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)
had a professional cut in six months. Needless to say, I was
twenty pounds overweight.
I looked hard at Tom. He was tan and fit. He stood quietly
in the doorway to the kitchen. His teeth were perfect, his stom-
ach was as flat and hard as Formica and his loafers were shining
from diligent polish. He pulled off his tie and began to roll it
around his hand.
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D o r o t h e a B e n t o n F r a n k
“We need to talk,” he said.
“Yeah, I guess so.”
“I’m sorry you found us, Susan,” he said.
“Wait a minute.You’re sorry
I found you?
Shouldn’t the first
thing you apologize for be that you betrayed me?” I began to
panic all over again.
“Of course I’m sorry I betrayed you,” he said quietly, look-
ing at the floor.“We had it good together for a long time.”
“What are you saying,Tom?” My breath was uneven.
“I’m saying I think we should try living apart for a while,”
he said.
There it was.The hideous truth. He wanted out.
“Why? Tom, why? Look, I know things haven’t been great
between us lately. I mean, I know we haven’t been as close as we
used to be, but I can change. I can try harder.” I was pleading and
I could see from his expression that he was embarrassed by it.
“Please, Susan, don’t make this any harder than it is,” he said.
“Don’t make it harder? What does that mean?”
“I just need some space, some time to think,” he said.“It has
to be this way.”
“Why?” I began to cry.“What about Beth? What about our
family,Tom? What about me?”
“Look, I just came back to get some things.You know I’ll
take care of you and Beth. I’ll talk to her. I just have to have
some time, Susan.”
“Look at me,Tom. Look at me in the face and tell me why
this is happening, because I don’t understand.”
When he looked at me I knew all at once why it was
happening. He didn’t love me anymore. He didn’t even look
guilty. He looked relieved. He cleared his throat.
“Where is my black hanging bag?” he said.
“Find it yourself,” I said. It began to sink in that he was really
leaving. Nothing I could say or do would change that. “And
while you’re finding your black hanging bag that I worked over-
time to buy you for Father’s Day last year . . . oh, God. It’s on the
S u l l i v a n ’ s I s l a n d
9
third floor in the hall closet.” I was going to tell him to go to hell
but I couldn’t get the words out of my throat. What difference
would it have made? Father’s Day. I watched him leave the room
and listened to his quiet footsteps on the stairs. I heard him walk
overhead and up the steps again to the third floor. I couldn’t
move. I felt like someone had died and it was such a shock that I
couldn’t absorb it. Suddenly I started thinking about seeing him
in bed with that woman and then I started getting mad again.
I went upstairs and found him lifting stacks of shirts from his
drawer and putting them on the bed. His hanging bag was
spread open and held several suits. I sat on the other side of the
bed and tucked my feet under me.
“What’s her name, Tom?” No answer. “Come on, Tom, she
must have a name.”
He opened his sock drawer and stopped.“Karen,” he said.
“How old is she? I mean, she’s obviously younger than I am.
Just out of curiosity . . .”
“I don’t know,” he said.
“Nineteen? Twenty?” I was being a bitch but, hey, I figured,
why not? “So, do you think she loves you for yourself ?”
“Susan, she’s twenty-three and yes, she loves me for myself.”
“And you love her too. Is that right?”
“Yes, I think so,” he said in a whisper.
“What was that? I couldn’t hear you,Tom. Did you say she’s
closer to Beth’s age than to yours and that you are in love with
her?”
“Yes,” he said.
“I see. Well, we may as well be civilized about this, to the
extent that’s possible for me anyway.” I got up from the bed and
went to the bathroom. He closed the drawer to let me pass
without touching him.That act of avoidance infuriated me fur-
ther.“No sense in prolonging the misery,” I said, “I’ll pack your
shaving kit for you.”
“Thanks,” he said.
I closed the bathroom door behind me, locked it and
10
D o r o t h e a B e n t o n F r a n k
looked in the mirror. I had never been so furious in my life. I
ran the cold water, took off my glasses and washed my face.
When had I stopped wearing contact lenses? Ten years ago?
When had my teeth started turning yellow? Five years ago? I
pulled his leather bag from the cabinet under the sink and
opened it. Condoms? How old were they? I took his razor
from his medicine cabinet and dropped it in the bag, along
with his shaving cream and the Colgate. Reaching for his
toothbrush, I looked at it and realized he’d been brushing his
teeth for somebody else for a long time. I don’t know what
possessed me to do it but I dunked it in the toilet.That pleased
me so much that I rubbed it around the inside rim. That
seemed so pleasant I then scrubbed up under the rim, good and
hard, where no toilet brush could’ve reached in weeks.
“Tom, do you want a hair dryer?” My heart was pounding
as I put the toothbrush in its holder and dropped it in the bag.
“No, that’s okay,” he said.
“I’ll be out in a minute,” I said. I pulled off my pantyhose
and threw them in the wastebasket. I took his aftershave and
cologne out of the medicine cabinet. It occurred to me that he’d
been wearing these for Karen. I peed in the bathroom glass,
drained the Aramis and poured urine into two of his cologne
bottles. “Up yours,” I said quietly. I dropped the bottles in his
bag and zipped it closed. Once more I looked in the mirror. I
wondered what had become of the nice girl I once was.
When I went back to the bedroom, his suitcase was gone. I
took the shaving kit downstairs and met him at the door.
“Where can I reach you?” I said, handing it to him.
“I’ll call you,” he said.
We just stood there looking at each other.
“I’m sorry, Susan, it’s not you, it’s me,” he said. He turned
and left.
“Yeah,” I said. I watched him go to his car, the same way I
had a million other times.
