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)
come see me and I’ll cut and color her hair and all the wives of
the doctors at the Medical University for twenty-five percent
off. The offer’s good until Christmas. How does that sound?”
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“I think you are going to be a very busy man.”
“You know what? It’s much cheaper than advertising. I’ll
give you a stack of business cards to take with you, okay?”
“Consider it a done deal.”
I was thrilled. Maggie couldn’t resist a bargain and neither
could any woman I knew. Beth was finished and she came over
with the cutest haircut I’d ever seen. It was swinging and shining.
“Mom! I totally love my hair! What do you think?”
“I think your hair looks beautiful but the concept of lime
green nail polish escapes me. Say hello to Kim.”
“Hi,” she said. “Mom, I’m gonna go cruise the mall and I’ll
be back in an hour, okay?”
“Sure, have fun.”
“Cruise the mall?” Kim said, watching her leave.
“Don’t ask.”
For the next two hours, he spun me around and foiled my
head, rinsed my hair, conditioned it, glazed it, trimmed a little
more and at last he was ready to blow it out. A gal on a low
stool manicured my fingernails on a lap pillow while he worked.
I felt like the queen of a lovely kingdom.
Finally, he spun me around to face the mirror and I barely
recognized myself.
“Lord have mercy!”
“Like yourself ?” Kim said and started to laugh.“I should’ve
taken a ‘before’ picture, don’t you think?”
“Amazing,” I said. “You know, I’m not an arrogant woman,
but I think this is the best I’ve ever looked in maybe my whole
life! How can I thank you?”
“Tell your friends and your sister. Don’t forget we have our
agreement.”
Kim stood there smiling. I wanted to be his friend forever.
“Well, I suppose there is a big difference between profes-
sional care and cutting my bangs with the same scissors I use to
cut cardboard, right? Kim?”
“Yes?”
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“Don’t ever leave me.”
He wouldn’t let me pay for Beth either but I tipped the
shampoo girl heavily and the manicurist too. I was floating on air.
Out in the mall, Beth came toward me with a shopping bag
from Record World.
“Whoa! Do I know you?”
“Very funny!”
“Seriously, Mom. That old codger did a number on you!
You rock! I bet you could pass for thirty-something!”
“Thanks.” Her compliment made me actually blush, some-
thing I hadn’t done in a long time.
“Got some new tunes,” she said,“want to see?”
“Sure. Come on, let’s get a cappuccino.”
What a cheery little monster I turned into with a little effort.
All I had done was starve myself for six months and accidentally
hustle a free makeover! Not a bad day’s work at all. God, it was all
so shallow.
Saturday night arrived and I wondered why I was so ner-
vous. I was dressing for dinner with a man, that’s why. Given my
relationships with men, I should break out in a rash. Maggie
may have been right, he might try to seduce me and I wasn’t
ready for that at all.
Beth was in her room packing a duffel bag to take to Tom’s
apartment to spend the night. I worried that she would let it slip
to Tom or Karen that I was on a date. Not that they would care,
but it was only a few days until the papers for our divorce would
finally, at long last, be signed. I zipped the back of my dress on
the way down the hall to Beth’s room.
“Hi, doodle!” I said.
“Hi! Mom! You look great!”
She had the look of someone who had reconciled the facts
of her life. I had a date, her father had a girlfriend and it was
normal for her.
“Thanks, honey. Listen, do me a small favor, will you?”
“Sure, anything.”
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“If your dad or Karen mentions my social life just tell them
I don’t have one, okay?”
“No problem. None of their business, right?”
“Right. And don’t mention my column in the paper either,
all right?”
“Sure. How come?” She pulled on a pair of jeans that were
ripped out at the knees and a faded Gap sweatshirt.
“Are you gonna wear that outfit to go out to dinner with
your dad?”
“We’re just going to Pizza Hut.”
“Oh, okay. Fine. Look, it’s not a huge deal if he found out,
but we are supposed to sign our papers very soon and I don’t
want him to think that we don’t need his support. Understand?”
“Right. He’d think that, like, this doctor is moving in and
paying all our bills. And that you’re getting totally rich from
your second job. Am I a genius or what?” She zipped her bag
and gave me a crooked smile of mature knowing.
“Honey chile, baby heart, you are a certified rocket scientist.
Just be cool.”
“Hey, Mom. I’m a teenager. It’s my job to be cool.”
The doorbell rang.
“I’ll get it,” she said.“It’s probably Daddy and if he sees you
looking like that he’ll be way suspicious.”
“Thanks, honey. I’ll see you tomorrow night.” I kissed her
head and she stopped and turned to me.
“Try to get home at a decent hour, Mom.You want me to
call you? You know, bed check? Then, if you want him to leave,
you can use me for an excuse.”
“Great idea, but I think I can handle it. Go on now, Daddy’s
waiting.”
“Love you!”
The front door opened and closed and she was gone. How
priceless was that, I thought. I went downstairs to the living
room to turn on some music. I caught a glance of myself in my
mother’s huge mirror and, for the briefest moment, didn’t know
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it was myself. I stopped and gave myself a full appraisal. Not bad.
I had on a deep brown, short, sleeveless dress that had a coat to
match. My arms weren’t too flabby. My hair looked really good
with its auburn “low lights” and my face seemed to have less
stress. My new makeup was doing its job. I looked like a woman
who was perhaps going out to do the town, not like the one
who, just a few months ago, had sunk to the floor and wept.
I flipped on an old favorite CD,
Clifford Brown with Strings,
and
relaxed as his music warmed the room. I poured myself a glass of
wine from the cooler on the coffee table and lit some candles on
the mantel. The candles were sandalwood, my absolute favorite.
