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)
you know.”
“Whatever.” Beth smiled at me. “You need to wash your
face.”
“Hey! Who’s the mother around here, miss?” I swatted her
backside.
“Hey! Quit killing me! Listen, forget about Jonathan. If he
calls, we’ll figure it out.”
Upstairs in my room, I realized I had won this battle
unfairly. By allowing Beth to hear me cry I had tipped the scales
in my favor. My mother used to do that all the time.When she
couldn’t argue to a win, she’d spread the guilt as thick as peanut
butter on white bread. Then she’d cry, and oh, how Marie
Catherine Hamilton could cry. Big MC with the champion tear
ducts. She cried more tears during her life than Shem Creek
holds shrimp. Her despair was the backdrop of my childhood
and probably what made me the sharp-tongued wench I was
today. I was terrified of weakness and sadness and made jokes
about everything. Maggie, on the other hand, denied every-
thing. Even at Momma’s funeral I looked at her and said, “As
usual, old MC’s lying around and we’re doing everything.” She
looked at me and responded,“What do you mean? She’s fine.”
Well, I hadn’t used my wit fairly and I could no longer deny
that Beth and I were dealing with my own adjustment to Life
After Tom as well as hers. As I washed my face, I realized I held
the ammunition to decimate Beth’s relationship with Tom.
S u l l i v a n ’ s I s l a n d
83
Piece of cake for a brutally clever girl like me. After all, Tom’s
pants didn’t fall off in a strong breeze. He was the bad guy, not
me. I could let her know about the money situation, tell her the
toothbrush story, tell her how I’d found them, but no, I wouldn’t
allow myself to sink that low. It was as if Satan was tapping me
on the shoulder but, thank the Lord, I recognized the devil’s evil
touch.
Now, if my mother were in my position, what would she
have done? Easy. She would’ve had a meeting at the table with
all us children and stood on the Bible while she informed us
that our father was a fornicating sinner and that he had chosen
another woman over his own flesh and blood. Then she
would’ve lined us up on the front porch while she threw all his
clothes over the rail and forbid us to say good-bye to him.
Finally, she would’ve gone to bed for a year and let us fend for
ourselves while she drank and cried away her grief.
And if Livvie were in my shoes, what would she do? She’d
take Tom aside for a little “come to Jesus” meeting and give him
the tongue lashing of his life. She’d tell him how it was all gonna
be, in simple English and Gullah, so nobody got confused in the
future.Then she’d tell her children not to worry, that everything
was gonna be fine and that Daddy still loved them just as much as
yesterday and that life goes on. She would then get on with the
business of raising her children and putting food on the table.
“Well, this girl is about to rise like a phoenix,” I said to my
bathroom mirror. “Put on some lipstick and go deal with your
daughter, and this time, be fair.”
I s e rv e d “ t w i c e dead chicken,” nuked potatoes and salad from a
bag, wondering how I’d ever gained weight from my kitchen.
Beth and I found our rhythm again and everything was fine.
“Want some help with the dishes, Mom?”
“No, honey, you go do your homework.This isn’t a big deal.
But if you’d put some soap in the washing machine, there’s a
load of towels in there, that’d be a help.”
84
D o r o t h e a B e n t o n F r a n k
“Sure. No problem.”
She pushed back from the table and took her dishes to the
sink, rinsing them and placing them in the dishwasher. I sat star-
ing into space and listening to the fill cycle of the washing
machine begin, followed by her footsteps. She kissed me on the
head, the same way I do to her, and in that moment we both
grew up a little more.
As I cleaned the kitchen I found myself sighing a lot as relief
spread through my body. I decided to polish the bottoms of my
pots as several sitcoms on the television droned in the background.
My mind was traveling. I poured myself another glass of white
wine and flipped on the eleven o’clock news in time to catch
the weather report.
