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
Kylie do it. Clay was distinctly not amused by the
skeletons, and even Carter only said, “Yuck. You’re
weird, Kylie.” But I knew. It is important to know what
the inside of things looks like. Otherwise, almost any-
thing can fool you.
Her books were there, in a military order known
only to Kylie. The old ones that I had loved:
Wind in
the Willows
(“Mother! Listen! ‘There is
nothing
—abso-
lutely nothing—half so much worth doing as simply
messing about on boats.’ Oh, he knew, Ratty knew,
didn’t he?”); the
Waterbabies
; the Nancy Drew series;
the Bobbsey Twins; the Lawrenceville Stories. For some
reason they fascinated her.
Black Beauty. Silver Birch.
Midnight Moon
. And alongside them, the handbooks
and textbooks and charts and maps of the Carolina
Lowcountry marshes and islands that we got for her
from the Corps of Engineers and various coastal con-
servation and natural resources organizations.
On her desk, a small voodoo drum that Estelle’s
Gullah grandmother, who adored Kylie, had given
her; we never knew where it had come
34 / Anne Rivers Siddons
from originally, but Estelle seemed to think it was the
real thing. And the big osprey we had found newly
dead on the bank of the tidal creek that cut through
the undulating green marsh over on the island one
summer day, still perfect except for the forever myster-
ious fact of its death. Clay had taken it to a taxidermist
for her, and the great bird, wings spread, had kept
yellow-eyed watch over Kylie and her room ever since.
Of all her things, I think she loved that bird the best.
And that was all. Except for her neat, beigespread
bed and the matching armchairs, nothing else of her
showed. Her clothes were shut away in the closet; she
almost never left anything lying out. Her outgrown
toys were in a hamper in her closet. The room did not
look lonely, though. The space and order spoke of
Kylie as clearly as strewn possessions would have of
another child.
I walked over to the French doors that opened onto
her balcony and leaned against them and looked back
into the room. Something caught my eye, the edge of
something blue, almost hidden under the dust ruffle
of her bed. I leaned over and picked it up. A T-shirt,
a small one, faded, that read PEACOCK ISLAND PLANT-
ATION SUMMER RECREATION PROGRAM. You saw shirts
like it all over the island; they were issued to children
who joined the summer program, mostly the children
of guests who wanted to enjoy the island’s adult pur-
suits while their children went
Low Country / 35
about their own, supervised activities. I remembered
that Kylie liked the shirts but hated the program and
absolutely refused to join, even when her father pointed
out that it would be a real treat for the visiting little
boys and girls to meet the daughter of the owner of
the Plantation.
“Big deal,” Kylie said. “You think I want to go on a
nature walk with some kid who’s gon’ yell his head
off if we see a snake?”
We did not make her attend the program. It would
indeed have been ludicrous. Kylie was dealing calmly
with bull alligators and rattlesnakes when the offspring
of the Plantation visitors were shying at horseshoe
crabs. She deigned to wear the T-shirts, though.
“That way the kids will all think I go,” she said
reasonably to Clay, and that was that.
I held the shirt to my face and sniffed. It smelled
fresh and particular, like summer and sun and salt and
Kylie herself, not at all like dust. But it should have
smelled of dust; it must have been there, just under the
fringe of the dust ruffle, for a long time. A little over
five years; Kylie had been dead that long. I had not
been this far into her room since the day we closed it,
not long after her funeral, after Estelle, tears running
silently down her long brown face, had cleaned it for
the last time and closed the door. Sometimes I opened
her door and looked in, and I knew that Clay did, too,
but I did not think that anyone came all the
36 / Anne Rivers Siddons
way into it. I would ask Estelle. She must have simply
missed the little T-shirt the last day that she cleaned.
I looked out at the ocean then. Kylie had died in
sight of her room, in sight of our house, when her
small Sunfish with the red sail had flipped in heavy
surf after an August thunderstorm and the stout little
boom had hit her a stunning blow to the temple, and
she had gone down and not come up again, at least
not until long after. None of the children she was with
had seen it happen, or none would ever admit to seeing
it, but then they were only ten or so, as she was, and
all had been forbidden to take their boats into that
stormy water, as she had been. They had been playing
in a neighbor’s yard after a birthday party, only three
houses up the beach, and had slipped off and taken
their little Sunfishes out while the adults were having
their own lunch on the patio, behind heavy plantings.
I was off the island that day, at the dentist in Charles-
ton. I never blamed Marjorie Bell or her housekeeper;
Kylie had never disobeyed us before in regard to the
Sunfish, nor had the other children disobeyed their
parents. Island children have water safety drilled into
their heads almost before they can toddle. We will
never know what started it all, what child dared the
others, who first leaped to the dare. Kylie, in all likeli-
hood. It doesn’t matter. The children were so traumat-
ized by it that more than one of them gave
Low Country / 37
away their Sunfish, or let their parents sell them, and
one family moved away from the island.
I have always wondered if she looked up just before
the boom hit and saw the dazzle of summer light on
her window, saw the roof and trees of home.
