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)
“Don’t cry, honey. Some lessons have to be learned the hard
way. I love you. Get some sleep.We’ll talk tomorrow.”
I rinsed a facecloth with cool water, folded it and placed it
on her forehead. I was pretty wrung out too. Turning out the
lights in the hall, and pulling down the covers on my bed, I
wondered what horrible battle lay ahead for me with the par-
ents of the other children. It had been a gross mistake to leave
them unsupervised. So much for perfect parenting.
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*
*
T h e r e wa s n o sun when I woke up Sunday morning, but I knew
it was late. I figured it to be around ten o’clock. Rolling over in
bed I squinted at my clock radio. Nine-forty-five. Good guess. I
washed my face, pulled my hair into a ponytail, brushed my teeth
and put on a robe. I needed coffee in the worst way. Padding by
Beth’s room I remembered that she’d probably need coffee too. I
peeked in. At the squeak of her door hinge, she rolled over.
“I feel awful,” she groaned.
“As well you should,” I said. “Come on. Come on down to
the kitchen and I’ll tell you about the night Aunt Carol got so
crocked she almost fell off the porch.”
“Aunt Carol? The priss?”
This mildly piqued her interest. If I couldn’t make her see
what a fool she looked like last night, maybe she could see it
through Aunt Carol’s nearly legendary escapade.
“Yup. You’re not the only one in this family who ever crawled
in the bag, you know. Family’s filled with legions of drunks.”
“Thanks a lot. Lunatics and drunks. Great. I’ll be right
there.” She slowly sat up in her tangled covers and fell back
again.“Oh, Momma, my head’s splitting!”
She was the granddaughter of Marie Catherine (a.k.a.Tallu-
lah Bankhead) Hamilton.
“Got just the thing for you.A bacon cheeseburger.You need
some grease, girl. And some carbs. I’ll put the coffee on.”
Somehow, with all the excitement of last night, I had neg-
lected to watch the eleven o’clock news. I switched on the
coffeemaker, tightened my robe and went outside to retrieve
the morning paper. The front door complained as I unlatched
the ancient locks.The sky was ominously dark blue. My bones
predicted the approach of a storm. Glancing at the front page, I
saw a small article about a tropical disturbance in the Bahamas.
Well, it was September.
The door closed behind me and I met Beth in the hall.
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“Momma, I’m so sorry about last night.”
“Sweetheart, every person on the planet gets at least one
stab at the Knucklehead of the Year award. I’m just glad you
were home, and you weren’t driving in a car.You know, if any-
thing ever happened to you I don’t think I could go on living.”
The thought of a phone call in the middle of the night from a
hospital made my insides knot.
“Never again, I swear.” She leaned against my shoulder.
“Jonathan probably thinks I’m a total, complete idiot.”
“Come on, let me pour you a cup of relief. Just remember,
true southern ladies do not vomit on their first dates. It’s bad
manners to get drunk and throw up and good manners are the
moisturizer of life.” With my arm around her shoulder we made
our way to the kitchen, crossing two thresholds at once.Another
rite of passage, another day begun.
“Yeah, thanks for reminding me. I’d rather have a Coke if
we have any. I’m so thirsty. And, Momma?” I looked up at her.
“Please don’t tell Daddy about this.”
“Don’t worry. Hey, it’s you and me, babe. A thousand wild
horses couldn’t drag it out of me.”
I poured a Coke and handed it to her. She drained the glass
and I poured her some more. I reached in the freezer for a ham-
burger patty and the hydrator for a piece of cheese and some
bacon. In minutes the bacon and the burger sizzled in separate
pans. Beth held her forehead on the heel of her hand.
“Aspirin?” I put two before her with a small glass of orange
juice. She looked positively green. “A shower would probably
do you some good too.”
“Yeah, as soon as I eat something. God, Momma, you know
what I can’t believe? I can’t believe you’re not furious with me.”
