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)
When Mrs. Struthers opened the door and saw us, she nearly
fainted. Mr. Struthers called the police to check on Daddy and
haul him over to the emergency room if he needed it. I thought
it odd that he told the policeman not to disturb Momma but just
to get Hank away from the house. He sat us down with a Coca-
Cola each. He cleaned up Timmy and put ice on his swollen face
and eye. Like a grandfather, he listened to the story of what drove
us to do this to our father.
“I couldn’t take it anymore, Mr. Struthers,” Timmy said.
“I understand, son. But y’all know a child should never raise
a hand against their parents, don’t you?”
“Yes, sir, I know that, but you don’t know what it’s like for
us, for me especially.”
“He’s not lying, Mr. Struthers. Look at his back,” I said.
Timmy stood up and raised the back of his shirt.The welts
were deep red now and Mr. Struthers let out a low whistle.
“Why’d he do this to you,Timmy?”
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“I was using one of his deodorant pads to shine my
shoes,” Timmy answered. “We were going to the dance at the
church and my shoes needed shining. I know I shouldn’t have
done it.”
“That’s all you did?”
“Yes, sir.”
“I was there, Mr. Struthers, so was Susan. He’s telling the
truth,” Maggie said. “It’s always like this for Timmy, and not
much better for us.”
Mr. Struthers raised his eyebrows and sighed again. I under-
stood the expulsion of so much breath to be an expression of his
understanding and vindication for us.
“If we go home and he’s there, he’s gonna finish us off like a
tomato sandwich!” I said this as emphatically as I could so he’d
comprehend the depth of our trouble.
“Does y’all’s momma know y’all’re ’eah?”
“No, sir. We just took off running once we knew Daddy
wasn’t dead,”Timmy said.
“Momma’s in bed anyhow. Sleeps all the time,” I said.
“Why’s that?” Mr. Struthers asked.
“Guess she’s tired or something,” I said.
I wasn’t about to tell the world that both of our parents were
crazy. Besides, I didn’t want to embarrass Momma.
“Well, let’s get y’all home. I’ll stay there and talk to y’all’s
daddy. Don’t worry, nobody gonna hurt y’all chillrun ever again
or I’m not the mayor of this Island. Let’s go now.”
We didn’t budge an inch.
“What’s wrong?” he asked.
Silence from the choir.
“I’m telling y’all, it’s gonna be all right! Now, trust me, okay?
I’ve been knowing y’all’s daddy since before y’all were born. I
know
him! If I tell him to keep his hands off of y’all, he
will!
Understand?”
We nodded.
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“All right, then, let’s go. It’s getting late and y’all’s momma is
gonna be worried sick about y’all.”
I rolled my eyes at Maggie and, for once, she rolled hers
back in agreement.
Mr. Struthers led the way up our back steps. Maybe Daddy
was afraid of Mr. Struthers; after all, he was the biggest man on
the Island.That was a comforting thought, the first one I’d had
in a while.
“Go tell y’all’s momma I’m here.”
Maggie went to tell Momma,Timmy sank into a chair at the
kitchen table and I opened the refrigerator. My first inclination
was to stay with Timmy and Mr. Struthers. I’d do my duty and
feed them.
“Mr. Struthers? Would you like a beer or some tea? Timmy?
Do y’all want a sandwich?”
“Sure.Whatever you have is fine, Susan.Thanks.”
Mr. Struthers took a chair at the table. He was preoccupied
with what he would say to Momma and, most likely, to Daddy
when he got back from the emergency room.The whole situation
had to be stunning to him. It was to me. I felt like Jell-O inside. I
wondered if I could get arrested for attempted murder or assault
and battery. It didn’t matter because there was nothing I could do
about it. The deed was done. I had knocked my own father out
cold with the branch of a tree. Jesus Christ. I still couldn’t believe I
had done it. My life could be over, I thought, it could be over and
I could wind up in some horrible juvenile detention center until
I’m old enough to go to the state penitentiary. At least Timmy
would be there with me, but probably in a boys’ center. I’d never
even see him.
I took out some boiled ham, iceberg lettuce, half a tomato
and the mayonnaise and began making sandwiches. If I kept
busy I didn’t have to think so much and maybe I could show
Mr. Struthers that I had promise beyond the jailhouse.
Timmy fixed his eyes on the sugar bowl in the center of the
table and he just kept shaking his head back and forth.
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I put two plates in front of them and made a new ice pack for
Timmy’s eye. My mind wasn’t screaming but plotting the next
move, trying to guess how this game would play itself out. Mag-
gie returned with Momma. Momma took one look at Timmy,
whimpered and the automatic tears flowed like the Cooper
River.
“What’s happened? Oh, my God, what’s happened to you,
Timmy? Tell me!”
She leaned over Timmy and kissed the top of his head. He
resisted her attempt to remove the ice pack. She stood back with
some indignation and realized the mayor was sitting at her
kitchen table eating a ham sandwich and drinking tea. The fog
in her eyes seemed to clear.
“Marvin! What’s going on here?” she said.
Over the next few minutes the details of the incident were
laid before our mother. She claimed not to have heard a blessed
thing. She never heard Daddy beat Timmy. She said she didn’t
know. She never heard him order us out to the yard. She never
heard Daddy, Timmy, Maggie and me screaming. She said this
was highly unusual. She never heard the patrol car arrive and
take Daddy away. She had no knowledge that Daddy was at the
emergency room.
Momma seemed shocked and surprised by what she was
hearing. At first I thought she was lying to Mr. Struthers. But I
realized that the truth about her husband was so terrible that she
couldn’t hear it or make sense of it. If she never told anyone or
interfered with our father’s violence, perhaps it didn’t exist. And
Mr. Struthers’s presence violated her perfect imaginary world.
