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)
chat rooms and meet some stud muffin?” Her face was serious.
“Gimme a break, will you? I leave the chat rooms to Beth.
Would you believe I caught her talking to some guy, saying she
was a twenty-three-year-old blond aerobics instructor from
Malibu who loved Mexican food?”
“Good Lord, Susan. But, hey, it’s another story you could
write!”
“See what I mean?”
“Susan? Are you going to use your real name?”
“I don’t know, probably not. Because if nobody knows who
I am then I think it would be easier to really say what I think,
you know what I mean?”
“I wouldn’t use anybody’s name in the column either. You’ll
get your butt sued for libel.”
“Yeah, I thought of that, unless it’s a politician.”
“I could help you with lots of stories from when we were
kids.” She liked the idea. I could see it.
“I have a trunk full of them! The journals, remember?”
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“Right! Well, when you run out of stuff to say, let me know.”
“Maggie, people will be spending the weekend on the
moon before I run out of things to say.”
We started to laugh and our laughter grew. Pretty soon, tears
were running down our cheeks as we were remembering all the
crazy things we had done as children.
“Remember that kid Stuart?”
“Oh, God! What a little creep he was!”
That was how it all began. I spent the next two weeks writ-
ing like a maniac. I wrote a piece about going crabbing with an
illustration of kids on the beach attached to it. I wrote a piece
about sibling rivalry with a cartoon of kids choking each other.
I particularly loved the one I wrote about Livvie.That one had
a picture of a little white girl on the lap of a black woman.There
was something to be said about single parenting, a lot, in fact, so
I burned up the keyboard of Beth’s word processor on that. I
wrote about the sexual revolution and how it had passed
Charleston by. They were all very tongue-in-cheek and some of
them were damn funny, if I said so myself. And the cartoons set
the tone. They were eaten alive with cuteness.
Beth thought I’d gone mad. She was letting me use her
computer, because I couldn’t make up my mind which one I
wanted to buy, and she’d sacrificed her privacy. She moved to
the dining room to study, saying that my laughing out loud, not
to mention my pacing and smoking, broke her concentration.
No doubt.
When I had twenty-five essays together, I was ready to try
to sell them. But first somebody had to read them for me. Catch
the goobers, fine-tune the language, gauge the rhythm, veracity
and wit. I called Maggie.
“Whatcha doing?” I lit a cigarette.“Do you love me?”
“Of course I love you. What choice do I have? Where the
heck have you been?”
“I’ve been impersonating Anna Quindlen for the last ten
days. My fingers are worn down to little nubs from spilling my
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guts on paper. My thumbs are callused from the space bar. I need
your help.”
“Name it.”
“Do you think you could pretend you don’t know me and
read what I’ve written and then tell me the truth? I need to have
all this stuff proofread.”
“You’re not really seriously asking me if I like to criticize, are
you? Get your bones in the car and come on over. I’ve been dying
to see what you’re up to! I’ll make supper for y’all tonight.”
True to form, my sister helped me once again. She found tons
of errors that the spell-check feature on the word processor didn’t
pick up and had some good suggestions for tightening up some
of the essays. It took another week to get them polished and
another three days to work up my nerve to call the newspaper. I
just kept telling myself that if they didn’t want to run my essays,
I’d try another paper. No big deal. In fact, I expected rejection.
Finally, on Friday, I looked up the number and dialed. The
computerized voice that answered the phone had me so con-
fused, I wasn’t even sure who I wanted to talk to when the
human voice finally came on the line.
“Hello? Can I help you?” The voice, female, sounded
mature and pleasantly professional.
“Um, I hope so. My name is Susan Hayes and I’m in charge
of literacy outreach programs at the county library.”
“Yes, Ms. Hayes, how may I direct your call?”
“Well, I’m not sure. I’ve written some essays about living in
these hard, fast times we’re in and I was hoping I might speak to
someone about buying them for the paper.”
“Ah, so you’re a journalist too?”
“Well, an aspiring one, I mean, I’ve done a lot of writing—”
She cut me off in midsentence.“Just bring them to the front
desk, any weekday between nine and five, and we’ll have a look
at them. Make sure you have your résumé and phone number
attached to your portfolio and we’ll call you.”
“Okay. Fine.Thank you.”
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I wasn’t used to being dismissed and it felt terrible. But then
I realized I was talking to the receptionist and she probably got
fifty calls a week from people who are sure they’re the next
Dave Barry or Molly Ivins. Can’t blame her, I thought, and then
I realized: Portfolio? Don’t have one! Résumé? Haven’t updated
it in years! I spent all Friday evening composing a new résumé
and successfully resisted the urge to include any wisecracks.
Maybe I should send a copy to Roger Dodds too, I thought.
He
still
hadn’t called either. I could’ve died in the hurricane for
all he knew.
The next morning I bought a black leather portfolio, to
hold my essays, from Huguley’s on Wentworth Street. I prayed
that I’d bought the right kind and that it didn’t look pretentious.
I decided to beat it up a little to make me look experienced, so
I threw it on the asphalt a few times and walked on it. Then I
damp-wiped it and Pledged it. The end result was convincing
enough to me.
On my way to work Monday, I dropped the whole kit and
caboodle off at the
Post & Courier,
held my breath and began a
novena to the Blessed Mother.
O most gracious Virgin Mary, never
was it known that anyone who fled to thy protection, implored thy help
or sought thy intercession was left unaided . . .
It was in the blood. I would be a card-carrying, fish-eating,
bead-pushing, candle-lighting, altar-making, incense-sniffing,
genuflecting, saint-venerating Catholic until the day I died. I
figured the Blessed Mother was my best bet in the Roman
Catholic pantheon of possibilities. After all, she was a woman.
