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
of the baskets at Christmastime, and they have always
been received with what seems to me honest delight.
A flicker of red from the front of the house caught
my eye as I came up the shallow steps to the veranda.
It was a long way away, perhaps at the edge of the
dunes, perhaps even down on the beach itself, and I
felt my heart drop and pause and then start its old low,
slow, cold thumping. I knew it was ridiculous, and I
also knew that I was going to have to go down to the
edge of the front lawn and see what it was. The sick
coldness
Low Country / 25
would last all day if I did not. I put the basket of
flowers down on a wicker table on the veranda and
went around the side of the house and across the front
lawn, kept velvety and green all year by the Plantation
groundskeepers, and around the tabby apron to the
oval pool, and up to the little gray cypress landing that
led to the steps and boardwalk to the beach. Only then
did I lift my eyes to the water.
The sea was still gunmetal gray out at the horizon
line, but the cloud rift that had lit the horizon earlier
had drifted westward so that the beach shimmered in
a wash of pale lemon light and running cloud-shadow.
Strange, strange…somehow, even when the temperat-
ure is as mild as it usually is in November here, almost
blood warm, like the water, the shifting dunes and flat
beach and heaving sea seem cold to me, cold to the
bone, cold to death. There is the damp, of course; the
humidity of the Lowcountry is as much an element as
its tepid water and low, sweet sky. The air of the Sea
Islands is like a cloud against your skin in all its sea-
sons. But it is more than that: taken in the aggregate,
all that flickering, tossing, shivering, whispering pewter
and silver seem to chill me to the core, and it always
did, even at those infrequent times I came to a Low-
country beach in autumn as a child. It is in this season,
and in the winter that will follow, that I feel queerest,
the most alien, here; there should be dark, pointed firs
26 / Anne Rivers Siddons
against the sky, not rattling, brown-tipped palms. Na-
ked branches, wet black tree trunks, the bare bones of
the earth, instead of the canopy of living green of the
live oaks, the eternal fecund darkness of the sea pines.
I looked at the sea and was cold in my heart.
The red turned out to be an open beach umbrella,
bucking against the steady, moaning sea wind. I looked
beyond it into the surf line, knowing what I would see,
and did: swimmers, plunging in the lace-white edging
of the breaking waves. Now that I saw them, I listened
for and heard their voices: Canadians. Snowbirds. We
get them every fall and winter, and we laugh and shiver
when they swim determinedly every day but the very
worst ones, and march up and down the empty,
howling beach as if dead set on getting their winter
vacation money’s worth. If they ever hear the laughter
and see the shivers they apparently do not care. I have
seen one or two of them plowing mulishly into the
ocean when one of our rare, soft, wet snows was fall-
ing. Don’t laugh, Clay says. Without them the Inn and
the villas and the restaurants would almost close down
off season. I don’t laugh. I have always liked and ad-
mired them, those tough, foolish migrants. Good sense
was never a fault of mine, either.
My heart picked up its dragging pace and my breath
came seeping back, and I took my flowers into the
kitchen and arranged them in
Low Country / 27
some of the pottery vases that I collect and keep for
flowers, and left them by the door onto the veranda,
and went up to take my own shower. I heard Clay
moving around overhead in his study and knew that
he would be bent over the architect’s drafting table
that he keeps there, the working drawings for the
newest Peacock Plantation project, whatever it might
be, permanently map-tacked in place there. Clay has
a design staff second to none when it comes to attract-
ive, ecologically sensitive Lowcountry architecture and
interiors, but nothing comes off their boards that does
not go directly onto his, and this morning time in his
study is sacrosanct to everyone on his staff. Later he
would tend to the endless rounds of meetings and
conferences that made up his afternoons, and might
go on until very late at night, to dinners and confer-
ences and cigars and brandies in restaurants and
drawing rooms from Savannah up to Myrtle Beach,
according to where the fat new money was. But in the
mornings he stayed at home and put his hands directly
on his empire. It probably drove his people wild, but
it had made the Peacock Island Plantation properties
a name that rivaled that of Charles Fraser’s Sea Pines
Plantation Company in its halcyon earlier days. I
smiled, thinking of him there; he would be fully dressed
for his day, in one of his winter-weight tropical suits
or perhaps a gray seersucker. Clay
28 / Anne Rivers Siddons
almost never wore slacks and a jacket, and I saw him
without a tie usually only in bed.
I went up the central stairs, a freestanding iron
staircase made for Clay by an old black ironmonger
on James Island when the house was built, and whose
designs now brought hundreds of thousands of dollars,
and paused at the landing. The house is open on both
the seaward and the landward sides, so that standing
on the landing is like standing suspended in a great
cage of glass. It always makes me dizzy, as if nothing
lies between me and the close-pressing darkness of the
old oaks and the shrouding oleanders in back, and the
great, sucking, light-breathing, always-waiting sea in
front. I shook my head and went quickly up to the
second floor, where the bedrooms were. They are open
to the sea, too, the best ones, but you can close it away
with heavy curtains if you choose, and the others, at
the back of the house, overlook the dark-canopied
backyard and feel to me like sheltering caves. I have
moved my daytime retreat there, in the back corner,
away from the beach and sea, though I still sleep in
the big master suite hung in the air over the lawn and
sea, with Clay. But when he is away I sleep on the
daybed in my den.
