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
company business do it, too. He even turned his fre-
quent flyer mileage back to the company. Hayes ragged
him incessantly about it.
The house seemed to settle in around me all at once,
fitting like a sweet skin. The dark night stopped press-
ing against the windows and wrapped them tenderly.
I lit the logs in the big
Low Country / 181
sitting room so that the house would smell of apple
wood and peeked into the oven. Estelle had left a pot
roast there, ready to be heated. Clay’s favorite. That
and some of the Merlot he had brought back from At-
lanta the last time he went, and the last of the key lime
pie we had had the weekend before…or, no, I would
make something for dessert. It would pass the time,
and please Clay, and I suddenly wanted very much to
be in my own kitchen, making something wonderful
with my own hands. I looked into the refrigerator.
Creme caramel; we had everything I needed. When I
went upstairs to our bedroom, I was nearly dancing
on the steps.
He was late coming. At one A.M., I gave up and
went upstairs and turned on my little television and
found a rerun of
Pillow Talk
and fell asleep before
Doris Day even had time to get pertly angry with Rock
Hudson. I don’t know how much later it was when a
sound from the kitchen woke me. I got up and ran my
hands through my tousled hair and shrugged into the
nicest negligee I had, and hurried downstairs. I was
not afraid. I knew it would be Clay.
He did not hear me coming in my bare feet. He was
sitting at the kitchen table with the platter of cold, un-
carved pot roast and vegetables in front of him, hands
in his lap beneath the table, staring into space. I had
never seen him look so old, or so tired, or so…ill? I
was afraid sud
182 / Anne Rivers Siddons
denly, so afraid that for a moment I could not get my
breath to speak. I remembered Shawna’s words the
day before…or was it the day before that?…and that
I had brushed them aside impatiently.
Then I said, “Honey?” and he looked up, and his
face was Clay’s again, with only the normal fatigue of
a late night home from a business trip on it.
“Hi, sweetie,” he said, and got up, and came over
and hugged me. His face against mine was cold, but
his arms were tight and hard around me, and he held
me for a long time. I hugged back, eyes closed, my
face pressed into his shoulder.
“You hopped a ride on a jet,” I said, still close against
the fabric of his coat.
“Yep. The guys we went to see were coming to
Charleston anyway, and I talked them into staying
over a day or two with us. Well, not with
us
. I put
them in the guest house, now that the new kids are in
their own places. It saved me a bad three hours in the
Atlanta airport.”
“Clever,” I said, kissing the side of his face. I felt
stubble there, and was surprised. He hardly ever al-
lowed a trace of growth on his chin. He must have
skipped shaving that morning. I had never known him
to do that in all the years we had been married, and
the anxiety came nagging back.
Low Country / 183
“Are you okay?” I said, leaning back to look at him.
“You looked awfully beat up there for a minute, and
Shawna was carrying on the other day about being
worried about you. Your health, I mean. I blew her
off; I thought she was just being Shawna. Should I
have?”
He made a small, disgusted noise.
“You should have. She drives me nuts with that
sweet-concern business. I’m thinking about assigning
her to Hayes. He can’t stand her. Yes, to answer your
question, I’m okay. I just hate Atlanta. And I’m getting
really sick of this money-raising business.”
“Why don’t you let somebody else take that over?”
I said, picking up the platter and putting it into the
microwave. “Surely Hayes could do it by himself by
now; he goes with you every time you go.”
“Most investors still want to see the honcho do his
dog and pony show,” he said, rubbing his eyes. “Makes
’em feel like they can jerk him around. Which of course
they can. You want a glass of wine while that’s heat-
ing?”
“No,” I said, perhaps more forcefully than I meant
to, and he shot an oblique look at me but said nothing
more. He poured himself a glass and sat back down
at the table.
“So tell me about the island,” he said. “I assume you
stayed over there? Shawna said you hadn’t called in
when I called the office.”
184 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“I was going to call her in the morning and find out
where you were and all that,” I said. “Yes, I did stay
over. It was awfully foggy, but I got some nice water-
colors started, and one morning of photographs. Oh,
and I saw Nissy and she has a colt! Wouldn’t…isn’t
that something? You remember, we’ve never known
how old she is, so we thought maybe she was too old
to have a baby, but apparently not. I’d love to know
who the daddy is. Oh, and I met that new man of
yours. That Lou Cassells person. He came over looking
for his granddaughter. She’d run away after the ponies
and ended up at the house.”
“Cassells…” he said reflectively. “Oh. Yeah. The plant
guy, the Cuban. His granddaughter was at the house?”
“Yes. Apparently she saw the ponies and had been
chasing them around for a while, and sneaked out early
yesterday morning and followed them over to our
place. I’d been feeding them, so they’re hanging
around. She’s a nice child, about five, I guess. There’s
a sad little story about her I’ll tell you sometime, but
right now you need to eat and then I need a snuggle,
and there’s just no telling where that could lead.”
I smiled at him and he smiled back. I did not men-
tion seeing the child the night before, in the fog, and
wished that I had not mentioned Lou Cassells, and
wondered why I had. That could have waited for
morning. This was not the time
Low Country / 185
for that. Perhaps there would not be a good time for
it. Perhaps I would, after all, just let the whole thing
lie. I did not want to tax my tired husband with that
can of worms. It all seemed, suddenly, so absurd as
to have been a fairy tale, something I had heard long
ago.
The microwave dinged and I took out the roast and
carved him a couple of slices and spooned the browned
vegetables onto his plate. He took a big mouthful and
smiled appreciatively around it.
“Estelle never forgets, does she?” he said.
