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
than Clay.
Almost everyone does it better than me. The young
women who clicked along on their sensible heels beside
me in the soft, wet night, stumbling every now and
then on a cobblestone, knew very well they were sacri-
ficial lambs in an alien land, knew that they were here
almost on suffer
106 / Anne Rivers Siddons
ance, to be petted and cajoled while their husbands
were courted; knew that sooner rather than later they
would be on their own in this wilderness, while their
men received the keys to the kingdom. They had a
keen, if terrible, sense of Charleston; I thought they
might never alter it. I felt an unwilling stab of sym-
pathy. I suppose all the new company wives go
through something like this unwanted epiphany, but
some seem to relish it, and others at least to try to put
a gallant face on it. These two did neither. Sally
Bowdon-Kirkland looked straight ahead, neither smil-
ing nor responding to anything Hayes or I said, simply
gone away behind her long, narrow New England
features.
Barbara Costigan cried.
When we picked up her and her husband, Buddy,
at the guest house, her blue eyes were swollen almost
shut and her little porcine nose was pink and raw. Al-
lergies, she said; something in the air down here that
they didn’t have at home in Old Greenwich. But I
know the stigmata of tears when I see them. Later, on
the way to Charleston, I would hear an occasional
rattling sniff from the backseat, where the young
Costigans sat, and a murmur of concern from the
stolid Buddy. In the restaurant Barbara’s slitted eyes
leaked almost continually.
“Wow,” she said over and over. “I hope you’ve got
some good allergists down here.”
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“Oh, yes,” I said. “Some of them, I think, from
Connecticut.”
She and Buddy were a pair: both square and short
and tanklike, though I rather thought that Barbara’s
flesh was newly acquired. Her short-skirted silk dress
fit her like the casing of a sausage and was obviously
a size or two too small. It was also a delicate shell pink,
which might have suited her fair skin and flaxen hair
if the former had not been splotched vermilion and the
latter sprayed into a helmet against our all pervasive
humidity. Buddy was blond, too, but a lighter shade,
near-white. His skin was red. His smallish features sat
in the middle of a large face as if someone had drawn
them on a balloon, and radiated self-confidence and
benignity. I’d have thought him the archetype of the
young German burgher but for the last name. Clay
had said that his IQ was off the charts. They looked,
all told, like a little couple on the top of a wedding
cake. I winced, thinking of the twin sunburns they
would sport from April to October.
The Bowdon-Kirklands were of a piece, too, though
I thought that it was a spiritual twinship instead of a
physical one. She was tall and very thin, almost six
feet in her Ferragamos, and he was perhaps a half-inch
shorter, and wiry. Tennis, I thought, for her and golf
for him. It was obvious both of them were sports
people. Their smooth tans spoke of good private grass
courts and deep
108 / Anne Rivers Siddons
water sailing and golf somewhere like the Maidstone
Club, where both had been members since birth. Both
were lank-haired, long-featured, and awesomely collec-
ted. Both were polite. Both were as distant as Uranus.
He spoke pleasantly in a New England honk but sel-
dom to me. She spoke hardly at all. There was no sign
of tears in her slightly protuberant gray eyes. I ima-
gined that she probably wept only when her favorite
hunter had to be put down, and then a good grade of
English toilet water, the kind with a number instead
of a name.
Peter Kirkland had been first in his class at Wharton.
Sally, I remembered, had done something at a museum
in Boston.
I tried at first.
“Do you have children?” I asked the young Costigans
on the way over.
A great sniff from Barbara, a hearty “Yes, we do, a
daughter,” from Buddy, followed by more whispering
and sniffling. I wondered what was wrong there.
Postpartum depression, perhaps? A child somehow
flawed?
“She’s only a month old,” Buddy said. “Our parents
thought it would be better if she stayed behind with
her granny and a nurse until we know where we’ll be
living. She’s a little beauty; her name is Elizabeth
Sloan, but she’s already Sissy, just like her mama was.
We miss her a lot, don’t we, Barbs?”
Low Country / 109
A sob, disguised as a little cough.
No wonder, I thought. Dragging that poor child all
the way down here and leaving her new baby behind.
What could he have been thinking of?
Turning around, I said, “Well, there are wonderful
things for children to do in the Plantation. The chil-
dren’s program is famous, and of course the weather
is almost always nice, and the beach is perfect for small
children almost all year round. Sissy will love it. Sum-
mer is paradise for kids.”
“We’ll be spending our summers on Fire Island,”
Barbara Costigan said in her little-girl whisper. “My
parents have had a house in Point o’ Woods forever.
We always go there. I went there every summer of my
life. I met Buddy there. The house was my grandpar-
ents’.”
“Now, Barbs,” Buddy said heartily. “I bring you
down to one of the most famous beach resorts in the
world and you go on about Fire Island. Just wait till
you see the beach in the Plantation; you’ll change your
mind in a minute.”
Barbara was silent. There would be, I knew, no
mind-changing there, about beaches or anything else.
I could almost see the fine, tensile steel filaments that
bound her to her family back up North.
Still, she tried, too.
“Do you have children, Mrs. Venable?” she asked
politely.
110 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“My son is twenty-two,” I said. “He’s in graduate
school.”
It is what I always say, when I am asked.
“Well, that’s nice. I always thought boys must be so
much easier to raise,” Barbara said, in the tone of one
who thought no such thing. “You’re lucky you never
had to put up with the wiles and the flirtiness of a little
girl. Even one as little as mine—ours. They’re just
shameless. Sissy has Buddy wrapped around her little
finger, and my father—”
She made a small noise and fell silent, and I knew
that Buddy had heard about Kylie and pinched or
poked her.
