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
mock toward the distant maritime forest that often
sheltered them, but I could no longer see them.
Kylie was properly chastened when my grandfather
and I finished with her, but she was not repentant. She
had, she said, seen the herd off at the edge of the copse
while I talked on the phone and went to give them
sugar, and they were so friendly, especially Pianissimo,
that she just wanted to see if she could ride. Nissy, she
said, had stood like a statue while she climbed onto
her back, but then had taken off as if she had heard a
shot.
134 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“I rode her all the way down the old deer path,
Mama,” she said. “She can run like the wind, for a fat
little old pony. It was…it was neat. Just me and her
and the fog…and you could hear the others behind us.
It was like we were leading them on a charge.”
“Didn’t you hear us calling you?” I said.
“Yeah,” she admitted. “I did.”
“Kylie, you know you have to come when I call you.
That’s not negotiable. You agreed to that. How can I
let you out of my sight if you don’t keep your word
about that?”
“I was, Mama,” she said. “I was coming faster this
way than if I was on my own two legs. Lots faster.”
She was right, technically, but I was not prepared
to argue the point. I cut our visit short and we forwent
the crabbing expedition and went back home to Pea-
cock’s. She was disappointed, but she did not whine
or cry. If Kylie deliberately disobeyed me, or did
something she knew I would not have permitted, she
took the consequences without a murmur. She simply
fell in love with an idea, weighed the pleasure against
the cost, did the deed with relish, and paid the price
uncomplainingly. It was a very adult way to live a
young life, all told. Except that the final price had been
more than she could have imagined. More than I could
have, too.
I stood still on this morning, in the fog, think
Low Country / 135
ing of that day, hearing again the thudding of the
hooves of the herd, seeing again the flash of my
daughter’s yellow slicker in the cottony nothingness.
Fog and ponies and Kylie…
Before I went out with my watercolors I called Clay
at his office. Shawna, the office’s forty-year-old recep-
tionist who has never married and thinks that she is
married to Clay, said that he was out of the office until
after lunch. She did not know where he had gone, but
she had an idea it was into Charleston.
“I hope he’s seeing a doctor finally, Mrs. Venable,”
she said in the honeyed twang that puts my teeth on
edge. Shawna is originally from New Jersey. The
Lowcountry got her about the same time Clay did. She
sounds as if she is chewing cape jessamine.
“What on earth for?” I said, surprised and faintly
alarmed.
She was silent a moment, and then she said, “Well,
nothing, really, I guess. It’s just that none of us think
he’s been himself lately. You know, he’s just so distrac-
ted, and abrupt, and it’s as though he doesn’t really
see you when you talk to him.…We just thought he
ought to get a checkup. But of course if you haven’t
noticed anything, then there’s nothing.…” She let her
voice trail off. My own blindness and neglect were
implicit in the dying syllables.
“I think he’s just fine, Shawna,” I said briskly.
136 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“But thank you for worrying about him. If there’s
anything amiss, I’m sure he’ll let us know. We had a
pretty late night last night, with the new people coming
in and all.…”
“Of course,” she said. “He’s just tired. I keep telling
him he ought to let somebody else take over those
dinner things for the new people, but you know how
he is.…”
“Yes, I do,” I said, and thanked her and hung up
smartly.
Did I, though? Had Clay really been all those
things—distant, abstracted, tired, unseeing—and I had
not noticed? I thought back. He had been working
very late in his home office for the past month or so,
but he frequently did that when there was a new project
in the wings. And he had been silent and gone away
behind his
Wall Street Journal
or his clipboard in the
mornings at breakfast, and to some extent at dinner,
but when wasn’t he? Clay was not gregarious, not lo-
quacious, not a mealtime gossip. He never had been,
especially not since the Plantation companies had taken
off like they had in the past four or five years, with
new properties coming on line in half a dozen states
and the Caribbean. Not since Kylie.
Both of us had been, to some extent, gone away
since then. I had been content to have it so. I could
not have borne the weight of a hovering, demanding
relationship in those first few precari
Low Country / 137
ous months and years. I did not think he could have,
either. It was as if we had had an agreement: when the
time is right, when the healing is further along, we will
come all the way back to each other. We will know
when. There is no hurry.
But there had been no agreement. I had just assumed
he felt as I did. I shook my head and went on out into
the day. I would call again after lunch, and tonight at
dinner we would talk about it. Finally, we would talk.
I could not abide the thought that he was unhappy
and alone with it.
The fog lifted about noon, and the sun fell so heavily
on the windless marsh and creek that I was soon hot
and sweat-slicked, and shucked my jacket and tied it
around my waist. With the fog gone, my morning’s
pursuit of fog-sculpted vignettes vanished, too, and the
glare off the water began to give me a headache. I
trudged back to the house and put on a T-shirt, ex-
changed the watercolors for my camera, made myself
a peanut butter sandwich, and took everything out to
the Boston Whaler that bobbed at the dock. We had
not yet put it away for the winter; there had been no
real winter on the island, and there probably would
be none. I could remember days in January and Febru-
ary out on the water, with the sun burning face and
forearms and only a chill edge to the wind to remind
you that the soft Lowcountry winter had teeth and
138 / Anne Rivers Siddons
could bare them if it chose. But it rarely did. Only oc-
casionally did we get a slicking of sleet or ice, and only
once in my lifetime did snow fall on Peacock’s and the
island. But it had been a spectacular snow, drifting up
to eight or nine inches and lingering for three or four
days. Snow on palms and Spanish moss…everyone
had taken photos of it, to send to family and friends
off-island.
