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
or what I would be. I don’t see how you’ve gone on.”
“Well, I have other people I love, other things,” I
said. “All of us do. It’s hard to see that at first, but…we
do.”
And then I remembered that, so far as I knew, she
did not, and muttered, “Sorry. I assume a lot.”
“Oh, I have them, too,” she said. “Even if most of
them are dead. I just found them. It’s a powerful feel-
ing.”
“Maybe not all of them are dead,” I said, thinking of
Ezra’s black eyes on her.
“Maybe not,” she said. “Maybe not.”
We were silent again until I pulled up in front of her
condo in the harbor village. Despite the balmy
weather, it was still winter, and the darkness had swept
in suddenly and completely from the west. There were
a number of big white yachts in the harbor, their
portholes radiant with the lights of cocktails and din-
ners being celebrated, and the flagstone walkway
around the harbor was full of tanned, sun-bleached
people strolling to the shops and restaurants, or from
one boat to another. In the old live oaks the tiny white
lights that always reminded me of Christmas twinkled
in the skeins of silvery moss. Soft rock music drifted
from somewhere. It was festive and rich and quite
lovely, and about as real as cotton
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candy. I knew suddenly that if I ever saw this over on
the island I would have to leave. That day. That mo-
ment.
We made a date for lunch the next week—I was not
going to let this accessible new Sophia go—and I drove
slowly back to the house. It was dark except for the
light I had left in the kitchen. As I pulled into the
driveway, I saw a man come out of the back door and
down the steps. Before I could even feel uneasy, I saw
that it was Hayes Howland and felt a sharp sting of
resentment instead. I did not want Hayes going in and
out of my house when I was not there. I supposed,
with weary resentment, that I would have to start
locking my doors after all. It was ironic to think that
when I finally capitulated to that, it would be Hayes I
was locking out, and not the occasional random robber
or rapist.
I met him at the back steps.
“Are you stealing the silver?” I said, trying for light-
ness.
“Looking for Clay. I haven’t been able to raise any-
body on the phone all afternoon, and I got uneasy. I
saw Charlie at lunch, and he said Clay was not in such
hot shape. You weren’t locked, so I went on in. He’s
asleep upstairs. I didn’t want to wake him.”
“Good of you,” I said waspishly. “He’s been sleeping
a lot. Charlie says he needs it. He also says he’ll be
just fine once he gets enough rest, so
352 / Anne Rivers Siddons
I’m letting him do it. I expect he’ll be back at the office
in a day or two. Can it wait, whatever you wanted
with him?”
“Oh, yeah. I was just being a mother hen. But now
that I’m here…Caro, have you had a chance to do
what we agreed on? About Dayclear?”
I knew in that instant that that was why he had
come. Not to check on Clay, but to see if I had been
to Dayclear yet, to put the company’s proposal to the
village. I don’t know why it made me so angry. From
the beginning I had known that he was in a hurry for
an answer.
“I’ve just come from there,” I said, looking straight
at him in the darkness. I could scarcely see his face,
only the gleam of his pale blue eyes.
“I told them exactly what you told me. And essen-
tially they told me it was up to me since I owned the
island, and I told them that it wasn’t going to happen.
And it’s not. I’m sorry, Hayes. I know that puts you
all in a bind. But you redid the plans once. Surely
there’s an avenue you haven’t explored yet. In any
event, I cannot let it happen, and I won’t.”
He stood silently, looking at me, and then down at
his feet.
“I’m sorry to hear that, Caro,” he said. “Clay will be,
too.”
“I know. Let me tell him, Hayes. I want him to hear
it from me.”
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He shrugged. I could just make out the gesture.
“Better do it soon,” he said, and padded away over
the carpet of wet live oak leaves to the Porsche that
crouched in the dark like a big cat.
I watched him out of sight, and then walked around
the house and through the front yard, over the dunes
and down to the beach. I had not known I was going
to do that, but this time there was no heaviness, no
darkness, no prickle of panic. I merely felt still and
empty and very tired. I slipped off my sneakers and
padded across the silky, snake-cold sand to the firmer,
icy salt-slicked sand at the fringe of the surf and sat
down on the trunk of the fallen palm tree that had been
Carter’s fort and Kylie’s balance bar.
There was no moon, but the stars were huge and
cold and near, and the sea itself seemed to breathe off
a kind of radiance, like smoke. It made a long, infinitely
gentle susurration: Hushhhhh. Hushhhhhh. There was
almost no surf at all; what there was was white lace
against the blackness of the beach. There was no other
sound, and no one at all on the beach. I knew that if
I looked behind me I would see the lights of all the
other houses that fringed our stretch of shore, see their
windows lit for dinner and the coming evening. But I
did not look back. I looked far out into the whispering
sea, and I looked up into the sky.
“I wonder what you would make of all this?”
354 / Anne Rivers Siddons
I said to my daughter in the sky, or in the water, or
wherever it was that held her. I felt her very near. “I
wonder what you would do about the island if it were
your decision to make.”
But of course I knew the answer to that; she would
make the decision that I had made. She was me and I
was her. There had never been any question of that.
It struck me then that it was time. It was, finally, time.
“I’m going to let you go,” I said aloud. “I don’t know
how to do it, but I’m going to do it tonight. You need
to be your own person now. If you were still with me,
I’d be doing this about now…trying to learn to let you
be yourself. So this is it, kid. You’ll have to help me.
I don’t know what I need to do next.”