Maggie had given me a box of them for my birthday. Old houses
like mine would take on musty smells but sandalwood perfumed
the rooms with the perfect amount of richness.
I hoped Roger would like Brie baked in puff pastry with
peach jam. It was a recipe I clipped from the newspaper and hadn’t
burned beyond recognition. Hopefully he’d think that I possessed
some domestic skills. At least my house looked clean. Beth and I
had spent the better part of the day cleaning and waxing. She was a
good girl, I thought.The doorbell rang and my date began.
“Hi! Come in!” I said.
“Hi! God, what did you do to your hair? Here, I brought
you these.You look great!”
“Thanks, you don’t look so bad yourself.” I ran my hand
through the side of my hair. “Just cut it a little, that’s all. Gosh,
these are so pretty! I love freesias!”
We went in the living room and I added them to the vase of
grocery store flowers on the end table next to the sofa. I poured
Roger a glass of wine. He touched the side of my glass with his
and took a large sip.
“That’s some mirror,” he said.
“You don’t know the half of it.”
“Educate me,” he said, running his hand around the side of
the mirror’s wide gold frame. “It looks old. Historical signifi-
cance?”
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279
“Well, this may seem hard to imagine, but way, way back in
time, before the War of Yankee Aggression, over on Sullivan’s
Island there were resort hotels. People went there to escape the
summer fevers.This mirror hung behind the bar of the Planters
Hotel until 1830. Later, it was installed in the Moultrie House
on the Island in 1850. The Moultrie House was a hotel and a
legendary spot for summer dances. It was built right down the
street from my family’s beach house, right on the harbor. It even
had a ballroom! Would you like a bit of this?”
I put some warm Brie on a cracker and offered it to him.
“I’ve never heard that.Thanks.”
“Yeah, seems hard to believe, doesn’t it? You can only imag-
ine how much bourbon and whiskey has been poured out in
front of this mirror. How many men twirled the tips of their
handlebar mustaches, how many ladies adjusted their bonnets?
God, I love history. My grandfather got his hands on it some-
how and it was in our house on the Island for years.”
“What a great story!”
“Anyway, there’s an old Gullah belief that the mirror holds
your soul. Same thing with photographs—that a little bit of
your spirit becomes trapped in the mirror or on the film.”
“Incredible what some people believe, isn’t it?”
“Well, who knows? They might’ve been right. I mean, there
have definitely been times when this old mirror gave me the
creeps.”
“So what happened to the Moultrie House? Do you want
some more wine?”
“No, thanks. I’m all set.Well, it seems there was this Yankee
soldier during the beginning of the war who fired a cannonball
on it. It was filled with guests and they all ran outside in a fit of
terror with their bloomers on fire.When they asked the Yankee
why he fired on a civilian building, do you know what he said?”
“I can only venture a guess.”
“Go ahead, guess.”
“Because the last time he stayed there he got a bad room?”
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“God, you are so smart. Do you know that?”
“Come on, let’s go to dinner,” he said. “I read that some-
where.”
“You rascal! You let me tell you that whole story!”
“Madam, I am neither a rascal nor a rogue. And, in the style
of the true southern gentleman, I have left my
Beamer
in the
garage so that I could stroll the
boulevard
with your
beautiousness.
”
His little speech made me giggle.“I’m not sure
beautiousness
is a word.”
“Poetic license. Shall we go?”
We walked to a small restaurant in the historic area, up an
old alley that I had never even known was there.We had steaks,
beautiful things, thick and rare with a wonderful mustard sauce
and an incredible bottle of cabernet sauvignon from the Napa
Valley. We shared a Caesar salad and discovered neither one of us
liked anchovies, but we loved garlic and croutons. For dessert we
had something decadent in flames, cherries jubilee.
After dinner we walked arm in arm and under the marquee
at the Dock Street Theater he told me I was beautiful. I thought
he meant it. It must’ve been the wine or the streetlight. What-
ever. It was nice to hear.
“That was a wonderful dinner, Roger. Thank you.”
“Oh, you’re welcome, it wasn’t anything really. I wanted to
cook for you, but another time. I had so much stuff going on
today I couldn’t figure out how to make dinner.”
“I have a lot of days like that,” I said.
“Well, I thought it might be nice to go back to my place
and have a cognac or some coffee.”
“Sure. I’d love to see where you live.”
We walked by the old cemetery and heard the voices of
teenagers deep inside the rows of tombstones.They were probably
in an open mausoleum, drinking beer and fooling around. It was all
terribly romantic. He held my hand and talked about growing up
in Aiken and how he had married a girl he met in medical school.
“Was she a medical student?”
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“No, no. She was the sister of a friend of mine. Family was
from Boston, old-line and very particular about everything. She
was like the Holy Grail to me. I always wanted what I couldn’t
have.”
“I know how that is,” I said.
“Well, she got pregnant and we got married and it was
downhill from there. Her parents hated me. I was southern and
no matter what, even when our second son was born and even
though we stayed together for almost twenty years, I wasn’t the
man they wanted for their daughter.”
“God, that’s awful. People are so stupid.”
“Well, it was a lot of years ago and I did my best for
Adelle—that’s my ex-wife’s name. She was okay, I guess. Any-
way, I have two great sons, and she’s remarried—to a Brahmin—
and living in Boston during the winter and the south of France
in the summer, as they always intended she would. All’s well that
ends well, right?”
“I suppose so,” I said.
“Here we are. Come on, I’ll make us some coffee. I have a
new espresso machine.”
“Ah, the gadget king!”
“Yep, that’s me!”
Pink stucco? His town house opened right on the street and
we stepped onto his long narrow porch.The door concealed a lit