Instead of turning to the right, toward our bedroom
and mine and Clay’s dens, as I almost always did, I
turned left and walked down the hall toward the chil-
dren’s rooms. I think I had
Low Country / 29
known all day that I was going to do so. I did not
hesitate, and I did not think. I walked past Carter’s
closed door—closed because he had left it in such a
disgraceful state when he left in September for his first
year at graduate school at Yale that I had refused to
go into it, and told Estelle not to touch it but to let
him come back and find it just as he had left it—and
stopped at the big ocean-facing room on the end, its
door also closed. Kylie’s room.
Unlike Carter, Kylie was neat to a fault; she hated
it if anyone disturbed the strict order of her things, and
had insisted from her earliest childhood that no one
enter her closed room when she was not in it. I had
always respected that; I felt somewhat the same way
about my things, though long years of sharing a room
with Clay had loosened my scruples about order a bit.
He is not untidy, only abstracted. I think he does not
notice either order or disorder. I could still hear small
Kylie, frustrated nearly to tears in her attempt to ex-
plain why she did not want me to come into her room
when she was not in it: “But it’s
mine
! It’s not yours!
You have a room of your own. Why do you need to
go in mine?”
“What are you hiding in there, a pack of wolves?” I
said. “Kevin Costner, maybe?”
She had fallen in love with the movie
Dances with
Wolves
, and was so besotted with wolves that she was
planning to be a wildlife veterinarian
30 / Anne Rivers Siddons
when she grew up, and work with the wild wolf packs
of the Far West. It was a mature and considered ambi-
tion, and I would not have been at all surprised if she
made it happen.
“I’m not hiding anything,” she said, looking seriously
at me, and I knew that she was not. Kylie hid nothing,
ever. She was as open as air, as clear as water. Then
she saw that I was teasing her, and she began to giggle,
the silvery, silly giggle that, I am told, is very like mine,
and then she laughed, the deep, froggy belly laugh that
is mine also. In a moment we were both laughing,
laughing until the tears rolled down our so-alike small,
brown faces, laughing and laughing until Clay came
in to see what was so funny, and said, grinning himself,
“Ladies and gentlemen, for your enjoyment to-
night…Venable and Venable! Let’s give them a great
big hand!”
And we rolled over on our backs on the floor of her
room, Kylie and I, in helpless laughter and simple joy,
because it was true. We were Venable and Venable.
We simply delighted each other. There was nothing
in either of us that did not understand and admire the
other. Even when she was a baby, there was nothing
childish, nothing condescending, nothing mother-to-
child about it. We were companions on every level,
confidantes, comrades, friends, lovers in the deepest
and most nonsexual sense of the word. My daughter
and I had fallen in love and delight with each other at
Low Country / 31
the moment of her birth, and it was often all I could
do to keep Clay and Carter from coming off second
best. Because they are so ludicrously alike, and because
Clay’s mind is almost absurdly full of riches and Carter
is a sunny, confident young man with a full and em-
powering sense of himself, I do not think that either
of them has suffered. Rather, they, like most other
people in our orbit, simply enjoyed and often laughed
at Venable and Venable.
I opened Kylie’s door and went into her room. At
first the great surf of brightness off the noon beach
blinded me, and I stood blinking, my hand shading
my eyes. Then they adjusted and I looked around and
saw it plain, this place that was, of all her places, most
distinctly hers.
It was not a frilly room and never had been. Like
me, Kylie was born with a need for space and order
and a dislike of cluttering frills and fuss. She had al-
ways been a small, wiry child, almost simian in her
build, narrow-hipped and broad-shouldered, slightly
long of arm and short of leg, never tall, always thin to
the bone. Ruffles would have been as ludicrous on and
around her as on me. She was, instead, sleeked down
for action; pared to sinew and long, slender muscle;
meant for sun and sand and wind and water, and that
was what her room reflected. I do not think she ever
drew her curtains, even at night. Kylie fell asleep with
her face turned to the moon and
32 / Anne Rivers Siddons
the comets and the wheeling constellations, seeing
when she woke in the night the dance of phosphorus
on the warm, thick, black summer ocean, or sometimes
the lightning of storms over the horizon that looked,
she said, like naval battles far out to sea. Waking to
the cool pearl of dawn on tidal slicks, to the pink and
silver foil of a newly warming spring ocean, perhaps
to the Radio City Music Hall dance of porpoises in the
silky summer shallows. Kylie went as far as any human
I have ever known, when she was small, toward simply
using up the sea.
Her walls were painted the milky green of the sea
on a cloudy day, and on them hung her posters of an-
imals and birds and sea creatures and the big, luminous
painting of Richard Hagerty’s that was the official
Spoleto Festival poster one year, of Hurricane Hugo
striding big-footed and terrible down on a crouching
Charleston. I had not wanted to buy it for her because
I had thought it would come to haunt her, but she was
adamant.
“Yeah, but see, Hugo didn’t win,” she said. “Big as
a thousand houses, big as a booger, and he still didn’t
win.”
And I had laughed and bought it for her, because I
wanted her to remember that: the boogers don’t always
win.
On the low bookshelves were the models she had
made of animal skeletons, from kits I had ordered for
her from marine biological laborato
Low Country / 33
ries and supply houses, and three or four real skeletons
we had found over on the island when she went with
me to the house there: the papery carapace of an eight-
foot rattler; a wild boar’s skull with great, bleached,
Jurassic tusks; the elegant, polished small skull of a
raccoon. Estelle would not dust these herself but made