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)
can’t be doing what you needs to be doing.Then he wins, you
see? He can’t win unless you let him because he ain’t got no
power on his own.”
“So, basically, what you’re saying is that worrying about
Daddy and Aunt Carol or Grandma Sophie diverts my attention
from other things, better things?”
“That’s it! That’s my girl!”
“Yeah, but Livvie, I don’t think I’m ever gonna forget what
I saw.”
“I know that, chile, but listen up, every time that picture
comes back in your head, ask the Lawd to help it go away. He
will.”
“Livvie?”
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“Mm-hm?”
“Your grandfather was a slave?”
“Yes, chile, he was. They carried him off from Africa when
he was a young man and he nearly died on the way ’eah. The
old people didn’t like to talk about slavery. It was a terrible
time.”
“It must’ve been horrible.”
“It ain’t over, Susan.We still got our troubles, but I just keep
to myself and don’t get all messed up with all this fool talk about
integration and such. I don’t want to eat at the lunch counter in
Woolworth’s over to the city. I’d rather eat in my own house!”
“Well, I ain’t got the money to eat there. It’s probably greasy
anyway.”
“Yes, but you
could
eat there. I can’t.You
could
use the bath-
room there. I can’t. It ain’t ever gone change and iffin it does,
gone be a miracle for sure.Wait till all these old buckra narrow
minds die and find heaven full of colored folks! Won’t that be
the day!”
“I don’t know, Livvie, I’m not gonna even be fourteen until
next month. I don’t know about all this stuff.”
I was embarrassed. I knew what she said was right but there
wasn’t anything I could do about it. Suddenly I was very glad
that Daddy had built the new bathroom. If Livvie had ever been
told to use the outhouse, she would have quit on the spot.
Maggie says that when colored people die and go to
heaven, their skin turns white. I used to believe that when I was
little, but now I knew that it was another dumb lie made up by
white people.
For a long time I had always thought plantation life must’ve
been full of music. Long days and hard work, and somehow in
my mind, all of it was set to music. Slaves singing, ladies dancing,
beautiful carriages and horses bringing people to parties at night
with lanterns all over the yard—that sort of thing. How stupid
and naive could I have been? Their music was born of pain, pain
caused by people of my race.
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“Well, I’m gonna go help Maggie put the porch back
together, okay?”
“Susan, come back ’eah, chile.”
I turned to face her.
“Listen to Livvie, I tell you what’s on my mind, not to make
you feel bad. I want you to
think.
Gawd got His special purpose
for you, just like He does for every one of us. He done give you a
very good mind.The world you have when you grow up is gonna
be the one you make.You use your mind and make it better.”
“I will, Livvie, I promise.”
By sunday morning it seemed that the entire Island knew that my
momma had twins. Every hour somebody came over with a
gift for my new sisters. Most people brought two pairs of
booties—in fact, we had fifteen sets of two already—and every
last one of them wanted to know what the twins’ names were.
They didn’t have names yet. But, in the tradition of the family
reputation of lying through our teeth,Timmy and I decided to
quit explaining.
“I’ll get it,” I screamed when I heard the knock.
It was Mrs. Wilson, the red-headed schoolteacher from
Sullivan’s Island Elementary School. She was divorced but since
talking to her was only a venial sin, I launched right in.
“Hi!” I said.
“Oh! Susan, I’m so glad I caught y’all at home! I thought
you might be at church.”
“No, ma’am. We went to Mass at eight o’clock this morn-
ing. Timmy and Henry had to serve on the altar, so we all just
got up and went.”
“Well, that’s nice, dear. Listen, this is for your new sisters.”
“Thank you. Booties?”
“Yes, I made them myself! How’s your momma?”
Make that sixteen pairs of two and still counting. The day
was young.
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191
“Good. Coming home Tuesday.We’re going to see her in a
few minutes.”
“Well, please send her my best. Did she name the girls?”
“Yes, ma’am. Posie Sue and Rosie Sue. Momma likes flowers,
you know, and she named them Sue in my honor. Isn’t that nice?”
Her face went blank.“Well, I always say people should name
their babies whatever they want,” she said.
“Yes, ma’am, I think so too.”
By the time we left for Charleston, my sisters had some of
the craziest names you can imagine. Itchy and Scratchy,Timmy
told Mrs. Fisher, because Daddy said the twins were all bumpy
and rashy. Sneezy and Wheezy, I told Mrs. Mosner, because their
noses were runny, but don’t worry, it’s not on the birth certifi-
cate, I told her. Daphne and Delilah,Tara and Scarlet, and Lucy
and Ethel were some of our favorites. We were laughing so
much in the car Daddy started screaming at us.
“Shut the hell up! I’m trying to drive!”
Silence prevailed and we spent the rest of the ride looking
at the damage from the storm. Trees were still down every-
where; the roads were covered in a wash of sand.The water was
still high on the causeway. It was incredible how much damage
could happen in just a few hours. Unfortunately Mount Pleas-
ant had electricity again, which meant school would be open
Monday.
When we reached the parking lot at the hospital, Daddy
gave us a talk on our manners.We gave our word not to behave
like a bunch of banshees. I had avoided talking to him and was
wondering how I could avoid it for the rest of my life.
We took the elevator up to the maternity ward and waited
outside Momma’s room until Daddy said we could go in.
“Momma?” I said.“Hey! You alright?”
“I’m tired but I’m fine! Come give your momma a kiss,” she
said,“and meet your new sisters.”
We bombarded her with homemade cards and signs, crawl-
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ing over her to see the twins.They were in the bed with her and
when I saw them I started crying. So did Maggie.They were so
beautiful. Momma was so moved that she started to cry. Then
Daddy grabbed the Kleenex box and started passing them out.
