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
He laughed, the big, rolling laugh I remembered.
“You’re right about that,” he said. “Nobody would
confuse me with whitey.”
I blushed again, hard.
“I meant that you’re Ezra’s friend, staying in his
house. That would be enough right there.”
“I know what you meant,” he said, still chuckling.
“You’re right. They’ve taken me and Lita in like family,
God bless them. I think it’s because I’ve traveled such
a long road. These are people that know a thing or
two about journeys.”
“You said you’d tell me about that road one day,” I
said.
Low Country / 209
“I did, didn’t I? Well, since you honored me with
an apology…completely unnecessary, by the way…the
least I can do is honor you with the absolutely fascin-
ating, never-equaled story of my life. Capsule version.
That is, if you’ll quit hovering and sit down and drink
coffee with me.”
I sat. He held up a finger and Janie brought two
more cups of strong black coffee, smiling her gold-
toothed smile as she did. It tasted strong and fresh and
bitter, odd but good on this stinging day. I told her
so.
“I puts a big ol’ lump of chic’ry in every pot,” she
said.
Luis drained his second cup, set it down, and said,
“Okay. Here we go. I was born…” And he grinned his
pirate’s grin. “Don’t worry; it’s the abridged edition.
I was born in Havana in 1939, or just outside it. My
family was rich. My father was third in a line of doctors
and gentlemen farmers, and we had what you all would
call a country estate here. The finca, we called it. I was
supposed to follow in the family tradition of medicine,
but I hated everything about it, and by the time I was
ready for college I knew that plants were going to be
it for me. The old man was furious, but he had my
younger brother already in the fold, so he paid for me
to go to the university and start studying tropical bot-
any. That was in 1957.
“I got married the same year. We do that in
210 / Anne Rivers Siddons
Cuba, or did, especially in the wealthy old families.
She was the daughter of a neighbor; just as rich as we
were, and I’d known her since we were in diapers. Her
name was Ana, and she was little and round and soft
like a dumpling, with the most wonderful giggle. All
she ever wanted was to be married and have children
and live exactly like the women in her family had lived
for generations. And we got a good start on it; our
daughter, Anita, was born the next year, 1958. Anita,
little Ana. God, she was a pretty little girl. She looked
like a Christmas angel.
“The next year Batista packed it in, on New Year’s
Day, 1959, and the world we knew turned upside
down. The revolution was supposed to be for all of
us, but it was clear very soon that that didn’t include
the quote, aristocrats, unquote. I could see what was
coming, but my family never could, and Ana’s couldn’t,
either. And her folks did a real number on her; when
I begged her to bring the baby and come out with me,
she wouldn’t do it. It was all going to blow over in a
few months, she said. She would stay with her family
on the estate and wait for me to get it all out of my
system. Then we’d go on just as we’d planned. She
wasn’t a stupid girl, but she was totally of her time
and class, and she couldn’t imagine that anything could
ever change, even after it did.
“So. I got out with a young uncle on a com
Low Country / 211
mercial fishing boat out of Miami, and I stayed with
some relatives there. There are Cassells all over the
place. These didn’t have half the money my folks did,
but they were realistic about Cuba under Castro. They
knew I couldn’t go back. They found a job for me in
a little Cuban radio station and I sent home what I
could. I never knew if any of it got there or not. I didn’t
hear from Ana and the baby for almost a year, and by
then things were pretty bad for all of them, my folks
included. There wasn’t a prayer of Ana getting out
while the baby was so small. She wouldn’t, anyway.
Her family was in terrible shape, trying to do farm
work for one of the cooperatives and dying from it.
She wouldn’t leave them. I knew in my heart that I
wasn’t going to see them again, though I wouldn’t
admit it to myself.
“I went back to Cuba in April of 1961 with the inva-
sion forces that the CIA trained in Florida and
Guatemala. I was captured almost before I put a foot
on the beach and spent a year and a half in prison
down there. I try not to talk about that year and a half.
They let me out just before Christmas of 1962, and I
was going to go and find my family, but I was met at
the gate by a friend of my family in Miami and taken
straight to the harbor at midnight, and put in the hold
of a sailing sloop that belonged to some rich German
dude who knew my uncle. That was the last time I saw
Cuba.
212 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“In 1963 my uncle sent me to Cornell and I got a
graduate degree in tropical botany. I finished in 1966,
with about as much chance of making a living in my
specialty as if it had been sword-swallowing. But I’d
met some people and learned some things at Cornell,
and those months in that prison made something of
me I’d never been before. There was a guy in Miami
then, a fantastic man named Jorge Mas Canosa, sort
of the legendary king of the anti-Castro exiles. The
word ‘charisma’ might have been invented just for him.
He founded the anti-Communist Cuban American
Foundation, headquartered in Miami. It was the daddy
of all the anti-Communist movements. He modeled it
after your American political action committees, and
he raised a ton of money for the movement, and got
out the exile vote for the Republicans year after year.
He was the most alive human being I ever saw. I would
have followed him into hell. In a way, I did.
“He couldn’t use a botanist, but he could a radio-TV
announcer. He got me into Radio and TV Marti, his
propaganda voice, which was nothing if not controver-
sial in those days, and I just ate it up. I did everything.
