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
band in a pretty eighteenth-century bedroom that was
not mine, with breakfast made by someone else waiting
for us when we chose to come down. We slept late,
ate heartily of shrimp and grits and oysters in every
imaginable style and creamed seafood in patty shells
and crab cakes according to the receipts of a dozen
Charleston grandmothers, and we danced, and we
even sang a little when someone played a piano in the
late evenings or with the car radio, riding home on the
black, deserted roads, with the cold Christmas moon
silvering the marshes alongside us. I had not heard
Clay sing since we were young marrieds; it simply did
not seem to occur to him. He smiled often, now, and
laughed outright more than he had in what seemed to
me years. Whenever I glanced over at him, at a party
or on one of the moon-flooded drives home, I caught
him looking at me with something in his eyes that had
not been there in a long time.
I never wanted those suspended days to end.
On impulse we spent Christmas in Key West, meet-
ing Carter there when he came in from Puerto Rico,
and it was an eccentric, sweet, indolent time. I had a
heady, sweetheart-of-the-regiment feeling the entire
three days, with the two tall blond men on either side
of me everywhere I went, and the hot sun beating
down on my bare head and shoulders. It was strange
and funky and so tropical as to be safe, for there was
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no shard of Christmases past to sting and cut me. For
the past five years, Christmas Eve and Christmas Day
had been dead times for me. But this one was raffish,
excessive, and totally alive. I thought that this would
be what we must do each year from now on, though
the thought of future Christmases seemed entirely un-
real to me.
In the week between Christmas and New Year’s we
went to a party at Hayes and Lucy’s house on Church
Street. It had been Hayes’s notion to invite his oldest
friends, those who had grown up with him and gone
to Virginia with him and Clay, and so we were surroun-
ded with many of the people I had first met even before
Clay and I married, the handful of couples who had
been my first real “crowd,” and who had remained so
until our children started to come and we moved away
from one another. Almost everybody came, for every-
one loves to visit Charleston, and Hayes had taken a
block of rooms at a nearby inn and footed the bill as
his Christmas present to his guests. If I wondered how
on earth he could afford it, I did not wonder long.
Hayes’s finances belonged outside the bubble. Inside
there was only room for the funny, lost young Hayes
who had brought Clay to me on a hot summer day,
out of a blinding glitter of dying sunlight.
Hayes and Lucy’s house is one of the big old
Charleston double houses, which means that it is
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two rooms wide instead of one, and very long. Its up-
stairs and downstairs piazzas were hung with garlands
of smilax and holly, and tinsel and tiny white Christ-
mas lights studded the crape myrtle trees and the lower
branches of the live oaks that hung over the garden.
It was a crisp night, too chilly to be outside, but we
went out at midnight to sing carols, and the sound of
our whiskey-sweet voices climbing into the night sky
over the old vine-covered back garden walls of Church
Street, and the clouds of frosty breath on which the
songs floated, and the yellow flames of candlelight
from neighboring windows all made that night as en-
chanted as if it had fallen in Avalon. I stood in a circle
with these people who had been my first friends as a
married woman, who had been young with me, our
arms around one another’s waists and shoulders, and
thought that if I should have to die suddenly, I would
not be sorry if it was on a night like this. It was a se-
ductive enough thought to frighten me, and I went
back into the house and asked Hayes for another old-
fashioned. Looking back, I see that I drank a lot in
those days of the bubble, but it was not as it was in
other times. I never seemed to get tipsy at all.
We stayed over with Hayes and Lucy that night, and
made hilarious and silent love in their high-ceilinged
old guest room, under an embroidered coverlet that
had come, Lucy said, with one
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of her forebears from England in the time of the Lord
Proprietors. I think, though, that she exaggerated; Clay
and I gave the coverlet a rather muscular workout and
it was still intact in all its silky shabbiness in the
morning. We laughed a great deal that night, silently,
with our hands over our mouths, for our bedroom was
just down the hall from Hayes and Lucy’s, and neither
of us felt like listening to Hayes’s sly insinuations at
breakfast. It was very late when we finally lay still and
sliding toward sleep, and Clay said, “I wish this night
would never end.”
I traced my finger along his bare chest. It was slick
with cooling sweat.
“I do, too,” I said, feeling tears prick my eyes and
blinking them back. “Oh, I do, too.”
In all that spangled and fragile country there was
one place that I could not go, and that was to the
house on the island. I did not even try. I was afraid,
and knew it clearly, and knew what I feared: both that
in the long, still nights I would hear the laughter and
voice of my dead child, and that I would not. The mere
thought of sitting alone all night in that darkened living
room overlooking the creek—for I knew that I would
not sleep—made me break out in a cold sweat at my
hairline. One way or another, the island house was
haunted for me now.
Oh, I could go in the daytime for a little while, and
did once or twice, but soon I stopped
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even that. The winter dark came down too soon. The
silence that I had so loved waited too breathlessly for
sounds that could not come…or could, and bring
madness with them. I knew this notion of mine was
not rational. I would, I resolved, deal with it as I could
with all the other things that bumped like sharks at the
aquarium wall of my bubble, after the holidays. But I
missed the island, and I found that I missed the ponies
and Lita and even Luis Cassells in some unexplored
way. So I filled the days that remained to me inside
the bubble with activity, from first light to long after
dark. I polished silver, washed windows, cleaned out
long-neglected closets, took curtains and drapes to be
cleaned, attacked the neglected winter garden with a
vengeance. It pleased and soothed me, somehow, to
feel with my fingers the lares and penates of my mar-
riage and my life with Clay, to tend them, to put them
away renewed and shining. I sang as I tended and
counted my treasures.
