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)
expensive linen Bermudas. Her brown alligator belt had a gold
buckle with her initials on it. She shook her perfect blond hair
and removed her sunglasses and smiled up to me on the porch.
“Hey, Miss Susan! How are you?”
What a phony, I thought. She thought she was Marilyn
Monroe or somebody. I shot a glance at Livvie, whose jaw was
locked.
“Fine! I’ll tell Momma y’all’re ’eah!” I called back. Passing
Livvie I muttered,“That’s Aunt Carol.”
“Humph,” she said.
The grown-ups had their night and we had ours. Maggie
had gone to her best friend’s house to spend the night. Timmy
was upstairs with Henry watching television. I hung around
with Livvie in the kitchen. She had tried to shoo me off to bed
several times, but I wasn’t moving. Her arrival that day might
have been the most important event of my life and I didn’t want
to miss anything. I was washing plates when she came back in
with a tray of crab shells.
“Humph,” she said.
“What’s wrong?” I asked.
“Nothing,” she said.
“Come on, let me guess.”
“Humph,” she said.
“Aunt Carol’s playing footsie with Daddy under the table
again?”
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“How’d you know that, chile? You ain’t supposed to be
knowing about that kind of thing at your age!” She was hon-
estly horrified.
“I know a lot more than I should,” I answered.
“Lawd, Lawd. I got to do a lot of praying on this family. I
can see that now.”
Six
First Dates
}
1999
HE following Saturday, Beth and I took a drive out
Highway 61 with a packed cooler and our camera.We
T planned to picnic at Magnolia Gardens and then tour
the house. As a little girl, Beth would imagine herself to be a
plantation belle, wearing hoop skirts and perfecting her curtsy. I
loved that memory and besides, I had had enough of work for
one week. My idiot boss, Mitchell Fremont, had taken a personal
shine to me and was driving me crazy.As a boss he was bearable,
but if I lapsed into a momentary daydream of him naked, it was
so repulsive it gave me the shakes. A plantation trip was the per-
fect medicine after a week of Mitchell’ s leering.
I pulled into Magnolia Gardens’s gate, paid the admission
fee and rolled down the long road to the parking lot.“Lock your
door, okay, honey?”
It was a perfect September day. The brilliant blue sky above
was so clear—not a cloud anywhere to be seen. The air was
not humid and the temperature was somewhere in the low
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113
seventies. Our feet crunched on the gravel as we ambled along
to the picnic tables.
It didn’t take long to unpack the sandwiches, low-fat chips
and diet sodas I had brought along. Suddenly, I was starving.
“Pickle?” I said, taking a bite from a kosher dill.
“Sure, thanks!” she said.“Why is it that eating outside makes
everything taste so much better?”
“Good question. I don’t know. But I do know that when we
cook on the grill at the beach, even hamburgers taste like heaven.
Chicken or tuna or half of each?”
“Tuna salad, please, just half. When do you think was the last
time they painted these tables?”
“Before the War of Yankee Aggression,” I said, smiling.
“Watch out for splinters.”
The sun was dancing through her rich, auburn hair and
once again I found myself saying a small prayer of thanksgiving
that she was mine.“Beth, you are going to be a beautiful woman,
do you know that?”
“I look like my momma,” she said and smiled at me.“I love
you, you know. A lot.”
“Baby, I adore you and you know it.”
“Yeah. I know. Hey, Momma?”
“What, darling child?”
“Did you and your momma ever go on picnics?”
“Well, yes we did, sort of. Once every year Stella Maris Church
had a big family picnic at Alhambra Hall. Old MC—we loved to
call Momma that—she’d make deviled eggs. Livvie would fry a
bunch of chicken and bake brownies. Of course, every year
Momma and Uncle Louis would fight about who made the best
potato salad.”
“Ukk. I hate potato salad.”
“Yeah, me too, but that’s not the point.You see, Momma put
olives in hers and Uncle Louis put onions in his. I think they both
added bacon fat to the mayonnaise. Can you imagine that? It’s a
miracle I’m alive from eating all that garbage! Maybe I should see
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a vascular man.What do you think? Oh, you should’ve seen us in
those days, three-legged races, sack races, all kinds of foolishness!”
“I think you’re a little bit crazy.”
“No doubt about it. Lunatics abound in the family history. I
am proud to continue the legacy, even if only on a part-time
basis. I do the best I can given the restraints of my life. If I didn’t
work in a library, I’d open a drive-through body piercing and
tattoo parlor and serve barbecue sandwiches to go.”
“You’re feeling full of beans today, aren’t you, Momma?”
“Yep. No doubt about it.Who wouldn’t on a gorgeous day
like this?” And I was. I had decided to put everything serious
out of my mind for a little while and take a well-deserved break.
“You know what? I wish I’d been a little girl when you
were. It’s so boring now. It seems like everything happened in
the sixties.”
“I think I probably romanticize the past, Beth, a lot. Old
people do that, you know.”
“You’re not old! Hey, can I ask you a personal question?”
“By all means.”
“Are you ever gonna go out on a date? I mean, are you and
Daddy getting back together or what’s going on?”
Wham. She had me now. I hadn’t told her anything about
Michelle Stoney and I had to decide then and there what she
was old enough to hear and understand. I plunged ahead, hop-
ing our good moods would soften the blow.
“Honey, Daddy and I have been separated for a while now.”
“Yeah, almost seven months. I can’t see him marrying Karen,
you know?”
“No, I can’t either. But I’m afraid I can’t see us back together
either.”
Her eyes began to fill with tears.“I know,” she said.“This is
so awful.”
“Yes, it is, but sweetheart, listen to me and think about this.
