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
so-called pain? When have I ever mentioned it to you?”
“You don’t,” she said, shaking her head slowly. “We
all know you’re too brave to mention that you’re in
mortal pain almost every waking minute of your life.
God, everybody who knows you tiptoes around scared
to death they’re going to slip and mention death or
daughters. You don’t know how many times I’ve
wanted to just ask you if your daughter was still dead.”
I felt the blood drain from my face.
“How dare you?” I whispered. “How dare you talk
to me like that? I’ve never…I don’t…
172 / Anne Rivers Siddons
you talk like I
use
Kylie or something, like I…hug it to
me, like I cherish it…”
“Don’t you?” she said, and then shut her eyes. “I’m
sorry. That was rotten. But I hate to see this, Caro. I
always thought of this place as somewhere you could
come that was safe, where you didn’t feel hustled or
threatened, or need to drink. I didn’t worry about you
when I knew you were out here. I don’t want to have
to start now.”
“So don’t,” I said snippily. “How did you know I
was out here, anyway? For that matter, how did you
know I drank half a bottle of bourbon?”
“Didn’t you?”
“Yes.”
“Well, then. As for how I knew, a little bird told
me.”
I saw it clearly, with one of those swift, untutored
leaps of connection that you make sometimes, for no
reason at all.
“He told you, didn’t he? That awful Cassells
man…Lou, or whatever his name is. Okay, Lottie, so
how do you know him? As if I had to ask.”
She grinned. It was her old grin, full and gleeful and
lewd.
“I know him just the way you think I do,” she said.
“And I’m damned glad I do. He’s as good a lay and
as good a man as I’ve met on this island in a coon’s
age, and as long as he wants to
Low Country / 173
drop on over of an evening, I’ll leave the light burning
for him. He’s not a bad art critic either, among his
other more obvious talents. I purely love fucking a man
who can talk about something afterward beside his
orgasm. I thought you all would meet eventually, but
I can’t say I had anything like this morning in mind.”
“He told you all about it, undoubtedly.”
“Of course. He has no secrets from
moi
. He was
worried about you, incidentally. He doesn’t go around
gossiping about the boss’s wife just to be doing it.”
“Oh, I’m sure not,” I said nastily. “Did he happen
to mention that he insulted me? And that he calls Clay
Mengele?”
She gave a whoop of laughter and doubled over.
“Oh, God! How perfect! I’ll never be able to look
at him with a straight face again.…”
“God
damn
it, Lottie!”
She held up one hand, palm out, gasping for breath.
“Okay,” she croaked. “All right. Truce. I’ll lay off
Men—Clay if you’ll go take a shower and toss the
booze and let me feed you lunch. When did you eat
last? Never mind. Shem just brought a mess of crabs
in. I’ll boil if you’ll crack.”
And because it was Lottie, and because I felt shamed
and diminished and out of control and frightened by
that, I did as she said. I climbed,
174 / Anne Rivers Siddons
shaking, into the shower and let the reeking hot water
wash the agues and wobbles out of my head and
muscles, and she tossed the liquor. I heard her ferret
out the remaining bottles of Wild Turkey, heard them
clink into the trash sack, heard the back door slam and
a bit later her car trunk, and knew that she would haul
them out to a Dumpster someplace. I felt better after
that, as if a loaded gun had been taken out of my
house. She was right. I had fouled my own nest last
night and today. I did not intend it to happen again.
A little later we sat at the scarred old picnic table
out behind her gas-station studio, cracking open the
hot boiled blue crabs and picking the sweet meat from
the shells. My hands and face were sticky with crab
juice, and I could feel my forehead and scalp stinging
from the spurted juice of an errant lemon. I imagined
that I smelled about as bad as I looked, but I felt much
better. Fresh crabs and Lottie have that effect on me.
Somewhere during the late lunch we had arrived at
a tacit agreement not to speak of my drinking again,
or of Clay, and I felt lulled and warmed by the sheer,
rank, earthen force that was Lottie. The hangover was
all but gone. So was the residue of last night’s eeriness,
and the near-madness. I could even speak lightly of it,
and found that I wanted to.
I told her about seeing the child in the fog, and
about sitting there in the firelight, drinking
Low Country / 175
and waiting, and about waking to the laughter, and
then running down the steps to meet not a revenant
Kylie, but a strange, near-mute Cuban child and her
black-furred grandfather. I even laughed a little, at
myself and my lunatic, fog-fed fancies.
She did not smile back. Her eyes were dark with pity
and something near fear.
“You want to stick a little closer to the world for a
while, Caro,” she said seriously. “I feel like this is a
dangerous time for you. I don’t know why, but I do
feel that. Maybe you ought to lay off the island for a
spell.”
“Well, I will, I think,” I said. “It’s so close to
Thanksgiving now, and there’re a bunch of new kids
in, and Clay’s going to want to do that ghastly Low-
country Thanksgiving thing for them and all the others
who don’t go home, so I’m just about out of time.
Besides that, I don’t want to run into Mellors the
gamekeeper again. He could ruin a place for you in a
New York minute.”
She leered at me.
“I see the sexual aspect of the man has not escaped
you. It’s pretty powerful, isn’t it? For an old man and
a grandpa, he flat reeks of it. I gather he pointed out
the similarity of your—ah, situations, yours and his
and Lady Chatterley and company. He laughed like a
hyena when I mentioned it.”
“It was your idea, was it? I might have
176 / Anne Rivers Siddons
known he’d never think of it by himself. What, a little
pillow talk or something?”