“High tomorrow, ninety-seven, lows expected to be in the
eighties tomorrow night.And if you’re going out tomorrow, don’t
be surprised if it feels like the tropics, as the extreme humidity is
gonna cause a very bad hair day all over the Lowcountry. Expect
shower activity off and on throughout the day . . .”
The young, blond meteorologist smiled and tilted her pretty
head as she spoke and I found myself imitating her while I
poured Cascade into the dishwasher and turned it on to do the
small load, amusing myself once again with the banalities of life
in this information-obsessed society. Finally, I moved the towels
to the dryer, turned off all the lights and made my way upstairs
to Beth to say good night.
I opened the door and saw her sitting in bed, wearing a
Citadel football jersey and reading her history book with great
intensity.The low light of the room was warm and the cabbage
roses of her wallpaper seemed to expel a sweet fragrance. Her
room was the perfect expression of a young girl balanced
somewhere between childhood and womanhood. Posters of
the Grateful Dead hung on the back of her bulging closet door
and her old teddy bears, frayed to a nub from years of affection,
were pushed in between textbooks on the shelves above her
word processor. Her cheerleader pom-poms hung from her
S u l l i v a n ’ s I s l a n d
85
closet doorknob. Around the top of her room were Barbies,
perhaps over a hundred of them, their frozen idiotic smiles and
zombie limbs sticking out like twigs in a molded plastic gar-
land. They always made me laugh to look at them. Occasion-
ally, I would take one down and pretend to be her in a singsong
voice to get Beth to talk to me when she was annoyed about
something. But tonight, I just stuck my head in the door and
traveled the room with my eyes, waiting for Beth to see me.
She looked up at last.
“Whatcha doing, doodle bug?”
“Oh, got a test on Friday and figured I’d better get on it,
you know?”
“Yeah, you’re right. I forgot to ask how your French test
went.”
“Ninety-three.”
“That’s my girl.” I hung on the doorjamb, waiting for an
invitation.
Beth smiled at me and the light of her bedside lamp caught
her profile, casting her into Botticelli’s Madonna. Her blue eyes
met mine and I could detect no trace of emotional damage.The
primal urge to protect her washed over me. How will we rebuild
our lives? Together.
“I love you, Momma.”
“I love you too, Beth, I’m so proud of you.”
“Do you want to talk for a few minutes?”
She moved to the other side of her bed, the same one that
had been mine in my childhood, to make room for me. She pat-
ted the empty space next to her, encouraging me to join her.
“Sure, why not?”
These late night talks were my treasure.
“I hate growing up.” She sighed and looked at me.
“Me too.”
“Mom, you are grown up!” she reminded me affectionately.
“I am? Oh well, it’s a hard business and it doesn’t happen in
one day, you know.”
86
D o r o t h e a B e n t o n F r a n k
“Like Rome?”
“Yeah, like Rome.You know, it’s a very uneven process. One
day you get up and think you can handle anything. The next
day, life deals you a joker and you’re struggling to survive all
over again.”
“Like Daddy bailing out on us?”
“Honey, Daddy didn’t bail out on you. He bailed out of our
marriage.”
“I guess so.”
“Anyway, life takes a lot of patience and it helps when some-
body loves you along the way. Love helps a lot, but patience is
your best weapon. Livvie used to preach to me that I needed to
slow down to think things through. Poor woman, she needed
two tongues to raise me. I was so stubborn.”
“Do I hear a Livvie story coming on?”
“Oh, I don’t want to bore you.”
“Please! Tell me what it was like in the dark ages, when
you were a kid and Livvie came to work for your family . . .
back when you were gonna be a writer and move to Paris,”
Beth said with all the drama she could muster. “I love the
Livvie stories, promise!” She added a Girl Scout salute for
good measure.
“Move over, then, I need a pillow. She saved our lives, you
know.”
“She loved you the best, didn’t she?”
“Oh, I don’t know about that. I think she had this amazing
ability to make all of us feel like she loved us each the best. She
was remarkable.”
“She was like your momma, wasn’t she?”