Another sob. I sighed.
“She’ll have a lot of company,” I said cheerfully.
“There are several new babies in the staff family this
year, and it seems to me that most of them are girls.”
“That’s nice, isn’t it, Barbs?” Buddy said. She did
not reply. I felt real joy when we saw in the distance
the spires of the bridge over the river into Charleston.
Toward the end of the evening, when neither young
woman had spoken for long minutes and I was consid-
ering asking Hayes to order another bottle of Merlot,
he suddenly roused himself from the contemplation of
his wineglass and said, “You’ll have to go and see
Caro’s paintings sometime, Sally, you being in the art
game yourself.
Low Country / 111
She’s really good. She shows all over the place:
Charleston, the island, you name it.”
Sally Bowdon-Kirkland turned her fine mare’s face
to me.
“You paint?” she said, as if she thought I might
perhaps have an example of my work with me, and
she would be required to examine it.
“A little. Nothing special. It was my major at school.
Tell me about your museum work; I’ve been meaning
to ask you. Are you a docent?”
“Actually, I own the museum,” she said, smiling a
little for the first time and revealing long teeth. I felt
as if I should offer her a sugar cube.
“Well, goodness…”
“It’s a very small museum, really. We show mainly
American minimalists who worked after 1980. I’m
hoping to make it one of the tops in its field, though;
and I’m having some luck with acquisitions. Or
rather…I did have. I turned it over to my cousin when
we…knew we were coming here.”
I thought, not for the first time, how hard the life of
a Plantation corporate wife is. They are not permitted
by policy to work for the company, and the families
are required by policy to live where the husbands work.
That limits career opportunities to primarily resort
areas. There is not a real estate position left in the
Lowcountry, I don’t think. Commuting to Charleston
is almost out of the question, in drive time. Some of
the
112 / Anne Rivers Siddons
young marriages do not survive it; some wives with
esoteric degrees and formidable skills find that, after
all, they cannot live in such air. Those who do not
leave adjust, I suppose, make their separate peaces,
but it seems to me that there is a good bit of drinking
around the club pool in the afternoons. I know that
human resources is kept busy with references for
counselors, of one sort or another. There is a list of
them posted in the corporate office, alongside the baby-
sitters.
“Well, it’s no substitute, but some of our galleries
are really good, and there are about a million museums
in Charleston proper. I should think any of them would
carpet your path with palm branches, if you’d like to
keep busy,” I said.
It was not the right thing to say.
“Keeping busy is really not my first priority,” she
said. “Finding a new American idiom to nurture is. My
family has been instrumental in that for a long time.
A distant kinswoman of ours founded one of the great
American museums. It’s in Boston. The Gardner. Per-
haps you know it.”
“Yes,” I said. “I know it.”
I did not think that Sally Bowdon-Kirkland would
be one of the ones who made a separate peace. Look-
ing at Peter Kirkland, oblivious, as he had been all
evening, to anyone but Clay, I wondered if he would
notice.
A moment later Barbara Costigan suddenly
Low Country / 113
jumped to her feet, clutching her napkin to her chest,
and fled, knocking over her water glass. We watched,
open-mouthed, as she floundered around the corner
toward the ladies’ room.
“Oh, no,” Buddy said. “I’m sorry, folks. She’s…it’s
been hard on her, leaving the baby. I think she’s got
all kinds of hormonal things going on.…”
I looked over at Sally Bowdon-Kirkland. She was
studying her newly arrived crème brûlée judiciously.
She looked up at me.
“Do you think you ought to…?” I began.
She lifted her shoulders.
“We just met this evening. I’m sure she’d rather have
you,” she said.
I got up and went into the ladies’ room. It seemed
empty, but I could hear alternating sobbing and
flushing coming from one of the stalls.
“Honey, it’s Caro Venable,” I said. “Please don’t cry.
Come on out and let’s talk about it. There’s nothing
so bad that we can’t fix it, I promise.…”
She sobbed steadily for a time, but gradually she
stopped. There was another flush and then she came
out, rubbing her eyes like a child and scrubbing at the
front of her dress. It was stained almost to her chubby
waist.
“I’m so sorry,” she whispered. “They leak; almost
every time it’s time to feed the baby, they leak awfully,
even though she’s not here, and I…
114 / Anne Rivers Siddons
I thought I had enough Kleenex in there but I don’t.…”
I looked at her in the harsh fluorescent light and felt
an actual pain in my heart. I also felt a sharp, cold
pang of anger at her husband and Clay and the com-
pany. Poor, bereft, sodden, frightened little soul.
“I remember that,” I said. “It’s awful, isn’t it? But it
stops. Before you know it it will have stopped, and
then you’ll have your baby with you and everything
will be better. This is a hard time. I know it is. Come
on, let’s get your face washed and some fresh lipstick
on you, and I’ll just drape my cardigan around
you…like this…and nobody will ever know. We’ll say
you spilled your wine.”
“She’ll know.” Barbara Costigan hiccupped. “She’ll
know I was sitting there leaking like a cow and crying
like a fool. You can just bet she’s never leaked anything
in her life, or even cried…”
I knew that she meant Sally Bowdon-Kirkland, and
did something I virtually never do. I ridiculed one
corporate wife to another. I did not feel one iota of
guilt about it, either.
“If she leaked anything, it would be ice water,” I said.
“Come on. You won’t have to see much of her at all,
once this night is over. Being friends with every woman
down here is not in the company policy manual. You’ll