I know I’ve said this to you a hundred times since Tom left, but
be patient because it’s the truth. Sometimes relationships run
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115
their course and lose steam. Sometimes people get middle-aged
and get afraid of dying and do stupid things, not just men but
women too. A marriage can’t survive unless you recommit yourself
to it every single day.”
“You were committed,” she whispered.
Once again I found myself in the position of holding all the
aces. I had another opportunity to blow her relationship with Tom
to smithereens. I decided to shoulder some of the guilt instead.
“I was committed, Beth, but probably didn’t work at it hard
enough. I mean, I saw signs and ignored them.”
“Like what?”
“Oh, like Daddy was working later and later. And, when he
was home, he was glued to the television or worked in the yard
and we wouldn’t speak for days on end. And he lost twenty
pounds and started working out every day and got in shape.
Then, he bought those three-hundred-dollar Italian eyeglasses
and that was the beginning of the end.”
“Don’t you think you could’ve done something?”
Ah, she was going to blame me now. I took a long look at
her and then at a group of tourists walking by, thinking what I
would say.
“I don’t know, to tell you the truth. I mean, by the time I
finally faced up to what was going on it was too late, I think.
And you know what? I’m the lucky one. I have you and he’s got
her, right?”
“Yeah, sure, and y’all are gonna fight about money till the
cows come home.”
“No, sweetheart, we won’t. I hired someone to work all that
out for us.”
“A lawyer? You hired a lawyer? I can’t believe you did that!
You didn’t tell me this! When did you do this? Why didn’t you
tell me?” She was very upset.
“I’m telling you now.”
“Why, Momma? You don’t have to sue Daddy. He swore to
me he’d take care of us!”
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Tears were streaming down her face. A lawyer’s child knows
what divorce lawyers do. They landscape the graveyards of
marriages.
“Honey, I did it because I had to. Daddy has been having
some difficulty accepting the fact that he has to commit to regu-
lar financial support for us.You know that. Believe me, I waited
as long as I could. It was a terribly hard decision for me to make,
but I don’t earn enough to support us without some help from
him.You don’t think I’m relishing the idea of a divorce, do you?”
“No. I know you. You’d have walked through fire first.”
“Right. I hate lawyers and I hate change. But they’re a neces-
sity, especially in today’s world. My lawyer’s name is Michelle
Stoney. She’s going to work it all out. I don’t want to fight with
your father.”
Beth shook her head and sniffed. I handed her a tissue.
Watching the clouds swimming by, I thought about my conver-
sations with Michelle. I had asked her how it usually went. I
wanted to know if men in general took care of their families
because they knew they should or was compliance with support
motivated by fear of breaking the law. She put it in a rank nut-
shell when she said that women who get the best support have
the most obnoxious lawyers. It tells me that time marches on
and men who leave their families, for whatever reason they
leave, begin a new life.They have more children, they buy another
house, they join another club, and they fish in a different river.
They make new friends, find new restaurants, and go to new
places on vacation. Pretty soon, years pass and they can’t remem-
ber what it was like with their old family.
“Honey, it’s important while he still cares about me, not
you—this has nothing to do with you—for me and my lawyer
to make sure that we are provided for in a way that’s fair for
everyone. Do you understand? This is something I have to do
for you and for me.”
“If you think Daddy still cares about you why don’t you
fight for him?”
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“Daddy cares, but not enough for our marriage to be like it
should be. Do you understand, doodle?”
“He’s changed anyway, Momma.You probably wouldn’t like
him now. I mean, why he would rather be with Karen I don’t
understand.What’s wrong with him?”
“Nothing, honey, it’s just your classic midlife crisis along
with a willing, conniving, underhanded, immoral, big-breasted,
low-class blond. He was too weak to resist, I guess, and she set a
mean table.”
“I hate blonds.”
“Jonathan is blond,” I reminded her.
“Mom? Jonathan called me last night,” she said sheepishly.
“What? When were you gonna tell me this? My Lord, here
come all the secrets! Come on, let’s dump this stuff in the trash,
throw the cooler in the car and have a nice walk. We can plan
your trousseau!”
“Mom!”
Her exasperated
Mom!
was what we needed to put Tom
away for a while.
“Come on! Let’s go in the Barbados Tropical Garden!”
We entered the small building and were immediately trans-
ported to another climate. The lush plantings and trickling
water of the fountains created a tiny paradise.
“So, tell me what he said,” I said.
“Nothing. It was pretty stupid, in fact. He talked about ten-
nis and math and wanted to know if I’d done my French home-
work yet.”
“That doesn’t sound so stupid.”
“Mom! He’s gorgeous, but he’s seriously boring to talk
to.”
“Well, young guys are nervous when they call girls on the
phone. Just the act of dialing probably gave him a zit.” Safe, I
thought, he’s boring.Thank God.
“Actually, it probably did! He had this major goober today,
right on his chin.”
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“Now that’s power, when you can wreck a guy’s complex-
ion,” I said.
“Whatever. I know why he called me, though.”
“I thought you said he called about homework.”
“Nope. Homecoming.”
“What about it?” Uh-oh, not safe.
“The dance. I know he wants to take me, because Lucy told
me. She’s going with his friend Sonny.”
“Well, we’ll see.” I sighed, realizing we had reached another
hurdle. I guessed I’d have no choice but to jump it when she
pushed me.“Beth, look at this, have you ever seen anything like
this orchid?”
By chance, we had the indoor garden to ourselves.We wan-
dered slowly, looking at and smelling the blooms. I heard some-
thing and looked up. Someone had accidentally allowed a
peacock in the building and there he was at the turn in the path.
He spread his feathers and nearly scared us to death.We turned