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
until tomorrow. The morning in Kylie’s room had bled
me more deeply than I had thought. And my afternoon
encounter with the young black woman Clay had hired
had made me both angry and bored, a combination
unbeatable for sheer enervation.
I had stayed too long at Lottie’s studio, and by the
time I got back to the house I barely had time to run
out again to the little supermarket in the Plantation’s
chic, lushly planted little mall for
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provisions for the guest house. When I got back to the
Heron Marsh house it seemed as empty as when I had
left it, and the kitchen was in its same pristine state,
so I put my grocery bags down on the counter and
was unloading them when a cool voice said, “I beg
your pardon?”
I looked around as guiltily as if I had been caught
rifling the silverware. A tall young black woman stood
in the door to the hallway. She wore a severely cut
ivory linen pantsuit and simple gold jewelry, and was
utterly beautiful; her skin was the color of coffee with
a great deal of sweet cream in it, and her face looked
like something on the wall of a highland African cave,
newly come to light after millenna. She was not smil-
ing. Her delicate brows were lifted high over almond
eyes.
“I’m sorry,” I said, smiling. “I didn’t know anyone
was here. Your plane must have been right on time.”
“Are you the baby-sitter?” she said.
I laughed.
“No. I’m Caroline Venable, Clay’s wife. I wasn’t
sure what you would want to do about dinner,
whether or not you’d want to leave your little boy with
a sitter, so I brought some things over for supper in
case you wanted to stay in tonight. I know how it is
the day you get in from a long trip.…”
“Mark is fine with sitters,” she said levelly.
98 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“Mr. Howland said the company had them available.
I’m sorry, I thought you must be someone he sent.
He’s gone to the office to see about it.…”
“Well, I’m afraid we weren’t able to do much on
this short notice. This time of year is crammed full of
things for the children. But my housekeeper said she’d
be delighted to sit. She’s wonderful with children; she
practically raised mine, and she has a raft of grandchil-
dren herself.…”
“That will be fine,” the woman said, and then, put-
ting her slim hand out, “I’m Sophia Bridges. I’ll be
doing research and development for the new property
eventually, but right now I suppose there’ll be indoc-
trination and that sort of thing. It’s kind of you to bring
these things for us, Mrs. Venable, but I mustn’t keep
you. I’ve got Mark down for a nap, so I’m going to
use the time to get unpacked before we leave for din-
ner. What time could your housekeeper be here?”
Her hand was chilly in mine, and firm, but it did
not linger. The slim fingers disengaged hurriedly.
“Please call me Caro; everyone does,” I said. “I hope
I’ll be seeing a lot more of you, and of course I want
to meet Mark. Estelle can be here around five, I should
think. We’ll probably leave for Charleston about a
quarter of six. It takes an hour or so to drive it. We’ll
be taking two cars over, so I’ll pick you up, or perhaps
Clay will.
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Somebody, at any rate. You needn’t change, what you
have on is lovely.…”
But I was talking to her slender back as she turned
and went back down the hall toward the bedroom,
where her son presumably slept a cool and orderly
sleep.
“You’re welcome,” I said under my breath to her
back, and only then wondered if there was a Mr.
Bridges, and if so, where he might be.
There probably never was one, I thought nastily.
He’s probably a test tube somewhere in a fertility lab.
I can’t imagine any living man getting close to her long
enough to accomplish conception.
I picked up my keys and started out of the kitchen,
then stopped as I heard her voice behind me. I looked
back. She stood in the door, poised like a royal cours-
ing hound, perhaps a saluki.
“Your housekeeper…is she African American?” she
said.
“Why…yes. She is,” I said in surprise.
“Then I’m sorry, but I think I’ll stay here with Mark
this evening. He’s never had a woman of color for a
baby-sitter. I don’t want him to get the idea that Afri-
can-American women are subservient or take servants’
roles. He’s never seen that. I realize that may be a little
problem down here, but Mr. How-
land…Hayes…thought we could get around it. I’m
going to want white sitters for Mark.”
100 / Anne Rivers Siddons
I drew a deep breath and let it out slowly.
Then want shall be your master, I thought, but aloud
I said only, “Well, it could be a problem. So many of
the black women on the island, or within commuting
distance over on Edisto or St. Helena’s aren’t trained
for much else, and the baby-sitting and housekeeping
jobs they have are very important to them. They do
them wonderfully well, and they know how much we
appreciate and depend on them. We’ll see what we
can do, of course, but African-American women in
white homes is simply a fact of Lowcountry life. I think
your son is going to see a lot of it no matter who sits
for him. Maybe when you see the reality of it you’ll
feel differently. These are warm, wonderful, skilled
women; they are more partners than servants.…”
“I have made my own reality for Mark,” she said
without smiling. “It has cost me a great deal to keep it
intact. Thank you, though. I’m sure the company’s
human resources people will get to work on it for me.”
And she turned and went back down the hall with
the stride of a big cat. All she lacked, I thought, was a
great, switching tail. Obviously Ol’ Massa’s wife wasn’t
required to deal out her largesse here. Ol’ Missus slunk
back to her car and jerked it into gear and screeched
back off across the island.
When Hayes Howland and I had decanted
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our two passengers and gone back outside to wait for
Clay, he said, “I presume you’ve met Mrs. Bridges and
the crown prince?”
“I have indeed,” I said. “They’ve gone into voluntary
exile until a pale enough courtier for the prince can be
found.”
