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
eous laughter, and the day slid smoothly into after-
noon, wrapped in sunlight and the sweet false spring.
Only then did I remember that it was New Year’s Eve.
We ate lunch late, and we ate for a long time. I
didn’t remember being so hungry for weeks, months.
We ate most of my sandwiches and a great deal of
Estelle’s fruitcake and divinity, and we finished off the
silky truffle pâté with cornichons and the baguette
Sophia brought.
“Where did you get this gorgeous stuff?” I said,
licking a smear of truffle off my fingers. You could
probably get pâtés in Charleston, but I knew that the
closest Peacock’s Island had to them was liverwurst.
Low Country / 293
“She ordered it from this little bistro she knows,
around the corner from her house in the Village,” Ezra
said, drawing out “beee-stro.” “She sent to Charleston
for the baguette. You could have fooled me. All this
time I thought I was eating French bread.”
Despite his disreputable clothes and shuck-and-jive
demeanor, I knew that he was no stranger to truffle
pâté and baguettes. Ezra had a town house in Wash-
ington, D.C., that I had heard was as spare and elegant
as he himself was massive and shambling. Lottie had
told me in amusement that
Architectural Digest
had
been after him for years to let them do a spread on it,
but he always told them that the hens were laying good
and he didn’t want to disturb them, or other of the
down-home nonsense that so charmed the national
media.
“I happen to know that you have a charge account
at Zabar’s,” Sophia retorted. She was lying with her
back against the railing of my porch, as indolent in the
slanting sun as a jungle cat. After our explosion of
mutual laughter, things between us had been comfort-
able, if not intimate. I enjoyed the comfort, knowing
that intimacy with me or many other people was
probably beyond this beautiful, tight-drawn creature.
I saw her smile fully and often only at Mark—and once
or twice at Ezra.
“Wouldn’t
that
be something,” I murmured
294 / Anne Rivers Siddons
to Luis, when they had gone to the Harley to stow the
plastic pitcher and the disposable champagne glasses
they had had, Ezra told us, to go to the Edisto Wal-
Mart for.
“A veritable mating of titans.” He grinned. “But I
wouldn’t count on it. I’d just as soon woo a totem pole
as Miz Sophia Bridges, and Ezra has at least six women
in every port. I don’t know how he’s standing his en-
forced celibacy down here.”
“Maybe he isn’t,” I said.
“Yeah, I think he is. He doesn’t cross the bridge to
Peacock’s that I know of, and he’s around Dayclear
practically all the time.”
“What does he do?”
“Hangs out, mostly. Talks to the old folks. Visits.
Listens to the tales. Tells some of them around the
stove. He’s preached once or twice. You forget he’s a
preacher sometimes, but you should hear him in the
pray house. It’s something to make your hair stand
up. And he’s with Sophia and Mark a lot. He’s show-
ing them all sorts of stuff, and she’s writing it down
in the goddamned little book of hers, or poking that
recorder in his face. And Mark is just drinking it in.
That kid has bloomed like kudzu. I don’t think he had
any idea he was black. Now I think he wishes he was
as black as Ezra.”
“That’s a switch for her,” I said. “I think all their
friends in New York were white as a field of
Low Country / 295
lilies. I’m surprised she allows the exposure.”
“Yeah, I am, too. There’s something going on there,
but I don’t know what it is. Sometimes she gets the
oddest look on her face, and sometimes she just…turns
her head. Or walks away. But she’s always back the
next day. If I didn’t know her for the little Mengele-ite
she is, I’d think her interest was more than anthropo-
logical. But leopards like that don’t usually change
their spots.”
The sun slanted lower, and was so beneficent on
our faces and arms that no one moved off the deck for
another hour or so. The children, worn out, napped
on the living room sofas. We four talked, but it was
not the sort of talk that demands or receives intense
attention. It was as drifting and desultory as the talk
between the oldest of friends, only we weren’t that. I
put it down to the cockeyed magic of this strange,
displaced spring day that had fallen into our midwinter.
Presently, into a lull, I said, “Why do you come back
here, Ezra?”
He did not answer for so long that I thought perhaps
I had offended him, and looked over at him. But his
big face was calm, and his eyes were fastened off on
the creek, where the glitter was turning from hot white
to gold.
“I think…to remember who I am,” he said. “And to
remember who they are. I don’t think we’re going to
have all this”—and his big arm
296 / Anne Rivers Siddons
made a sweeping motion that took in everything my
eyes could see and all that they couldn’t—“very much
longer.”
I said nothing. Neither did Sophia Bridges. We
carefully did not look at each other. I felt a bolt of
complicity leap from my mind to hers, though. Shame
and unease followed it. No fair. My bubble time was
not up yet.
“Nothing seems to have changed in Dayclear in a
hundred years,” Luis said sleepily. “It’s like Brigadoon.”
“I wish it were,” Ezra said. “The fact is, a lot has
changed just since I was here last, and lots more since
I left to go to college. The old ways are going. The old
stories are being forgotten, and the old dances, and
the old ways of making things…baskets, circle nets.
None of the young folks come back often enough to
learn the shouts or hear the histories and mythologies
of their own families. In another generation, nobody
is going to understand the language, much less speak
it, and no kids are going to play ‘Shoo, turkey, shoo,’
or sing ‘Sally ’round the sunshine.’ Nobody’s scared
of the hags and the plateyes anymore. We’ll even have
lost our ghosts, and that’s when you know you’re a
poor, sorry-assed people.”
I felt rather than saw Luis Cassells’s eyes on me. I
would not look up.