One morning toward New Year’s I was preparing
to leave the nursery with a trunkful of new rose cuttings
and ran into Luis Cassells. It was a raw day, with wisps
of the morning’s fog still curling among the ocean pines
and clinging in heavy droplets to the moss, and he
wore a hooded sweatshirt and thick-soled boots caked
with the black mud of the marsh. He had two enorm-
ous sacks of fertilizer in his big arms, and
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he grinned around them when he saw me.
“Miz Mengele!” he yelled across the parking lot.
“Happy holidays to you and yours!”
Heads turned toward me, and my face reddened. I
could feel it. At the same time I felt the corners of my
mouth tug upward, and a laugh start low in my throat.
He was outrageous and incorrigible, and I had missed
him.
“And to you and yours,” I called back, and went over
to the Peacock Plantation pickup truck, where he was
storing the fertilizer. “Have you had a good Christ-
mas?”
“You ask a Jew that?” He laughed. “Oh, hell, what
chance does a poor lone Jew have down here? We had
an old-fashioned Dayclear Christmas, and that, my
lady, is some kind of Christmas indeed. A combination
of Southern Baptist and Kwanza and Hanukkah, with
a little Anglican and Disneyland thrown in. We cooked
and ate for three days, and went to a Christmas Eve
watch service and shouted and sang until dawn, and
Ezra cooked a wild turkey somebody shot illegally and
gave him, and Auntie Tuesday made hoppin’ John and
cooked seven thousand pounds of yams, and I made
black beans and rice to go with it, and Sophia ordered
bagels and lox from the H&H deli in New York for
Christmas breakfast, and Lita and Mark threw up three
times apiece on Christmas Day. It was totally satisfact-
ory.”
Low Country / 271
I lifted my eyebrows.
“Sophia and Mark?”
He grinned; with only his face showing under the
tight-drawn hood, I thought that he looked like a
werewolf.
“Well, nobody else asked her for Christmas. Ezra
thought it was the only neighborly thing to do.”
“Oh, Lord,” I said, aghast. “I thought surely she’d
be going back to New York for the holidays. I should
have checked; it’s sort of my job to see that all the of-
fice crowd has somewhere to go for holidays. I just
got busy, and then we went to Key West…I’ll call her
this morning and apologize.”
“I wouldn’t bother,” he said. “Looked to me like she
had a great time. Oh, she showed up in some kind of
suede jumpsuit thing and high-heeled boots that cost
more than Auntie’s house, and she still isn’t used to
brushing a chicken off wherever she wants to sit down,
but she’s learning. She’s learning. She makes careful
notes on everything that happens in her little leather
Day-Timer, and she’s about to run everybody crazy
with that tape recorder and camera, and she still talks
about ‘the Gullah experience’ and ‘the oral tradition’
and a pile of shit nobody can understand, but she’s
Ezra’s guest and they’re getting used to her, and
nobody gets ruffled up about her much anymore. And
they love the little boy. He
272 / Anne Rivers Siddons
used to cry whenever somebody touched him, and it
took him four or five visits to start talking, but he’s
jabbering a blue streak now. Lita has taken him under
her wing. In another month they’ll both be little Gullah
younguns.”
“Four or five visits…she goes over there often then,”
I said. Somehow I simply could not see it, remote, el-
egant Sophia Bridges spending her days in the hard-
scrabble clutter and the warm, smoky funk of Dayclear.
“She’s come almost every day,” Luis said. “She’s
taking her assignment from Mengele very seriously,
whatever it is. She says only that she’s studying the
culture under his auspices and with his blessings. I
don’t ask her anymore what she aims to do with her
newfound knowledge, or what he does. You’ll notice
I’m not asking you, either.”
“I really don’t know,” I said, feeling the walls of the
bubble quiver perilously. “And I’m not going to ask
Clay. You know what I told you, about them coming
up with a better plan…for everything. I’m sure Sophia’s
research is part of that, but beyond that I just—”
“—don’t know,” he finished for me. “Ah, yes. Well.
Come and have a cup of coffee with me and tell me
what you do know. I promise not to ask you anything
else about the island except why you haven’t been over
there lately. We’ve been looking for you almost every
day. Lita is
Low Country / 273
driving me crazy about the ponies, but I’m not going
to take her to see them without you along, and besides,
I haven’t seen them or their calling cards for a while.”
I hesitated, but then I went with him to the chic little
coffee shop on the traffic circle nearby. We took our
cups to a corner table and he pulled the hood off his
big head and was the Luis Cassells I knew again, half
mythic creature and half lowland gorilla. His hours in
the winter sun had kept him walnut brown, and his
teeth flashed piratically in the dimness of the little shop.
I saw a face I knew at a table across the room and
sighed. Shawna would be in Clay’s office within the
hour, smiling archly and twittering about seeing me
having a little coffee date with the hired help. I did not
care if Clay knew, but I hated the smirk on Shawna’s
proprietary face and hoped devoutly that Hayes was
not around when she told Clay.
“So why haven’t we seen you?” he said matter-of-
factly. “What’s the matter?”
“Why does something have to be the matter?” I said,
annoyed. “I’ve just been busy. Christmas is always a
zoo down here, and then we went to Key West over
Christmas Eve and Day, and there have been a bunch
of parties in Charleston.…”
“Ah, I forgot. Miz Mengele is a social lioness. Of