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
your granddaughter…for a minute, last night, she
looked very like my daughter at that age. She used to
chase the ponies, too.”
“
Ay, Dios
,” he said softly after a long while. “I’m
sorry. Lita must have been an awful shock for you. I’ll
see to it that she doesn’t come again.”
“No. She’s a nice child. And the ponies are obviously
helping her. Later, maybe, another day, you can bring
her over and I’ll tell you where to find the baby and
her mother. I think I know where they’re hanging out
this fall. I can’t stop living. I don’t want to. She’s wel-
come here.”
He got to his feet and went to the door and called
to Lita to come in, it was time to go.
“You are a very nice woman, Mrs. Caroline Venable,”
he said. “I’m sorry if we brought any pain at all into
your enchanted hideaway here. I think that you didn’t
know about Dayclear, and I’ve shocked you badly,
and as I say, I wish I could bite my tongue out, but
I’m sure it would simply go on flapping. Your husband
should have told you about it. You must talk with him
about it now.”
Anger flared from somewhere under the hangover.
How dare this man, this perfect stranger, this hired
employee of my husband’s, this trespasser, tell me what
I must and must not do, or what Clay should have? I
recognized the anger for what it was: a mask for fear,
but that did not lessen it. I sat up abruptly and glared
at him.
Low Country / 163
“I find that arrogant beyond belief,” I said coldly.
“My…relationship with my husband is absolutely none
of your affair. It never will be. And you are dead wrong
about the new project. You’ve got your facts confused.
There is no way Clay would start to develop this island
without telling me first. There’s no way I wouldn’t
know. For one thing, he doesn’t own this part of the
island, I do. All of it, except for the settlement itself.
And I’d never in this world permit such a thing. He
knows that.”
He looked at me silently for a long time, a level look
suddenly as cold as my own. All the small-boy charm
was gone from the brown face. I could almost feel the
impact of the opaque black eyes. Uneasiness crept in
over the anger. I did not know this man. How could
I have forgotten that?
“They’d like to know that over in Dayclear,” he said
finally. “They’re really upset. They’re sure they’re going
to lose their homes. It’s all they talk about, the old
ones. There’s not anywhere else for most of them to
go.”
“They do know that,” I retorted. “Right after Clay
deeded this part of the island over to me I went over
and told them. I told Jackson. He said he’d tell the
others. Toby would do what he said. I told them they’d
never have to worry about losing their homes. My
God, I love this marsh as much as my grandfather did,
and all of them knew how he felt about it.…”
164 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“Well, perhaps you’ll pardon them for being a little
confused,” he said. “They’ve got surveyors over there,
and people in pink Izod and LaCoste shirts thunking
around in their little deck shoes with no socks, making
notes on clipboards, and every now and then Mengele
himself pays a royal visit and chats everybody up, and
his trusty sidekick Goebbels is over there every other
day, and then I come poking around in their bushes
and sticking tags on their live oaks…you can see why
it might look to them like something’s up. And for the
record, I’m not mistaken. I’ve seen the master plan.”
I felt my face whiten.
“You are definitely mistaken. I don’t care what you
think you’ve seen. And even if you weren’t, Clay does
not own Dayclear, nor do I. It belongs to them, the
people who live there. My grandfather always said that
it did.…”
“Actually, nobody knows who it belongs to,” he said.
“There’s no way you could establish clear title to those
homes. I imagine they’ll be offered a handsome cash
buyout. That’s the way it’s usually done.”
“And how can you possibly know that?”
“A friend of mine told me. Someone who lives in
Dayclear. Perhaps you know of him. Ezra Upchurch?
I gather he’s rather well known in the Lowcountry.…”
“Ezra Upchurch! Living in Dayclear? I
Low Country / 165
thought he was on John’s Island,” I said. “Of course I
know of him. I know him, too. I used to play with him
when we were both about eight, but then his mother
came and got him and they moved.…What’s he doing
back in Dayclear? I wouldn’t think things were lively
enough for him over here.”
“He thinks otherwise,” Lou Cassells said, smiling a
new, cold smile. “He’s decided to come back to the
humble village of his birth and stay a spell. Rediscover
his roots, so to speak. As a matter of fact, I’m staying
at his house, his and his old aunt’s. He’ll be happy to
know that according to Mrs. Mengele, Dayclear is safe
as a baby’s butt in a cradle.”
Ezra Upchurch. Bastard child of a mother who fled
Dayclear at fifteen, leaving him behind with his young
grandmother. Changeling child possessed of a quicksil-
ver mind and a steely will, so gifted that he graduated
from the county high school at sixteen and went on to
Morehouse College in Atlanta on a full scholarship,
and from there to Yale Divinity School and then Duke
Law. Full scholarships all. Then he came back to the
Lowcountry and began a rich, glinting career that in-
cluded preaching at the smallest, most time-lost pray
houses in the marshes and woods, taking the smallest
and most impossible pro bono legal cases for the re-
maining Gullah Negroes, playing piano in a number
of scabrous, deep-woods
166 / Anne Rivers Siddons
roadhouses where few white faces were ever seen, disc
jockeying for black jazz stations up and down the coast,
racing his Harley-Davidson, and lecturing at colleges
and universities all over the country for astronomical
fees, most of which went to support the various drives,
funds, and marches that he organized to improve the
lot of his people. He was almost magically successful
at these; the media adored him, as did what he called
“my little folks” everywhere. A great many white Low-
country people, particularly the gentry and those who
aspired to be, called him an agitator. His supporters
called him a savior. No one called him humble. His
fat, flashing ego preceded him, to paraphrase Cyrano
de Bergerac, by a quarter of an hour. To hear him
speak was an unforgettable experience. I never had,
not in person, but I had heard him on television; the
fine hairs on my arms had risen at his words and voice.
