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)
door was opened with the flexed muscles of Miss Fanny’s fore-
arm coming toward us like Popeye’s.The same lady who ran the
Island’s little store was our sainted chauffeur. She leaned her
head sideways to greet us.
“Good morning! Come on now, let’s hurry up.You kids set-
tle down! Hey, Billy and Teddy! If y’all don’t settle down, I’m
gonna tell Father O’Brien!” She was yelling at the boys in the
back of the bus, who were knocking each other with their
lunch bags.“I swear to Gawd, them boys.”
I was the last to get on.
“Hey, Miss Fanny, how’re you?” I said.
“I’ll tell you how I am! Them crazy Blanchard boys gone
make me an old woman before my time!”
“Don’t let them bug you,” I said,“they’re jerks.”
They were still carrying on and one of the boys screamed.
In the next instant Miss Fanny was pissed off in purple.
“All right, that’s it! Teddy, Billy! Up to the front of the bus,
on the double,” Miss Fanny said. “You boys can lead the bus in
the rosary and if you even so much as twitch, you’re going right
to Father O’Brien when we get to school!”
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Taking the bus to school was an exercise in working off years
in purgatory. Every day, Miss Fanny led us in a decade of the rosary
as soon as we got over the Ben Sawyer Bridge. Every decade of the
rosary said is the equivalent of one hundred years off in purgatory.
If you say the Sorrowful Mysteries with the correct fervor, you get
a thousand years off.At least that’s what we thought.
“Let’s be quiet, y’all! Come on, let’s be quiet!” Miss Fanny
hollered.
We kept laughing and carrying on like a bunch of lunatics,
buoyed by the sugar of our morning dosage of Alphabits and
juice. I thought we prayed enough in school. But she was insis-
tent and she got madder and, like always, she started cussing.
“Y’all children! Dammit! If y’all don’t shut the hell up, I’m
gonna tell Father! Teddy! Billy! Y’all stand right there . . . in the
name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the . . .”
The prayers began at the top of her voice, and instantly we
all got quiet and prayed with her, snickering among ourselves
that prayer began with threats and curses.Today we said the Sor-
rowful Mysteries.
“Think about our dear Lawd, His momma at the foot of
His cross. Hail Mary, the Lawd is with thee, blessed art thou
among women and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus.”
Miss Fanny led us, and the Blanchard boys stood there look-
ing pious enough to sprout halos.We knew they were trying to
make us all laugh. But we didn’t need them. All we had to do
was hear the word
womb
and it caused a surge of giggling. In her
fervor, she ignored us every time and continued.
“Holy Mary, mother of Gawd, pray for us sinners, now and
at the hour of our death. Amen.”
We said the fifty required Hail Marys, the four Glory Be’s
and were putting the serious hurt on a synchronized Apostles’
Creed when the bus rolled into the dirt parking lot under the
big live oak tree, dripping moss—with red bugs—and we scam-
pered out to go pray and study for the day.
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Maggie was a big-shot tenth grader at Bishop England High
School and the rest of us were still sniveling runts at Stella Maris
Grammar School in Mount Pleasant. Still, she was forced to ride
the grammar school bus and another bus would take her to the
city. Although she was my best friend at home, on the bus she
sat far away from the rest of us, with other high school students,
and spent the ride silently looking out the window, rolling her
eyes and being serious.
It was my last year at Stella Maris and I couldn’t wait to get
out. At about ten o’clock, I had just begun a math test when
Father O’Brien came quietly into my classroom and whispered
to Sister Martha, my teacher.
“Susan Hamilton?”
“Yes, Sister?”
“You’ll go with Father O’Brien.Take your things with you.”
I fumbled around and gathered up my books. Nothing was
worse than being sent to Father O’Brien. He was all business and
had no tolerance for children.Why somebody like him was the
principal of a grammar school was merely another mystery of
the Catholic Church. The scuttlebutt on him was that he had
once studied with the Jesuits.That alone says it all.
“What about my test?” I asked.
“You can take it later.”
“Come along now,” Father O’Brien said.
“Thank you, Sister,” I said.
Every eye in my class watched me leave. What had I done?
Or was it Henry? Timmy? Did Maggie’s bus get in a wreck? I
worried all the way down the hall and to his office, where
Timmy and Henry were seated on a bench in the outer office,
terrified.They got up and we all went inside.We stood in front
of his desk and he sat in his chair.
“Children, I’m afraid I have some very sad news to tell y’all.
Your grandfather Mr. Asalit passed on this morning.”
“You mean he’s dead?” Henry asked.
“Son, only his body is dead; his soul now radiates with the full
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glory of the risen Christ. Surely you remember your catechism.”
Timmy and Henry started to cry and I stood stunned, just
staring at Father O’Brien.Then I put my arms around them and
reached for the tissues on Father’s desk.
“This is no time to indulge yourselves with tears. Pray that
his soul makes a swift journey to the Lord’s bosom and save your
strength to support your mother and grandmother. Remember,
this is your momma who’s lost her daddy and your grandmother
has lost her husband.”
Tears rolled down my face without a sound. I didn’t know
what to do, none of us did.We just stood there, time not passing,
waiting for some comfort. Shaking, scared and crying.
“Can I call my momma?” I asked.
“No, let’s not bother her. Your Aunt Carol is on the way
here to bring y’all home. She’s going to pick up Maggie first.
You may make a visit to the chapel to pray for your grandfather
and then you can wait on the bench outside if you’d like.”
“In the school yard?”
“Yes.”
Permission to wait in the school yard unsupervised was a
monumental event. I grabbed a fistful of tissues and led my little
brothers out.
