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
course. The Charleston parties.”
274 / Anne Rivers Siddons
His grin widened evilly. I could not remember if I
had told him how I hated parties or not, but I knew
that he knew somehow that I did.
“It’s the only time of the year I go to them,” I said
defensively, and then laughed aloud. “Though why I’m
explaining myself to you I do not know.”
“Why, indeed?” he said, and then his smile faded.
“What
is
wrong, Caro?” he said, and the softness in
his voice startled me so that I told him.
“And you’re afraid you’ll hear your daughter in the
night? Or see her?” he said, when I fell silent.
“I’m more afraid that I won’t, I think,” I said help-
lessly, at a loss as to how to make him understand and
wishing I had not spoken of it. “Or that I will, and that
she’ll just…fade away then. That would be worse than
not seeing her, but either of them just seem like more
than…I could bear right now. I know it’s stupid. I
know I need to get myself over this.”
“It’s not stupid. But you do need to get yourself over
it. Not only does it hurt you in more ways than I think
you know, it dishonors your child. She should not be
the agent of your fear. She would not want to drive
you from the place you and she loved so.”
“I know,” I whispered, feeling tears but knowing
dully that they would not, could not, fall.
Low Country / 275
“I feel responsible,” he said presently. “It was Lita,
after all, when she came that night after the ponies. I
know that you thought…”
“I did, for a minute, and finding that I was wrong
was one of the worst moments that I have ever had in
my life,” I said. “But that was scarcely your fault, or
Lita’s. And it’s not that I’m afraid of my child. Oh
God, of course not. If I thought she could truly come
to me there I would go and never leave. I guess I’m
afraid…of the long nights alone. I’m afraid of being
afraid. Franklin Roosevelt would not be proud of me.”
“Perhaps you should go and spend a night there and
see that it does not happen,” he said soberly. I was
grateful to him beyond words that he did not laugh at
me, or try to tell me that I was really being silly and
hysterical. I knew that I was.
“I would be glad to stay with you,” he said. “I would
not even speak if you didn’t want me to. I’d just be
there. Do you think that would help? Or maybe your
husband…”
“No,” I said. I did not tell him that I would rather
die than tell Clay I was afraid that our daughter would
come to me in the night on the island and even more
afraid that she would not. It would be a knife in his
heart. Worse.
He nodded as though he knew.
“I think…that I’ll have to do it by myself,” I said.
“And I will. Maybe in the spring, when it’s light longer
and everything’s green again…I
276 / Anne Rivers Siddons
don’t know. The thing is, Luis, I think that I can’t stay
there all night awake, waiting…and not drink. And
somehow to drink over there is abhorrent to me. I
hated it that time I did it. It feels as if it might finish
me off somehow, just kill me. And…I don’t know.
Poison the island somehow.”
I took a deep breath and looked up at him. I had
never even admitted that to myself, and there it lay,
out on the little marble-topped table between us,
pulsing like a beating heart.
“It’s a first step, Caro,” he said, and covered my hand
briefly with his own. It was enormous, and so callused
that it felt like a leather glove that had dried in the sun.
It was very warm.
“If you’re going to start that twelve-step business
with me, I’m going home,” I said, annoyed that I had
told him and near panic that I had actually named the
beast. And not to Clay, but to Luis Cassells.
“No. It’s not time for that. It may never be,” he said.
“I agree with you. The island house is no place for you
to drink. And I also think you’re probably right about
doing it by yourself. Let me think on it.”
“It’s not your problem, Luis,” I said, gathering up
my purse and keys. “I didn’t mean to burden you with
it.”
“You are no burden, Caro,” he said, and he was not
smiling. “I have burdens, but you are not
Low Country / 277
one of them. I have an idea, though; why don’t you
come and spend a whole day there, and I’ll bring Lita
and perhaps we’ll find the ponies, and maybe Ezra
would come and bring Sophia and Mark, and we could
just sort of…have a day at your place. Live a day in
Caro’s world. You’ve had one at ours, after all. It
would be wonderful fun for the children, and who
knows? It might start to give you back your island.…”
“Maybe,” I said slowly, thinking of it. The sun on
the greening marsh, and the quiet lap of the water
against the dock, and the ponies, and the lazy banter
and laughing, and maybe a picnic lunch…
The shadows that had lain thick over the house and
the island in my mind lifted a bit.
“Maybe I will.”
“Name a day.”
“Well…after the holidays. Maybe a little later, when
the marsh starts to green up?”
“You don’t want to let it go too long,” Luis said.
And as it turned out, I did not.
Two days before New Year’s Eve Clay came home
to dinner and said, “How would you like to spend New
Year’s in Old San Juan?”
I looked up from ladling the Portuguese kale soup
that he loves on winter nights.
“Puerto Rico?” I said.
He read my face.
278 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“It’s a long way from Calista. And it’s beautiful. A
lot like Key West, in the oldest parts. Or vice versa, I
guess. I thought you like Key West so much…”
“Oh, Clay…”
I did not know how to tell him that, for me, the very
earth of Puerto Rico would always be stained now
with Jeremy Fowler’s blood.
I did not have to. He sighed.
“I know. I don’t want to go, either. I swore I never
would again. But Carter has a buyer, I think, and he
won’t talk to anybody but me. It’s not going to do the
company much good; the payments are spread out too
far. But it’ll get the investors off us for a while, and it’s
the only offer we’re apt to get. The main man is
spending the holidays in San Juan on his yacht, doncha
know, and he insists that we do this right now or not
at all. I think it’s another case of jerk-the-CEO, but
right now I’m not in any position to argue. I thought
you just might want to come. You’re apt to be lone-
some here by yourself. I mean, you’re not painting
much anymore, are you? I didn’t think you’d been
over to…the other house for a while.”