I read the news and played the music and kept the
station logs and sold airtime and even had my own
slot singing once, when we ran out of money and he
couldn’t get anybody else. But then I started to drink,
which was almost endemic in the exile
Low Country / 213
community in those days, especially among the ones
of us who’d been in the invasion and in prison. Big
man stuff, you know. I was one of the ones who
couldn’t handle it. It didn’t take me long to go the
whole way down. I was born to be an alky. I make a
better drunk than I do anything else, probably. I got
so bad on the air that he didn’t have any choice but
to fire me. Even I knew that. So I drifted around, doing
landscape work and whatever radio and TV I could
get. I didn’t hold on to any of it. I never remarried and
I never stayed with any woman long enough to settle
down. I was married to the bottle, and that’s no joke.
I’ve done essentially that from the late seventies until
now, only I’ve done the last eight years of it sober. I
met Ezra in Charleston when he was speaking there,
and he had this afternoon jazz and talk program on a
station out on Wappoo Creek Road, and he put me
on with him, and we played music and needled the
conservatives and he let me help him with some of his
organizing. I helped organize the sanitation workers
on John’s. It was as big a thrill as I’ve ever had. But
mostly I just do the radio program and what landscap-
ing and consulting I can pick up.
“Like I said, I never went back to Cuba. There wasn’t
anything to go back to, really. My parents tried to run
a little shop in Havana, but of course they knew
nothing about that. They
214 / Anne Rivers Siddons
checked out with sleeping pills and rum one night
about the time I discovered booze over here. My wife’s
folks ended up on one of Fidel’s biggest agricultural
cooperatives, doing field labor until they dropped from
it, and my wife worked in the fields, too. I only found
this out later. She never would come out, not even
when I found a fairly safe passage for her and Anita.
Ana always thought things were about to change. Al-
ways did. Anita married a young man from the cooper-
ative and went with him into the mountains to start a
new agricultural colony there, but it failed after the
first year. It’s hard to tell anybody just how bad things
are up in those hills. Everybody was checking out right
and left, but she was nine months pregnant and spot-
ting, and she didn’t want to risk the baby. Her husband
left with the others, saying he’d be back in a day or
two with food and supplies, and after the baby came
they’d go back to Havana and start over. I don’t know
if Anita had any sense or not, but she was Ana’s child
to the core, and she believed him. I don’t know what
happened to him. I guess she didn’t, either. Dead,
probably, from liquor or a fight, a lot of them died
young. Anyway, he didn’t come back and she went
into a long and awful labor alone in their little shack,
and the baby was born dead. She lay there bleeding
to death with Lita beside her. I never even knew I had
a grandchild until after they were all dead but her. She
was not
Low Country / 215
quite five. She wouldn’t leave her mother and the baby.
She just lay down beside them and waited. It was days
before the Red Cross found her. They located my wife
back in Havana and brought Lita to her, and that’s
where she’s been until I could get her out, after Ana
died. She wouldn’t let me bring Lita out before that.
Still waiting for things to get back to normal, she was.
I have no picture of my daughter but the one made at
her christening, and I cannot remember what my wife
looked like, except for a picture I have that was made
on our wedding day. Well, you know the rest of it; I
told you yesterday. So. Does that earn me the right to
hear the story of Caro Venable, from gestation up to
now?”
“One day,” I said, my eyes stinging with tears. “One
day, maybe. My God, what a life. How could mine
compete with that?”
“Are we having a competition? I tell you, Caro
Venable, for all its comings and goings and ins and
outs and so forth, the best thing I can say about my
life up to now is that I beat booze and I have Lita. It
doesn’t seem very much for the amount of energy ex-
pended, does it?”
“If that’s all you think a life like that adds up to,
you’ve got a problem,” I said.
“It was a selfish life,” Luis said briefly. “When all’s
said and done, I did just what I wanted to. Anyway, I
have a feeling things are about to change.”
216 / Anne Rivers Siddons
And he gave me such a showily exaggerated Latin
leer that I could only laugh helplessly. If he had had
a long, waxed mustache, he would have twirled it.
“I have to go home now,” I said. “I’ve hung on
breathlessly to your every word, but now, alas, my
own duties call me.”
“And are you impressed beyond words and moved
almost to tears?”
“I’ll think upon it and let you know,” I said lightly,
but inside I was both those things, and not ashamed
of it, though I would never tell him so.
When he walked me to the car, he said, “Will you
be staying out here? Lita is wild to see the ponies
again.”
“I’ve got to do Thanksgiving for about a million
homeless lambs,” I said, “but I’ll try to come out after
the weekend, and we’ll track them down. How will I
let you know?”
“I’ll know,” he said, bowing from the waist and
kissing my hand. “I assure you, I’ll know.”
I shut the Jeep’s door a little more smartly than was
necessary, and he went back into the store. As he
walked away, I could hear him laughing his hyena’s
laugh. I laughed, too. It felt good.
Two days before Thanksgiving, Jeremy Fowler walked
down to the sea in Puerto Rico at four o’clock in the
morning, sat down, and blew his brains out with a
police .38 nobody knew he had.
Low Country / 217
By noon we had the news on Peacock’s Island. By six
o’clock that evening the company was in deep shock
and full mourning.
Clay and Hayes flew down from Charleston that
afternoon as soon as they could get a plane out. I went
to the office and put a note on the front bulletin board
and told a weeping Shawna to pass the word to
everybody: our house was open for whomever wanted
to come. There would be drinks and some supper, if
anybody wanted it.
Almost everybody came. Most of those who had
expected to go to their respective homes for Thanksgiv-