Authors: Anne Rivers Siddons
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Married Women, #Real Estate Developers, #South Carolina, #Low Country (S.C.), #ISBN-13: 9780061093326, #Large Print Books, #Large Type Books, #Islands, #HarperTorch, #Domestic Fiction
mering in my throat, tears of fright and something else
entirely welling up in my eyes. My fingers gripped the
arms of my chair as if they alone might save me. Beside
me Clay, in his chair, did not move either, did not
breathe.
“My God,” I whispered finally. “My God.”
“Not an alligator, was it?” he said.
“Oh, no. No. No alligator on earth ever sounded
like that,” I said. I had begun to tremble.
Then he said, “I know what it was. That was your
grandfather’s panther. That’s what he’s been hearing.”
“Lord Jesus,” I said, and it was a prayer. “Then it
was true.”
“Everything out here is, I think,” Clay said, and got
up out of his chair and came over and put his hands
on my shoulders, and kissed me.
And that was that.
W
hen I came downstairs, showered and
more or
less together, Clay was sitting at the round table on
the back veranda making notes on the omnipresent
clipboard that goes everywhere with him, and Estelle
was pouring coffee for him out of the little French
chocolate pot that he likes to use for his coffee. Estelle
and I have both tried to persuade him that in this cli-
mate pottery or china would be more suitable, but he
bought the little silver pot on our honeymoon, in
Cuernavaca, and admires it inordinately. The fact that
someone has to polish it after every use does not
bother him in the least.
“What do we have Estelle for?” he will say when I
fuss about the pot.
“Not for polishing your coffeepot every morning of
her life,” I say. “I’ve been doing it for years, if you must
know.”
80 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“I do know. And I thank you,” he says. “The pot
makes me happy and it makes me happy that you
polish it for me.”
And so I do it, because I will not ask Estelle to, and
it is, after all, a small thing. He does not ask much
foolishness of me. There is not much foolishness in
Clay.
I knew that he had chosen the back veranda because
I simply could not have looked at the sea this morning.
He loves the marsh vistas, and always has, but it is the
open ocean that calls to him. I sometimes think that
the sheer, intense orderliness of his soul finds a kind
of release in that ultimate, untamable disorder. He can
sit and look at the sea for hours, though he rarely sits
and looks at anything anymore for hours but whatever
is on his drawing board or his clipboard. He is restless
during enforced inactivity; cocktail parties are torture
for him, though he goes to and gives enormous num-
bers of them and does the walk-through perfectly. Clay
never did drink much and is impatient with the slight
silliness, the looseness, that ensues after an hour or so
at the best of them. He chews ice fiercely and eats
enormous quantities of hors d’oeuvres, waiting to be
released. When we have drinks before dinner, either
at home or at a restaurant, he can go through an entire
basket of bread, waiting for everyone else to finish their
drinks. He sometimes waits a long time. There seems
to me to be quite
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a lot of drinking in the Plantation. Despite the
munching, I am fairly sure he has not put on an ounce
since we married. I never see him weigh himself, but
the contours of his long, angular body do not seem to
have changed.
Estelle poured out a second cup of coffee and
plonked a plate of sticky buns down in front of me.
They were still warm from the oven. The rich cinnamon
rose to my nose and I sniffed appreciatively, though
my stomach heaved at the thought of food.
“They smell wonderful, Estelle, but I think I’ll just
have coffee,” I said. “Will you put some aside for me?
I’ll eat them with my tea this afternoon.”
“You eat them now,” she ordered. “You looks like
the hind axle of hard times. You been up in that room,
haven’t you?”
I looked over at Clay, and she said, “Mr. Clay didn’t
tell me. I seen the door still open. And I know that
look on yo’ face. You ain’t got no call to be broodin’
in that room, Miss Caro. It don’t do nothin’ but stir
you up. She ain’t in there. She in a better place than
this, and happy as a little lark. You try to rejoice in
that an’ leave her po’ things be.”
I bent my head over my coffee so she would not see
the unsheddable tears gather. Estelle’s faith is earth-
simple and granite-hard. Not for the first time I felt a
profound ache of pure envy. I
82 / Anne Rivers Siddons
had ceased negotiations with God on the day that my
daughter died. I felt no anger at Him, only a dreary
and cell-deep certainty that whether He was there or
not, that door had slammed shut for me. There was a
kind of peace in it.
We drank our coffee in silence. I was grateful for it.
Clay knows that I cannot abide hovering when I am
feeling out of sorts. Even if I could, I don’t think it is
in him to hover. He deals with his deepest feelings by
snapping them firmly into the steel grid inside him and
going back to work. The night that Kylie died, he
stayed at his board all night, working furiously, while
I slept in a thick swamp of barbiturates. The master
plan for Calista Key Plantation, on the south coast of
Puerto Rico, was conceived almost in its entirety that
night. It is thought by most critics to be by far Clay’s
most innovative and attractive property. I have never
been there. He does not go often, either. Neither of us
can forget what terrible fuel fed the fire it was born in.
Finally he lifted his head and said, “You ready? I
went ahead and put the flowers in the car.”
And we went out into the misted morning to get the
guest house ready for the new nestlings.
The Heron Marsh section of the Plantation is, except
for the seaside neighborhood, the oldest. It was Clay’s
thought to offer to the first venturesome investors and
home buyers the choice water
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front lots on the ocean and the marsh tidal creek that
separates Peacock’s from “the island.” In between, he
devised lovely neighborhoods of single-family and
cluster homes bordering man-made lakes, lagoons, and
a golf course, each with its own pool and tennis court.