“Or something. I did tell him about you, for what
it’s worth. He was curious about Clay, about what sort
of wife he would have, what sort of children. Don’t
worry, I didn’t tell him about Kylie. That’s for you to
do or not, as the friendship progresses.”
And she smiled at me again, a wolflike baring of her
big teeth.
“There’s no friendship to progress and there isn’t
going to be,” I said. “He’s arrogant and insufferable,
and if it weren’t for his granddaughter I swear I’d try
to get Clay to fire him. She’s crazy about the ponies,
though. She talked for almost the first time since her
mother died when she was with them. It’s the saddest
thing, Lottie.…”
“I know the story. You’re right. It’s awful. Well, I
don’t think you need to worry about him hanging
around. He’s pretty busy over in Dayclear, from what
he says. He also said he has no intention of bothering
you again, said for me to be sure to tell you that. He
was only there today because the kid ran away. But
you’re cutting off your nose to spite your face. He’d
make you a good friend. You don’t have so many of
those around here that another one wouldn’t help.
Come to think of it, he’d make you a good…whatever
else, too. A tad of Lady Chatterley
Low Country / 177
would do you a world of good, no doubt about it. And
I sure don’t mind sharing. There’s enough there to go
around.”
“I’m going home if you’re going to talk like that,” I
said, face and neck burning. The thought of those dark
hands and arms, those heavy shoulders, that black
hair…would it be coarse? Silky? How would it be?
I got up and ran water from the outdoor spigot over
my sticky hands and hot wrists, letting my hair fall
over my face so that she could not see the flush. I heard
her chuckle. To divert her, I said, “You know what he
said? He said Clay’s going to put a property, a resort
community, right smack in the marsh where the river
and creek meet, where Dayclear is. He says Clay hired
him as a consultant about subtropical plants and
landscaping for it. I think he must be really crazy. You
know that’s my land. You know I’d never let anything
like that happen on the island. And you know Clay
knows that, too. Next time you see old Babalu or
whatever you call him, you might enlighten him about
that. I certainly didn’t get very far trying.”
When she did not respond I straightened up and
looked around. She was looking at the ground, and
her face was very still. Lottie’s face is many things, but
almost never that.
“Lottie,” I said tentatively.
“I don’t know anything about that,” she said. “You
ought to talk to Clay about that.”
178 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“Well, of course I will, but don’t you think it’s the
craziest thing you ever heard?”
“I’ve heard lots of crazy things, Caro,” Lottie said.
“Somehow that’s not the craziest.”
“But, my God…”
“Ask Clay. I don’t know. I try to know as little about
what goes on in his mind as possible. You know me.
Just a little ol’ trailer tramp, only interested in fuckin’
and drawin’. Speaking of which, I’ve got a painting
drying up on me in the studio where I just walked out
and left it when I heard you were on a private toot on
your private island. I need to get back to it and you
need to get on home.”
“Lottie…”
“Home, Caro. Not the island. Home. Okay? I’m
going to call you in an hour and see if you’re there,
and if you’re not I’m going to call the sheriff to go out
to the island and get you. Now go on. Git.”
She turned and stomped back into the studio, leaving
the litter of crab shells and paper napkins reeking in
the sun. I got up, fuming at her high-handedness. Un-
der it all there was a small, cold curl of fear, like a
worm.
It was close to five when I got home. I knew that
Estelle would be gone, but she had left the kitchen and
downstairs sitting room lights burning against the
darkness that comes early off the ocean this time of
year. I was glad. The wind had
Low Country / 179
picked up and I could hear the surf, usually flaccid and
sullen, booming hollowly on the shore beyond the
house, and the palms rattling fretfully. It is the time of
day that I like least in winter, and I went into the house
singing loudly simply because I hate to be answered
by nothing but wind and sea.
“‘Trailer for sale or rent, rooms to let fifty cents,’” I
wailed in my frail soprano.
I would light a fire in my little upstairs sitting room,
I thought, and take a supper tray up there, and find
an old movie on TV, and drift off to sleep on my quilt-
piled daybed, and when I woke it would be to the
sound of Estelle singing gospel down in the kitchen
and the smell of coffee. And then I would find out
where Clay was staying and I would call him, and he
would tell me when he was coming home, and the free
fall of the past two days would stop, and the orderly
quadrille of my life on Peacock’s Island would resume
again. I realized that I was missing Clay very much. I
missed Carter, too. Maybe I would call him tonight.
Except that I almost never caught him in, and for some
reason that depressed me. Oh, well. He would be home
for Thanksgiving, and that was less than a week away.
There was a note from Estelle on the counter. It was
sitting under the steam iron. I walked over and looked
at it.
“It have play out,” the note said, and a fat
180 / Anne Rivers Siddons
black arrow pointed to the iron. I felt a smile twitch
at my mouth, and then banished it. Clay thought Es-
telle’s notes to us were wonderfully funny, but I did
not, and I usually threw them away before he saw
them, lest he take them to the office and show them
around. More than once Hayes Howland had quoted
an Estellism at a party, and I resented it sharply. Illit-
eracy in any permutation is not amusing to me. I was
about to pick this one up and throw it away when I
noticed that another arrow directed me to turn the
paper over. I did.
“Mr. Clay be home tonite,” it said. “He coming by
privet jet. Home by midnite.”
I did smile then, both at “privet jet” and the fact that
Clay would be home by midnight. I wondered whose
private plane he might be taking. He was adamant that
no such amenity be purchased for the company, except
for a small twin-engine Cessna that was virtually a ne-
cessity for island-hopping among the company’s
properties. When he traveled he was scrupulous about
flying coach, and he insisted that everyone else on