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)
filled with regret—regret that I couldn’t reconcile how a man
who was such a bastard to the ones who loved and needed him
most gave his very life for the Civil Rights movement. While I
hated the way he had treated us, he had possessed strength in his
character I’d never considered. He was a fighter. Like me. I was
like
him. He had never acknowledged that. Neither had I.
For years and years I had said in anger that I was glad he was
dead. For the first time in my entire life I missed him. I felt the
weight of sorrow in a way I had never known I could. I wanted to
wail like a child. I wanted someone to tell me they would make it
all right.There was no one who could have done that. I wanted to
lie down on the floor and sleep. But I just stood there, my
thoughts racing as I tried to sort out the pangs of despair I felt.
Maybe if he had lived he would have been proud of us. He
would have seen me become a woman, a mother, a single parent.
He would have seen how capable we had all become. How suc-
cessful, how strong. Maybe we would have found peace with him.
I couldn’t find it in my heart to blame him anymore. I just
wished I had known him better. I wished he had known me.
Maybe somehow through my recognition of his heroics he could
feel that now. I prayed that wherever his spirit was, he knew
I forgave him. And missed him. And, finally, that I was proud
of him.
Nineteen
School
}
1963
T home, I lived in diaper land. I could see myself
raising my own sisters and eventually becoming
AMomma’s nurse as she had been to her mother. It
was the southern way. It was what was expected of girls. I
guessed they thought Maggie could make a good marriage and
I was so homely, I’d never find a husband.
My only hope was to somehow get to college, which
seemed less and less likely. I’d probably wind up teaching public
school, the plain girl’s other option. I’d wear a big bun on my
head, pencils sticking out of it, and kids would tape kick me
notes to the back of my moth-eaten cardigan sweater. Just the
thought of it was depressing. No, I’d figure another way out of
my mother’s prison.
I was very happy to go back to school after the holidays.
School was the only routine in my life that made real sense to me,
and it was time off from the house. Most people loved summer,
but winter was my favorite time of year. The summer tourists
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were long gone and not due back for months. The silence of a
walk along the shore with the spray of the ocean in my hair, on
my face, let my mind travel. I could imagine myself to be Cather-
ine searching for Heathcliff on the moors or, better yet, I could
search for Simon in a place where I could be alone with him. I
wanted to get past the silly banter and teasing that defined our
conversations. I spent a lot of time thinking about him and his
lips.The rest of my daydreaming involved refining various escape
plans. At one point I considered taking a bus to Atlanta, pretend-
ing to have amnesia and throwing myself at the mercy of the
biggest Catholic church I could find. But I knew my accent
would betray me as a Lowcountry girl. One call to the bishop of
Charleston and I’d be back home in no time. I was too young for
enlisting in the army and not holy enough for early entrance to a
convent—that was my most desperate plan. So I filled my days
with school.
One morning in January, I was in class when Father O’Brien
appeared again.We all jumped up from our desks and called out,
“Good morning, Father,” as good children with nice manners
did. He wanted me to come to his office.
I hope nobody died
was
my first thought, then I realized there weren’t that many people
left
to die in my family, so it must be another reason. I immedi-
ately left my class, with all my classmates staring at me.
“How’s your momma?” he said, closing the door and ges-
turing for me to sit in the big oak chair opposite his.
“Fine,” I said,“everybody’s fine.”
“Good, good. I see they finished the investigation into your
daddy’s accident.That must be a relief to have that behind y’all.”
“Yeah, it is, Father.”
In fact, we were sick and tired of seeing Daddy’s name in the
paper and answering questions about his death. Fat Albert and
the police department in Charleston had decided Daddy’s death
was not a conspiracy.They finally decided he had a heart attack
and ran off the road. Because of all the trouble Daddy had when
he was building the black school, they probably thought the
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397
Klan might have had something to do with it. So they poked
around, asking the same dumb questions over and over again.
Stuff like, Did he have any enemies? Excuse me, but my daddy
was building a heated school for colored kids smack dab in the
middle of the Civil Rights movement. He had more enemies
than the Japs after Pearl Harbor. Starting with his own family
and every bigot who ever heard of him.
Not that it would bring Daddy back to life, but I kept
thinking they weren’t exactly wearing themselves out with the
investigation. Seemed like the newspaper articles asked more
intelligent questions than the police did. It had been the biggest
story the newspapers had had since the polio epidemic. I was
just glad that Marvin Struthers hadn’t blamed us for giving
Daddy a heart attack.
“Well, that’s not the reason I called you in here,” Father
O’Brien continued. “I wanted to talk to you about your school
record.”
“What did I do? Oh, my library books! I know they’re
overdue! Am I in trouble?”
“Heavens, no, child. In fact, you’re doing surprisingly well,
amazingly well. Bring the books back as soon as you can.” He
cleared his throat with a grown-up
ahem.
“Susan, every year
the archdiocese of Charleston sends a student on scholarship
to St. Anne’s Academy in Columbia. Are you aware of that?”
“No, Father.”
“Are you familiar with St. Anne’s?”
“I thought it was a home for unwed mothers.”
“No, honey, that’s the Florence Crittenton Home. Not the
same thing at all. St. Anne’s is a privately funded Catholic girls’
boarding school. Over ninety-five percent of their graduates
finish college and go on to have careers, teaching or nursing or
some other appropriate line of work for ladies.”
“Oh.”
“What’s the matter?”
“I don’t want to be a teacher or a nurse.”
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“Well, then, do you know what you’d like to do?”
“Yeah, I mean, yes.” I was twisting in my seat.“I want to be
a writer and live in Paris.”
