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)
first time some bubble wit lifts her Wonder Bra in his direction.
Who needs it?”
“You’re ready. I’ll get you a list of lawyers and you can start
interviewing them next week.”
“Okay.” I inhaled the healing salt of the beach and exhaled
my soured marriage.“I just hate dealing with this, you know?”
“I know, I don’t blame you for that at all.” Maggie reached
over, patted my arm and continued.“Look, a family breakup is a
tragedy, no doubt about it, but you don’t have cancer, you’ve got
a great job and you have Beth.What’s he got? Some stupid twit!
Big deal! Sounds to me like he’s the loser, not you.”
“I hope he rots in hell.”
“That’s the spirit!” Maggie started cleaning up. She took our
glasses and put them on the tray and, balancing it, wiped the
tabletop with a napkin.“You need a new haircut.”
Having someone who always told me what I needed was
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a little exasperating, but I knew it didn’t pay to call her on it.
“You’re right, I need to do something about my looks. But
that tightwad I need to serve with papers still has the five bucks
his Aunt Helen gave him for his tenth birthday! I need another
job or something.”
“Or a bulldog lawyer, somebody with zero sense of humor.”
“Yeah, with big teeth who’s got the guts to tear a big piece
out of his miserable carcass. Wait! Don’t take the celery! You
want a hand with that? Where are our children? It’s getting late.”
“You just relax, I can handle this. I guess they’ll be home
soon. Listen, if they caught anything, why don’t you stay for
supper? Crab cocktails and grilled steaks? Not the worst meal
on earth.”
“Sounds good,” I said. “Hey, Maggie?” I stared at her while I
dug around for the right words.“I’m gonna get a lawyer. I just have
to find the right person and I have to find my nerve, you know?”
“Since when have you had a problem finding nerve?”
“Very funny. What I mean to say is that I really appreciate
your advice.”
She smiled at me. “Well, you know your own mind. You
always have. I just don’t want to see you victimized again.”
“I was never victimized. I just married the biggest ass in
South Carolina and was too bullheaded to see it.”
“Well put by the family poet!” Maggie smiled at me again.
“I just want you to be yourself again, you know? Like a bad dog,
chasing cars. I miss that about you. I mean, what would you do
if you could do anything with your life? Like, change careers?”
She balanced the tray on her hip, held the screen door open
and challenged me to come clean.
“I don’t know. Maybe . . . oh, shoot, Maggie, I don’t know.”
“Well, think about it, little sister. There’s a new world out
there if you want it. Seize the day and all that. Livvie didn’t raise
us to wallow.”
“You’re right. Hey, you know, on the growing list of things I
intend to do with my life is another tidbit.”
S u l l i v a n ’ s I s l a n d
29
“Yeah, what’s that?”
“I’m gonna figure out what happened to Daddy.”
She ran her fingers through her hair and looked at me like I
had said something foul. “Give it up, Susan,” she said. “Daddy’s
been dead for decades.”
“That’s not it, Maggie,” I said. “I just have to know that I
didn’t cause it.”
“Susan. I’m your sister. I love you. . . .”
“I know that. . . .”
“You need to concentrate on other things. Daddy died of a
heart attack. Period.”
I hated when she looked at me like that, taking the posture
that her word was the final one on the subject. So I said,“It ain’t
period. It’s a question I have to resolve for my own soul.”
“Suit yourself. But I think your time’s better spent on other
avenues,” she said.
“Whatever. But, I’m telling you I know in my guts that
Daddy was murdered,” I said.
“Susan, ain’t nobody on this planet who loves you more
than me but I’m telling you I can’t stand to listen to this.”
“Maggie,” I said, “I can’t stand to
think
it. I have to know
that the fight didn’t cause him to die. I have to believe it was the
Klan.”
“What is this fight you always refer to? I don’t know
what
you’re talking about!”
She was becoming agitated. It was suddenly clear that for
some reason she didn’t remember the fight. Maybe she had
blocked it from her mind. I didn’t know. I just wanted the
waters smooth again.
“Never mind,” I said,“I’ll figure it out someday.”
“Well, my advice is worry about the living. The dead had
their chance.”
“Whoa, that’s cold,” I said.
“No, it’s not. I care about you and Beth.That’s all.”
She went inside.The door slammed behind her with a loud
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D o r o t h e a B e n t o n F r a n k
thwack
and the sound of wood slapping wood woke me up like a
sock in the jaw. Maggie had just succinctly reduced my life to an
ancient Latin maxim and some hard facts. She was right about
Livvie too. Livvie would be incensed to have seen me rolling
around in my despair of chocolate chip cookies and fast food for
the past three months.
Maggie was always right.When all hell broke loose, Maggie
was right there at my side. She’d taken Beth under her wing too.
She had listened to me wail and moan ad nauseam. It was
enough now. I looked defeated and that had never been a word
in my vocabulary.
It’s just that my head was in gridlock at the thought of a
new life. I was a little afraid, you know? What if I failed? What if
I couldn’t take care of Beth? What if she went wild and flunked
out of school and got pregnant? What if this was all there was?
O Lord, I prayed, help me figure this out!
I peeled myself up from the rocker, knowing the slats had
left their imprint on the back of my legs. I decided to throw one
leg over the banister and straddled it like a horse, hanging on to
a support beam, the same way I did when I was a child.The tide
was almost high and its power was mesmerizing. I wished I
could have some of it for myself.
The waves had now grown from the baby hiccups they
were at low tide to crashing rollers, and washed everything in
their path with silvery foam. They began down at the eastern
end of the Island at Breach Inlet. Danger, danger. People
drowned in whirlpools and ebb tides there every year in spite of
posted warnings. Didn’t people read?
