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)
“So you made it to paradise and you found Nelson! I’m so
happy for you!” I couldn’t think of what to say so I said, “Seen
Momma lately?” Tears flowed down my cheeks in spite of my
attempts to stop them.
Livvie shook her head, smiling.
“Don’t fret about your
momma. She fine.”
“Well, when you see her, tell her I asked about her, okay?
Tell her that I understand now. God, I miss you, Livvie, I love
you, you know.”
She smiled and nodded her head. In my mind I could hear
her say,
“Me too, chile, me too! But I got my Nelson.What about you?
You gone finally give your heart to Simon?”
“Livvie,Tom’s had cancer. Simon’s back in Atlanta for now.
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Things have been pretty complicated! If you were ’eah with me,
it would be so much easier! You’d tell me what to do.”
“But, chile, ain’t I ’eah now? Ain’t I ’eah? Did you think I ever
gone leave you? And don’t you know what to do?”
“Yes, I know what to do. Give my trouble to the Lord,
right?”
“That’s right.And use that brain of yours!”
“What’s gonna happen to Tom, Livvie? What can I do?”
“Say your prayers, girl. Prayers work miracles; don’t you see that
much yet?”
“You know, Livvie, I think I was as smart at thirteen as I was
ever going to be. Seems like I haven’t learned much at all.”
“Now, why was you so smart at thirteen? ’Cause you had a situa-
tion to rise above! Ain’t you back there again?”
“You mean the time’s come to rise?”
“The time has come to rise up and take your place again. I love
you, baby. Don’t be afraid to love. Iffin you love Simon, don’t be afraid.
And don’t worry about Tom.”
“Buck up, right? Just go for it?” She nodded her head to me.
I was laughing now through my tears, tears of joy, tears of relief.
I could feel her starting to leave and I concentrated with all my
might to hold her with me a moment longer.“I love you, Livvie,
forever.”
I was whispering to her. Love. It mystically transcended
death. It healed hearts. It changed thoughts. And when you met
it head-on, it gave you courage in return. I put my hand up to
the mirror and she held hers to meet mine. The mirror was
warm. I would have given anything to hold her hand, but the
warmth was there. She faded away until she and Nelson were
visible no more. Finally I saw just my own reflection.
Maybe the scent of roses, the bright light and the alleged
vision of the Blessed Mother at Stella Maris had been a mass hal-
lucination of some kind. I wasn’t sure. Maybe seeing Livvie now
had been some kind of desperate act of my unconscious. How
could I judge? There was no question that Livvie had visited me
S u l l i v a n ’ s I s l a n d
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in my dream. If she could come to me in a dream, then why
couldn’t she visit me through the mirror?
I had this sudden urge to turn and look all around me—to
take it all in. The tree coming down, the table of photographs,
the old armoire Tom and I had salvaged. Salvage. That was the
order of the day for me—my cosmic marching orders.
I threw myself on the couch and lit a Marlboro Light, then
put it out after the first puff, knowing I didn’t need them any-
more. Okay, I’d go to the drugstore and get the patch to help, just
in case I felt weak. I couldn’t help but laugh at myself and what
had just occurred with Livvie’s visit. I would pray like mad for
Tom and get the whole family to do the same. Better yet, I’d get
the whole congregation of Stella Maris to pray. And what of
Simon? I already knew the answer to that. The energy I felt
made me euphoric with hope. I knew everything was going to
be all right.Yeah, even I—cynical Susan Hamilton Hayes—had
to admit that just about anything was possible.At last, at long last,
I could rest in the sweet arms of peace.
Author’s Note
could tell you real stories about my family and all the
good people of Sullivan’s Island and Charleston and
I go on and on. I could tell you about how, on the
Island, from the last day of school in spring until the first day of
school in fall, I knew no kids who wore shoes, just flip-flops
that we bought at Miss Buddy’s or Bert’s for twenty-nine cents.
And that any kid who owned Keds, especially if they were
clean, was immediately branded an intruder from the outside
world.
I could wax on about the summer days spent running free
with my cousins—filling an empty coffee can with blackberries,
wild plums and chainey briar (wild asparagus) and climbing
the water towers—and how anyone with a bicycle of their own
was obliged to tow kids who didn’t have one. How we spied
through the windows of summer renters and smoked stolen ciga-
rettes under their houses in the winter and that our specialty was
digging holes to China.
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Once we did that at my Uncle Teddy’s and then somebody—
one of my Blanchard cousins, I think—got the brilliant idea to fill
it up with water and make a swimming pool. The hose was
devoured by the hole so, knowing Uncle Teddy would tell our
father, we covered the whole mess with some planks of wood.
Well, he must’ve gotten suspicious about the hose being pulled
from across the yard to under the house. He went down there
after supper. It was dark, he moved the boards, fell in the hole and
got covered in mud. He beat our behinds with his brown leather
slipper and told us to never tell Daddy. His version of a beating
resembled the way Ella Wright—a.k.a. Miss Fuzz—who was my
Livvie, plumped pillows.We hollered our heads off to make sure
he thought it was enough and then we laughed about it for a mil-
lion years.
If you ever meet my cousin Michael McInerny, he’ll tell you
the story about how he and his friends—I guess they must have
been nine or ten—caught the biggest crabs on Sullivan’s Island
and sold them to all the mothers in his neighborhood. In later
years he found out the reason the crabs were so large was that he
was crabbing at the Island sewage pipe! What could the family
do but give him full credit for pioneering recycling?
And what about the ghost stories? People would tell them
at night on dark porches and scare themselves half to death. Of
course, I would listen to them and snicker, thinking they should
have a big mirror like ours.They would sleep with a light on for
the rest of their lives! Yes, that part about the mirror is actually
all true.
In the old days, there were lemonade stands and there still
are today, and ball games of “half rubber,” which is a Lowcoun-
try version of stickball played with a broomstick and, you
guessed it, a rubber ball cut in half.There were shag contests at
Folly Pier, before it fell in the ocean, and sneaking into Big
John’s and the Merchant Seamen’s Club with fake IDs to drink
Singapore slings and beer when it was sweltering outside.
There were friends who went to Vietnam and others who
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fled to Canada. We burned our bras for women’s rights in the
same fires that made ashes of our brothers’ draft cards.We argued
civil rights until we were exhausted and then started over the
next day.We rebelled against everything we thought was wrong.
Good old boys grew long hair and traded beer drinking for pot
smoking and Weejuns for sandals. And then, eventually, we
buried our parents and became them, clinging to Lowcountry
life with all the fervor of an Evangelical Revival, rather satisfied.
So many stories, too many to tell here. We don’t live there
now, but maybe someday that will change. Someday I’ll have a
home for my family on the Island.
Another time, we will shag, I’ll teach you a little Gullah
poem and we’ll argue on how to make use of an entire ham.We
will stroll down to the Sullivan’s Island beach at dawn, talking
hurricanes, tide tables and sand castles.You will spread your arms
in the eastern wind and feel the sun rise in every one of your
bones. Once the sand of Sullivan’s Island gets in your shoes, your
heart will ache to return. And return you will.You will be one
of us.You won’t mind being a little bit Geechee.
As the heat and light of day begin to rise and glow, I’ll feed
you a Lowcountry breakfast of warm salted air and, smiling, you
will tell all these stories to your friends until you think they’re
your own.You will hum this music of so much magic forever.
Yes, you will. ’Eah?