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
“
Ummm hummm! Stick ’im up
!”
“And the man take Ber Rabbit, say, ‘Oh, I got you
now, Ber Rabbit!’
“‘Ohhhhhh, don’t throw me in there! I rather you
kill me!’
“So he take the rabbit and throw ’im in the briar-
wood patch. The rabbit say, ‘You fool you! This where
I born and raise!’”
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“
Born and raise! Ummm hummm
!”
They both fell silent. Mrs. Upchurch’s head nodded
down on her chest. I thought she slept but could not
be sure. No one moved or spoke. I looked over at
Sophia Bridges. Her face was closed and still, and she
had pulled her body slightly backward, as if to remove
herself as far as possible from the story and the
storyteller. I looked at Mark. He was rapt, his mouth
in a perfect O.
Ezra Upchurch was looking at him, too.
“Good story, huh, Mark? You’ll have to come back
soon. She knows all the old stories there are to know.
All the old games, too. Lita knows some of them; she
can teach them to you.”
Sophia Bridges stirred and started to speak, but he
broke in over her.
“Now, before we all go, I want to sing you my
auntie’s favorite song. She always sings it for visitors
before they go, but she’s a little tired, I see. She’ll jerk
a knot in me if I don’t sing it for her, though.”
And he stood, as easily as if he were alone in the
room, shining like a basalt cliff in the gloom, and threw
back his head, and began to sing. His voice rolled and
caromed in the little room, as full and complex as deep
winter water.
“Honey in the rock, got to feed God’s
children.
256 / Anne Rivers Siddons
Honey in the rock, honey in the rock.
Honey in the rock, got to feed God’s
children,
Feed every child of God.”
Luis Cassells came in with him:
“Oh, children, one of these mornings I was
walking long.
I saw the grapes was a’hangin’ down.
Lord, I took a bunch and I suck the juice,
It’s the sweetest juice that I ever taste.”
The deep male voices climbed in the frail afternoon
light slanting through the little panes, filling the house
up to the rafters, spilling out into the clear air.
“Satan mad and I so glad.
He missed the soul that he thought he had.
Oh, the devil so mad and I so glad,
He missed the soul he thought he had.
Honey in the rock, honey in the rock
Got to feed God’s children now.”
When they had finished there was no sound but the
gentle bubbling snore from Mrs. Upchurch, and the
song seemed to spin on and on. I felt my hands and
feet tingle, and my face burn as if I were blushing. It
had been inexpli
Low Country / 257
cably, incredibly beautiful. Across from me Sophia
Bridges seemed as still and empty as someone in a
coma. Mark looked from one adult to another, as if
waiting for whatever would come next.
Mrs. Tuesday Upchurch shook herself and came
back to us. She hauled herself to her feet and tottered
over to Mark and Sophia. She put her bleached,
wrinkled old hand on the boy’s head and smiled down
at him. He did not move. She picked up Sophia’s limp
hand and peered up into her remote face.
“You remember about Ber Rabbit, girl,” she said
softly. “When you born and raised in the briarwood
patch, the briars can’t hurt you.”
Then she turned and shuffled out of the room,
through a dusty old velvet curtain hanging in a door-
way, and was gone.
“Auntie needs to sleep now,” Ezra said. “How about
I take you all on a little tour of Dayclear, let you meet
some of the other old-timers?”
“We have to go. We’ve stayed much longer than I
intended,” Sophia Bridges said abruptly. What was it
in her eyes? Not just distaste. Fear? But how could
that be?
She turned to me.
“Mark has a French lesson at four. We’ll have to
hurry if we’re going to make it.”
I stood, holding out my hand to Ezra.
“Ezra, please thank your aunt for us,” I said.
258 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“It was a wonderful lunch, and we loved the story and
the song. I hope—”
“No,” said Mark Bridges clearly.
“What?”
His mother looked at him. We all did.
“No, I don’t want to go home in the car. I want to
go home on the motorcycle,” he said. His voice was a
papery whisper, like the wings of a dead wasp.
“Mark, for heaven’s sake! I’m not about to let you
get on that thing; it scared you to death this morning,”
Sophia said. “Get your things now.”
“No. The motorcycle.”
He did not have a tantrum. He did not cry or beg.
He did not even speak again. He merely looked at his
mother with all the force of those enormous, extraor-
dinary eyes. They seemed to spill pure, liquid light out
into the room.
“It’ll easily carry three,” Ezra said quietly. “I can wrap
you both up in my sweaters and scarves. We can go
real, real slow. It hardly makes any noise at all that
way. It’ll only take a few minutes, just a little longer
than the car would.”
Mark stared, unblinking, at his mother. His face was
suddenly heartbreakingly beautiful. Why had I ever
thought it strange?
She raised her hands and shoulders and dropped
them helplessly.
“All right. Okay. But if you miss your French
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lesson, you’re going to pay for it yourself, out of your
allowance,” she said.
Without moving at all, his face shone like the young
sun. Hers was cold and shuttered. Ezra Upchurch
merely smiled, his big, genial wolf’s smile, and left to
get warm wraps. Sophia would not look at me. She
did not again, that day.
Luis walked me up the road to the car, carrying the
sleeping child in his arms. He put his head into the
open window after I had shut the door.
“You going home now?” he said.
“Yes.”
“Going to have a drink with Mengele?”
“He’s out of town. Don’t call him that. I asked you
not to.”