I wriggled off the log and stretched out against it,
leaning my head back, letting it take my weight. The
damp cold of the sand seeped through the seat of my
blue jeans, but it seemed a point of connection to the
earth, not an uncomfortable intrusion. I closed my eyes
and willed myself to think of nothing at all except her.
I tried to empty my mind even of the image of her, and
let just her essence, the warm, secret displacement of
air and space that was Kylie in my soul, fill me.
It was a mystery, what happened then. I think
everyone gets perhaps one to a lifetime. I know that I
made it in my mind, but I know, too, that it
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was more than that, and I will always know that, no
matter who tries to dissuade me. No one will, because
I will never tell anyone. Not even Clay. This was my
mystery, mine and Kylie’s. I lay still on that empty
beach with her filling me, and behind my eyes there
began to appear golden prickles of light, like the ones
that always come when you hold your eyes shut hard.
And then one of the pinpricks began to grow larger
and larger and brighter and brighter, so that it pressed
hard against my lids, and I opened them to ease the
pressure and the light drifted out of me and into the
air, very slowly, and up into the sky. I watched it as it
grew smaller and smaller, and finally I lost it among
the winter stars.
I closed my eyes again and waited. And then I saw
behind my eyelids that very slowly, infinitely slowly,
it disengaged itself from the body of stars and grew
larger and more golden, and began to drift down again,
down and down until it hovered in front of my face
and bumped at my cheeks and lips with a cool sort of
frisson, like the feeling a lit sparkler makes against your
skin. A kiss, a nibble. I opened my eyes and it came
in. I closed them. I felt it linger there just behind my
lids, warm and cool at the same time, and then it slid
down and down and came to rest in my chest, in what
felt to be the absolute center of me. And there it stayed,
until I finally opened my eyes for good and all and
said, “Yes. Okay. You’re
356 / Anne Rivers Siddons
safe and so am I. Thank you, darling. Go to sleep
now.”
And I believe that she did. And I believe that she
sleeps there now and always, and will never again have
to answer some sad, silly, frantic summons from me
or anyone else. Wherever else she is I do not know,
but I believe that the very living core, the essential
flame of her, is inside me. I believe that.
When I finally got up off the beach and went inside
my house, it was to find my husband still asleep on
my daybed, his face looking, finally, cool and
smoothed and full again. I kissed him on the forehead,
and he stirred and mumbled, and then fell back into
his long sleep.
“I just wanted to tell you that I have her home, and
I think you can go back to your own bed,” I whispered.
In the morning when I woke, I found a note on my
bedside table that said, “Feel terrific for some reason
& have gone into the office. Call me later. Thanks for
hanging in there.”
I lay there looking at the new morning on the face
of the sea and thinking that if I was lucky there was
time for coffee before I called him and blew his world
to bits.
B
ut I did not do that, after all, because when I
finally
had had enough coffee to jump-start my courage and
called him at his office, it was to learn, from a Shawna
whose smirk was almost visible over the wire, that he
was gone again.
“Just ran out the door,” she said happily. “Got a call
about an hour ago from Atlanta and he and Hayes
were out of here like scalded tomcats. He said for me
to tell you when you called, and that he’d be away
three or four days. The bigwigs are flying them to
Texas to see some kind of Wild West theme park thing
out there. Reckon we’re all going to be wearing ten-
gallon hats. Oh, and he said to tell you he was just
fine, felt great, and to call Charlie and tell him. That’s
his doctor, isn’t it? I could do that for you. I wouldn’t
mind talking to that doctor myself. I heard about Pu-
erto Rico.
358 / Anne Rivers Siddons
Somebody needs to tell him just what’s going on, and
I know Clay isn’t going to do it.…”
“Thank you so much, Shawna,” I said through
clenched teeth. It dawned on me that my head was
pounding badly and my nose was stuffed up. Sinus
infections are spring’s first gift to me, and if I was in
for one, the last thing I needed was to listen to Shawna
chirp her love and ownership of my husband to me at
ten o’clock in the morning.
“I’ll call Charlie myself,” I said. “We went over last
week and saw him; he knows all he needs to know
about Clay’s condition. He’s been our doctor for a
long time. He was in our wedding. He would want to
talk to Clay or me.”
I heard her affronted little snort and realized that I
had been cruel, and did not care. Shawna set herself
up for rebuffs like a tenpin, over and over again. I
wondered if she thought that if I were out of the picture
Clay would sweep her into his arms? Look at her one
afternoon, walk slowly to her, pull the pins out of her
hair, and remove her glasses and whisper, “My God.
I never realized.”
Fat chance.
The sinus infection settled in by noon. I knew that
I had done it to myself, sitting in the damp wind on
the wet beach last night, and did not care at all. The
infections make me sick and so dizzy that it is hard to
walk, and the pressure in my
Low Country / 359
eyes and cheeks feels like intense sleepiness. My face
swells and my eyes close, and I am good for nothing
but to burrow into bed and sleep. I know that they last
approximately three full days and nights; if I take anti-
biotics, perhaps two and a half. When the fourth day
dawns I am invariably as clear-headed and full of en-
ergy as I ever was, and so I have learned to give in to
them, cancel whatever I can, and crawl into bed with
hot tea and magazines.
And that is what I did. Estelle knows the drill now;
she does not hover, but she keeps a carafe of hot tea
beside my bed, and leaves soup and sandwiches for
me, and goes on about her business. If Clay is at home
he checks on me occasionally, but I really do prefer to
be left alone, and it pleases me when one of the attacks
happens to fall during one of his business trips. I don’t