“And you’re here to try to preserve the old
Low Country / 297
ways? To see that they go on?” I said. I realized that
I sounded like an elementary school teacher talking to
her class, but I wanted to get off the ghost business
quickly.
“Oh, no,” he said, and laughed richly. “I leave all
those fine endeavors to Miz Bridges here. She a cultural
anthropologist atter all.” He gave it the rural black
pronunciation. Sophia’s mouth tightened.
“No, I’m just here to…bear witness, I guess. Oh, I
do what I can. When I preach I talk about the real
world, of course, because they live in it, after all, but
I always end with one of the old songs, and I use the
rhythms of the old shouts. For one thing, I love them.
They come right up out of my gut. For another, no
preacher is going to survive in these little communities
who doesn’t tap into those deepest feelings.
“It’s not that all the old ways are gone,” he went on.
“I could take you all right now and walk you not three
miles from here and show you a graveyard that’s
completely surrounded with woods, just buried in
them. Some of the graves are new, too. They’re hidden
in the woods so the poor spirits of the dead can’t get
out and get lost and roam away. And you’d be apt to
find an alarm clock on lots of those graves, an old rusty
drugstore windup job, with its hands stopped at the
moment of the deceased’s death. And pictures, photos,
in fancy frames. Family shots,
298 / Anne Rivers Siddons
mainly, but always what the dead loved most. I know
of one fine picture of a mule in that graveyard.
“All the old Dayclear names are there. Some of mine
are. My mama and grandmama are there. So is my
uncle, Auntie Tuesday’s husband. Peters. Miller. Cato.
Bullock.” He paused a moment and looked intently at
Sophia, who was digging for the tape recorder, to catch
the scholarly words.
“Mackey,” he said.
She put the recorder down and turned her head
away. But before she did, I thought I caught the glisten
of tears in her dark eyes, and then wondered if I had,
after all. It did not seem possible.
The silence that followed was no longer comfortable.
He seemed to realize that he had broken a spell.
“And I painted my front door blue, in D.C.,” he said
in a bantering tone. “Everybody admires it as a creative
touch. They don’t believe me when I tell ’em it wards
off evil spirits. But I haven’t had a plateye since I
moved in.”
We laughed, but we could not get the sleek skin of
the moment back. I looked around restlessly. The heat
was going out of the afternoon, and the sun was nearly
level with the tops of the trees far across the marsh,
on the verge of the inland waterway. The sky was
turning gold.
Low Country / 299
The old anxiety came stealing back, rising in my throat,
marching up my vertebrae one by one, like stair steps.
“I need to get back,” I said. “This has been…wonder-
ful. I can’t tell you. But I’ve got…stuff I need to do.”
“Me, too,” Sophia said briskly. “Mark and I have
been invited to a little New Year’s Eve party with some
of his kindergarten friends’ parents. Let me go get those
children on the road.”
“Can I persuade either of you to stay and listen to
me preach at the New Year’s Eve watch service to-
night?” Ezra said. “I can promise you more shouting
and singing than you ever heard. I am amazing when
I get going. You could get a whole chapter out of this
thing, Sophie Lou.”
“I really can’t. Thanks, though,” she said crisply. She
got up and went into the living room to wake the
children. In the darkening gold of sunset, she looked
suddenly very small and thin. What was it he had said,
to drive her away from us like this?
He looked after her, and then at Luis.
“Losin’ my fabled touch,” he said, and grinned, but
there was no warmth in it.
He settled Sophia and Mark on the Harley and eased
off down the driveway, slowly now, to take them back
to Dayclear, where Sophia’s car was. Luis and I sat on
the steps, watching the night come in from the west.
It was not coming
300 / Anne Rivers Siddons
fast, but it made me want to leap to my feet, to run for
my car, to be away and gone. Lita slept on in Luis’s
arms. He looked down at her, and then at me.
“I left the truck a half-mile or so down the road
where we saw the ponies,” he said. “If you need to go,
maybe you could drop us off there. I think I’ve lost the
princess for the night.”
“I will in a minute,” I said. I sat, listening to the night
wind that was ruffling the water far out, to the sleepy
twitters of the birds as they settled down off in the
hummocks. To the soughing of the great oaks over our
heads. To the tiny scratchings and rustlings that meant
the small night creatures were waking up, to hunt or
be hunted. There was nothing untoward, nothing I
had not heard a thousand times before out here. And
still I listened.…
“Let her go, Caro,” Luis said softly. “Just…let her
go.”
I turned my face to him, feeling the color drain out
of it.
“You mean…just forget her? Just…throw her out?”
He shook his head.
“Of course not. You won’t forget her. How could
you? I mean…stop calling her back with your need
and your hunger and your pain. It’s too big a burden
for one little ghost to carry. Send her off with your love
and pride and all the things
Low Country / 301
you laughed at and all the tears you cried together.
You won’t lose her. It’s like the old saying, ‘Hold a
bird lightly in the palm of your hand and it will always
come back to you.’ And maybe then there’ll be some
room inside you for…other things. Other people.”
I started to protest that there were other people in
my heart, many of them, but then did not. There was
a great grief rising in me, like a storm.
“How will I live without her?” I whispered.
“I’ll tell you. It’s a game I know. It works for me.
Just close your eyes and think of what you’d be willing
to die for, and then—live for it. It’s very simple, really.”
I just looked at him.
“The only rule of this game is that whatever you
choose has to be alive,” he said very gently.
I dropped my eyes. The heaviness of tears was near
to overflowing.
“Go on,” he said. “Try it. Close your eyes. Say to
yourself, ‘What would I die for?’ and grab the very
first thing that comes into your mind. No thinking
about it. The very first thing.”