That made us laugh. He pretended to cry, making fun of us, but
he was so loud he scared the babies and they really started cry-
ing. The more they screamed the redder they got. Maggie
picked up the blond and I picked up the brunette. I couldn’t
believe they calmed down.
“You girls are going to have to help me when I come home,
you know,” Momma said.
“Oh, don’t worry about it, Momma. I love babies,” I said,
thinking of my plan.
“They look like Susan and me,” Maggie said.
“Yeah, that one doesn’t have any eyebrows,” Henry said.
“She’ll get them later, bird brain,” Maggie said.
“Boy, she’s got some grip!” Timmy said. The baby I held
had her tiny hand wrapped around his finger. “Gonna be a
wrestler!”
“I hope not!” Momma said.
“All right, you kids go wait in the waiting area and I’ll be
along soon,” Daddy said. He was so pleasant it made me forgive
him for the moment, making me hope things would be better.
We lined up like good little soldiers, kissed Momma on the
cheek and the twins on their heads and filed out. There was
something magical about the moment. Maybe the twins would
bring us good luck. Maybe Daddy would go back to loving
Momma. Momma looked pretty good, I thought, considering
what she’d been through. Remembering the babies’ names, I
giggled to myself.
T h e g r e at j oy of my sisters’ birth and the plans to tell it all over
school were dwarfed by the terrible news of the following
Monday morning.When my brothers and I arrived at school we
were told by our teachers to go directly to chapel for a special
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193
Mass. We were told that somebody had bombed a church in
Birmingham,Alabama, killing four little girls. Many others were
seriously hurt. It was a Negro church.We were absolutely stunned.
The nuns were crying and there was a mood of despair that
crept through the pews like poison gas, rising up from a dark
place.The hideous news changed us forever.
Until then, I had no clue whatsoever that the Civil Rights
movement was so dangerous. It had always just seemed so far away,
like Vietnam. And I couldn’t imagine who would kill children
because they were colored. If grown-ups wanted to fight each
other, they would, but what kind of a person bombed a church?
And how deep must be the hatred that drove the person to
commit such an unforgivable crime? Who would kill people
while they prayed? I had a hard time trying to concentrate in
my classes. I kept seeing the grief-stricken faces from the news-
paper that someone was passing around.Visions of children lying
in coffins tormented me all day. For some inexplicable reason, I
didn’t want to face Livvie when I got home. I knew she would
be angry.
She was grieving as though those children had been her
own. She wiped her eyes with the back of her hand, humming
a church song. I found her ironing when I came in the back
door with Timmy and Henry after school.
The boys each grabbed a cookie from the plate on the table
she had set out for us and ran upstairs.
“Chocolate chip! Thanks, Livvie!”Timmy said.
“My favorite!” Henry squealed.
I put my books on the table and reached for a glass to pour
some milk for myself.
“Want some milk?” I said.
“No, chile, I don’t want nothing today. No, nothing today.”
She looked long at me and went back to her ironing, humming
a little, but her eyes were incredibly sad.
“We had a special Mass in school for those girls in Alabama,”
I said quietly.
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“It just don’t make no sense,” she said.“People killing like this.
Bombing the Lawd’s house. Lucifer got to be stopped! Somebody
got to stop him.”
“You’re right,” I said.“What can we do?”
“Beg Gawd to help,” she said.“Gone take the mighty power of
all His angels to stop this kind of thing. I’m fearing it’s gone come
this way. Hatred is a terrible thing. Like cancer. Eats you up.”
“You’re right,” I repeated, at a loss for words for once in my
stupid life.
“My cousin Harriet come to my house this morning with
the paper.When I see them faces of them mommas and daddies
crying for they children, make me cry.That’s all.”
“Me too.”
She looked at me and realized my eyes were red too, but
she was suspicious of my honesty. Couldn’t she see that I was
frightened by what had happened in Alabama? It meant the
trouble could come here and children here might get blown
up too.
“This ’eah is trouble for my people, not yours, Susan. We
gone fight the fight, because every back is fitted to the burden,”
she said, slamming the iron on the board for emphasis. “We
done carry burden since we come to this country in chains.
Ain’t much different now.”
The last thing I’d let her do was shut me out.
“You’re wrong about that, Livvie. I mean, I don’t usually
disagree with grown-ups and I never thought I’d disagree with
you, and I’m sorry to say so, but you’re wrong.”
“Oh, yeah? Let me ’eah this now. Now they burning babies!”
“I know that, but I didn’t do it! Listen, God made all of us,
right?”
“Yeah, that’s right.”
“And the only difference between you and me is our skin
color, right?”
“Yeah, I reckon so.”
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“And kids are kids, right?”
“They sure enough are.” She was patiently watching me bum-
ble my way through this and giving me all the rope I needed to
hang myself.
“Well, if a colored man blew up a white church and killed
some white kids, that wouldn’t mean all colored people are bad,
would it?”
“No, it wouldn’t.”
“It would mean that there was one crazy sumbitch out
there, or maybe a bunch of them, but not every colored person
was crazy, right?”
“You may be right, but please don’t say that curse word.
Ain’t fitting.”
“Okay, so this means that there are a bunch or maybe even a
lot of bad guys in Alabama who don’t want integration, but not
everybody feels like that.”
“I already told you. I don’t care about integration. I just
want peace, that’s all. Just want to live my life in peace and serve
the Lawd.”
“Me too. But, Livvie, a lot of people do care about integration.
I mean, Sister Amelia, my teacher, said plenty today that made a lot