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
I wished he would wake up now and smile, but he
did not. He simply slept, and slept, and slept, and I
watched him as I had my children.
“Let him,” Charlie said on the third day, when I
called him, alarmed. “It’s what he needs. It’s what I
hoped he’d do.”
“He looks dead, Charlie.”
“Who looks good when they sleep, Caro? Except
you, of course. Find yourself something to do and let
him sleep. He’ll wake up when he’s ready, and you’ll
see a big change in him.”
And so, on the afternoon of the third day, I
332 / Anne Rivers Siddons
got into the Cherokee and went at last to Dayclear, to
do, finally, what I had promised Hayes I would do.
In the days after Kylie, I became skilled at living on
the very top level of my mind. Part of this process
consisted of a conscious, ongoing dialogue with myself
about the things I saw in the world around me. I was
aware that I was doing it; I even came to call the
process my little class trips, as in, “Oh, look, class,
there’s the first robin of spring,” or “Class, notice par-
ticularly how pretty Mrs. Carmichael’s tulips are this
year.” Even when the nethermost core of me was
screaming with pain and loss, even when foreboding
loomed in my subconscious like an iceberg, I was able
to take my class trips and keep myself in the moment.
The amount of focus and single-mindedness it required
was astonishing. If I could have harnessed it I might
have lit leaves and paper to fire with the sheer force of
my concentration. It is a talent I have yet to find any
real use for, beyond the numbing of pain.
So even as I drove over the bridge onto the island,
passing over the rippling marshes and the tranquil
black water of the slough, I did not think, as I might
have, of what I would see here if Dayclear became the
epicenter of another Peacock Island Plantation property
or, rather, what I would not. And I did not see in my
mind the face
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of my depleted and diminished husband as he slept,
or wonder what might become of him if I could not,
after all, bring myself to deed the island back over to
him. I only thought that if the mild weather continued
we would have one of those rare, perfect, attenuated
springs where everything reached its absolute optimum
early and balanced there, shimmering with life and
perfection, long after the savage young summer should
have been born.
“A perfect spring for painting; I’ll have to get back
to it,” I said chattily to myself.
But the other thoughts, the older, darker ones, were
there. I felt them, bumping like sharks, down deep.
When I came into the settlement, it seemed that
everyone in it was out renewing themselves in the sun.
Old men sat on the porch and steps of the store,
wrinkled old turtles’ faces turned up to the light,
drowsing or nodding among themselves. I knew that,
barring a deadly cold snap, they would sit there now
until late next fall. A ritual herd movement had taken
place.
A few of the younger men and women were
scratching in the bare garden plots across the road
from the cabins, turning over the rich black soil, per-
haps to ready it for planting—though that lay a month
or so ahead—or perhaps just to see what they could
see. Old women hung laundry on sagging lines behind
the houses; in the
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soft, fresh little wind sheets and underwear and overalls
billowed like sails, and would, I knew, smell fragrant
beyond words when donned, sweet with salt and sun.
A couple of old women sat in chairs set out in front of
the houses, watching children toddling and stumbling
after thin black dogs and chickens in swept-out door-
yards. In a dooryard near the end of the line of cabins,
old Toby Jackson, near-blind and smiling, looked into
the sky. I wondered what he saw behind his useless
lids. Perhaps he smiled because it was wonderful bey-
ond the telling; wouldn’t that itself be wonderful? His
hands were busy with the coils of a sweet-grass basket,
as they almost always were, and the grand paisley
Legare Street shawl lay loosely on his shoulders, more
decoration than protection on this soft day.
I went into the store and found Janie behind the
counter, as usual. She had opened both the front and
back doors, and light that did not reach the fusty old
interior all winter flooded it, picking out the astounding
clutter and shabbiness and dust. The iron stove was
cold. All the old men were outside. Janie was propped,
elbows on the counter, flipping through a book of
lottery tickets. Out back I could hear garbage cans
rattling. Esau, hastily tidying up for the spring that had
come before he was ready for it.
“Hey, Caro,” Janie said, flashing her gold-toothed
smile. “It’s God’s day, ain’t it?”
Low Country / 335
“It is indeed,” I said, smiling back at her. “You fixing
to win the lottery?”
“From yo’ lips to God’s ear,” she said. “Shoot, why
not? Lady over to John’s Island won fifteen thousand
dollars last month. Never had a pot to piss in before,
neither.”
“What did she do with it?”
“Got her boy to buy her a double wide over to
Edisto. Gon’ start a beauty parlor over there.”
“Wonder why she didn’t stay on John’s?” I said.
“Oh, most of the folks around where she live is old.
They either wears head rags or does hair wrappin’.
Not much business in the old places.”
“What about you, Janie? Would you stay here if you
hit the jackpot?”
She looked at me out of the corner of her eye.
“You handin’ out money today?”
“Well, I wish, but no, I was just curious.”
She sighed.
“I don’t know. That’s God’s truth. There ain’ much
over here. Never has been. But the spaces, they’re easy
on the eyes, you know. The marsh and the woods,
they don’t confuse the mind like the cities do. When
I go over that bridge I always come home with my
head achin’ and my eyes wo’ out from things and stuff.
Look like I can’t look at but one or two things at a
time. I might feel different if I was younger, but I ’spec
it’s too late for me to move now. This old place, this
is a good
336 / Anne Rivers Siddons
place for the old folks. We don’t need much, but what
we do need is right here.”
