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)
if the old codger had a soapbox in the closet I could use.
“So we may assume you have other opinions about other
things?”
“Yeah, I guess you could say that.”Why was I so out of con-
trol? This was no way to charm a guy, even I knew that.“I tend
to get carried away.”
“Carried away can be a good thing. I have two more writers
to interview and I’ll let you know by Monday. Okay?”
“Really?”
“Yeah, really. Fair enough?”
“Oh, God, yes, that’s more than fair enough! Thanks, Max,
listen, this is all just draft, you know, I could polish it up—”
“Quit apologizing for your writing. God, all writers are
the same.” He got up from his desk and opened the door for
me to leave.The interview was over. I had spent eight hundred
and fifty dollars on this black widow’s outfit for a five-minute
interview.
“Max?” I extended my hand to him and he took it.“Thanks.
I really mean it.”
“Sure thing, Susan Hayes, with opinions galore! I’ll call you
either way by the end of the weekend.”
I called Maggie as soon as I got home.
“Let’s get drunk,” I said.
“Love to oblige, but I have to take the boys to football prac-
tice tonight. My turn to carpool. How’d it go?”
“Then can I borrow a Valium?” I twisted the phone cord
around my elbow and hand, knotting the whole thing up.
“God, I wish you’d get your own. Ask your doctor.Tell me
how it went.Was it a disaster?”Why was she so cranky? Get my
own Valium?
“No, I don’t think so, I mean, I don’t really know. It was so fast.”
“Has he got your portfolio?”
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211
“Yeah, he had read the stuff already. I guess he just wanted to
see my face. I’m gonna be a wreck until he calls. Can I come
over?”
“Sure.”
I don’t remember driving to the Island, but I came out of
my trance in Maggie’s kitchen as she put a bottle of peach-
flavored Snapple in my hands.
“Peach-flavored tea? How can you drink this stuff ?”
“It’s better for you than all those nitrates you guzzle.”
“Maybe. Maggie? Is something wrong?”
“I haven’t seen my husband in two days.” She leaned back
against the sink and she had the strangest expression on her face.
“Susan, Grant’s having an affair,” she said.
“What in the hell are you telling me?”
“I’m telling you Grant is putting away some little nurse at
the hospital.”
She burst into tears. I knew she sounded funny on the phone!
No wonder she told me to get my own drugs. I put my arms
around her.
“Come on, now. How do you know this is true? I mean, are
you sure?”
“I found a matchbook with a phone number written on it
in his jacket pocket.”
“Call the number?”
“Yeah. Answering machine. ‘Sheila and Debbie aren’t home
right now . . . ’ What would you think?”
“I’d think what you think, but you know what? You should
ask him. Just ask him.”
“Here I am in this perfect life, in my clean house, and my hus-
band is screwing around and I didn’t even suspect it. But, lately,
he’s gone so much, I don’t know, I just started getting this rotten
feeling in the pit of my stomach, you know what I mean?”
“Do I know? Yeah, I know. I just can’t believe Grant would
do that, Maggie. He’s a Eucharistic Minister, for Christ’s sake, no
pun intended. I mean, guys who dispense Communion every
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Sunday are unlikely to have affairs! I think you need more facts.
Just ask him straight out. Say, ‘Grant? Are you having an affair?’
Just as he’s about to bite into dinner, you know, catch him off
guard.”
“Oh, I couldn’t do that, Susan, I don’t have the nerve.”
“Yes, you do.Then he’ll say, ‘Why no, honey, whyever in the
world would you think that?’Then you say,‘Because I found these
matches in your pocket from the White Horse Saloon with a
phone number, so I called it and a girl named Debbie answered.
I told her I was your wife and you’re HIV positive and on a mis-
sion to infect all the sluts of the world, that’s all.’That’s what you
say. Then you look at his face to see if he’s choking or turning red
or whatever.”
