
thinking about Hayes. The thought came, unbidden
and as whole and complete as an egg: What does he
get out of all this? What’s in it for him?
He had been with Clay now almost since college.
Day by day, closer than any brother, he had cast his
lot with Clay at the very beginning of the Peacock Is-
land Plantation Company, leaving without apparent
regret the job with the Charleston law firm and coming
on board as Clay’s legal adviser, assistant, and general
factotum. Hayes did everything. He advised, he
traveled for the company, he ran errands, he oversaw
personnel, he haunted building sites and construction
crews, he sat in on marketing and advertising meetings,
he scouted universities and graduate schools for the
kind of young man or woman Clay wanted, those with
the invisible but unmistakable stamp of the company
upon them. Most of all he was Clay’s link to the Low-
country.
120 / Anne Rivers Siddons
There was not an old family or a cache of old money
from Litchfield to Savannah that Hayes did not know,
or his family did not. Hayes brought Charleston to
Clay. In turn, Clay took Hayes with him on his traject-
ory straight into the sun.
And yet…and yet. Somehow it did not seem that
Hayes was a terribly successful man, much less a con-
tented one. I could not have said precisely what I
meant by that. It was just that Hayes had a restlessness,
a kind of chronic discontent that his general affability
and foolishness sometimes did not hide. He was court
jester and confidant, but sometimes he was moody and
bitter, too, and then Clay wisely let him alone. The
moods rarely lasted more than a day, but they were
real.
For one thing, I don’t think Hayes and Lucy ever
had quite enough money. He had married Lucy Burton
the year after Clay and I had married; they had known
each other since infancy, and were out of the same
tiny, dense gene pool. Lucy’s parents, like Hayes’s,
were an old Lowcountry family, though, as Hayes
himself said cheerfully, poor as a cracker’s pisspot.
Hayes did not marry money, but he did marry
Charleston, and that, from what I could see, was what
always mattered to him.
But I thought now that it must have been a struggle
at times for them. Hayes was officially
Low Country / 121
listed as number two man in the company after Clay,
but he had no financial interest in it, for all the joint
venture money he sniffed out for Clay, and I knew that
his salary, while better than any other in the company,
even the one Clay allowed himself, was not spectacular.
Clay puts most of the Plantation’s money back into
the company. Hayes and Lucy must have stretched his
salary very thin to maintain her family’s beautiful old
Federal house on Church Street and give the parties
that they did, and educate two daughters in the bar-
gain, much less keep them in Laura Ashleys. I could
not think there was much at all left over.
Once, I remembered, I asked Clay when he was go-
ing to give Hayes some sort of property of his own, a
partnership or something.
“I guess when the right one comes along,” he said.
“Though if you think about it, can you imagine Hayes
running one of the Plantations?”
“Why not?” I said.
“Well, for one thing, it would probably mean leaving
the Lowcountry, and he’d let you cut his throat before
he’d do that. And then, frankly, I think he gets off on
being my sidekick. Who else thinks he’s as funny as I
do? Who else would let him fool around and goof off
as much as I do? Hayes is a born second banana, and
I think on some level he knows it. He’s never asked
me to let him have a crack at anything else.”
122 / Anne Rivers Siddons
I thought about that conversation now, as the night
stilled and quieted outside my drawn curtains. Some-
thing was missing; something did not equate. Hayes
was more than he seemed, had to be more.…
But the thought eddied away on the spiral of thick
wine-sleep that took me under, and when I woke, only
short hours later, with a cottony mouth and the begin-
ning of a dull headache, it was gone from my mind. I
sat up abruptly, as if summoned by an alarm clock,
slid out of bed, splashed my face and scrubbed my
teeth, ferreted out some old jeans and a sweatshirt of
Clay’s from the bureau, and was in the Cherokee and
on the road south within an hour.
By the time dawn broke, red as the apocalypse to
the east, I was on the bridge from Peacock’s over to
the island, and by the time the sun touched the tops
of the live oaks that leaned over the marsh house, I
was fast asleep again in the small iron bed that had
been my first in the Lowcountry.
T
he five rules of sleep according to Kylie Ven
able:
1.
Don’t draw the curtains. God can’t look
after you if He can’t see you.
2.
Face the door. You need to be able to see
what’s coming.
3.
Pull your knees up to your chin. It’ll get your
feet first that way.
4.
Keep your ears covered up. You won’t hear
it calling you.
5.
Never let your hands hang over the side of
the bed. There’s no telling what might take
hold of them.
She made those rules for herself when she was about
five, after a series of screaming nightmares that dragged
us out of sleep night after
124 / Anne Rivers Siddons
night, hearts hammering. We wrote them down for
her and pinned them on her bulletin board. If she fol-
lowed them scrupulously, she dropped right off to
sleep. If she omitted one, or fell asleep before she could
complete her ritual, she would have the dreams. We
were never sure why it worked. A child psychologist
who was visiting on the island later told us that it was
the instructive power of ritual, and that Kylie had, in
effect, healed herself.
“But should we just let it go?” I said. “I don’t want
her getting the feeling that there’s nothing between her
and danger but some kind of magic ritual she thinks
up. On the other hand, I don’t want her to think she
can prevent all kinds of harm just by doing the same
thing.”
“If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it,” the shrink said. “It was
about time for the nightmares, and it’s about time for
them to go away. Kylie has a good sense of her own
needs, I’d say.”
And she did. The nightmares faded, and she was
never so afraid of anything incorporeal again. Or if
she was, I never knew it. And I think I would have.
But all of her life, she put herself to sleep at night by
following her Five Rules of Sleep, and I often do it,