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
“Dear God, surely you don’t think that Clay…”
“Of course not. But I think that somebody acting in
his name, if not with his knowledge or permission,
stuck those needles in those apples. We’ll probably
never find out who, but I don’t really care. I can’t af-
ford to take chances with her. You can see that, can’t
you?”
“But…we…you were winning! I’ve already told you
I’m not going to turn over this land; there’s no more
fight to fight.…”
He looked at me in disbelief.
“Winning what? The right to eat apples with botu-
lism toxin in them? If that’s a victory, I can’t afford it,
Caro.”
I could not argue with that. Desolation settled over
me. The night turned vast and cold. There were stars,
the same ones I had seen over Kylie’s ocean four nights
before, but I could not
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see their light now. It did not seem to reach the earth.
“I’ll miss both of you,” I said as matter-of-factly as I
could. My voice shook.
He took a great breath as if to speak in return, but
then did not. Presently he said, “You could come by
and see us sometime on your way to Charleston. It’s
not far off the highway. Lita would love that. I’ll be
around; I’m not going to look for anything for a while,
till I know she’s going to be all right. Maybe when we
know about the colt. After that I’ll find something and
get her into preschool. Ezra knows a woman with a
good little one near the trailer park.”
“Well, of course,” I said, thinking of it: this great,
exuberant force of a man, with his wild darkness and
his big shoulders, pent up in a double-wide in a trailer
park. The living flame that was Lita battering at those
enclosing walls…
I knew that I would not visit him on Edisto.
“So when will you go?”
“In the morning, I think. Or later tomorrow. If the
colt comes along like the vet thinks he will, I’d like to
take her by to see for herself. I think Esau and Janie
will take him when he’s well enough to leave; he’ll be
used to people then, and the vet doesn’t think the herd
will take him in after he’s been away so long. They’ll
smell us on him. The Bigginses have a pen behind the
store. I
380 / Anne Rivers Siddons
can bring Lita over in the summer and she can learn
to ride him. You could come, too.…”
The plans sounded positive, full of hope, but his
voice was merely defeated.
“Luis…” I began, unsure what I would say but willing
almost to say anything that would bring life back into
that voice.
“Don’t, Caro,” he said, his head down so that I could
not see his face. “You can’t straddle two camps, and
it’s not possible for you to choose one. You’ve lost too
much already. I would not permit it if you could.”
I was silent. What were we speaking of, or rather,
not speaking of, here?
“Abuelo! Grandpapa!” a small voice shrieked, a voice
with relief and joy behind it, and we looked up to see
Lita tearing out of the cabin door toward us, her arms
outstretched, her face wreathed in smiles. He opened
his arms and took two great strides forward, and she
ran into them and was enclosed.
After that I painted. I painted for almost two straight
days and nights, faster and more intensely than I have
ever painted before, virtually scouring color onto the
paper and then, when it tore, abandoning my watercol-
ors and pulling out my old oils and the moldy canvases
I found stacked in the utility closet and slashing at them
with palette knife and stiff drypoint brushes. I put on
my grand
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father’s old tapes of Beethoven and Mahler, great,
crashing, apocalyptic music, and I built up the fire,
and when I got so tired and hungry that I dropped the
knife, I opened cans of Vienna sausage and tuna fish
and ate them with soda crackers and rat cheese and
washed them down with Diet Cokes and fell asleep
on the sofa before the fire, and dreamed more paint-
ings.
It was almost like automatic writing, I thought,
watching as if from a distance the work unrolling from
my fingers onto the canvases. It was not that I was
unaware of what I did; indeed, I felt an almost preter-
natural control, an awesome kind of focus, that I have
never felt before. It was simply that I did not quite
know where my subject matter was coming from. I did
not go out into the marshes and sketch or photograph
and return to work, as was my habit. I did not leave
the living room of the house. What I painted was the
island: the marshes and the river and the creeks and
the hammocks, and the secret groves of live oaks and
the shrouding moss, but it was not an island I knew.
It seemed to be an island out of another time, seen
through other eyes. I painted stormy skies and nets
flying like clouds, and dark people in fierce colors with
their heads thrown back and their arms outstretched,
shouts and songs stretching the cords of their shining
throats. I painted fires in black woods and not quite
human creatures out of an African night a millennium
before. I painted
382 / Anne Rivers Siddons
baptisms in blood-dark rivers and burials in firelit
woods. I painted wild horses, running, running. Run-
ning free.
When I finished painting, as suddenly as I had be-
gun, morning was well along on the third day after
Luis and Lita found the horses, and I was as cool and
dry and depleted as if I had given birth. And perhaps
I had.
I took a shower and cooked myself a real breakfast
and took the paintings out onto the deck and propped
them in the white sunlight and studied them. They
were crude and hastily done and primitive past any-
thing I had never even seen in my mind, and they had
a power that almost frightened me. I could not even
imagine where they had come from. Well, that was
not entirely true; I knew or could sense that they sprang
from the bottomless well of red anger I had discovered
at the poisoning of the horses, and the fear I had felt
for Lita and the colt and the island…and for Clay. But
the images themselves…it was as if they had passed
through me from somewhere else, not had their genesis
in my mind. I poked around inside myself, prodding
carefully, to see if that all-generating rage still lived
there. I felt none at all. Just the emptiness.
As if they had been waiting until I finished my work,
Ezra and Lottie Funderburke drove up in Lottie’s little
Subaru truck. I greeted them calmly, almost peacefully.
