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
facts before you start a fight. I always knew that you
really thought it was yours, though; I never thought
you were just blowing smoke at us, to save your hus-
band’s fanny. Nobody over here did. Most of them
knew your grandfather. They knew you were his girl.”
“So…even when I was over here spouting off about
nobody ever having to worry about anything again
you all knew…Clay still owned it?”
“Yeah. But we knew how you felt. We still hoped
you could change his mind about it. I take it that’s not
the case, huh?”
Low Country / 397
“I don’t think it is, Ezra,” I said. I was so tired that
I thought I would fall out of the chair and simply lie
on the sun-warmed earth of the Bigginses’ storeyard
until it swallowed me into the damp coolness under
its surface.
“Okay,” Ezra said. “Now we ruin his ass.”
W
hen Ezra Upchurch set out to ruin an ass
, he
didn’t waste any time. By afternoon of the next day he
had a press conference of national proportions set up
for high noon two days later. Because he was Ezra
Upchurch, the national media listened when his people
in Washington called to announce it. Because he was
Ezra Upchurch, most of them planned to attend.
The
Today Show
was in North Carolina filming a series on
black church bombings and would send a crew. All
three major evening news shows scheduled reporters.
Virtually all the national news magazines and many
of the dailies would at least have stringers and photo-
graphers present. They would all meet at the bridge
from Peacock’s over to the island. Ezra would meet
them there with the residents of Dayclear, five or six
other Gullah communities in the Lowcountry, and rep
Low Country / 399
resentatives of every significant environmental group
that could mount a presence. They would march from
Dayclear to the bridge, singing and holding hands as
they had done, many of them, so many years before,
in Selma.
Even in my fugue state of a pathetic grief, I knew
that it would be irresistible. No matter if Clay could
have managed to prevail over the natural tastelessness
of South Ward and create something approaching en-
vironmental genius for the island, he would be dead
meat now in the eyes of the nation, a despoiler of
priceless wetlands and a fragile, ancient culture. It
might not matter at all to South Ward, but it would,
indeed, be the emotional ruin of Clay Venable.
Oh, Clay, I thought in such pure sorrow that it sur-
prised me, when Sophia Bridges told me Ezra’s plans.
What did you think would happen? Did you think the
Sierra Club would give you a lifetime achievement
award?
While I was still sitting in the chair in front of the
Bigginses’s store the afternoon I confronted Clay, spent
and silent, Auntie Tuesday came out of her cabin,
toddled down the street on Janie’s arm, and brought
me a giant pickle jar full of her tea.
“You take you some of this when you gits home,”
she said, peering into my face. “Take you another cup
befo’ you goes to bed. You sleep through without no
hag-ridin’. You gon’ need yo’
400 / Anne Rivers Siddons
sleep for a while. I fix you some fiddlehead broth to-
morrow and send it over. This time I put some St. John
in it. You gon’ need yo’ courage, too.”
“Auntie,” I said tiredly, “please don’t ever tell me
whether you saw all that in fire or water.”
“Didn’t see nothin’ this time,” she said. “Ezra been
talkin’ all along about callin’ in those news folks did
he have to. I knowed from the look of you when I seen
you out my window that he gon’ have to now. That
gon’ be hard on you. Likely gon’ split you right in two.
This he’p. It really will.”
I hugged her when I left with my pickle jar, holding
her hard. She was almost a head shorter than I and so
frail that I could feel her tiny bird’s ribs, but there was
a strength in her that I could feel in my own hollowed
and watery bones. I wished that I could simply move
in with her and be cosseted, as she had cosseted Lita.
But I knew that there was no place for me now in
Dayclear. I was not the enemy. They all knew that.
But I was married to him. I could not blame them if
they wondered which loyalty would finally prevail.
So I drove slowly back to my island house and be-
fore the grief that hung like heavy, rotted fruit over my
head could fall, I heated the tea and drank a cup. I
could not handle much more right now than drowsi-
ness, sleep. The knowledge of the betrayal needed time
to work its way deep into the fibers of my mind and
heart so that I
Low Country / 401
knew its whole scope, its essential truth. Until that
could happen, I knew that I would spend my time
veering wildly from despair to denial, and back again.
I had done it with Kylie. I would do it, too, now, with
whatever might be left of my marriage. Better to
drowse. Better still to sleep.
And I did. The smoky, slightly bitter tea eased the
ache in my heart and the snarl in my head just enough
so that I could read, and I stretched out on the sofa
and lit my fire and pulled out the crumbling, yellowed
old copy of
The Jungle Book
that had been Kylie’s fa-
vorite. The exotic, firelit world of Mowgli and Baloo
and Bagheera and Shere Khan swallowed me totally.
I fell asleep before the fire and dreamed, not of my
own threatened river and forest, but of a gold-green
jungle where animals spoke and a child lived in a
profound and sustaining harmony with them. When
I awoke, it was almost ten the next morning, and I was
cold and stiff and hungry, and the razor-sharp new
pain was infinitesimally dulled.
It seemed to me that I should make a plan, a blue-
print for living a new way, a map for getting through
the next days in a new and diminished territory. So I
showered and washed my hair and put on clean jeans
and shirt and sat down on the deck with coffee and a
fossilized bagel. I brought a legal pad and a pen with
me for the outlining of my new life, but nothing came
to me. Nothing at
402 / Anne Rivers Siddons
all. I could not think of a life without this island and
this house, and I could not imagine one without Clay.