“No, I…well, maybe I will start again,” I said, not
wanting to get into my reasons for avoiding the island.
“The weather’s wonderful. And I need to give the house
a good cleaning.…”
“Take Estelle for that, for God’s sake,” he said,
lapsing into his pre-Christmas abstracted
Low Country / 279
irritablility. “You don’t need to be humping out houses
yourself.”
“I think it might be just what I do need,” I said
stubbornly. There was no reason on earth to quarrel
with Clay about who cleaned the island house. I could
simply do it myself and not tell him, if I wanted to.
The fact was that I felt the walls of the bubble begin-
ning to erode badly, and it frightened and angered me.
Had it been so much to ask, this period of giddy
peace?
“Suit yourself,” Clay said coolly, and went upstairs
to his office. Thus it was that when he left for Puerto
Rico two days later, the kisses we gave each other were
cheek kisses only, and glancing ones at that. I hated it
but did not know how to get the past three weeks’ in-
timacy back, and he gave no sign that he wanted to.
When he was gone, I sat down in my shining, empty
house and suddenly could not bear it. I dug out my
battered Day-Timer and consulted it, and then dialed
the number I had written down for the little nameless
store in Dayclear.
Janie answered.
“Sto’.”
“Janie, it’s Caro Venable. Could you get a message
to Mr. Cassells for me, do you think?”
“Reckon so. They outside playin’ football right now.”
When he came to the phone, I said, “Don’t you ever
work?”
280 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“Ah, if only I could,” he said lugubriously. “But in-
stead I must hang around this store waiting for you to
call. I’m weeks behind. Mengele will gas me. Or con-
nect my ear to my fat
Cubano
butt.”
I laughed; I could not help it. The fragile sorcery of
Christmas came drifting back.
“Do you think you could take your fat
Cubano
butt
over to my house today? I’m going to be around, and
we’re not apt to get a better day to show Lita the
ponies. If I can find them.”
“My butt is yours,” he said. “As a matter of fact, I
think the ponies are around your place somewhere.
Ezra was out on the creek yesterday and saw them
hanging around under your porch.”
“Lord, I hope they’re not chewing on the supports
again,” I said. “They aren’t pressure treated, and I’ve
found enough teeth marks on them so that one day
they’re going to gnaw through them like beavers.
Granddaddy said it was the salt that soaked into the
wood that they like.”
“I think it’s more apt to be the six tons of windfall
apples I’ve been lugging over there every week, at Lady
Lita’s direction,” he said.
“You’ve built a pony trap under my porch,” I said,
grinning into the telephone.
“
Sí, senora
,” he said in a dreadful Latino whine.
Low Country / 281
“I’ll be over directly,” I said. “I’ll bring a picnic lunch.
You bring whatever you want to drink for the two of
you.”
When I got out of the Cherokee there was no one
in sight, and I stopped still and looked up at the
weathered gray house on its stilts, dreaming in its
shroud of silvery moss and the mild sun. It was a
warm, sweet morning, so much like the spring that
was still six weeks away, that I could almost hear the
little liquid sucking sound that the wet earth sometimes
makes in spring, as the dormant roots come alive again
and drink in the standing rain. Out on the creek the
water danced and sparkled, and the sky over it was the
pale washed blue that March brings. The sun was
already warm on my forearms and the top of my head,
and I took off the hat that I had worn. I waited.
Nothing happened, nothing broke the silence except
the distant cacophony of the returning ducks and wa-
terbirds in the big freshwater pond across the river and
the tiny rustlings of small things that should, by right,
still be sleeping in the mud. Well, I thought, what did
you expect to hear? But I knew.
Anxiety crawled out of the pit of my stomach and
closed around my heart. I shook my head and walked
briskly up the steps to the house. I would not have
this. Not on this most beneficent of days. Not here.
Not now.
There were baskets and grocery bags piled at
282 / Anne Rivers Siddons
the door, and a small sack of the tiny, gnarled Yates
apples that lay everywhere in the long grass of the is-
land, the last spawn of centuries-old orchards. I knew
they would be as sweet as smoke and honey, but that
you were quite apt to meet half a worm if you bit into
one. Pony bait, I was sure. So Luis and Lita were
already here. But where? I saw no vehicle, and there
was no sign at all of the herd.
And then there was. The familiar, half-spectral sound
of their hoofbeats in soft, wet earth came bursting
down the road that led into the hummock. My breath
stopped. Then the herd itself swept into view, still
looking like clumsily made toys. They were not gallop-
ing, as they sometimes did, but trotting phlegmatically
along in a messy knot. At the rear, I saw the awkward
sprite’s shape of Nissy’s colt, capering on longer legs,
and then Nissy herself. Lita was on her back, sturdy
little legs clamped around Nissy’s fat, shaggy stomach,
hands intertwined in the scabrous mane. Beside them,
Luis Cassells trotted, breathing hard but keeping up.
I put my hands to my mouth, my heart pounding. I
had seen this before, in another, distant lifetime. I did
not know if I could handle it again.
Nissy set her splayed hooves in an abrupt, skidding
stop and Lita slid off her back, crowing with joy. She
ran straight to me and threw her arms
Low Country / 283
around me and buried her head in my stomach.
“
Ay
, Caro! The
jaca
, she let me
montar
…”
“English, Lita,” Luis said, puffing and laughing.
“
Ingles, por favor
.”
Lita threw her head back and looked up at me.
“Nissy let me ride her! It’s the first time!