Read Sullivans Island-Lowcountry 1 Online
Authors: Dorothea Benton Frank
Tags: #Fiction, #Domestic Fiction, #General, #Sagas, #Women - South Carolina, #South Carolina, #Mothers and Daughters, #Women, #Sisters, #Sullivan's Island (S.C. : Island), #Sullivan's Island (S.C.: Island)
“Yes, thanks.”
She’s got a regular Starbucks franchise going here, I thought
and picked up a copy of
People.
The buzzer of her telephone
intercom rang and she picked it up.
“Yes, Ms. Stoney. I will.”
That was the moment I started coming unglued. My hands
became clammy and my tongue got thick.
“Mrs. Hayes? Ms. Stoney will see you now. Please follow
me.”
I followed her down the short hall, our steps muffled by the
thick carpet, past a research library with two paralegals working
away on computers, past a powder room and a small kitchen.
Her double doors opened and there she stood.
“Thanks, Donna.” The receptionist turned and left. “I’m
Michelle Stoney, Mrs. Hayes.” She shook my hand soundly and
motioned for me to enter.“Would you like something to drink?
Coffee?”
She had perfect teeth, had to be laser bleached. I guessed her
age to be about forty-eight. Her dark hair was pulled back at the
nape of her neck and secured by one of the most beautiful tor-
toiseshell clasps I’d ever seen.
“Please, call me Susan,” I said, voice shaking a little. “No,
thanks, too hot for coffee.”
I took a seat in front of the desk and she sat next to me in
the matching tub chair. She wore a plain Rolex that showed
from the cuff of her navy pinstripe coatdress. She was downright
pretty in a buttoned-up kind of way.
“Would you like a Diet Pepsi? I have a ton of them in my
fridge.”
“Yes, thanks,” I said, heartened by her choice in soft drinks,
“that’d be great.”
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D o r o t h e a B e n t o n F r a n k
I dropped my purse at my feet, and my cigarettes fell out on
the Persian rug between our chairs. She saw them and her eyes
brightened.
“Oh! Do you smoke?”
I blanched at my bad habit and she continued.
“I haven’t had a cigarette in ages,” she said, “gave it up, but
every now and then . . .”
“Please! Help yourself !” I offered her the pack and dug
around for my lighter.“I’m always quitting and then I start again,
and then the next thing you know . . . well, you know how it is.”
She pulled out a huge crystal ashtray from her bottom
drawer and we were in business.We torched two low-tar death
sticks and popped open two cans of frosty chemicals. She was
obviously a woman of extraordinary taste. I began to tell her the
whole miserable saga. I watched her eyebrows narrow as she
took notes.
“Do you remember the exact date?” she asked.
“Yes. Wednesday, April twenty-eighth. I was supposed to
give a presentation at two o’clock on a literacy program with
day care for unwed mothers. Stupidly, I had left the whole mess
in a folder on the kitchen counter that morning. When I went
through my briefcase, I couldn’t believe it wasn’t there. I had
worked half the night on the darn thing.”
“We all forget things.”
“True. Anyway, it was about eleven o’clock and almost
lunchtime. I told my secretary that I was going to run home and
I’d be back as fast as possible. I took my car and drove down to
Queen Street, where we live. I was going to grab the folder and
hurry back. I came in the back door and dropped my bag on the
floor by the stairs and heard somebody upstairs. I thought, Oh,
God, there’s a robber in the house! I reached for the poker from
the fireplace, shaking all over.”
“I’m sure you were terrified!”
“I was! But I listened for a moment and heard their voices.At
first I thought it was Beth with some boy, and started sneaking up
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57
the steps, thinking I’d kill whoever would dare to do something
to my little girl!”
“How old is your daughter?”
“Thirteen, almost fourteen.”
“Not so young, these days.”
“In a pig’s eye, but anyhow, when I got to the top of the stairs
I heard the voices coming from my room. I couldn’t believe that
she’d do something like this in my room!”
