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 to pass. Iffin it ain’t, nothing you can do about him nohow.”
“Well, we’ll see. I might not even win it, you know. So don’t
say anything, okay?”
“Chile, my lips are sealed.”
It was a beautiful Sullivan’s Island afternoon and the sunset
was beginning. Gosh, I thought, this morning I didn’t even
know St. Anne’s existed, now I thought I might die if I didn’t
win the scholarship. How royally screwed up was that?
“Look at that sky,” Livvie said.
“Uh-huh,” I said.
“Ain’t it marvelous?”
“Yeah, it’s marvelous.”
“No, chile o’ mine, you ain’t understanding what I’m telling
you.”
Her voice was so soft and loving, it was hard to keep my
worries on my mind.“What do ya mean?”
“See them stars starting to twinkle? They’s Gawd’s diamonds.
You ’eah me? And the night sky turning so blue? That’s He
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sapphires for us. And see that streak of red across the horizon?
They’s a field of rubies.Whenever you feel troubled and poor in
the spirit, just go look at the sunset and all Gawd’s riches just be
a-waiting for you.”
“Yeah, sure, Livvie,” I said.
“I ain’t lying to you, chile. I is telling you for true.”
I looked at the sky and it was full of riches, all you could
want or spend. She put her arm around my shoulder, gave me a
squeeze and then dropped it, taking my hand into her lap. My
small white fingers were enfolded by her sturdy dark skin, her
palms rosy, her nails deep ivory and thick. Her capable hands,
roughened by years of hard work, her loving hands whose
warmth radiated and soothed. She spoke to me as though deep
sounds could penetrate my thick skull.
“Gone be all right, Susan. Everything gone be all right.Y’all
gone see, by and by. You growing up, Maggie growing up, all
y’all gone grow up. Trouble can’t stop that, no sir. Gawd gone
send help. He always does.”
We g l i d e d towa r d Easter, me holding my tongue—I had given
up swearing for Lent—and Timmy and Henry trying to behave.
Livvie and Momma were doing spring-cleaning. I don’t know
what had come over Momma lately, but she had lost a lot of
weight and the red glass was nowhere to be seen. She looked
pretty good for someone her age, and as near as I could tell that
was around forty-something. Momma never told how old she
was. She said ladies never revealed their age. Well, if you were
living right in the town where you grew up, didn’t everybody
know anyway?
One day Simon got a letter. It sat on the table by the stairs,
waiting for him. I smelled it first to see if it was from a girl but
the handwriting was a man’s and I assumed it was from his
father. It was.
Simon’s father was coming to Charleston for a visit. Simon
asked Momma if he could stay upstairs with him and Momma
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said, “Sure, why not?” He showed her a picture of his father, I
guess to show her that he was normal or something.Apparently,
he was divorced, which Simon said was for the best.
That was when the fun started. The life force flowed back
into my momma. She started manicuring her nails again and
wearing a girdle, even though she finally didn’t need one. She
got out her old Singer sewing machine and took her dresses in
so they fit right, then, to our surprise, she hemmed them up to
the top of her knees. She spent a lot of time in front of the big
old mirror looking at herself. I’d never seen her act this way and
it made me nervous.
She got on the phone to Aunt Carol and invited her and
Uncle Louis to come for Easter dinner and then she invited the
Strutherses and a bunch of people who had cooked for her in
our family’s time of bereavement. Of course, she invited Simon
and his father.
Simon’s father was the head of surgery at the biggest hospi-
tal in Detroit. Bucks, honey. Lots of ’em. I knew my momma
didn’t want to be Mrs. Rooms for Rent for the rest of her life.
Finally, Good Friday rolled around. We were all going to
Stations of the Cross that afternoon from twelve to three. Simon
was bringing his father out to the beach later.
Momma had taken charge and she was formidable. The
house was the cleanest it had ever been in my life. Momma had
on a cornflower blue linen dress and jacket, one she had chosen
deliberately because it matched her eyes. Her hair was all teased
up and she smelled like perfume. She looked really pretty.
I just hoped it would all go all right because if it didn’t she
might die from embarrassment at having tried to snag him
when she hadn’t even laid eyes on him yet. I didn’t think the
fact that he was Jewish and divorced meant anything to her at
all. She had somehow overlooked that.
Well, Simon’s father didn’t go home to Michigan until
Tuesday—that is, the Tuesday of the second week after Easter.
He promised to write to old MC every day. Seems the doctor
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caught a bad case of Magnolia fever. I even saw them kissing on
the porch.
Things got dull mighty quick. Simon was studying all the
time, Maggie was working all the time and the rest of us had
gone back to our old routines, except me. I’d been nursing a bad
throat all week and had stayed home from school.
There was no question that Momma was mooning over
Dr. Lips. She was walking around the house humming all the
time and just waiting for Timmy or Henry to bring home the
mail. When there was a love letter from Stan, she ran to her
room with it and closed the door. I guess I couldn’t blame her, it
was just that she seemed a little desperate to me. Okay, that was
not nice to say, but it was the truth.
When I finally felt well enough, I decided to catch up on
my schoolwork. Being out of class for this long had given me
terrible anxiety over all the assignments I had to do. I was look-
ing for a pen to write a book report and every pen in the house
either leaked globs of ink or was dry. I knew Momma had one
in her stationery box and thought she wouldn’t mind if I bor-
rowed it, as long as I put it back.
The twins were napping, Livvie was ironing and the boys were
I didn’t know where. Momma was gone off someplace. I went into
her room and opened her closet. I started digging around on her
shelf above her dress rack, where she had all this stuff stacked up,
and the whole blessed mountain came down on my head.