I took the boat down Alligator Alley to Wassimaw
Creek and over to the inland waterway, to photograph
the steel winter light there. But the sky was too milky
for much contrast, and there was a softening in the
distance that spoke of returning fog. So I cut the motor
and threw out the little anchor and let the Whaler drift.
I ate my sandwich and drank the Diet Coke I had
brought along, and then I stretched out on the backseat
and pulled the Atlanta Braves cap that belonged to
everyone and no one over my eyes and drowsed. There
must have been virtually no traffic on the waterway; I
saw none, and heard none, for the entire time that I
was there. But for much of that time I was fast asleep,
and when I woke, the fog was just reaching its suc-
cubus’s fingers out to pat my face, and the heat was
gone from the day. A solid white bank lay over the
Inland Waterway, and I knew that it would drift up
the creeks and estuaries until it swallowed the entire
island. I pulled up the anchor and started the engine
and
Low Country / 139
putted for home. I was not worried about the fog, but
I was cold in just the T-shirt, and I had a neck ache
from sleeping with my head tilted forward against the
stern. I wanted hot coffee and a shower before I left
for Peacock’s. More than that, I wanted not to leave
for Peacock’s at all. The island had done its work while
I slept, and I felt washed and lightened and eased.
There would undoubtedly be some sort of additional
welcome ceremonies for the new people this evening,
and I simply did not feel like wasting this beneficence
on them.
“Please let them all have previous engagements,” I
whispered to the whitened sky, though what engage-
ments they might have there among the alien corn I
could not imagine. But when I got back to the house
the answering machine light was blinking, and I picked
it up to hear Clay’s voice telling me that he and Hayes
had to go to Atlanta on the spur of the moment and
that the human resources people were baby-sitting the
newcomers tonight.
“So stay another day or so, if you want to,” he said.
“I don’t know how long we’ll be. There are some
money people who made some time for us earlier than
we thought. I’ll call you either there or at home when
I know where we’re staying and when we’ll be back.
Or I’ll let Shawna know. Take care.”
He did not say, “I love you,” as he sometimes
140 / Anne Rivers Siddons
did. He was using his flat, intense, strictly business
voice. He did not use it for endearments. I would not
have had it so. I thought that the money people must
be pretty important. My heart lifted. I could stay on
the island. Clay would not miss me in this mood.
I had my shower and built a fire and put on a tape
of Erroll Garner’s
Concert by the Sea
. It was an old re-
cording; it had been my grandfather’s. Oddly, he had
loved the cool, improvisational West Coast jazz of the
late fifties and sixties, and I had transferred a lot of his
old records to tape for him. I loved this one, too. Per-
fect fog music. I made a pot of coffee and rooted
around in the bookcase among the yellowing, damp-
warped books and magazines for something I had not
read recently. I settled on
Kon-Tiki
, another favorite of
my grandfather’s, and curled up on the spavined sofa
to lose myself at sea.
An hour or so must have passed when I heard the
ponies again. The fog-flattened sound of their hooves
pulled me back from the wastes of the Pacific, and I
shook my head for a moment, not quite knowing where
I was. Then I smiled and got up and went out onto
the deck to see if I could spot Pianissimo and her colt
again.
The fog was blowing, spinning fast in the circle of
yellow light from the overhead porch light. A brisk
wind from off the ocean meant that it would be clear
later tonight, and there would be
Low Country / 141
a sky pricked full of icy stars. In the swirling skeins I
caught glimpses of the herd, moving restlessly around
the support posts of the house. It was not full dark,
but it would be in fifteen or twenty more minutes.
I went back for sugar cubes and then walked slowly
down the steps, clicking my tongue.
“You here, Nissy?” I called softly. “Want some sug-
ar? Come on, bring that baby up here and let’s have
a look at him. Or her.”
A dark shape came out of the fog: Nissy, sure
enough, with the colt close on her flank. I stretched
out my hand with the sugar cube, and that’s when I
saw the child.
She stood off at the edge of the pale orb of porch
light, perhaps thirty feet away, still as a statue, staring
at me. Her head and shoulders were fairly distinct, but
from her waist down she was lost in fog. I got the im-
pression of a small brown face and great dark eyes that
fastened intently on me, and a headful of dark curls
with fog droplets clinging to them. She wore a yellow
rain slicker. She looked to be about five or six, maybe
seven. A small seven. She made no noise at all, and
she did not move.
I did not, either. I could not have. My heart began
to thunder, pounding so hard that I could hear only
it and my blood, roaring in my ears. If she had spoken,
I could not have heard her. But she did not speak. My
knees and thighs and
142 / Anne Rivers Siddons
wrists turned to water. It seemed to me that only the
powerful heartbeat held me up, that I hung from it like
a marionette.
Nissy whickered and stamped her hoof, and I held
out my hand toward the child as slowly as if to a wild
creature.
“Who are you?” I meant to say.
“Is it you?” came out of my mouth, a crippled whis-
per.
The child turned and bolted. The fog took her before
she had gone four paces. I could hear her footsteps for
a bit before they were lost in the cottony whiteness. I
thought she ran back around the house and toward
the dirt road leading into the hummock where the
house stood.
I could not make my legs go after her. In the space