“I see.Well, there’s no harm in having a dream, I always say.”
“Right. So did the Brontë sisters and George Sand.”
This caused a major clearing of his throat. “In any case,
every year we hold a sort of competition for that scholarship to
St.Anne’s, and I’d like to submit your name as a candidate. Have
you ever thought about going away to school?”
“No, Father. I mean, yes, I have, but I thought about going
away to college, not high school.”
“Of course, and you should’ve been thinking about that.
Well, I suppose what I’m asking you is if you’re interested? If
you are, I can talk to your mother about it for you, if you’d like.”
“Um, Father O’Brien, what are my chances of winning it?”
“Oh, I don’t know, probably pretty good.”
“Well, if it’s all the same to you, why don’t we see if I can
win it and then we can talk to Momma about it. I mean, there’s
no point in putting another burden on her, you know, ’cause if I
lose, then she’s gonna feel bad and all.”
“And she’s been through enough?”
“Exactly. I mean, I’d also like to think about it a little. Like
what would happen to the twins if I left? Can Momma handle
it without me? I don’t really know.”
“I see.” He reached into a folder and pulled out a
brochure, handing it to me. “Have a look at this. It tells you all
about the school. You have to wear uniforms, but they are
included in the scholarship, as are all your books. Plus a stipend
of fifty dollars a month goes to the winner for spending
money. All medical bills are covered, in case you’re ill or need
glasses or something. All you have to do is maintain a B-plus
average and you can stay for four years. It’s an excellent pro-
gram, Susan. I think you should give it serious thought.”
“Oh, I will! Of course I will!”
S u l l i v a n ’ s I s l a n d
399
“And, if you’re worried about getting homesick, you can
come home on weekends and, obviously, all the holidays.”
“Right. I mean, thank you for thinking of me and every-
thing. I really appreciate it. I’m sorry, it’s just that I never thought
about anything like this before and I’m not sure about Momma
and all.You know?”
“Of course I do. But, I think let’s try for it and if you win,
let me handle your momma, all right?”
“Okay.”
“Fine.”
“Father? Thank you.Thanks a lot. I really mean it.”
“I know you do.”
Something like this could change my life forever, I thought,
it could be my ticket out.
I sat on the back steps that afternoon, tossing a stick for
Rascal. I scratched him behind the ears every time he brought it
back to me. I’d miss this little dog if I left, I thought. He was so
eager to please and so grateful for attention. White seagulls
swirled all around, squawking at each other.
I tried to imagine what it would be like to leave the Island
and live in a dormitory with a bunch of girls.What if they were
mean? What if they were all rich and stuck up? I could always
come home if I hated it.What if it was a really hard school? What
if I couldn’t do the work there? Going to school in Columbia
wasn’t like school in Mount Pleasant, after all. Columbia was the
capital of the state.
I heard the door close behind me.
“What are you doing, chile? Sitting ’eah playing with Rascal?”
I turned away from the afternoon sun and stared up at
Livvie.“Oh, just thinking.”
“Mm-hm. I thought I smell wood burning!”
“Yeah, that’s me. Burning wood like a furnace out here.”
“What’s in your head, ’eah? Tell Livvie.”
“Oh, I don’t know, Livvie. Life is so confusing.”
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“Ain’t that the truth!”
She folded her dress under herself and sat down next to me.
Rascal came bounding up the steps, jumped in her lap and
started licking her all over her face.
“Get down, boy!” I said.
“Oh, that’s all right. I don’t mind him none. Better than get-
ting bit.”
“Yeah, that’s for sure.” I looked out across the yard to the sky
and her eyes followed mine.
“So, you gone tell me what or do I have to sit ’eah till the
supper done all burn up?”
“Livvie, if you had a chance to do something really big,
would you do it?”
“Chile, I
am
doing something really big. I’m praising Gawd
every day! Iffin that ain’t big enough, then tell me what I should
do!”
“No, that’s not what I mean.”
“Then spit it out, chile.”
“Okay, Father O’Brien wants to enter me in a competition
to win a scholarship to St. Anne’s boarding school for girls in
Columbia.”
“Oh! Lawd have mercy! Your momma gone take a fit iffin
you get it too, ’eah?”
“Exactly.”
She thought for a minute.“This is a good school, I expect?”
“Yeah, look at this.” I pulled the brochure from my pocket,
unfolded it and showed it to her. It had pictures of smiling nuns
and serious students working in a biology lab over microscopes,
a picture of the dormitory rooms, a classroom photograph and a
picture of the campus. She whistled through her teeth.
“Humph.All right now. Tell me how you feel in your heart.”
“I’d love to go to a school like this.Who wouldn’t? But I’m
a little scared too.”
“What you scared of ?”
“Leaving everybody.”
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401
“They don’t let you come home none?”
“Oh, sure, you can come home every weekend if you want
to. But what if I don’t fit in?”
“You raise your head up high, ’eah?”
“Yeah, you’re right. I mean, this could be my only chance to
get out of ’eah.”
“Then, that’s all she wrote.You ain’t got no choice.”
“What about Momma and the twins and Timmy and
Henry?”
“Honey, don’t fret none over y’all’s momma. She gone do
fine. Timmy and Henry gone get to go to college anyhow,
’cause your uncle gone see to that. Them twins is mine. Don’t
you worry none about them twins.”
“Well, I gotta tell Father O’Brien something by tomorrow.”
“Honey, Gawd’s got a plan for you and it ain’t about raising
your momma’s children for her. You needs to be in the world and
maybe this is His way of helping you. Iffin it’s Gawd’s will, gone