I started gathering everything up, her letters from Stanley
and other thank-you notes she had received from the Easter
dinner, and a long envelope caught my eye. For a minute it
didn’t register, but it was from St. Anne’s school for girls. It was
addressed to Momma. Okay, I shouldn’t have opened it but my
fate was right here in my hands and the next thing I knew I was
reading it.
Dear Mrs. Hamilton, It is a great pleasure to advise you
that your daughter, Susan Asalit Hamilton, has been accepted for the fall
term with a full scholarship and all that entails.
S u l l i v a n ’ s I s l a n d
405
“Oh, my God!” I said. “I won the scholarship! I can’t
believe it!”
A flood of warmth came over me and in the next breath I
looked at the date of the letter. It was a week old.Why hadn’t she
told me? Why hadn’t Father O’Brien called me? Then my heart
sank. She didn’t want me to go. I knew it. Now what? I knew I
had to confront her. I couldn’t go without her permission.
I thought for a minute, trying to calm myself down enough
to think my way through this while my brain was going a mil-
lion miles an hour. First of all, did I really want to fight this bat-
tle? Yes, I did. I had to go. If I stayed here I’d never get to college.
The only road to Paris went through Columbia. I had decided
weeks ago that even if this school was overflowing with snobs I
didn’t care. I’d ignore them, get my diploma and get out. Four
years was nothing. After what I’d endured in the last fourteen
years, a bunch of bitchy schoolgirls looked like Cream of
Wheat.
Okay, I said to myself, when she gets home, just ask her. Be
calm and just ask her.
I was in the kitchen with Livvie setting the table for supper.
I could hear Aunt Carol calling good-bye to her and Momma
coming up the back stairs.
“Lawd, I’m so tired, I’ve got to go put my feet up!” She saw
me and kissed me on the top of my head. “Hey, honey, how’re
you feeling? Throat still sore?”
“No, ma’am, I gargled with warm salt water all day.” I was
furious and she didn’t even notice.
“That’s a good girl. Hey, Livvie! What’s for supper? Anybody
call? Mail here?”
“Meat loaf and mashed potato and the mail on the hall
table. Ain’t nobody call.”
“Nobody called, Momma.”
“All right then, wake me in thirty minutes, will you? I just
want to close my eyes for a few minutes.”
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“Sure,” I said.
Livvie just went about her work, knowing I was stewing over
something. She was waiting for me to tell her.
Chop, chop, chop.
The onions and bell pepper hit the bacon grease with a sizzle.
“Best to cook ’em a little before they go in the mix,” she said.
“You need some saltines?”
“Yeah, crush up ’bout fifteen for me, ’eah?”
“Sure.”
She put her knife down on the counter and turned to me.
“All right, now.What’s on that mind of yours? You gone tell me
what’s cooking or do I have to drag it out of you?”
“Livvie, you won’t believe what happened.” And I told her
the story.
“Listen ’eah, Miss Susan,” she said,“don’t be gone on raising
the devil about she not showing you this. Be real sweet.You gots
to know your momma gone worry ’bout letting you go, ’eah?
Take her some of this tea I just make, with a cookie, and then
you tell her.Then we see what.”
“God, you are so smart, Livvie! You’re right.”
She handed me a glass of tea and two Oreos in a paper napkin.
My mother had been resting for only a few minutes, so maybe she
wouldn’t be asleep yet. I knocked on her door.
“Come in,” she said. She wasn’t in her bed, but in the closet.
“Hi, Momma, I brought you some tea and a couple of
cookies.”
“Susan, have you been in my closet?”
“Yes, ma’am. I needed to borrow a pen for my homework . . .”
The look on her face was terrifying to me. I’d never seen
her angry like this. I’d seen her upset and crying and depressed
and drunk, but never angry. She stood outside the closet door
and I was frozen to the floor by her bed.
“How many times do I have to tell you children not to go
into my personal things?”
“Momma, I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to pry, I just wanted a
pen . . .”
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“And I suppose you found the letter from St. Anne’s?”
“Yes’m.”
“And I guess you think you’ll just be picking up and leaving
me just like that?”
“I don’t know, Momma, but . . .”
“But what? Do you realize how impossible it would be for
me to get along without you?”
“That’s not my problem,” I whispered.
“What did you say?”
That’s when I lost control of myself. I knew this would hap-
pen, I just knew it. Everybody else could say that they’d step in
to help me, or that surely she wouldn’t hold me back, but here
was the truth. I was on my own and, even if I lost, a few things
needed to be said around here.
“I said that it’s not my problem, that’s what!”
“How dare you!”
“Because it’s the truth! Instead of you being proud of me
and getting excited for me, you hid this from me! How could
you do that?”
“I wanted to think about it!”
“Look, Momma, it’s not my job to raise your babies! It’s not
my fault you have so damn many kids! I’m going away to school
this fall and you can’t stop me!”
She got so frightened and she was so angry that she moved
across the room before I could think of what was coming. She
slapped me across the face with all her might. I stood there and
said not one word more.
I ran from her room, out the front door, slamming it almost
off the hinges. I went over the sand dunes to the beach. I needed
to walk for a while, calm down and think things through.
It was low tide and there were football fields upon football
fields of empty beach before me. It was warm enough to kick
off my loafers and walk the water’s edge. Tiny shells collapsed
beneath my feet, breaking apart into millions of pieces. It felt
good to break something.
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An old palmetto log was up on the high ground in the
white sand, near the dunes. I sat down on it and ran my fingers
through my hair. The white sand was as fine as the kind in an
hourglass. I let it sift through my fingers. Grains of sand, hours of
my life, chances not taken, opportunities lost, lives finished,