“Never.” I smiled back. “I don’t, either. I made crème
caramel. We can eat it in bed.”
“Well, you hussy,” he said, grinning a little. It was
the grin I loved most. I had not seen it in some time.
“Can’t you even let a man get his nourishment first?”
“Be quick about it,” I said.
An hour later we lay tangled together in the big bed
in our “real” bedroom, the one that faced the sea. The
drapes were closed against the darkness, and they
muffled the sound of the waves. The palms still
scratched and rattled, though, and banged against the
wrought-iron railing of the balcony that lay beyond
the French doors. I burrowed my ear deep into the
hollow of Clay’s naked shoulder and heard, instead of
the palms, the roar of my own diminishing blood and
the pulse of his. If I moved my head slightly I could
186 / Anne Rivers Siddons
taste the sweet salt sweat on his neck. I did that, tasted
the essence of Clay after love, and hugged him hard
with the other arm that was flung over his chest. He
hugged back.
“Not bad for an old bag,” he said drowsily into my
hair. His breath tickled.
“Or for an old crock,” I said. “The only trouble is, I
know all your tricks. Why don’t you get some new
tricks to amaze and delight me?”
“And just where do you suggest I get them? Shawna?
Some daughter of joy from the mean streets of At-
lanta?”
“You could get a book,” I said. “Or we could rent a
video. I bet Hayes knows some good ones.”
He laughed and shifted me slightly in his arms. We
lay still for a while, I listening to the regular cadence
of his breathing. I kept thinking that I would get up
and bring the comforter and spread it over us, but I
did not move, and before long I began to think that
he had fallen asleep. But he had not.
“So what do you think of him? My new guy?” he
said, when I was just thinking that I would disengage
myself and get up. My stomach gave a small squeeze
of anxiety. I did not want to speak of this. I was done
with this.
“Oh, who cares?” I said. “Go to sleep. It’s almost
three.”
“I’m not sleepy,” he said into the dark. “No
Low Country / 187
kidding, what did you think of him? His credentials
are good, but I don’t know…there’s something about
him. I realized after I hired him that I really don’t know
anything about him.”
For some reason, I felt a stab of perversely propriet-
ary protectiveness toward Lou Cassells. I said, “He
seemed fine. Like I said, he had his little granddaughter
with him and he’s certainly crazy about her. He’s ap-
parently had a pretty rough life; he just lost his wife,
and his daughter…died…having a baby, back in Cuba.
He takes care of the child now. You’ve got to admire
that.”
“I suppose,” Clay said. “I just don’t much like the
idea of him hanging around the house over there, or
knowing when you’re there and when you’re not. I’m
going to have to make that clear, I think.”
“No, don’t. He wouldn’t have been there if the little
girl hadn’t come there. He told Lottie he didn’t plan
to bother me.”
“Lottie…oh, terrific. I guess he’s shagging Lottie
Funderburke like half of the rest of my staff, huh?”
“Well, you don’t have any rules about that, do you?
Let him be. He was…nice. And apparently he’s highly
educated. He was telling me a little about himself.”
Clay lay in the darkness for a while, and then he
said, “What else did you talk about?”
“Oh…nothing. Everything. About Day
188 / Anne Rivers Siddons
clear. He’s staying over there, and you know who
with? Ezra Upchurch. Isn’t that something? Ezra, back
in Dayclear?”
“There goes the neighborhood,” Clay said neutrally.
“So…did he say what he was doing over there? Ezra,
I mean? Him, too, for that matter. I thought he lived
on John’s Island. I thought they both did.”
“He’s visiting his old aunt, apparently. She’s the only
one he’s got left, Lou said. Ezra, I mean. As for Lou,
he’s there because he knew Ezra somehow or other on
John’s Island and I guess this is a lot closer to his work.
He didn’t say.”
“Lou, huh?”
“It’s what he said his name was, Clay.”
“He told me Luis.”
“Well, what’s the difference?”
“It’s just…familiar, that’s all. I don’t like the idea of
him being familiar with you. I want you to tell me if
you see him over there again. As a matter of fact, it
might be a good idea if you gave the island a rest for
a while.”
“Why, for pity’s sake?” I could not keep the exasper-
ation out of my voice. This was not at all like Clay.
Not at all.
“Oh, for Christ’s sake, Caro, because I said so,
okay?” he snapped. “Is it a terrible great lot to ask, just
for a little while?”
I raised myself up on one elbow and stared at him.
Low Country / 189
“I think you’re jealous, and I think it’s absolutely ri-
diculous,” I said.
He raised himself up, too, and glared at me.
“Jealous of you and a…Cuban Jew gardener? Not
hardly,” he said, and there was something cold in his
voice.
I was stung.
“Well, maybe you ought to be concerned, though
not for the reason you think,” I said, trying to match
his coldness with my own. “He seems to know an awful
lot about your business. He seems to think you’re
about to put a resort over there in Dayclear. In fact,
he’s awfully sure about that. If he’s telling me about
it, who knows who else he’s telling? If you have to
make anything clear to him, that’s what you ought to
clear up. It made my hair stand on end.”
The cold sickness did not start until the silence had
spun out so long that it was obvious that he was not
going to answer me. Then it flooded me and took me
deep under, so that I could not move or get my breath
to speak. Over it, very gradually, came not anger, or
fear, but a terrible desolation that was the sum of every
bad thing I have ever known was waiting ahead for
me. It was not anxiety or even terror; that presupposes
a catastrophic event still ahead of you. This event was
here. I knew as certainly as I knew it was I who sat
here in the dark with Clay that what Luis Cassells had
said was true, and that my