First we peeked in the chapel and no one was there, except
for the light on the altar indicating the presence of the Eucharist
in the tabernacle.As fast as we could, we scampered to the front,
did a bounce genuflect in front of the altar and hurried to the
statue of the Blessed Mother. Her empty plaster eyes stared at
me and her half smile seemed like a smirk. It gave me chills. As
the oldest, I reached under the tray of candles for the matches
and lit three candles, one for each of us. I made the Sign of the
Cross and knocked Timmy and Henry in the ribs, encouraging
them to do the same.
“Dear God,” I said, “please take Grandpa Tipa straight to
heaven and not anyplace else. He was a good grandpa and a good
man. And he had plenty of reasons to be such a grouch. Also,
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please help Grandma Sophie and our momma not to go crazy
from this.Amen.”
“Amen,” my little brothers said.
We got up and hightailed it out of there. Empty churches
gave me the creeps.
The ride with Aunt Carol was like a disjointed dream. She
yammered on in a nervous monologue about what we should
wear and who would be coming and that we had to be quiet when
we got home.As we passed people on the street, going about their
lives, I wondered if they could tell our lives had just been blown
open by death. Could they see it on our faces? Henry continued to
cry and all Aunt Carol would say was,“There, there now.”
When we reached the Island Gamble, Livvie was standing
on the back steps in the sunshine waiting for us. She took one
look at us and opened her arms.“Come ’eah to Livvie. He gone
be all right. Everything gone be all right.”
Each one of us hugged her with all our might.The strength
of her arms healed me on the spot.When she saw the fear in our
faces transform from fright to calm, she released us, one by one.
“Go on now and kiss your momma and grandmomma and
then y’all come back ’eah to me. Maggie, see about them twins,
all right, chile?”
“Sure,” Maggie said.
We went inside and left Livvie with Aunt Carol on the back
steps. Aunt Carol was still talking, Livvie was shaking her head.
I found Momma in her bed with old Sophie sitting in a
chair beside her. Momma acted drunk but Grandma Sophie, like
the eighth wonder of the world, spoke.
“The doctor gave her a shot for her nerves,” she said.
Under the circumstances, Grandma Sophie seemed fine, bet-
ter than she had in my whole life. “Go and tell your aunt that I
want to speak with her, child, would you please do that for me?”
Timmy ran off for Aunt Carol and Henry and I followed
Sophie, who walked slowly back to her own room and crawled
up on her bed.
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“Come in! Come in! I won’t bite you!”We took baby steps
closer.
“I’m sorry you lost your husband, Grandma Sophie,” Henry
said, still crying.
“Well, somebody had to go first. Do you want a tissue? Go
get yourself one and blow your nose. I’m just sorry I wasn’t with
him in the end, that’s all.”
“What happened, Grandma? Is it okay to ask that?” I asked.
“He dropped dead on the floor of the post office, poor
thing. Had a heart attack and dropped dead. He’d gone to get the
mail, just like he always does. One minute you’re here, and the
next, poof ! Deader than Kelsey’s cow. Somebody pulled his plug.
I expect your father’s gonna throw me out now that I don’t have
Tipa to protect me. Susan, look in the top drawer and see if you
can find a pair of stockings for me.”
“Sure!” I opened the drawer and the stale scent of old per-
fume escaped.“Gosh, Daddy wouldn’t do that! Don’t even think
like that!” I found her stockings and gave them to her.
“Put them on the bed and find my robe. Oh, yes, he would!
Your father’s a hard man! How am I going to manage without
Tipa? He did everything for me! Where’s your aunt? I need to
talk to her about the funeral.Tried to talk to y’all’s momma, but
she’s in her bed, acting like she’s the only one who ever carried
a cross.” She cleared her throat with a terrible noise and spat in
a tissue.“Get me some water too,” she rasped.
“I’ll go find Aunt Carol,” I volunteered, anxious to get away.
“Be quick.We have a lot to do!”
“Yes’m.” I gave Henry a look, he shrugged his shoulders and
I took off to the kitchen.This had the earmarks of an interesting
saga.
In the kitchen, Livvie was talking to Timmy.
“This day we gone be busy as bees!” she said. “Susan! I want
you to come with me and we gone lay out clothes for all y’all
children to wear to the funeral home.Where the masking tape is?”
“What do we need masking tape for?” I asked.
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“You mussy be joking with Livvie now. Don’t you know
you can’t be having no kinda funeral without masking tape?
Come on, girl. Let’s get a move on.”
I asked Timmy to take the water to Sophie and left the
room with her.
“Sophie’s talking,” I said to Livvie.
“It’s shock,” she said.
“Probably,” I said.
“I gots to tell you a little something.”
I opened the door of the boys’ closet and pulled out two shirts.
“What’s up? How about these?”
“I seen something with my own eyes.”
“What do you mean? ’Eah’s two ties.This one has a spot.”
“Sit down ’eah for a minute,” she said, pointing to the bed.
“What?”
Livvie had the most peculiar look on her face.
“This morning when I came to work I was on the way out
to the porch to sweep. Mr. Tipa done gone to the post office.
Anyway, I seen something in the living room. It was a man.”
“Who?”
“I didn’t know at the time, but I’ll tell you this much, you
could pass your hand right through him!”
“What? A ghost?”
“Yes, ma’am. It was a haint as sure as any haint I ever seen in
my whole life.”
“Go on, Livvie, you’re putting me on.”
“No, ma’am, I am not! I was passing in the hall and I seen
this cloud in the big mirror. Cloud grew, took the shape of a
man and stepped out to greet me.”
“Are you serious?”
“As serious as I can be.”
“Tell me exactly what you saw,” I said, not believing a word.
“This man come out the big mirror and he wearing a hat
and a suit. I told him to go back to hell or wherever he came
from and don’t be bothering me or anybody in this family. I tell
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him we ain’t throwing no party and what does he want any-
how? Then he point to a picture of your grandparents and I