She cracked up. I cracked up. Humor. It never fails.
“You’re the best, Susan. I’m gonna do it.” She paced around
the kitchen table.“What do you think? Should I wash my hair?”
“Definitely. I don’t want to put pressure on you, but pretend
you’re getting your picture taken for
Town & Country,
know what
I mean? Put on the dog and when he takes the bait, whammo!”
“Whammo, huh? At this moment, I’d like to whammo him
straight to McAlister’s Funeral Parlor.The son of a bitch.”
“Maggie! Such language! Honey, get the facts first. I have
the feeling this is all a big misunderstanding. I can’t for the life of
me see Grant sneaking around. He loves you, first of all, and sec-
ond, he’s not the type.”
“Livvie used to say all men were the type.”
“Yeah, well, Gawd rest she soul, I’m sure that even she
would’ve been wrong this time.”
I drove back to the city with a heavy heart. Grant was fifty-
one. Prime target for a nurse and an affair. It was true, he hadn’t
been around much, only to take the boys fishing and Sundays
he’d take everyone to church and then to do something else, like
see a movie. I thought about it some more and wondered what
indeed would Maggie do if she were right. I knew I’d better
prepare myself to step in and help her like she had helped me.
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213
The house was quiet that night. I was watching television
and Beth was reading in her room. I had decided to give myself
a break in the writing business that night and just catch up on
sitcoms and paying bills. At eleven o’clock, I turned off the
lights and went upstairs. Beth’s light was still on.
“Night, sweetie!” I blew her a kiss through the door.
“Hey, Mom! Wanna see something outrageous?”
“Why not? Today’s been a day for the outrageous.”
“Look at this catalog! This is what I’m gonna wear on my
wedding night.”
I sat on her side of the bed and she showed me a picture in
a lingerie catalog of an emaciated blond with enormous breasts
and big, pouty, slippery lips, wearing a white, sheer, nylon, poor
excuse for a gown and robe trimmed in feathers. For a moment,
I didn’t know what to say. It was the worst thing I could imag-
ine she would want to wear in front of anyone. It bordered on
pornography.
“Where did you get this catalog?”
“Cool, huh? Jennifer gave it to me.”
“Who’s Jennifer?”
“A girl in my biology class.”
“That figures. Listen, sweetie, throw that in the trash.When
the time comes for you to get married, we’ll go to Atlanta to
shop.”
“You swear?”
“Mother never swears, Beth, you know that.”
Mo n d ay a f t e r wo r k I was coming through the door with gro-
ceries for dinner and Beth was on the phone, as usual, and ani-
mated like a lunatic, waving her arms at me.The kitchen was a
wreck, also as usual, but I was so stressed out that I didn’t even
start yelling at her.
“Sure, she’s right here.” She handed the phone to me.
It’s him!
she mouthed, pointing to the phone.
The guy from the
Post &
Courier!
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“Hello?”
“Susan? Max Hall here. Nice girl you’ve got, nice girl.”
“Thanks.”
“Well, if you still want the job, it’s yours. I know I shouldn’t say
this, but I saw those other two people and I swear to God, what
some people think passes for entertainment, you wouldn’t believe.”
“Right.Well, I still want the job.Very much!”
“Well then, we need to settle a few things. First, we will use
a number of the essays you’ve given me, but not all of them. So
why don’t you come by and we can talk about them? I have a
list of possible topics for you too.You know, education, the arts,
local sports, that kind of thing.”
“Sure! No problem.”
“Then there’s the ugly business of money.”
“Right, money,” I repeated like a parrot.
“I’m afraid it’s not much, ten cents a word, but it’s something
anyway.”
“That’s fine, I’ll take it!”Tough negotiator, I thought.
“First column runs this Thursday, Living section. I have a
question for you.”
“Sure, what’s that?”
“Do you want to use your name or a nom de plume?”
“Nom de plume, please, too many living relatives.”