“Uh-oh,” Hayes said, grinning his gaptoothed grin.
“I’m afraid I dropped the ball, too. I could only think
of that Filipino waiter at the Island Club, and that
didn’t suit, either. Maybe an American Indian? I hear
the new teller at Palmetto State is half-Seminole. Maybe
she’s got a sister.”
I have never really managed to like Hayes as much
as I thought I would when I first met him, or as much
as Clay wishes I did, but he can be bitingly funny.
Tonight we burst into laughter, and could only stop
when Clay pulled up in the Jaguar with the second of
the two new couples in tow and raised his eyebrows
at us and said, “Want to share the joke? We could use
a laugh; the drawbridge was up for twenty-five minutes
and I never could see why.”
“Nothing worth repeating,” I said, and took his arm,
and we went inside, the seven of us, to begin the inter-
minable business of assimilating four disparate
strangers into the Plantation family.
We had stopped first for drinks at the town house
Clay keeps in Charleston. Hayes had had
102 / Anne Rivers Siddons
his family’s cook go over and open and air it, and set
out the cocktail and appetizer things. Mattie sometimes
does that for us when I cannot get over ahead of time,
and often stays to serve drinks and pass around al-
monds and benné seed biscuits. Clay likes that. Mattie
has a sure, unobtrusive dignity I cannot muster. Many
guests think she is our employee, and neither Clay nor
Hayes disabuses them.
The town house is on Eliott Street, a short, shady
cobbled alley off Bay Street lined with dollhouse
Charleston single houses. Clay bought the house years
ago, when it became obvious that Plantation business
was going to keep him in Charleston a great deal of
the time. I know that even if it hadn’t, he would have
found an excuse to own a Charleston house. He has
never stopped loving Charleston, as much, I think, for
what it will not give him as for what it will. Clay has
made a great deal of money, but there is a small core
of old Charleston that does not care about that and
will not admit him into its inmost bosom no matter
what civic endeavor he underwrites. He will never, for
instance, belong to the St. Cecelia Society, for the
simple reason that membership is inherited, and he
has come to ridicule it, but he never gave up on the
notion that Kylie might come out there.
“You could cultivate Charleston,” he said.
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“You’ve probably still got kin around here you don’t
know you have.”
“You remind me of Groucho Marx when he said he
wouldn’t belong to any club that would have him as
a member,” I said once. “You scorn it, but you want
your daughter to make her damned debut there. What
kind of message do you think that gives Kylie?”
“That there are some things worth having that aren’t
easy to get,” he said. “That real quality is rare.”
“And that exclusion by policy is the Amurrican way,”
I said. “I’m no more going to ‘cultivate’ Charleston
than I’m going to let her go to St. Margaret’s. She
doesn’t live over there, Clay. I’m not going to have
her in a car for two hours every day of her life just so
she can go to a silly dance. Country Day is as good a
school as there is in the Lowcountry. You’ve seen to
that. What’s it going to say to these newcomers you
hire if your child goes to school in Charleston while
theirs are expected to go on the island?”
“That rank hath its privileges,” he said, but he did
not push it, and of course, as it turned out, it did not
come up.
But Clay still loves Charleston with the single-
minded passion of a man for a lost first love, and when
Hayes found out that the little house was being put up
for sale by the old couple who were moving to the
carriage house of a child’s home,
104 / Anne Rivers Siddons
he called Clay immediately. This was just before the
first of the wealthy Northerners discovered Charleston
and began buying up historic properties at prices the
natives could not afford; Hayes, though never much
of a lawyer in many respects, has the native’s nose for
real estate and knew that such properties would soon
triple and quadruple in value. It was still early days in
the Plantation, but Clay got the money together and
bought the house sight unseen, as much for its street
address as for its attractiveness or livability. It lies in
the heart of the hallowed area “South of Broad,” which
in Charleston means more than the words might imply,
and fortunately it is a prettily proportioned house that
had been well cared for, needing only cosmetic atten-
tion. I have to admit that I am charmed by the little
house and its walled garden, too, though I do not
spend much time there. It never seems quite real to
me, never seems to be our house at all, and when Clay
refers to it as our pied-à-terre, as he often does, I can
only look at him.
Charleston is as lovely in this soft, misted pre-
Christmas dusk as it ever is, with gas carriage lights lit
in the old district and warm lamplight shining from
the shuttered windows of the old pastel houses and
fingers of mist curling off the harbor up through the
live oaks on the Battery and down the little side streets
South of Broad. We walked the short distance over
the glistening
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cobbles to Carolina’s down on the waterfront. The
streets were full of people walking slowly, looking into
shop windows, laughing, talking. There are never many
cars on the streets at night in the old district, though
parking is at a premium, and walking is a good way
to get your initial feeling for the city. I watched the
two young couples as we walked. The men were so
absorbed in Clay and his words that they might have
been walking in downtown Scranton. They would
have, after tonight, no feeling for Charleston at all.
They followed him like ducklings, having imprinted
upon him instantly and totally.
I have seen this before many times with the young
who come to work at the Peacock Island Company.
Just out of the pure ether of their Ivy League business
or liberal arts schools, heads pounding with abstrac-
tions, newly adrift in a world so alien to the one they
have just left that it might be in another geological
epoch, they find Clay to be hyper-real, the Word made
flesh, the only solidarity in a great mist of strangeness.
He plies them like a Pied Piper. Nobody does it better