Ezra Upchurch, in Dayclear.
What must I think about that?
I shook my head slightly. It had begun to throb.
“Well, since you know him so well, you go back and
tell him that none of it’s true and I’m not going to let
anything happen to this part of the island. And that
includes Dayclear. And let that be an end to it. I don’t
want to hear any more about this…silliness. Do you
understand me?”
He nodded his head and tugged at a forelock
Low Country / 167
in an elaborate parody of a servant with his mistress.
“Yes, Miz Mengele,” he drawled. “I understand, I
sho’ does. You have, by the way, read
Lady Chatterley’s
Lover
?”
I stared at him, speechless.
“Ah, so you have. Well, then, doesn’t it give you the
least little pang of fear, or whatever, to realize that
you’re out here all alone in the wilderness with your
husband’s greenskeeper? You know what came of that
for Lady Chatterley.”
I got up off the sofa and marched to the door and
opened it and stood beside it, speechless with anger.
Beyond the glass windows I could see that Estrellita’s
mouth was open in a little round O and her black eyes
were huge. She stared in at us.
He turned and went out the door.
“Go on home, Mrs. Venable,” he said, without
looking back.
“Go to hell, Mr. Cassells,” I said, my voice shaking.
After they had gone I stood for a long time, staring
out over the marsh and the creek, across it to the dis-
tant line of trees that marked the river. All of a sudden
I could see it: a jumble of masts and flying bridges and
antennas soaring over the rippling green marsh grass,
villas and homes clustering around manicured lagoons
that did not yet exist, golf carts crawling like beetles
over the green hummocks where now the ponies
cropped.
168 / Anne Rivers Siddons
The ponies…
I would, of course, go to Clay about it the instant
he got home. Of course I would. But that would be a
while yet; I knew that he could not possibly be home
yet from Atlanta. Usually his money trips lasted several
days. So there was no need to leave the island and go
back to Peacock’s. No need at all.
I got up and straightened up the coffee table and
plumped up the sofa pillows and gathered the spilled
magazines and newspapers from the floor where I had
left them. I pulled the bottle of Wild Turkey out from
under the sofa and carried all of it into the kitchen. I
tossed the magazines and newspapers into the trash
basket and set it beside the back door, ready to carry
over to the big Dumpster on Peacock’s.
And then I poured myself another small drink and
took it out onto the deck, and sat down in the old twig
rocker, and put my feet up on the railing, as my
grandfather and I had done a number of times before.
There was all the time in the world.
T
his time it was Lottie who woke me
.
I know that I did not have more than the one drink,
but when you have drunk as much as I did the night
before, and when you are as small as I am, it doesn’t
take much to drag you under again. It’s as if the alco-
hol still in your system is like a banked but living fire;
it only takes the touch of a match and it’s off and
roaring again. I fell asleep sometime around eleven in
the morning, in the rocker, and only woke when the
sun was slanting toward midafternoon, my head hung
cripplingly over the back of the chair. I heard myself
give a great, gargling snore as Lottie shook me awake.
I snorted and gaped and blinked, licking my lips.
They were dry and chapped, and the sick-sweet taste
of bourbon was strong on my tongue. She came into
focus as I squinted at her, seeming in the painful dazzle
of light off the creek to loom
170 / Anne Rivers Siddons
over me like a colossus. She was leaning against the
railing, scowling at me and rolling my empty glass
back and forth with her toe.
“What are you doing here?” I rasped.
“Better still, what are you?” she said. Her voice was
the familiar twanging growl, but there was something
in it I did not recognize, or rather, something not in it
that I missed. None of the usual fudgy, tolerant warmth
was there today. Her leathery face was closed and
scowling. Her muscular arms were crossed over her
chest.
“You look like Daddy Warbucks.” I giggled, and
then hiccupped loudly. “Oh, shit,” I said. “I think I fell
asleep. My neck is killing me.”
“I think you passed out,” Lottie said. “I hope it
is
killing you. What the hell do you think you’re doing,
out here by yourself dead drunk?”
“I am not dead drunk,” I said with what dignity I
could muster. It was not much. “I had one little drink
sitting out here, and I fell asleep. I hardly got any sleep
at all last night.…”
“No wonder,” she said. “It must have taken you all
night to drink half a bottle of bourbon. This is bad
stuff, Caro. I thought you didn’t keep booze out here.”
“Well, ’
scuse
me,” I said indignantly, trying to sound
righteously affronted. “How many times have I rooted
you out at noon with a hangover that would stun an
army mule?”
Low Country / 171
“That’s me,” she said. “That’s what I do. I’ve been
doing it since I was fifteen, and I never do it unless I
mean to. It’s fun and I like it and when I don’t want
to do it I don’t. It’s different with you, and you know
it.”
“And why is that?”
“Because there’s something in you that won’t stop
until you’re dead,” she said matter-of-factly. “I’ve always
known that. There’s something in you that doesn’t
have any limits. And you can’t let go of all that pre-
cious pain, or you won’t. It’s a shitty combination,
and I’m not going to sit around and watch you self-
destruct.”
“So who asked you to?” I said, shame and anger
stinging in my throat. “I don’t remember asking you
to be my own private temperance society. And as for
my pain, as you call it, what do you know about my