“Sort of the ultimate rebellion, right?”
“Exactly. Then all of a sudden it hit me. It wasn’t Beth but
Tom. I could hear whoever this woman was saying stuff like
‘Oh! Tom! Ride me! Yes! My tiger!’ Can you imagine?”
“Dear God.What did you do?”
“The stupidest thing possible. I opened the door and caught
them! Why did I do that?”
“I probably would’ve done the same thing. It’s that unstop-
pable desire to disprove what you know, right?”
“I guess.Anyway, he stopped giving her what was mine long
enough to turn around and see me. She sat up and saw me, then
rolled over and covered her head with a pillow. I guess she
thought I was gonna hit her with the poker, which I nearly did.
She screamed, ‘Oh, no!’ And he said, ‘What the hell are you
doing here?’ I said, ‘I live here.’ Right away, I started explaining
what and why, and then I thought, What the hell am I doing?
He’s in the bed with this slut—in
our
bed, no less—and he’s the
one who should be apologizing, not me!”
“So what happened?”
“I went downstairs and waited for him, but he left with
her.”
“That probably made you feel pretty bad.”
“Yeah, you could say that. I was so numb and ill that I
couldn’t go back to work. So I did what women do in times of
trial.” She looked up at me and I said,“I started cleaning every-
thing in sight.”
“Classic,” she said.
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D o r o t h e a B e n t o n F r a n k
“Right. About two-thirty he showed up again, probably
thinking that I’d be back at work and he wouldn’t have to deal
with me. But I was in the kitchen, still cleaning. When I asked
him how he could do this to me, to himself, to our families, do
you know what he said? He told me he was sorry I had caught
them. Not that he was sorry he wrecked our life! He packed
some stuff and left. Just like that.”
I wasn’t surprised that she didn’t ask about the Aramis bottle
filled with eau de whiz—I had never told anyone about that.
Even I knew it was over the top. But I was surprised she didn’t
remark on the toothbrush story because by now everyone in
Charleston knew about that. I guess I bragged a little and word
got out. In fact, people stopped me on the street and in the gro-
cery store to ask me if it was true. That single peanut-sized
episode of revenge had elevated me to something of a cult hero
among the jilted women of Charleston. I continued to spill the
family juice without even worrying about whether or not she
intended to take my case.
“So then I was so upset that I started helping him pack.
While he was stacking all his shirts and suits into his hanging
bag, I went into the bathroom and dumped a lot of his stuff out
of the medicine cabinet. I took his toothbrush and looked at it
for a minute and then I scrubbed the toilet with it. Good, too, all
under the rim, everywhere.Then I dropped it in his shaving kit.”
Even though Michelle was grinning from ear to ear, experi-
ence made me stop.
“Ms. Stoney . . .”
“Michelle, please . . .”
“Michelle, my husband thinks he is the Perry Mason of
Charleston and that no one will represent me against him. If this
is a problem for you, I guess this is when you should tell me.”
“Susan? I hope you’ll pardon me for saying this, but your hus-
band is a big fat skunk first, and a lawyer second. I’ll handle this
for you with pleasure.” Michelle smiled, leaned back in her chair
and exhaled a cloud of blue smoke toward the ceiling.“You have
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59
to do two things: try to the best of your ability to document all
contact you have with him from this moment on. Does he show
up when he’s supposed to? Is he hostile? That sort of thing.Then,
itemize your expenses the best you can. Keep a good journal.”
“I can do that. I used to do that all the time. I like you,
Michelle. I trust you.”
“You can trust me better than your own mother.”
“You know, I heard he’s living with her. She’s twenty-three
and has breast implants. He’s practically a pedophile.”
“Good grief.”
“I know I shouldn’t dwell on it, but I still can’t believe I
found them together. Calling out his name at the top of her
squeaky, insipid little lungs, and him yelling back,‘Yes! Yes!’ Infu-
riating! Can you imagine how I felt? How will I ever get that
image out of my head? I’d like to kick his butt the whole way to
California.”