It was a strange, suspended time, that morning. I both
had a husband and did not; both had a home and did
not. I would think, Well, we can live very well over
here if we lose the Peacock’s house, and then think,
But who is we? Or I would think, This is absurd; Clay
will no more let me lose this place than he would let
me go naked, or starve, and then realize that he was
prepared to put the machinery of that loss into motion
whenever he wished, and so far as I knew, would do
it without delay. I felt nearly crazy, actually near insan-
ity. I did not know how even to think of Clay in any
terms but the ones in which I had always thought of
him: my husband; the man I had always loved; the
man I would grow old with; would, with luck, come
to the end of my days with.
And yet, for all practical purposes, he had ended
that life yesterday. Or had it been I? I did not know
even the most basic truth of all this, and so I sat in the
soft sun of late January and waited for what would
come next.
It was Sophia Bridges, on Ezra’s motorcycle. She
came roaring into the clearing and slewed smartly to
a stop, dismounting in one single fluid motion of her
long, elegant legs and unpacking a small sweet-grass
basket from the saddlebag. I stared at her. She might
as well have ridden up on
Low Country / 403
a Komodo dragon. Even in my strange, suspended
state, I realized how profoundly Sophia had changed
on this island. There was little of the chilly, distant
woman I had met in the kitchen of the guest house
before Thanksgiving. She seemed almost totally a cre-
ation of this wild island now.
“I brought you some of Auntie’s magic soup,” she
said, dropping down beside me in the rickety chair
that had been my grandfather’s. “And I wanted to see
how you are. You took a bad knock yesterday, Ezra
says.”
A Southern woman is raised from birth to say when
someone asks how she is, “Oh, fine, thank you for
asking.” I remembered saying it even when the
enormity of Kylie’s death was still new, and re-
membered the strange looks it evoked from the asker.
But now I simply said, “I think I’m in bad trouble,
but I don’t know how I feel yet. It’s like being shot or
something, and it hasn’t started hurting yet but you
know it will any minute. I don’t even know how to
describe it. But thanks for asking.”
She grinned wryly at that last, and stretched out her
legs in the old faded jeans that were her island uniform.
“I think I know. I remember when Chris told me he
was leaving me. It seemed like there ought to be some
kind of book that would tell me how to feel and what
to do about it. You just don’t
404 / Anne Rivers Siddons
know who or what you are anymore, do you?”
“I guess that’s it,” I said. “Mainly, I just can’t believe
that what’s happened…really happened. I just can’t
believe it.”
“I know. In my case, I didn’t know who I was any-
way, so in the end it wasn’t so much different from the
way I usually felt. But it must be awful for you. You
never much doubted who you were, did you?”
“I guess I never much doubted
what
I was. I think
there must be a difference that I’m just learning about.
So much for teaching old dogs new tricks.”
“Well, I guess the main thing is not to do anything
sudden,” she said. “Nothing’s cast in stone, is it? I
mean, you haven’t decided really to leave or anything,
have you? Things change so fast, Caro. They really
do. That’s one thing I’ve finally learned. Things
change.”
“I guess I haven’t decided anything,” I said. “But,
Sophia…I don’t think I can live with…what will hap-
pen over here. I don’t think I can be around for that.”
“Then where would you go?”
I just looked at her. I had not gotten that far. She
was right. Where would I go? The town house? And
risk running into Hayes Howland or Lucy every time
I put my head out my front door? See the line of green
on the horizon that was the fringe of Peacock’s Island
every time I
Low Country / 405
walked on the Battery? No. Not the town house.
“I never got around to residential options,” I said.
“Neither did I, but one presented itself, anyway, and
one will for you,” she said. “Maybe the first thing we
both needed to learn was just to let go and let life do
it.”
“Well,” I said, feeling absurd laughter start deep in
my stomach, “life has done gone and done it.”
And we sat in the sun and laughed and laughed, like
schoolgirls giddy with new spring and limitless possib-
ility.
Presently she said, “I came to tell you what Ezra
plans to do. He wanted to come tell you himself, he’s
so proud of it all, and he was just sure that the jewel
in the crown would be to have you march with them
to meet the media. It’s the old Upchurch touch, doncha
know. The piquant, poignant little coup de grace.
When I got through telling him how many kinds of
assholes he was he saw the wisdom of letting me come
alone to tell you. It’s a good plan and I think it could
work, but I can also see how it would just finish you
off if you thought you had to be part of it. My advice
to you is to go somewhere off-island…like maybe Ja-
maica or the U.S. Virgins, or Bhutan…until this is over.
It’s going to hurt some folks you care about before it
does any good, and whether it will stop the project or
not is anybody’s guess.
406 / Anne Rivers Siddons
Mine would be that it might stop Clay but it probably
won’t even make a dent in South Ward’s hide. But
Ezra’s good, I’ll give him that. He’s done more with
less to work with than this. It’s just that he is essentially
a butthead and will never understand why you don’t
want to see Clay pounded through the ground.”
“Do you understand?” I said.
“Of course I do, Caro,” she said softly. “I’ve loved a
man. You don’t stop just because they’ve done a big
awful. It may change the
way
you feel about them, but
it doesn’t necessarily lessen it.”
I rubbed my eyes hard and said, “You better tell me
what Ezra’s got cooking,” and she did.
When she was done, I said on a long breath, “My
God. How could he do that in less than twenty-four
hours?”
“His Washington staff did most of it,” she said, and
it was only then that I remembered that Ezra Upchurch
did not always wear overalls without a shirt and work