Maybe I would resort to daily Mass in case I’d used up all my
heavenly favors.
Tuesday and Wednesday went by and no one called. Not
Roger, not Tom and not the newspaper. I had indulged in a
thousand fantasies by late Wednesday afternoon. Ones where
crowds roared at my jokes and held their breath while I
spoke.
I was making a meat loaf for supper and had my hands in
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the bowl of chopped meat and ketchup when the phone rang. I
was so deep in thought that I jumped at the loud noise.
“Beth! Can you get that? If it’s Oprah, tell her there’s no fee
for me to appear, but I only fly first class!” I had been having a
marvelous time imagining fame and fortune and how cool I’d be.
“It’s for you, Mom!” Beth screamed from upstairs.“It’s some
man, probably wants to sell you something!”
Oh, good Lord, I thought, just when I’m up to my elbows
in gook. I wiped off my hands and picked up the receiver.
“Ms. Hayes?”
“Yes?”
“This is Max Hall calling. I’m the publisher of the
Post &
Courier.
” He paused.
“Oh! Yes! How nice of you to call.” My heart was beating
against the wall of my chest.
“I’ve read your essays.” He took a very long pause again. Did
he hate them? Did he love them? Tell me already and stop the
pain!
“And?”
“Well, it happens that one of our writers who does a col-
umn on Thursdays is leaving us and I might be able to use some
of your work. I’d like to meet with you and discuss it.”
“Fine! When?”
“Well, would Friday around four o’clock be all right with
you?”
I would’ve gone at three in the morning if he had wanted
me to.
I m a rc h e d mys e l f into Berlin’s the next afternoon like I shop
there every day. I bought a pair of black Calvin Klein trousers
with a jacket and a black silk T-shirt and paid the full retail price
for it all.Then, full of beans, I walked down to Bob Ellis Shoes
and bought a pair of black Prada pumps to match and a black
knock-off Chanel bag.Thank you, Jesus, and all those good peo-
ple at Metropolitan Insurance! Friday, I picked up the trousers
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from the alteration woman and hurried home to try on my new
image. As I stood in front of the mirror on the back of my door,
I liked what I saw. I was tall, thin and very cool. No, I was digni-
fied. I went to Beth’s room for the ultimate test.
“If I pull my hair back in a clamp, what do you think? Do I
look like a writer or an Italian widow?”
“Groovy, baby. Shagadelic!”
“Thanks, I think.”
All the way to Max Hall’s office I tortured myself. What if
he hated me? This was not a romance, I told myself, it was busi-
ness. What if he laughed at me and thought my work was idi-
otic? What if he bought it, it was published and everybody knew
it was me and
they
laughed at me?
“Ms. Hayes?”
His door had swung open, and a pimple-faced young man
in shirtsleeves scooted out past me. I marveled that he was old
enough to be a journalist. I was feeling old, but the face on Max
Hall was a lot older than mine. I took a deep breath and jumped
in the deep end.
“Hi!” I shook his hand. Firm grip.That was good.“Mr. Hall?”
“Call me Max.” He closed the door behind us. “Everyone
does.”
His office was exactly what I expected. Behind his old leather-
topped desk was a computer screen on a credenza, flashing news
with a stock tape running across the bottom. His desk was huge
and had several pencil cups and neat piles of paper stacked on both
ends. He took his seat in the leather swivel chair and indicated that
I should sit opposite him.
“Then call me Susan, please.”
“Sure. You want coffee?”
“Sure. Black’s fine.”
He spoke into his intercom, asking the female outside to bring
in two cups of coffee.Then he leaned back and looked at me.
“So, you want to write a column for the
Post & Courier,
do
you? What kind of experience have you got?”
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“Jack,” I said.
“Excuse me? You worked for someone named Jack? Do I
know him?”
I cleared my throat and my face got hot. I should’ve
watched a video on how to interview.
“Um, no, Max, I mean I have a lot of experience, but not in
journalism. But I do a lot of writing for my regular job at the
county library. Grant proposals, brochures, that sort of thing.”
“Ah! I see.” He leaned across the desk and said in a low
voice as his secretary left the office, closing the door behind her,
“What you’re telling me is that you don’t know jack about jour-
nalism, is that right?”
The son of a bitch had no sense of humor.
“Well, yes and no. I mean, everyone tells me I write like a
journalist and that I should write professionally and that I’m
funny. Well, they think so, I’m not so sure.”
“Let me be the judge of that.”
“Ah, Jesus.” I had spilled the coffee down my arm.
“Don’t be so nervous. Here.” He handed me a wad of tissues.
“Right. Max, can I be real straight with you?”
“Please. I’m about as good at mind reading as you are on
interviews.” He smiled and leaned back. This wasn’t going as I
had visualized it.
“Look. If you like the twenty-five stories you’ve seen, I have
more. I’ve been keeping a journal since I was knee-high. Here’s
the thing. I need this job. I’m a single parent, my ex-husband is
so tight he squeaks and I need to prove something.”
“Now you’ve got my attention.What’ve you got to prove?”
“I need to prove to my daughter that the human spirit can
overcome any trial life throws your way. These stories are for
women around my age, the boomers. They’re to remind them
that raising kids today ought to be a breeze next to the issues we
faced during segregation and the Vietnam war and all the stuff
that went on thirty years ago that changed the world forever.”
“You think your generation changed the world?”
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“You bet we did. This planet’s never been safer than it is
today. The air’s cleaner, the water’s cleaner and the risk of nuclear
war is practically nil.” You go, honey, I said to myself. I wondered