“We can do that without even changing shoes.The question
is, where are we heading here? Is there any desire on your part
or his for reconciliation?”
“It’s not possible.”
“You’re absolutely sure about that?”
“Yes. I’ve dissected this thing to death, and you know what
I haven’t even told my sister?”
“Tell me.”
“Tom stopped loving me years ago. I don’t know how we
stayed together as long as we did. But, now I’m sure of this, I
don’t want the kind of marriage where my husband thinks he’s
stuck with me, especially given his preference for young nympho-
maniacs. Part of it is surely my fault. I mean, when I look back, I
remember many times when I could’ve tried harder. I just didn’t.
I don’t even know why. I was probably too tired from running
the house, working full-time and taking care of our daughter to
cite chapter and verse from
The Joy of Sex,
you know what I
mean?”
“I know exactly what you mean.”
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D o r o t h e a B e n t o n F r a n k
“Oddly, he never complained. I guess that’s when he found
Karen. I understand that a lot of men do these things when they
get around fifty, but he didn’t have to do it in our house, in our
bed. If I hadn’t come home to get my presentation papers, I
never would’ve known, although I think men who screw their
little girlfriends in their own home have a secret desire to be
caught.”
“Maybe. I don’t know, but I’ve heard that said.”
“Anyway, our marriage has been in rigor mortis for ages. I
guess I thought that eventually things would go back to being
good again. We’d been through ups and downs like everyone.
But that’s not what happened. I resented being expected to do
everything. And he resented me resenting him. We didn’t talk;
we swam the River Sarcasm. And worse, our silence was the
smoldering kind. He didn’t like the way I looked anymore, even
when I tried to change my looks. He just didn’t want me any-
more. I didn’t fit his fantasy.”
“Fit his fantasy?”
“Yeah, I have this theory that you marry your fantasy.”
“How’s that?”
“Well, it goes like this: He dies for women with a big
bosom, you have a big bosom, he dies for you. He falls apart for
big blue eyes and a wicked meat sauce, you make an incredible
Bolognese and, kaboom, he looks in your blue eyes and he’s
yours forever, until you burn his meatballs, no pun intended.”
“Of course not.”
“Anyway, I don’t fit his fantasy anymore and I probably
never will again.”
“Not fitting someone’s fantasy is hardly grounds for infi-
delity.”
She was right. It wasn’t funny. It was sobering.
“My family has lived in this city for over two hundred years
and he’s humiliated me in front of every single person I know,”
I said. “Every time I turned around there was someone I’ve
known all my life either whispering when they saw me coming
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61
or dying to tell me that they’d see Tom and Karen out and
about. I don’t know what I ever did to him for him to hurt me
so. Maybe I wasn’t the perfect wife, but I deserved better than
this.And, if that’s not bad enough, he refuses to give me what he
should in financial support.That’s really why I decided I had to
get legal help.”
I was babbling like the white water in the Colorado River.
“Yes, tell me about that. Has he been sending you money
once a month? Or do you have to go to him?”
“At first, I guess he felt guilty about leaving, so he just left
the checking account as it was and I paid the bills from money
he deposited.That’s over now. He hasn’t made a deposit in two
months. Now he’s got this new idea in his head that he’ll con-
tribute to our support, but I can’t live any better than he does. Is
that legal? I mean, do I have to sell my house if he decides to live
in a one-bedroom apartment?”
“No. Under South Carolina law, you’re entitled to more
than that. How long were you married?”
“Sixteen years.”
“And have you contributed in any way to his business?”
“I’d say so. I supported us while he went to law school
at Carolina. I’ve certainly grilled enough steaks for clients and
partners.”
“Hmm, that’s good. Could I trouble you for one more
cigarette?”
“Of course! Help yourself !”
I liked this woman.A lot. She was going to help me negoti-
ate the next twenty years of my life and Beth’s future as well.
“Thanks. Have you always lived in your home on Queen
Street?”