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
blab it to you. Carter says to tell you that if you really
want to do something, pick Clay up at the airport in
Charleston tomorrow and take him somewhere nice
and relaxing for lunch, and then make him go home
and rest for the rest of the day. I told him I’d tell you.
And when I couldn’t raise you at the house, I knew
I’d find you here.”
“Did Clay ask you to tell me all this, Hayes?” I said,
my voice trembling. “Does he want me to take this
proposal over to Dayclear?”
Hayes looked at me soberly, and then shook his
head.
“No. He doesn’t know I’ve told you about our
needing to move things up, and he didn’t ask me to
ask you to go over there with it. I took that on myself.
It might have been the wrong thing to do, and he’ll
probably be pissed as hell at me, but I just couldn’t
dump anything more on him right now. And this has
got, repeat
got
, to be done and done soon. You can
tell him I told you if you want to. You know better
than any of us what he can take and what he can’t.”
322 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“I wonder if I do?” I said so softly that I did not
know if he heard me or not. Oh, my poor Clay…
“You really do love him, don’t you?” Hayes said.
“Your face looked like you were seeing ghosts.”
“I was,” I said drearily. “Yes, Hayes, I really do love
him. I always did. Did you ever doubt it?”
“Then…are you going to tell him I told you?”
“I don’t know. I just don’t know. I’ll have to wait
and see how he is when I pick him up tomorrow. I’m
not going to have him collapsing in the airport or
something. You’ll just have to trust my judgment on
that. Eventually I will tell him, of course.”
“Eventually I hope you will, or I will,” he said. “It’s
just that right now he needs for things to let up a little.
It’s a damned shame that the project has got to go
forward right away; I wish we did have those three
months he promised you. I just thought you might be
willing to take some of the load off him by talking to
them over at Dayclear.”
“You always did know which of my buttons to push,”
I said to him, and he smiled a little.
“I guess I did,” he said. “You don’t try to hide them,
do you? Well, will you do that at least? Will you go
over there and give them the proposition? If that hurdle
could be behind him when he gets
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back, it would be a bigger help than you know.”
“Hayes, I…yes. Okay. I’ll do that. I may or may not
tell Clay you came to me with this, but I’ll go over
there and tell them what you propose for the property.
I may tell them I hate it, but I’ll wait till they’ve heard
the whole thing before I do that.”
“When will you go?”
I shook my head.
“Don’t push me on this. I’ll get to it. I want to think
it out first. You know I’m never going to find it accept-
able. But it should be up to them, and I’ll leave it like
that.”
“Fair enough,” he said, turning to get into the
Porsche and go back to his brunch and his Bowl
games. “Don’t leave it too long, though, Caro. It
wouldn’t do Clay any good at all to lose this offer. Not
at all.”
“You let me be the judge of what’s good for Clay,
Hayes,” I said, but he had started the big, soft engine
and did not hear me. I stood on the porch watching
the Porsche race off through the trees, leaving a rooster
tail of black mud-mist behind it, thinking it looked like
blackness and misery and meanness on four wheels
and very glad indeed that it was leaving my part of the
island.
When I picked Clay up at the airport in Charleston
late the next morning, he looked like a man
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returning from a funeral, and I hugged him hard and
we went to lunch at a crab shack on Edisto and had
crab cakes and beer, and then I drove us home and
bullied him into taking a nap, and he slept far into that
night, and I did not tell him what Hayes had come to
ask of me.
Time enough for that.
I
didn’t tell him for over a week. For the first
part of
that time I was afraid that he was seriously ill. For the
middle part of it he slept. During the last of it he was
gone again. By the time I got to him, almost everyone
on Peacock’s Island knew what my decision was but
my husband.
By that time, everything had changed.
I got him to the doctor the day after he got in. He
did not even argue vigorously; he was too subdued for
that, and his stomach was hurting him rather a lot. He
did not tell me this, but he did voluntarily ask for an
antacid. I had never known him to take one before.
When he went to get water to wash it down, I called
Charlie Porter in Charleston and he worked us in late
that afternoon.
Charlie had been at Virginia with Clay and Hayes,
and they had remained friends as well as
326 / Anne Rivers Siddons
doctor and patients. He had a lucrative practice in the
new medical complex over on Calhoun, and he and
Hayes played tennis a couple of times a week, or sailed
from the Yacht Club. Clay saw him less often, but
regularly, usually when he was in Charleston overnight.
Charlie and Happy sometimes had him to dinner at
their house on Tradd, or he and Charlie went to the
club. Charlie was tall, thin, bald, and laid-back to the
point of seeming asleep much of the time you were
talking to him. But he wasn’t.
“What you need most is a solid month at one of
your own resorts,” he said at the end of the day, when
he had come with Clay back to the town house on
Eliott and was having a drink with us. He stood in
front of the fireplace, where I had lit the little fatwood
fire that was kept laid there, his hands in his pockets,
rocking back and forth.
“I don’t feel tired,” Clay said restlessly. “I never did.
I just got too hot and got dizzy for a minute. You
never got too hot?”
“I never move that fast,” Charlie said affably, and
took a swallow of his scotch. “I don’t care how you
feel. You don’t know how you feel. That’s your prob-
lem. You’ve been running flat out on empty for a long
time. You need some rest and I’m not kidding about
that. What do you think an ulcer means? What do
you think passing out in the middle of a parking lot
means? I know
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about that; Hayes told me. Carter told him. You’re
lucky there’s not any permanent damage. Your heart
and your blood pressure are basically okay, though I’d
like to get the pressure down some. But there are other
indicators and you’ve got all of them. God knows what
your blood work will show. What are you eating?
