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)
fools. I mean, he couldn’t even take me to the movies. I was too
young to date! Well, maybe I wasn’t really, but nobody in my
class dated, and in my family you didn’t date until everyone was
sure you weren’t convent material.
Simon was my first and only love. But I admitted to myself
that Fat Albert showing up had probably been a blessing in dis-
guise. I understood now why Maggie was so hot for Lucius.This
make-out stuff was pretty fabulous fun, but dangerous too. I
could just see both of us winding up pregnant. Good Lord.
May came and Dr. Send Her to School was coming for a
weekend. When Momma and he weren’t writing each other,
they were calling each other. Momma may have been crazy but
she was different, stronger. Suddenly she had opinions and she
talked about things like a happy person, instead of one who lived
on the edge of Armageddon. Love did that to you, I thought. She
was sitting in the kitchen with Aunt Carol, talking about him. I
was snapping five pounds of green beans on the back steps with
Livvie. I guess they forgot we were there, like usual.
“What’s wrong, Carol?” my momma asked.
“Oh, nothing. It’s just that ever since Easter a person can’t
talk to you about anything except Stan. It’s getting kind of bor-
ing to be around you, MC. I’m sorry to say that to you, but it’s
the truth.”
Livvie and I looked at each other, smelling trouble.
“Jealous,” I whispered to Livvie.
“Humph,” she whispered back.
“Well, you don’t have to be around me if you don’t want to,
Carol Asalit.”
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“What? Well, I never! Fine. That’s fine with me! I’m going
home to my husband, who appreciates me.”
“My husband appreciated you too, I hear.”
“Well! I never!” Silence for a moment, except for my aunt’s
gasping and clucking noises. “I don’t need to stay here and be
insulted and falsely accused this way!”
“If you don’t behave—if you look so much as sideways at
Stan—I’ll tell my brother everything I know!”
“You! You think you’re such a saint!”
“Ha! And you think you’re the only woman in the world!
You’re getting old, Carol! Your varicose veins are showing and
when you get angry all the little lines around your lips show.”
“I am never stepping foot in this house again!”
“Fine!” my mother said.“Then I don’t have to worry where
your feet are during dinner!”
Holy moly, I thought, how did Momma know all this? And,
more importantly, was that
my
momma talking like that?
I looked up at Livvie. She was a little sheepish. “I only told
her about the feet after she tell me Miss Simpson tell she about
the storm!”
Alice Simpson had spilled the beans on Aunt Carol and
Daddy in their episode of “The Secret Storm.” And Livvie had
iced the cake! Good!
Aunt Carol slammed out the door and raced down the steps
to her car, face red as a beet. Our dog ran barking behind her.
She reached her foot out to kick him and he jumped away and
then lunged at her. She tore out of the yard in reverse, the dust
kicking up under her car. Rascal chased her, barking his brains
out, until his voice tapered off in the distance. The back door
opened again and Momma came out and stood on the steps.
She looked down at us and smiled.
“Do Lawd, Miss MC, what bee got in your bonnet?” Livvie
was grinning from ear to ear. So was I.
“No bee, Livvie, I’m just not afraid of her anymore. In fact,
I’ve never felt quite so good. Lord! What a beautiful afternoon!”
S u l l i v a n ’ s I s l a n d
417
“If it makes any difference to anybody around here,” I said,
“I never really liked her much and I ain’t gone miss her!”
Momma looked at me as if she were surprised all at once to
see me so much older.We started to laugh.
“Did you see her swishing her butt down the steps?” I said
to Livvie and Momma.
“You should’ve seen her face when I told her I knew!”
Momma said. “She makes me so mad, that woman! I hope she
does
tell Louis and then I can tell him what I know!”
“Yeah, Momma! You were great!”
“You know, I’ve been wanting to give that you-know-what
a piece of my mind for twenty years!”
“Well, ya done good, Momma,” I said. “Come on, let’s take
the twins for a walk.”
And we did.
L i v v i e a n d i
were sweeping the porch together. Dr.
Divorced, Rich and Jewish was coming in soon to spend the
Memorial Day weekend, and Momma wanted everything
just so. The twins were in the playpen, gurgling like babies
do. They played so well and hardly ever fussed unless they
were tired or hungry. Of course, with all of us to play with
them, they never lacked attention. They would have their
first birthday soon.
Dr. Stanley Rifkin arrived in a red convertible rental car and
parked in front of the house. I heard Simon coming down the
steps to greet him. Stanley got out and waved hello to us.
“Hi!” I said.“How was your flight?”
“Oh, just fine, Susan! Thank you for asking! Such a nice girl
you are!”
“Jeesch,” I said under my breath and Livvie giggled, knowing
that this man got on my nerves. He wasn’t like Simon, who was
a wise guy like me. No, Simon’s father was slow and deliberate,
his manners from another time. Everything about his demeanor
spoke of his intelligence. I just couldn’t believe that a powerful,
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educated man like him would want to get mixed up with a crazy
widow and her six children.
Livvie went to the door and held it open for him so he
could put his luggage inside on the porch. It had
L
s and
V
s all
over it. If he was supposed to have so much money, couldn’t he
have afforded his own initials?
“I’m glad you’re both here,” he said. “Oh. Simon, my boy!
Come here, all of you. Got something I want to show you.”
“Hey, Dad!” Simon kissed his father on the cheek.
Stanley was clearly nervous and excited. He dug around in
his jacket pockets for something, eventually producing a little
velvet box. He opened it for all of us to see. It was a beautiful,
big, and I mean big, door knocker of a round white diamond
ring. It could’ve been the night lights at the ball field. It had
smaller, round rubies on either side. My jaw dropped. Simon’s
jaw dropped and Livvie started to laugh.