“I’m still kind of stunned, but that doesn’t mean that I
won’t be furious later when I’ve had time to think about it
all.” I turned the burger and the bacon, peeled the plastic wrap
from the yellow impersonation of dairy product, and laid it
across the meat. “Look, it could’ve been worse. What about
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their parents? I mean, I could be liable for a lawsuit, you know.”
“I’ll call them and see what happened.”
“Good idea.” I flipped on the tiny television on the counter.
Across the bottom of the screen was a weather advisory bulletin.
“Storm’s coming,” I said,“probably nothing, but you never know.”
She had disappeared to the living room with the portable phone. I
watched as a news bulletin came on.
“. . . located five hundred miles off the coast of San Juan.
Winds approaching hurricane level, seventy-five miles an hour. If
it continues to pick up force, this tropical storm could become a
hurricane by tonight. Stay tuned to WCIV for all the latest
updates. . . .”
She came back, gave me a weak hug and went upstairs. I
turned back to Beth’s breakfast, frying her burger in the old
black cast-iron skillet, and wondered how many times I had held
it in my hands. It was one from my mother’s kitchen, our ver-
sion of an heirloom. One that had fried probably millions of
eggs, and strips of bacon, patties of sausage, battered shrimp and
fish, and grilled cheese sandwiches.
When Beth returned she was practically smiling. “No big-
gie,” she said. “Charlene’s parents were asleep when she got
home and Lucy just went straight to bed too. Apparently, that
guy you were with took them all out for coffee and a big fat lec-
ture on alcoholism at the Pancake House. They were all pretty
straight by the time they got home.”
Talking about it irritated me. She sensed it. She knew she
was in trouble with me but it was a different kind of trouble
from any we’d known before.This was her first major mistake. I
didn’t want to make too much of it because I knew she was
sorry, and I thought things had just gotten out of control. I made
a mental note to call Roger and thank him.
“Storm’s coming,” I repeated, putting her burger on a plate
and setting it before her at the counter with the bottle of ketchup.
“Big one?”
“It can’t be much. Not yet anyway.The wind’s only around
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seventy-five miles per hour and that ain’t squat in hurricane
history.”
“Weren’t Aunt Sophie and Aunt Allison born in a hurricane?”
Her mouth was full as she spoke.
“Yep. Hurricane Denise. Winds over a hundred miles an
hour. Very bad news. Wipe your mouth and I’ll tell you all
about it, although I’m sure you’ve heard it before.”
“Doesn’t matter,” she said.
She wiped and we were both glad to have the subject
changed. I poured myself another cup of coffee and lit a ciga-
rette, careful not to blow my smoke in her direction. I could tell
her about her drunken Aunt Carol anytime—although I was not
going to tell her about Aunt Carol and Big Hank. No, she’d
never hear that one from me. I put my feet up on the bar stool
next to her and began the tale of my sisters’ auspicious births.
“I was about your age. It was Thursday, September the
twelfth, when Hurricane Denise blew through and when the
twins were born. Livvie had been working for us for, oh, I don’t
know, maybe six weeks?”
“And, your momma didn’t know she was having twins, did
she?”
“Honey, in those days, they didn’t know anything! But my
momma was awful big, I remember that.”
“Right.” She giggled. “What was it like at the beach? I
would’ve been scared to death.”
“I suppose we didn’t have the good sense to be scared.The
first thing we always did when a storm was brewing was fight
for a good position on the porch and watch the ocean.You can’t
imagine how the world changed as she made her way to the
coast. Ever hear that old Billie Holiday song? Something about
the ill wind blowing bad on me?”
“Who the heck is Billie Holiday?”
“I’d consider it a great personal favor if you wouldn’t con-
tinually remind me of my advanced age.” I raised my eyebrows
at her. “Ah, yes. Well, everybody was getting ready for the big
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137
storm.The hardware stores were jammed with men buying ply-
wood and the grocery stores had long lines of women pushing
bulging carts of bottled water, bread, flashlight batteries and
milk. Old Islanders like us grew up on tales of these storms.The
warning signs were in our blood and handed down from gener-
ation to generation like family jewels.We shopped for the storm
like it was any other day. Just normal battle supplies, you know?”