Are
you eating? You say you’re not sleeping very well.…”
“I never slept a lot.…” Clay said, not looking at him.
“You slept more than two or three hours a night or
you’d be dead,” Charlie said.
“Can you do anything with him, Stretch?” he said,
looking over at me. He has called me that ever since
we met. I come about to Charlie’s shoulder when we
stand together.
“Nothing short of drugging him,” I said lightly, to
mask the concern I felt. I was glad to hear that Clay’s
heart was not faulty, but I did not like the sound of
the passing out or the insomnia. Not at all. I could not
remember a time when Clay had not simply functioned
physically like a well-made machine.
“Then that’s what we’ll do,” Charlie said.
And that’s what we did. Charlie wrote a prescription
for Halcion and Zantac, and I went to the big Eckard’s
on Calhoun and had them filled. On the way home I
looked at the dense little city unrolling outside my
windows. It was still balmy and there were people on
all the narrow streets in
328 / Anne Rivers Siddons
the historic district and around Colonial Lake, strolling
or jogging or riding bicycles or in-line skating. The
twilight was clear and green, the kind of late winter
light that speaks of coming spring and blooming things,
and indeed, the big camellia bushes in the gardens of
most of the old houses were full to bursting, and
whenever I got in and out of the car I caught the breath
of the Confederate jasmine that is January’s gift to the
Lowcountry. I was caught and pinned with a sudden,
overwhelming sense of sheer community, of the pres-
ence all around me of my fellow species. It was a bene-
volent presence, and I did not feel it as a weight but
as a lifting.
Could I live here? I thought, turning off Meeting
Street onto Tradd. Lights were coming on in the
streetside windows. Through the sheer blinds and
curtains that people in the shoulder-to-shoulder district
South of Broad affect, I could see beautiful rooms
swimming with lamp and firelight reflected off polished
old wood, and the gleam of silver and china, and the
dark chiaroscuro of gilt-framed ancestors on paneled
walls.
If the worst happened, like Clay says it might, and
we could not live on Peacock’s anymore, could I come
and live in the little house on Eliott, and be a part of
this?
I could if I still had the island, I thought. But then
the image came, of masts and antennas and
Low Country / 329
aerials and putting greens and golf carts, and of the
silent pewter creek “redirected” so as to fool me into
thinking that there was no water traffic outside my
windows. A lump formed in my throat, and when Clay
asked if I wanted to stay over at the town house, I said
no, that I thought we should go home. I did not think
that anything but the dark marshes would cleanse my
mind of the pictures there.
When we got home I gave him one of the Halcions
and he went to bed in our big bedroom. He was
sleeping quietly when I came to bed a couple of hours
later. But when I woke up, he was asleep on the little
daybed in my sitting room across the hall.
“I got up to get some water and just wandered in
there and fell asleep,” he said. But the next morning I
awoke and found him there again.
“Okay. Tell me,” I said, when he woke, cramped and
stunned, to find me sitting in the wing chair beside
him.
“I…Caro, do you dream about Kylie?” he said, and
my heart stopped and then jolted forward again. Clay
had not spoken of Kylie since before Thanksgiving
when he had found me in her room.
“Sometimes,” I said after a while. “I didn’t know you
did, though.”
“I never have,” he said, and his face was slack
330 / Anne Rivers Siddons
and grayish in the early morning light, and his voice
empty. “But for the past two nights I’ve dreamed about
her, and they’re…not good dreams. It has something
to do with the ocean. It seems louder than it has, or
something…it keeps getting into my sleep. I always
liked that sound before, but now…Listen, would you
care if I slept in here for a while? Just until I get caught
up and back to the office?”
He had promised Charlie that he would take a long
weekend off. I had thought it was a wonderful idea,
but now I was not so sure. Maybe, in this new vulner-
ability of his, the structure and discipline of the office
would serve him better than this utterly alien, unformed
time. Then I thought, My poor lost Kylie. First I bind
her with my own need, and then her father, whom we
thought had let her go a long time ago, calls her back
with his delayed grief, or whatever this is. I had as-
sumed that he had dealt with his own pain in silence,
but perhaps he had merely buried it, and it had found
a weakness in the wall only now and broken through.
Old sorrow and an obscure anger welled; I can’t even
handle my own need for her, I thought. Don’t ask me
to shoulder yours.
“Of course I wouldn’t mind,” I said. “It’s probably
a good idea. Didn’t Charlie say that Halcion sometimes
caused increased dreaming?”
Clay sighed and rubbed his eyes, and turned over.
Low Country / 331
“I guess he did. I think I’ll nap just a little longer.
Don’t wait breakfast on me.”
He slept for most of three days and nights. Some-
times I came and sat beside him and simply looked at
him. In the dim light his Christmas tan looked
bleached, and his sun-streaked hair was simply a
lightless brown, dull, rough. He looked thinner and
smaller under the light duvet I had put over him, and
his face was naked and somehow blurred, hollow at
the cheekbones and temples. He looked at once much
younger and quite old. I remembered how he had
seemed to me the second time I saw him, when he had
come alone to the island in Shem Cutler’s boat, and I
had seen that he was not golden and radiant after all,
or limned in light, but merely a too-pale, too-thin out-
lander with no magic to him. Until he had smiled.