“Oh, Lawd have mercy! Lawd have mercy!” She was slap-
ping her thighs and doing a little dance.
“Is this good?” Stanley asked, smiling widely. He pointed to
Livvie.“Does this mean she approves?”
“Mr. Doctor? You don’t need me to say it’s okay, but I tell
you what, you just what this family need! Yes, sir! You just the
medicine they all need! Yeah, Gawd! That’s the biggest diamond
I ever did see! Wait till I tell Harriet ’bout this!”
“My brother!” I said and hugged Simon.
“My sister!” He laughed and hugged me back.
“Well, Miss Susan, I want to tell you this,” Stanley said.
“First, I’m going around to see Louis and ask for your mother’s
hand.With his approval and, of course, MC’s, I’d like to marry
your mother in the fall. Now, I want you to understand that I
know I can’t replace your father, you’re too old for that. But, I
would
like to be your friend. If you ever need anything, you
come to me, all right? And call me Stan. I always wanted a
daughter, now I could have four! If Marie Catherine says yes, I
swear I’ll be the happiest man in the world!”
S u l l i v a n ’ s I s l a n d
419
“Oh, Stan,” I said, giving the old goat a good hug, “I’m so
happy for both of you. I really mean it. Please make sure Aunt
Carol gets a good look at the ring, okay?”
“I understand completely,” he said and winked at me.
I h a d k i s s e d the twins and everybody else twice or three times.
Even though Momma was engaged and they could now afford
Livvie, I was still very nervous about leaving. Everything would
be different for Timmy, Henry and Maggie when Momma mar-
ried Stanley Rifkin. But at least they would all have each other.
I would be alone.
Maggie and I had had long talks, late at night, all summer
long. I would miss her so much. She was considering breaking
up with Lucius for the same reasons I had cooled things with
Simon. Even though she was older than I was, she was begin-
ning to realize that Lucius would never marry her. His mother
and her Virginia Tidewater family would never accept a girl
from Sullivan’s Island, even though our family had fought in
every war in America for the past two hundred years.
Simon and I were just friends by that point. Momma and
Stanley getting engaged made our love feel too weird. Anyway,
Simon had promised to write me and he was going to drive me
to St. Anne’s. I had given him a picture of myself that I had had
taken at Furchgott’ s Studio in Charleston. I looked pretty good
in the white cotton lace drape. I signed the back before I put it in
a frame.
To the only man I’ll ever really love, Susan.
I was counting
on him never opening the frame and seeing it.
Timmy started to cry when he saw my bags all packed.
Then Henry started to cry. I took care of that by kicking them
in the shins as hard as I could.
“Remember that this is how life here can be,” I said, “and
write to me every week, okay? Look after Maggie and the twins
and if they get into trouble, call me. Swear it.”
We made pinky oaths and then we hugged.They would be
all right and I would be home in three weeks for the wedding.
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They weren’t getting rid of me quite yet. I scratched Rascal
behind the ears.
The hardest person to leave was Livvie. She was waiting for
me in the kitchen.
“So now what?” I said.“If it weren’t for you, I’d probably be
going to jail instead of boarding school.”
“That’s true enough,” she said.
“I can’t tell you good-bye, Livvie.”
“You never have to, Susan.”
“What? What do you mean?”
“The mirror. Even when I gone to glory and my Nelson, I
still come to you.”
“Yeah, but Livvie, I can’t see
anything
in that mirror.”
“Someday you will. And don’t you ever forget, this old col-
ored woman loves this Geechee girl so.”
“Oh, God, Livvie, and how I love you. I always will.”
Twenty
Lowcountry Magic
}
1999
AGGIE?” I was on the phone with my sister.
“Guess what I found?”
M I told her about the pictures of Fat Albert’s
and Marvin Struthers’s feet in the photo at the Klan rally. She
was stunned.
“Well, I’ll be darned. It wasn’t enough for old Marvin to be
mayor? He had to be the Grand Dragon too?”
“I know. I mean, Maggie, it makes perfect sense. Albert
probably ran Daddy off the road and Marvin Struthers and him
probably pushed Daddy’s car into the marsh. I have to think this
all through and I’m sure if I kept digging I could find the evi-
dence, but I swear I am so relieved just to know. No wonder
Marvin headed up the investigation with Albert! No wonder no
one was blamed! Pity that old Marvin and Albert have been fer-
tilizer for years.”
“You’re right. I mean, what would you do with the proof
anyway? Can’t put a dead man in jail.”
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“Exactly. And it wouldn’t be worth embarrassing their
families.”
“Yeah, but at the same time, it’s good that you can finally
put your mind to rest.”
“Yeah. Maggie, did you ever think of Daddy as a hero?” We
were quiet for a moment, numbed by the news and the sugges-
tion that he was.
“Never even considered it. Until now, that is.”
“God almighty. Life is so weird.”
I t wa s t h e Wednesday before Christmas. I had been working late
at the library every day and at the same time trying to prepare for
the holiday.We had been blessed with perfect springlike weather
all week, which made gathering greens from the yard a very
pleasant task. I had finally put the last of our decorations on the
tree and around our house. I arranged some of the smaller
branches of magnolia in a glass bowl in the middle of the dining
room table, and put red glass balls on florist’s sticks in between
them. I polished the magnolia leaves with Wesson Oil—a trick
Maggie taught me—and I thought you could part your hair in
their reflection. Speaking of hair, I was pleased that I remem-
bered to send a card to Kim. He was turning out to be a good
friend and I was grateful to have him in my life. I needed some-
one besides Maggie and Beth.
I had hardly heard from Tom since he had left my house
after his surgery except to discuss money and visitation, which
led me to believe that Karen was firmly in his life. Occasionally,
we’d discuss the treatments he was having and he seemed to be