I knew that attempting to investigate Daddy’s death was dan-
gerous too, but the compulsion to do so was growing each day. Of
all the stones I carried in the sack tied to my heart, his death was
the heaviest. I had told Maggie it was a personal guilt thing, but
the guilt stemmed from being the only one who seemed to care
if he had died at all, never mind
how.
Added to that was Tom’s
deception, which only exacerbated my thirst for truth.
S u l l i v a n ’ s I s l a n d
31
The waves arrived in stacked sets of three, the current driv-
ing them in on an angle. As they reached our end of the Island,
they seemed to calm in the faint, sweeping beams of the light-
house.Turning tides were hypnotic.The water flooded the shore
in anger, then turned, withdrew and renewed itself.
The beams from the lighthouse grew in intensity, spreading
protection for boats at sea. It was in these moments that I was
sure there was a God. He was tapping me on my stubborn
shoulder, telling me the scene before me was a metaphor for my
own life. Withdraw and renew; life goes on. Maybe Beth and
I would stay for dinner, crack some crabs, grill steaks and shoot
the breeze. Maggie was right. I needed to reinvent myself. The
question was, could this old dog still hunt?
I could just see Beth and Maggie’s boys now, coming down
the beach in silhouette against the edge of dusk. They were
swinging a basket of crabs and a bucket of bait. It could have
been a photograph of our childhood, the happy days. So many
days I spent with Maggie,Timmy and Henry, catching fish and
crabs, throwing plough mud at each other . . . those were, I
think, my happiest memories. We’d come home all sunburned
and sticky and present Momma and Livvie with our catch of
the day. They’d act like we were heroes for feeding the family.
We were so proud.
And then there was our daddy, Big Hank.
Two
The Outhouse
}
Summer, 1963
ON’T, Daddy! Please! I’m sorry! Please stop!”
It was the unmistakable lament of my little brother
DHenry begging for mercy while he got a rare whip-
ping from the old man. Henry was seldom spanked. I thought
he must’ve blown up the church or something, because Henry
was Daddy’s undisputed favorite.
When Daddy took off his belt, we paid for it with the sting-
ing disappearance of a layer of our childhood innocence. The
old man had an uncontrollable temper. It simply didn’t pay to
draw a line in the sand with him. If you argued with him, his
rage grew to such outlandish proportions that you might walk
away in the right, but your backside would be covered with
welts. He would never understand that these beatings changed
the way we felt about him. The cracking of leather across our
young skin sliced away layers of trust, and our love.
Timmy and I were on the porch, holding our breath, not
moving a hair. A door slammed somewhere inside.
What now?
S u l l i v a n ’ s I s l a n d
33
“Get in the car! On the double!”
Daddy’s command boomed from upstairs out to the front
porch. I was sure Henry’s wailing could be heard for miles. I
felt very sorry for my little brother, but I wasn’t sure that we
weren’t next.Timmy and I weren’t sure if Daddy meant for
us,
or
someone else,
to get in the car. We heard Daddy stomping down
the steps. Next, the screen door flung open, slammed against the
back wall and he pointed his index finger at me and then Timmy.
“You children deaf ?”
“No, sir,” we answered together.
“Then, get in the damn car when I tell you to!”
The screen door slammed again behind him and we jumped
up and followed his lead down the hall, into the kitchen, out the
back door and down the steps. He was on another rampage and
for whatever cryptic reason he had, he wanted us to go some-
place with him.We said not one word to each other or to him.
We got in the car before he had the chance to consider box-
ing our ears, as he often did when his fury got the best of him.
We’d unearth the details with our silence.
We were the children of a gifted and brilliant man, a World
War II veteran, a civil engineer who had graduated with high
honors from Georgia Tech, an adored and only son. Daddy was
tall and handsome, with piercing brown eyes and straight brown
hair. He wore thin wire-rimmed glasses, which wrapped tightly
around the backs of his ears. On sight, he could’ve passed for a
diplomat. His laugh and voice were loud, no, enormous. We
wondered if he hadn’t suffered a hearing loss during the war.
His parents, dead for nearly a decade from heart ailments,
were a quiet Baptist couple who had prided themselves on refine-
ment and doted on their son. Daddy had been accustomed to
getting his way, but everything about his life with our mother’s
French-Irish Island family had denied him that privilege. It would
have required the patience of a thousand saints to tolerate our
house and there was no news of a pope traveling to Sullivan’s
Island to canonize our father. Daily doses of our family drama and
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the chaos of our grandparents’ infirmities fed his rage like shovels
of coal feed the furnace of a tramp steamer.
And he was having trouble at work. As an engineer, Daddy
and his partner had been awarded a contract from the South
Carolina Department of Education to build a new school in the
country, in a colored area, which was slated to be integrated by
bussing. Daddy had figured out how to heat the school, build a
new gymnasium, a cafeteria and a library, all on a shoestring bud-
get. That wasn’t such a big deal; certainly there was no uprising
from the colored people. But there sure was noise from the
Department of Education and the local school boards.The real-
ity was that no white family would bus their children there and
it would always remain a colored school. This infuriated the
authorities, who claimed that our daddy’s plans would lead to
having to upgrade the rural colored schools all over South Car-
olina. Things were happening, such as him finding his tires
slashed and construction equipment destroyed, and he knew it
was the work of the Ku Klux Klan.
When I thought about him like that, I had empathy for
him. But when his demons bettered him, I ran for cover like
everyone else.
We lowered the car windows and didn’t utter a single syllable
about how hot the car was as he backed out of the driveway and