Seven
Hurricane Denise
}
1963
HE morning Denise hit Charleston, Daddy had gone
out. Momma and I were in the kitchen making breakfast
T for everyone. Black cast-iron skillets were lined up on
every burner—bacon in one, sausage in another, bacon drip-
pings sizzled in a third, ready to receive four eggs to fry, and the
fourth bubbled butter waiting for a spoonful of pancake batter.
I could tell Momma wasn’t feeling up to snuff because she
kept leaning on the counter. I was so stupid I didn’t realize she
was in labor, but they say low pressure can cause all kinds of
things. Heart attacks, suicide and babies come early.
Livvie came rushing in the back door all in a tizzy because
she was late. She was going on and on about Old Reverend
Mr. Sam the bus driver, and how the bus had broken down on
the causeway and how they had to wait for half an hour for her
nephew to come with a fan belt.All she needed was to take one
look at Momma and she knew.
“Where’s Mr. Hank?” she screamed.“Lawd, Miss MC! When
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139
did your pains start? Where’s Mr. Hank?” She took Momma by
the arm and supported her.“Where?”
“Gone. Louis’s house. Borrow some tools. Better call him,”
Momma said.
“Call him, chile! Be quick!” she said to me.
Mamma was breathing hard by now, and I started getting
nervous. I ran to the phone but Uncle Louis’s line was busy. I
figured Aunt Carol was probably working her jaw with one of
her friends.
“Line’s busy!” I said. My heart raced.
“Get your sister! Now!” Livvie said in a quiet, firm voice.
My tail feathers were a blur as I took the steps and beat on
the bathroom door for Maggie to come out.
“Momma needs you! Hurry! She’s in labor!” I said.
Maggie came out the door in a flash and we raced down-
stairs together. Livvie had turned off the burners and put
Momma in a chair with a cold cloth on her head.
“All right, Miss MC! It’s all right. I gone with Miss Susan
and we bring Mr. Hank here fast as we can.” Momma nodded
her head and took a deep breath.“Start running,” she said to me.
“Maggie, keep dialing the number!”
Livvie and I ran out the back door, heading for Uncle
Louis’s house. We must’ve been some sight. I still had on my
pajamas and Livvie’s apron was flying in the air. Even though I
was barefooted I don’t think I felt a single thing on the bottom
of my feet. I don’t even really remember running, all I know is
that Aunt Carol was out front cutting roses when she saw us
running toward her. She dropped the hose and ran off screaming
for my daddy. Livvie screamed at her as she was running. She
was provoked that she was calling for my daddy and not my
uncle. She said,“I don’t care who you call! Just move your bony
behind quick!” It was terribly exciting.
My daddy, Uncle Louis and Livvie finally got Momma
dressed, packed and into the car. Aunt Carol wanted to go with
them but at Uncle Louis’s insistence she agreed to stay with us.
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Nobody took Momma’s suitcase. Finally, Uncle Louis ran back
up to the porch, grabbed it, ran down and threw it in the trunk.
Sophie sat silent as a stone in that rocker when Momma asked
her to go with her to the hospital. Momma was scared, I guess. I
was standing next to her.
“Won’t you please come with me, Momma?”
Grandma Sophie just stared at Momma like she didn’t know
her from a bucket of green paint. Old Grandpa Tipa answered
for her.“Go with God, Marie Catherine, go with God.”
Finally, Livvie came and took Momma by the hand, led her
down the stairs and put her in the backseat. Now, Momma’s face
got all funny and I knew it was because she had never sat next
to a colored person in a car, but Livvie took care of that.
“I see your face, Miss MC, but let Livvie tell you something.