“Good,” he said, as if he had not heard me. “You
drink too much.”
“How do you know how much I drink?”
“I know about you.”
“How? Why?”
“Research. I always know my territory.”
“You’re a tough cookie, aren’t you?” I said.
“No. If I was a tough cookie I’d be back in Miami
practicing pro bono law.”
“So why
are
you here?”
He did not answer. Suddenly, I thought I knew.
“You’re one of them, aren’t you? You’re with Ezra;
you’re one of his activists, or whatever it is he calls
them. That’s why both of you are in Day
260 / Anne Rivers Siddons
clear right now. You knew all about the project before
you even came to work for Clay. I could have you fired,
Luis Cassells. You’re a mole.”
He shifted the child in his arms and looked at me
levelly.
“You going to?”
I shook my head slowly, suddenly so tired I could
hardly hold it up.
“No.”
“Why not? It’s the only loyal thing to do, Caro. You
know you’re going to go along with him in the end.…”
“I don’t know anything of the sort. I just said I’d
think about it. They’re going to redesign everything
and get back to me. There’s all kinds of time yet.…”
“There’s never time,” he said, and pulled his head
out of the window, and carried his sleeping grand-
daughter back down the sandy road toward the house
of Ezra Upchurch’s aunt.
E
ver since I was a small child I have had the
fancy
that, between Thanksgiving and New Year’s Day, time
somehow stops. I knew then and know now, of course,
that each day wheels past at its appointed pace, but it
has never seemed to me that it is real time that passed.
That strange, glittering, suspended time seems swung
between two realities: it belongs to no sober workaday
chronology that I know. It is, in effect, the Washington,
D.C., of the calendar year. And so it was with this
holiday season. I walked lightly and carefully in that
bubble of timelessness and thought neither behind me
nor ahead, and was for the interval oddly happy.
I did not really forget what had happened to the
company and more particularly and terrible to Jeremy
Fowler, but I found that I could put it away for the
nonce. And there was no
262 / Anne Rivers Siddons
forgetting the heavy sword that dangled over Dayclear
and my island, but I did not have to remember it until
after the holidays were over. This gift of suspended
time was one of the sweetest and most unanticipated
that I have ever received. I was as awed and delighted
with it as a child with a wonderful, unexpected present.
And for that period I behaved, I believe, more like a
child than I have since I was one myself, or my children
were. I was sometimes shamefully silly when Carter
and Kylie were very young, but the silliness went, as
did so much else, with my daughter, down into the
sea. Now it was back. I indulged it gratefully. I would,
I promised myself, shape up and buckle down to my
real life on the second of January.
I dragged home an enormous Frasier fir tree from
the island nursery and put it up in front of the glass
windows in the big living room and spent an entire
day decorating it with the cartons of ornaments and
lights we had stored when I took to having smaller,
more understated trees and putting them in the small
library that overlooked the back garden. After Kylie I
could not seem to bear the thought of those tender,
annunciatory lights shining on that black sea. No one
had ever mentioned it, but when Clay saw the tree,
and when Carter came home from Puerto Rico and
first spied it, their faces lit in a way that told me the
loss of the big tree had been hurtful.
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My heart smote me. Selfish; I had never even thought
of that.
And since we had the tree up anyway, I had an open
house and asked everybody we’d ever known in the
Charleston area, or almost, and was surprised and
gratified that almost all of them came. It was an old-
fashioned party; I had eggnog and Charleston Light
Dragoon Punch and benné seed cake and my grand-
mother’s fruitcake, and Estelle made divinity and pea-
nut candy, but there was little on my buffet that was
sophisticated or clever. Looking over my food list, I
saw that I was indeed having a children’s party, and
so I moved the time to four in the afternoon and in-
vited the children of my guests, and a great many of
them came, too.
The party was such a success that many people
suggested we make it an annual occasion.
“Of course,” I replied, and “Why not?”
Next year was so far outside my bubble of now that
it need not even be reckoned with. In the meantime,
the assorted children darting and shrieking around the
tree and through the living room and out onto the lawn
gave our house the air of a Lord & Taylor Christmas
window, and that is how I chose to regard it. We had
recordings of the traditional carols, and small presents
for the children, and there was enough laughter and
singing to fill the vast cave of the living room, for once,
to its eaves. When dusk fell and the
264 / Anne Rivers Siddons
lights of the tree swam in their underwater radiance
against the darkening sea and sky, only living children
were reflected in my wall of windows. If a small shade
joined them, I resolutely did not see.
I was truly moved to see how much Clay enjoyed
the party. I did not realize until I saw him laughing
with his guests and their children how quiet he had
become, how far into himself he had drawn. I was ac-
customed to Clay’s going away inside his own head
when there was a new project on his drawing board,
but only when he emerged into our Christmas world,
blinking and smiling, did I see that there had been a
quality of somberness, almost of mourning, in his ab-
straction. Of course there was Jeremy, and the great
peril that hung over the company, but I knew this was
more, and I knew what it was. But I did not have to
deal with it for the time being. It was enough that I
had Clay back. I was determined to keep him as long
as I could.
So we became social butterflies, something I, at least,
had never been. We went to every party we were asked
to; there was hardly a reception or open house or
cocktail or dinner party from Georgetown to Beaufort
that we did not attend. Sometimes, if the drive was
long, we stayed over, either with friends or at an inn.
We had done that so seldom in our marriage that it
was festive and somehow erotic to me to wake up be-
side my hus
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