“Well, honey, you only have one momma, but if I could’ve
had two, she would’ve been the other one I’d have chosen. God,
she understood everything. . . .”
“Earth calling Mom!”
“Sorry, drifting again. I was just remembering what it felt
like after she came.”
S u l l i v a n ’ s I s l a n d
87
“Well, tell me . . . I’m waiting! Tell me about how you and
Aunt Maggie and Uncle Timmy met her.” I settled myself
between the bumps and lumps of her old goose down pillow as
the stories began to surface.“Scratch my back,” she pleaded.
I reached up under her top and ran my short fingernails
across her skin, the way she likes, careful to avoid the tickle zones.
“It’s the gospel truth, you know. Every word.”
Five
Livvie
}
1963
AGGIE and I were shaking the sand out of our
beach towels and Timmy was winding up the
Mcrabbing lines.A bushel basket full of blue crabs
sat beside us.
“I have a ton of sand in my bathing suit too,” Maggie said.
“Do you want to rinse off with me?”
“Me too.Augh! It’s so disgusting!” I pulled away the bottom
of my swimsuit and turned out a lump of wet sand.
“You’re gonna go to jail for indecent exposure!”
“Kiss my butt! Last one in’s a rotten egg!”
From the dunes, we sprinted to the water, not stopping until
the incoming waves knocked us down, thoroughly soaking us.
“You’re rotten!” Maggie dove under a roller and came up with
me beside her.
I took a mouthful of water and spewed it at her with the
force of a garden hose, hitting her square in the face.
“You are so gross! I’m gonna murder you!”
S u l l i v a n ’ s I s l a n d
89
Maggie sputtered, rinsed her face and slapped water in my
direction. Laughing, I dodged her retaliation and sent her a
flood of water from the ocean surface, drenching her face again.
Our shrieks were a call to arms for Timmy, who watched from
the water’s edge, shaking his head.
“Don’t worry, Maggie! I’ll save you from the enemy!”
Timmy dropped the crabbing gear and took a heroic, flying leap
over the low waves. He grabbed me around the neck, pulling me
down backwards in the shallow water. I gurgled and fought,
broke free and pulled Timmy back under the water and dropped
him there. Coughing my brains out, I tried to escape to the safety
of the shore, but Timmy dove underwater and caught me by the
legs, pulling me down again. All the while, Miss Maggie floated
in regal splendor, enjoying the sounds of her little brother and
sister pummeling each other.
“Help! Take that, you little creep!” I grabbed a handful of
mud and threw it at Timmy, stinging him on the legs.
“Wait!” Timmy stopped and pointed in the direction of
Maggie.“Let’s get her.”
Timmy and I, with our noses skimming the water and the
stealth of submarine spies, cut through the water toward an un-
suspecting Maggie, whose attention appeared to be focused on
the sounds of the seagulls. I came on her from underneath and
Timmy from behind. I grabbed her bathing suit and pulled her
to the floor of the ocean, attempting to stand on her. The cur-
rent had its way with all of us as we toppled, and Maggie rose up
to the surface like a sperm whale, vowing to kill us both.
“I’m telling Daddy! You know you’re not supposed to do
that! That’s how people drown!” Maggie’s hair was over her face
and she washed it back to better view her attackers.“Y’all are in
deep trouble now!”
“Ah, try to get me! Come on!” I challenged her good-
naturedly.
“Yeah, you tell and we’ll get you again!” Timmy said.
“Oh, just forget it. Come on, we gotta get home.”
90
D o r o t h e a B e n t o n F r a n k
Maggie surrendered, all of us knowing she wouldn’t tell our
father. On the way out of the water we bodysurfed, riding the
waves to shore.
“We really got her,Timmy!” I crowed after sending one last
mouthful of water in her direction.
“Susan Hamilton,” she said,“you are a gross pig, and no man
is ever gonna want you. Ladies don’t spit!”
“Is that a fact?” I giggled and gave Maggie the finger.