Now Mr. Struthers knew the truth.
Mr. Struthers went on saying, as nicely as possible, that taking
care of her children and her mother were probably too much for
her, but that she still had a responsibility to us. Even though the
burden, on such a delicate and refined lady, was overwhelming.
“What are you telling me, Marvin?”
“I’m telling you that Hank can’t do this to his children. In
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the least case, it ain’t right. In the eyes of the law, it’s criminal
behavior.”
“Criminal!”
“Yes, MC, criminal. Child abuse. It’s against the law.”
She reached in the drawer and took out a pack of cigarettes.
I’d never seen my mother smoke.
“What am I supposed to do, Marvin? Tell me that!”
“That’s why I’m here, MC. I’ve been knowing you all my
life. I know what you can face up to and what you can’t. I’m
gonna talk to him.”
She inhaled and exhaled a billowing cloud from her Salem
100. The smoke was sucked up to the ceiling fan, dispersing
itself into nothingness. She had to choose. Either she would take
Daddy’s side or ours. In her classic bob-and-weave fashion, she
chose neither.
She told Timmy to go lie down. She sent Maggie to get
Henry and the twins from Aunt Carol’s, where they had been
for the day, playing with her pack of dogs. She ignored me,
probably furious that I had had the nerve to protect her child
against her husband. Or maybe she was glad. I couldn’t tell.
I poured her some tea and refilled Mr. Struthers’s glass. He
asked for the newspaper and began to read while Momma fid-
geted, finally announcing she was going upstairs to change from
her bathrobe into a dress or something. She had at least realized
that it was unusual for a normal person to be in her nightgown
at seven in the evening.
Soon Maggie came back with the twins and Henry, who
immediately ran for his room. Maggie heated up two bottles for
Sophie and Allie, announced she was going to put the twins to
bed and said she was going to bed herself. I stayed in the back-
ground until I heard Daddy coming up the back steps. As fast
as I could, I hid myself in the hall closet.
It was hard to hear from behind all the coats, which muffled
their voices, but I heard enough to know that Mr. Struthers
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bought us some time. He explained the difference between nor-
mal discipline and child abuse to Daddy and Momma. Every time
Daddy raised his voice to object, Mr. Struthers would calmly ask
Daddy if he’d prefer to settle this dispute in court. Every time
Momma would try to defend Daddy, probably out of fear for her
own safety, Marvin would remind her of the definition of negli-
gence. I was too young to understand the implications of all that
he said, but I was old enough to know we would all be safer for a
while.The most frightening thing of all was that I had to be pro-
tected from my momma and daddy. It filled me with shame.
As the house became quiet, I must’ve fallen asleep in the
warmth of the closet. I didn’t know how I got to my bed that night
until I found one of my grandmother’s hairpins in my bed. Bless
her heart, I remember thinking, how did that poor old skinny bag
of bones get me up the stairs and how had she found me?
A f t e r s c h o o l o n Monday, I ran from the school bus ahead of
everyone and told Livvie what Daddy had done to Timmy and
what we did to Daddy and how he got twenty-seven stitches in
his head. I’d never seen her so angry. She began to iron with a
vengeance, pushing the flat bottom of the iron into the clothes
with all her strength, her lips set in a straight, hard line.
“Are you angry with me, Livvie?”
“Not one bit. Go on get Timmy in ’eah to me,” she said.
Something in the back of her voice prompted me to drop
my books on the table and run for Timmy. I brought him back,
she put the iron on the resting plate and stood up from her
stool. First, she stared at his black eye and bruised face.
“Pull up your shirt, boy,” she said and he did it at once.
He turned around and she saw the welts.
“Ain’t right. My granddaddy died with whipping scars on
he back.This ain’t right.” The sight of his back kindled a pow-
erful feeling down deep inside of her. Her breathing wasn’t reg-
ular. Her nostrils flared as she stared at my brother’s back. She let
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go of an enormous breath and, gently, she reached out and laid
her hand across his skin. Her hand traveled each red mark, regis-
tering its length and width.Timmy didn’t flinch. She moved her
hand on Timmy’s eye and jaw.
“Still hurt, son?” she said to him.
“Not now. It’s alright now, Livvie.”
“Ain’t alright. Ain’t alright nohow.”
The wipe of her beautiful, long, dark fingers had taken away
Timmy’s pain. Timmy was healed, but now Livvie carried the
wound. She hardened toward my father in a declaration of war.
She was very serious about protecting us.“Chillrun be Gawd’s
gift, ain’t no doubt about that, no sir,” she’d say to us over and over.
We’d never know for sure, but I thought she would’ve done any-
thing to shield us from Daddy. And, in a karmic twist of fate,
within days Daddy needed shielding himself.
Daddy caught the devil from the president of the board of
education for Charleston County. I heard Big Hank telling
Momma that he’d been called in and told to scratch the cafete-
ria and heating in the school he was building and that the bas-
ketball courts and library were a waste of energy and money.
Daddy was disgusted. He took a lot of pride in his work. He
may have been horrible to us, but he believed in education and
equal opportunity for everyone. Just because no other black school
in the state had those things, did that mean they never should?
Daddy said that maybe it was time for them to raise the standard of
facilities anyway. And apparently this guy told Daddy to mind his
own business and do what he was told. But you couldn’t tell Hank
Hamilton something like that. Oh, no.
He and his crew continued the building his way, not altering
one thumbtack of the plans. Although I had every reason to
despise him, I had to give him some due for having the courage
to match his convictions. I wished he cared half as much about us.
Monday of that week, he went to work in the morning and
found crosses burned into the grass and equipment smashed to
pieces. It was the trademark of the Klan and the worst damage
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done to his work site so far. He continued anyway. On Tuesday,