I dropped my eyes. I had thought I might go from
one villager to another, the ones I knew, anyway, and
tell them what SouthWard proposed merely as part of
an idle conversation on a spring day, but I saw that I
could not do that. I could not say it but once.
“Is Ezra around?” I said. “I need to talk to him.”
“He and Luis gone over to the old cemetery with
Auntie Tuesday to clean up the family plots. They took
the chirrun and that Sophie with ’em. She want to
make pictures of the markers, she say. I don’t know if
Auntie gon’ let her do that or not. Ain’t too many
white folks seen that graveyard.”
“Sophia’s not white,” I said in confusion.
“Yeah, she white. She might be black in her blood,
but she white in her mind,” Janie said. “Least she used
to be. Look like she changin’ some these days. Ol’
Ezra, he talkin’ his trash to her all the time now. Not
many gals stand up to Ezra’s trash.”
I laughed, surprised at the acuity of her words.
“White in her mind.” It was just what Sophia Bridges
was.
“You know when they’ll be back?”
“I git ’em in here now if you really need ’em,” she
said, and turned and went out onto the rick
Low Country / 337
ety little back porch. I followed, protesting that I could
wait.
But she had already taken up a weathered old
wooden mallet, and with it she struck a mighty blow
on a huge, age-blackened bronze bell that sat at the
foot of the back steps. It was as big around as an oil
tank, and rose above her waist. I thought it must be
centuries old, and hand cast. It spoke with a great,
ponderous boom that rolled away through the drows-
ing woods like summer thunder, echoing and echoing
until I lost it among the farthest trees back to the west,
fringing the inland waterway.
“My lord,” I said reverently. “That’s some bell.”
“Sho’ is. Used to be a quittin’ bell on one of them
big indigo plantations on Edisto. Called folks out of
the fields five miles away.”
“How did it get over here?”
“Esau’s great-granddaddy took it when they ’mancip-
ated him, instead of money or a mule. Took him three
weeks to git it over here by oxcart. Said from then on
he was gon’ to be the only one to ring that bell, and
while he was alive, he was. You listen now.”
I did. From far away came the thin shriek of what I
first took to be a hunting osprey, or perhaps even an
eagle, but did not sound quite right for that.
“That’s Ezra,” Janie said. “He got him one of
338 / Anne Rivers Siddons
them whistles ladies in the city carries to keep from
gittin’ jumped on at night. They be on in here ter-
reckly.”
And in ten minutes or so I saw them, trudging up
the sandy white road that led away into the scrub and
the forest. Mark and Lita capered in front, with Sophia
just behind them. I could see the easy swing of her
stride even though I could not make out her features
yet. Then came Ezra’s great bulk with the tiny figure
of his aunt on his arm, and behind him, carrying what
looked to be hoes and a rake, came Luis Cassells. I
realized that I would know his great-shouldered slouch
anywhere. Auntie’s rangy yellow dog trotted at his
heels.
When I had hugged the children and greeted every-
body and they had settled Auntie Tuesday into a chair
on the porch, Janie brought opened Mello Yellos and
Mountain Dews for us, and we sat down on the porch
steps. The old men nodded and smiled and dozed. No
one spoke. Ezra and Luis looked at me keenly, but I
simply could not get my tongue working. I wished I
was anywhere on the face of the earth but here, about
to propose this monstrous indignity to these dignified
people.
Finally Ezra said, “I think you’ve got something to
say to us, Caro.”
And I sighed, and took a deep breath, and said, “I’m
only here because I promised I would
Low Country / 339
tell you this. I want you to know that it is not my idea.
I still feel the way about this island that I always have.
But I promised.”
He nodded, not speaking. I could not read his eyes.
Luis was not looking at me but out across the cleared
field to the edge of the forest. Sophia Bridges looked
at her feet. They were shod in muddy old tennis shoes
and she wore filthy blue jeans and a sweatshirt whose
message had long since faded. Her narrow, beautiful
head was wrapped in a kerchief in the manner of the
other women in Dayclear. She looked as near as Sophia
could look, I thought, to belonging here.
Auntie Tuesday nodded her head and made a sort
of hypnotic humming sound: “MMMMM hummmm,
Mmmm hummmmm…”
I realized she was singing to herself, but I could not
tell what the song was.
And so I told them. About the dilemma Clay found
himself in—though I could not have said why I did
that—and about his and Hayes’s long search for
something that would save the company and the jobs
of so many people, and finally about SouthWard. I
did not think that the name would mean much to most
of the villagers, but Ezra looked away from me, and
Luis made a soft little sound of disgust, and I knew
that they knew of it. I also knew, somehow, that they
were not surprised to hear the name on my lips. I felt
my face color, but I went on.
340 / Anne Rivers Siddons
I told them everything Hayes had told me. I was
very careful about that. I told them just what South-
Ward proposed to build on this land, and also how
they proposed to mitigate the project so as not to dis-
turb the settlement or my house too much. I told them
about the dredging and the rerouting of the creek, and
about the berms and the greenbelts and the careful in-
digenous landscaping. I saw a few eyes go to Luis
Cassells then. And finally I told them about the plans
for the settlement, ending with the offers of health in-
surance and steady salaries and central heating and
television and indoor plumbing for everybody, and
about the catch-up tutoring for the children. Finally I
fell silent. I was standing so that to look at them was
to look into the sun, and I could not do it, and was
glad. I pulled my sunglasses out of my pocket and put
them on. In the dark green world the people of
Dayclear stood silent and still, looking at me with po-
lite, closed faces.
“You may want to talk about this among yourselves,”
I said finally. “You probably will. I don’t think you