I had not known that they
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knew each other, but it did not surprise me. Two such
forces of nature on a small island: of course they would
meet. Incuriously, I looked at each to see if the nature
of the relationship was apparent, but it was not. They
could be lovers or mortal enemies during a truce. The
only thing I thought that they could not be was casual
acquaintances.
“Coffee, for God’s sake,” Lottie said, stumping up
onto the deck, and then, “Jesus, God, Caro! Are these
yours?”
“I think so. Nobody else here but us chickens,” I said.
“You want coffee, too, Ezra?”
“Please. Whhhoooee, look at that stuff! You been
hag-rode in the night, Caro?”
“I honestly don’t know,” I said, and padded inside,
barefoot, to put on the coffee.
When I came back out with the coffee tray and some
stale doughnuts, Lottie was sitting on the deck floor
with her back against the railing studying the paintings.
Ezra stood looking out at the morning dance of the
light on the creek.
“Whatever got ahold of you, you treat it good, you
hear?” Lottie said. “This stuff is dynamite. I don’t know
if you’ll do much with them around Charleston or in
the village center. Likely scare the bejesus out of the
culturines and the retired admirals. I know some odd
little galleries around that would love to hang them,
though. I’ll put some up in the studio, too. The kind
of people who’ll buy them stop by my place pretty
384 / Anne Rivers Siddons
often. You think you’ve got any more of that in you,
or did you paint it all out?”
“I just can’t tell yet,” I said. “It’s like somebody else
that I don’t know did it. I’m not going to show it or
sell it, though. Not now. Maybe when I can tell
whether or not it’s a real direction, or just a twitch…”
“More an explosion, I’d say,” Ezra said, grinning.
“You get any madder than that and you gon’ blow a
hole in that canvas.”
“I don’t feel mad now,” I said. “I know I was the
other day, but I can’t seem to find it again.”
“I don’t wonder,” he said. “It’s all in there.”
He gestured at the paintings.
“So, what about the colt?” I said. “What about
Lita…and Luis? Have you gotten the toxicology reports
yet?”
“The colt is up and running around and eating,” he
said. “I’m going to take him over to Janie and Esau’s
in the morning. He’s already let the vet slip a snaffle
on him. Lita is talking a blue streak and pestering Luis
to bring her back over here. He doesn’t feel like he can
do that right now. He’s got her in preschool half a
day. The other half he stays with her. He’s looking for
somebody over there to stay with her after school; he’s
got to get some work pretty soon. Meanwhile, morn-
ings, he’s doing some legwork for me around the
Lowcountry. The vet was right; it was botulism toxin.
I know a guy who knows a guy knows a guy who
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might be able to find out where it was bought. We do
that, we know who bought it. Luis is visiting
old…contacts of mine. Be a good thing to know, that.”
“Is it…Could he be in any kind of danger?”
“Not much, I don’t think. Not till he gets closer to
home base on it, anyway. Luis knows how to take care
of himself. He’s in less danger than he would be if he
stayed on this island. I agree with him about that.”
“Have you been to the police?” I said. “Surely if illeg-
al poison was used…”
“No. Somehow I can’t imagine the authorities getting
real upset over a dead marsh tacky. The rest is specu-
lation. I think it’s island business. I think the island
ought to see about it.”
“I just can’t believe this,” I said. “Who on this island
would hurt Luis? Who would hurt that child? I know
you think somebody in Clay’s organization is behind
this, but I think you’re just plain wrong. That’s…that’s
James Bond stuff. I don’t know anybody in the com-
pany who’s even capable of thinking like that.”
“Don’t you?”
I dropped my eyes.
“No. I don’t.”
But I did. I don’t know how I knew, but I did know.
“Well, listen, Caro, I hope you can scrape some of
that mad back up, because I think you
386 / Anne Rivers Siddons
might need it,” Lottie said. “I have a message for you
from that nitwit in your husband’s office, Shiny, or
whatever her name is. She called me saying she
couldn’t raise you either at the house or over here.
Your phone’s off the hook. Said to tell you Clay was
coming in this morning; he’s probably at the office
now. I assume you’re going to want to share the little
tidbit about the horses with him, aren’t you?”
“Maybe he knows,” I said. I did not want to have to
tell Clay about the horses. I did not want, now, to have
the conversation that we should have had almost a
week ago. I just wanted to go to sleep, and then to get
up and paint some more.
“I doubt it,” Lottie said. “Old motormouth would
have blabbed it if he did. She practically told me what
color his jockstrap was before I hung up on her.”
“I’ll go over there after lunch,” I said. “I really need
to get some sleep now. I think I’ve painted through
two nights.”
Ezra looked at me.
“I think you ought to go now, Caro,” he said.
I looked back at him. Somehow I did not want to
ask him why.
They finished their coffee and left. Just before he got
into the passenger side of Lottie’s truck, Ezra turned
and looked up at me.
“The paintings are terrific, Caro,” he said.
Low Country / 387
“You really got under our black hides. I didn’t think
you had it in you.”
I didn’t, either, I said to myself, watching the truck
lurch down the rutted road under the live oaks. And
then I went to dress and go back to Peacock’s Island
and speak to my husband of things that would, I
thought, wound us forever.
The anger came back when I crossed the bridge onto
Peacock’s Island. It sprang up like a living flame when
I saw the first Mercedes station wagon leaving the
nursery, laden with mature bedding plants that would
have cost a family in Dayclear a month’s food money.
It licked higher at the sight of two groups of square,