“All right. Oh, and one other thing . . .”
“Yes?”
“Tell Jack he’s a helluva guy!”
“Right!” Oh, shit, this beast won’t ever let me forget that one.
“Be in my office tomorrow at four?”
“You bet! Max, thanks, I mean it.”
“Quit thanking me, you deserve a chance, Susan. You’ve
done a lot of living and these stories will give a lot of people
something to think about.”
I hung up the phone and leaned against the wall. Beth
grabbed me and we jumped up and down for a minute, whoop-
ing and hollering.
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215
“My mom! The famous columnist!”
“Oh, God! I can’t believe he called! He’s a little bit of a stiff,
I think, but who cares?”
“Right!”
Beth opened the refrigerator and found a can of Coke and I
poured myself a glass of Chardonnay.We clinked aluminum and
glass and I toasted myself and her.
“To the future!”
“To the future,” she said and gave me a hug.
“Hey, Mom, not to change the subject, but have you heard
from Dad?”
“No, why?”
“Just wondering.” She sat up straight on her bar stool.
“Okay, here’s the dirt. I saw him with
her.
”
“Oh, so what? Look, Beth, you’re old enough to understand
this. People should live where they want and do what they
want. If he wants to come back and he’s serious, you’ll be the
first person I tell.”
“I guess. I wasn’t gonna tell you but now that you have
some good news, I figured it was okay.”
“Right. Let them have each other. Come on!” I opened the
refrigerator. “Let’s make spaghetti. Tell me what happened in
school today.”
“Jonathan finally started speaking to me again.”
“Tell him not to do you any favors. Don’t we have a bell
pepper?”
“Right. In the bottom drawer. So, Momma?”
I loved when she called me Momma.
“Is it hard to write?”
“Nah, it’s sort of like dancing. You find a rhythm and go to
town with it. Know what I mean?”
“Sort of. I mean, it’s easy to write about good stuff, but what
are you gonna do if they ask you to write about bad stuff ?”
“Let’s hope they ask. Like what?”
“I don’t know, death maybe?”
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“That may possibly be the toughest question I’ve had to
answer all day, but even death has humor, wakes and funerals
especially. I guess I’d advise people not to take hams to the
bereaved. Did I ever tell you about the mountain of hams we
always got?”
“You’re weird, Mom.”
Eleven
Tipa
}
1963
T was a bright October morning. The last vestige of
Indian summer before the gray months. I was waiting
I outside for the school bus with Maggie, Timmy and
Henry. The twins had been home for about a month. Momma
had named them Allison (after June Allison, the actress) and Sophie
(after her mother) and when we took them down to Stella Maris
to wash the devil out of them, they were baptized Allison Marie
and Sophie Ann.They had screamed all the way through the cere-
mony, but from the minute they came home from the church they
settled into a routine under Livvie’s care.They were good babies,
Livvie said.
Momma didn’t get out of bed to cook breakfast for us any-
more. Somehow we managed. Daddy was leaving earlier than
ever for work. His construction of the county high school was
well under way and there were problems all the time. Just the
day before, someone had hung him in effigy from a tree by the
construction site. I heard him tell Uncle Louis that there was
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a sign around the dummy’s neck that read hank hamilton loves
niggers. Just last night old Fat Albert and Mr. Struthers came by
to see Daddy.They sat out on the porch talking about the dan-
ger of the threats. I thought they had frightened Daddy. But, no.
They had just made him more determined to finish his project.
But Daddy seemed worried and he was in extremely foul
humor. Needless to say, I was scared by the whole business but
knew better than to bring it up with him.
The next morning, I stood in the driveway looking for the
bus. It was late. Not one of us felt like going to school. The
boys kicked dirt into little clouds that covered the spit shine on
Maggie’s and my Weejuns.We complained in our whiny voices
and they imitated us, irking us to no end.
Finally, the noisy yellow bus rolled to its screechy halt, the