So, theoretically, everyone who lives in the Plantation
has his own bit of waterfront. But it is the great
dazzling vistas of sea and marsh that are the prizes,
and they were gone almost in the first year of the
Plantation’s existence. I have always loved the Heron
Marsh homes. They sit so deep in lush ocean forest
that they are all but hidden from the road, and the
contrast of coming out of that dark cave of green into
the light that seems to pour like sour honey off the
wide marshes is stunning. All the Heron Marsh homes
have long back lawns and gardens that slope gently
down to the reeded marsh’s edge, and the deep, swift
tidal creek that is the belt on the island’s midsection
is studded with docks at which cheeky outboards and
slim sailboats bob. From this part of the creek you can
reach the harbor and open ocean in a five-minute sail.
The water is almost unfailingly calm and shining; even
our fierce summer storms can’t reach their clawing
fingers here. I remember that I wanted to build on
Heron Marsh when I first saw it, because it looks
straight over into “my” part of the island, the secret
green heart where I spent so many summer weeks with
my grandfather. But Clay was in love
84 / Anne Rivers Siddons
with the ocean even then. It does not bear thinking
that we might still have Kylie if we had come here, and
I try hard not to. I really do. I have always known that
there was simply no blame to be assigned, except per-
haps to my child herself. Certainly not to Clay. I sensed
even in the depths of my very earliest grief that that
way lay the death of our marriage.
The house Clay uses as a guest house is the largest
of twelve on the marsh. It was built for a very rich
family from Spartanburg who had eight children and
innumerable grandchildren, and so it sprawls octopus-
like among its azaleas and oleanders and great ferns
and overhanging live oaks, harboring a staggering
number of smallish bedrooms, each with its own bath.
There is an enormous family room and a kitchen and
dining room that can accommodate an emerging na-
tion, a wraparound veranda that steps down one step
to a huge pool, and two Har-Tru tennis courts at the
fringe of the water. It is made of our tradition-hallowed
tabby, a mixture of sand and crushed oyster shell that
dates back who knows how many hundreds of years
in the Lowcountry. I always loved the thick, pitted
surface of tabby; it looks as if it could stand for millen-
nia, and may well do so. The tabby and the now-ma-
tured plantings are, to me, the only things that save
the guest house from a rather daunting institutionality,
which may be why the rich Spartanburgers sold it after
the first
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year, though local legend says that it is because an al-
ligator came out of the creek and ate the wife’s Yorkie
and was going for the youngest child as dessert before
the screams from the children drove the sensible beast
back into the water.
I always try to cram as many big, loose, rowdy
bouquets as I can into the bedrooms and common
areas, to soften the look of an upscale Elks Hall. Today
the back of my Cherokee was almost full of them.
Clay helped me take the pails and vases into the
kitchen and did not make a move to leave, but I knew
that he was at least an hour past his customary time
for going to his office, so I said, “Why don’t you go
on and catch up? I’ll finish this up and then I think I’ll
walk over to Lottie’s. She’s starting a humongous new
thing of the lighthouse that I want to see. I’ll probably
have some lunch with her, too. What time are your
chickens coming in?”
“The two couples should be in about two. I think
the woman…you know, the black woman…is getting
in an hour or so later. Hayes is going over to Charles-
ton to pick her up; the others are renting a car. Did I
tell you that she’s got a child with her?”
“Oh, Clay, no, you didn’t. How old a child? She’s
surely going to need a sitter, isn’t she? Or do you think
she’ll even want to go out and leave it? What is it, by
the way?”
86 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“A boy. I think she said he was five or six. Yeah, I
guess she’ll want a sitter. Can you leave them with
sitters at five? I don’t remember…”
“Just,” I said. “But she may not want to. I’ll pick up
a few things for a light supper for her and the little boy
in case she wants to stay here and bring them over
after lunch. I want to put some breakfast things in the
fridge for everybody, anyway. Lord, I hope I can get
somebody at this late date. There’s an awful lot going
on around the island this time of year.…”
“Don’t you bother with that; I’ll get somebody in
human resources to do it. There’s a list over there. It’s
what they’re for.”
“No, I’ll do it this time. I know how I’d feel if I was
coming to a new place with a small child. If all else
fails maybe I can heavily bribe Estelle to do it. She was
saying the other day she missed having her grandchil-
dren at home now that Emily has moved to the main-
land.”
He kissed me on the forehead.
“You okay now?”
“Yes. I’m sorry about that.”
“Don’t ever be sorry. Just don’t do that to yourself.
That’s all I ask. Estelle’s right. It doesn’t…get us any-
where.”
“I know.”
He got into the Cherokee and drove away, and I
filled vases and pitchers and set my riotous roses
around, watching the stark rooms catch
Low Country / 87
flame with them, and then I went out back and sat for
a time on the low wall that bordered the veranda,
looking west into the dull-pewter noonday dazzle to-
ward “my” part of the island. From the dark line of the
distant woods a pair of great, gawky birds rose into
the air and lumbered away into the sun. Wood storks,
I thought. They had been homing into the Ace Basin
for some years from their historical habitats in Florida,
because extensive development there has left them no
home. Now, in all of the Carolina Lowcountry, they
come only to the Ace. These, I thought, had been
fishing one of the small freshwater ponds on the island
and might be headed back to one of their rookeries.
My grandfather had said, just before he died, that he
thought there were perhaps three of them.
He had died seven years earlier, suddenly, because,
as Kylie said seriously when we told her, “His heart
attacked him.” He died on the porch of the marsh