One
The Porch
}
1999
began putting my life back together at the feet of my
older sister and her family. She lived in Momma’s
I house—the family shrine—on the front beach of
Sullivan’s Island. Every time I went over to the Island—which
was frequent in the first months after Tom left—I tried to leave
the harsh realities of my new life behind me.
My old station wagon rolled slowly across the causeway, lib-
erating my daughter and me from the starched life of the penin-
sula to the tiny dream kingdom of Sullivan’s Island. Black magic
and
cunja
powder swirled invisibly in the air. The sheer mist
became the milky fog of my past.
From within the pink and white branches of the overgrown
oleanders, which lined both sides of the road, floated the spirits
of decades long gone.The
haints
were still there, just waiting for
us in the tall grasses and bushes. Suffice it to say that everything
in the Lowcountry was just a-wiggling with life and it wasn’t
always a warm body.
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D o r o t h e a B e n t o n F r a n k
The spirits urged me to roll down my windows and breathe
in the musk-laden drug of the marsh.The scents of plough mud
and rotting marsh life filled my senses like a warm shower of
rare perfume. Then the sirens sounded their cue and the draw-
bridge lifted up before us to allow passage for a tall-masted sail-
boat. We would be detained on the Charleston side for fifteen
minutes. I left my car to stand outside and feel the air. Beth
stayed in the car listening to the radio.
I walked to the edge of the marsh.The full force of the salty
air washed my face and, in an instant, I was a young girl again.
I was hurrying home to my momma and Livvie, my heart
already there.The sweet steam of Livvie’s simmering okra soup
beckoned in a long finger all the way from the back porch. In
my mind I heard the voices of my brothers and my sister as we
converged on the supper table, all of us bickering in Gullah over
the largest piece of cornbread. Livvie ran interference, telling us
to hush, warning us that Daddy was coming.
It was odd what I remembered about growing up. My first
associations were tied into the smells of the marsh and the aro-
mas of the kitchen. Maybe I should have done fragrance research
instead of planning literacy programs at the county library, but I
was always more inclined toward saving the world. One thing
was for sure, I needed a job that would let me offer my opinions
because, according to everybody I knew, that was one area where
I excelled.
Livvie. God, not a day passed that I didn’t remember her. She
raised me—all of us, actually. Here was an old Gullah woman
who put her own five children through college working as a
housekeeper. Just when she should have been thinking retire-
ment, she took on the notorious clan of Hamilton hardheaded
ignoramuses. She was the captain of our destiny, redirecting our
course as often as needed.With every snap of her fingers we woke
up to the truths of life and our own potential a little more. It was
because of her that we all loved to read. She’d shake her head and
lecture. “Feast your hungry brain with a good book,” she’d say.
S u l l i v a n ’ s I s l a n d
13
“Quit wasting time! Life’s short. Humph!” Humph, indeed.Who
was I kidding? It was because of her that we were not all in some
treatment program. She had taught us how to think—no small
feat.
She’d probably have had plenty to say if she could have seen
Beth and me right now, playing instead of working. I’d told my
boss I had a doctor’s appointment. A tiny lie. But I had an excel-
lent excuse for playing hooky on this particular weekday after-
noon. Heat. Over one hundred degrees every day since last week.
We were having a heat wave, Lowcountry style. It felt as if old-
fashioned southern cooks were deep-frying us in bubbling oil like
a bunch of breaded chickens. One flip of the wrist and the whole
of Charleston and its barrier islands sizzled in a cast-iron skillet.
We’re talking hot, Bubba. Take it from an old Geechee girl.
Geechee? That would be someone born in the Lowcountry,
which extends from the Ogeechee River down in Georgia clear
up to Georgetown, South Carolina. I was raised in the downy
bosom of the Gullah culture, as opposed to a Charlestonian reared
in the strictures of the Episcopal Church. Big difference. Gullah
culture? Ah, Gullah. It’s Lowcountry magic.That’s all.
Coming to the Island made me feel younger, a little more
reckless, and as I finally went back to my car and closed the door—
pausing one moment to lower the audio assault of the radio—I
realized the Island also made me lighthearted. I was willingly
becoming re-addicted. As we arrived on the Island, I pointed out
the signs of summer’s early arrival to Beth, my fourteen-year-old
certified volcano.
“Oh, my Lord, look! There’s Mrs. Schroeder!” I said.“I can’t
believe she’s still alive.” The old woman was draped over her
porch swing in her housecoat.
“Who? I mean, like, who cares, Mom? She’s an old goat!”
“Well, honey, when you’re an old goat like her, you will.
Look at her, poor old thing with that wet rag, trying to cool her
neck. Good Lord.What a life.”
“Shuh! Dawg life better, iffin you ask me!”
14
D o r o t h e a B e n t o n F r a n k
I smiled at her. Beth’s Gullah wasn’t great, but we were
working on it.
“This ’eah life done been plan by Gawd’s hand, chile,” I said.
It was a small but important blessing how the Gullah lan-
guage of my youth had become a communication link to her.A
budding teenager was a terrible curse for a single parent, espe-
cially given the exotic possibilities of our family’s gene pool. But
speaking Gullah had become a swift ramp to her soul.
Gullah was the Creole language developed by West Africans
when they were brought to the Lowcountry as slaves. While it
mostly used English words in our lifetime, it had a structure and
cadence all its own and most especially it had many unforget-
table idiomatic expressions.
It was spoken by Livvie, taught to us, and we passed on the
tradition to our own children. We used it to speak endearing
words to each other, to end a small disagreement or to ignite
memories of the tender time we spent with Livvie.When I was
Beth’s age every kid on the Island spoke Gullah to some extent,
at least those lucky enough to have someone like Livvie.
I stopped at the corner for some gas at Buddy’s Gulf Station,
the Island institution renowned for price gouging on everything
from gasoline to cigarettes. We got out of the car, I to perform