I wondered now what she would be wearing if she
had lived, what I would be picking up from her floor.
What color it would be, what size. What its smell
would be, the smell of Kylie Venable at nearly sixteen.
I used to have the fancy that I wore Kylie inside me,
just under my skin, that I was a suit that fit exactly the
being who was my child, and that she was the structure
that filled out the skin that was me. Since that day there
has been a terrible, frail lightness, a cold hollowness,
a sort of whistling chill inside me where Kylie used to
be. It makes me feel terribly vulnerable, as if a high
wind could simply whirl me away. As if there is not
enough substance inside me to anchor me to earth.
Usually the pain of her loss is dulled enough now so
that it is more a profound heaviness, a leaden darkness,
a wearable miasma that is as much a part of me as the
joy of her used to be. But sometimes that first agony
comes spiking back, as it did now. I sank to the floor,
the T-shirt still pressed to my face, feeling the killing
fire flare and spring and rage, feeling the great shriek,
the scream of outrage and anguish, start in my
38 / Anne Rivers Siddons
throat, feeling the scalding tears gather and press at
my eyes. I opened my mouth to let it out, but nothing
happened, nothing came. It never did. I screamed si-
lently into her T-shirt, my face contorted, my throat
corded and choked with the need for her, but no sound
would come. I could not cry for my child. I never had,
not even when they came to tell me, not even when I
watched her go down into the earth of the Lowcountry,
riding in a fine carriage of mahogany and bronze.
I felt a hand on my shoulder and heard Clay’s voice.
“Caro, don’t. You promised you wouldn’t. Come
on with me now, and take a shower and get dressed,
and we’ll have some coffee on the veranda before we
go. I’ll take you by the guest house; we’ll put the
flowers around together. They’re beautiful, by the way.
Those old roses, they really have lasted, haven’t they?”
I did not move to get up, and after a moment I felt
his hands under my elbows, and he lifted me up.
“You need to work, baby,” he said. “That’s the thing
that will help; that’s what’s helped me most. Real
work. This is your job now, helping with the new
families, you need to come and do your job.”
I looked at him then.
“She was my job,” I said.
But I did not say it aloud.
W
hen I was sixteen, the son of the local
undertaker
in the little town where we lived asked me out on a
date, and my stepfather promptly called the chief of
police, who was in Rotary with him, and had the chief
dispatch a deputy to follow us everywhere we went.
My friend Lottie Funderburke, who is a painter and
lives on the island (but
not
, she is quick to point out,
in the Plantation) thinks this is the funniest thing she
has ever heard. She may be right. It was not, however,
very funny then, at least not to me. The deputy was a
gangling, slouching eighteen-year-old named Honey
Cato, low of hairline and waist and thick of shoulder
and head, and he had been whistling and making
stunningly suggestive and stupid remarks to me since
we moved to Moncks Corner, when I was twelve. I
had told my mother and stepfather about it, but my
stepfather said only, “If you
40 / Anne Rivers Siddons
didn’t run around with your behind hanging out of
those shorts, he wouldn’t do it. A lady doesn’t get
herself whistled at on the street.”
I didn’t mention Honey to him again. In the first
place, I didn’t intend to give up my short shorts. Every
other teenager in Moncks Corner rolled her shorts as
high as they would go, and I had a horror, then, of
being different. In the second place, my stepfather
never would have understood about Honey Cato or
boys—I purposely do not use the word “men”—like
him. Honey would have whistled and made his crude
remarks to Helen Keller, or a nun. It was his duty as
a South Carolina good ol’ boy. My stepfather was from
Ohio. The difference was measured in far more than
miles.
“So what exactly did your stepfather have against
undertakers?” Lottie said when I first told her. “I would
think an undertaker made more money than a lot of
people in Monkey House, or wherever it was you lived.
And you could say it’s a profession. Of sorts.”
“Well, you know. An undertaker,” I said vaguely.
“And then there was always this rumor that Sonny’s
father ran some kind of illegal operation out of the fu-
neral home. Running liquor or something; I never did
know what. Whatever it was, my stepfather didn’t
think it suited the daughter of the town lawyer. Even
if he did get his law degree mail order.”
Low Country / 41
“Where was your mother on this?” Lottie said.
“Well, she usually sided with him. She’d worked too
hard to land him, see; she wasn’t going to screw that
up by sticking up for me. And I guess I was pretty hard
to handle at that age. Mainly, she didn’t think dating
the undertaker’s son suited a future Miss South Caro-
lina.”
“Oh, Christ, that’s right, somebody said you’d been
in the Miss South Carolina contest. I thought at the
time they had to be lying. Not that you aren’t right
presentable, when you’re all cleaned up, but you don’t
have a dimple to your name, and you’d look like a
first-class ‘ho’ with blond hair. I wouldn’t have thought
you’d had a chance.”
“I didn’t. Especially after I dropped my baton.”
“Don’t tell me. You twirled a flaming baton to ‘Age
of Aquarius.’”
“Yep. Only it was ‘Yellow Submarine.’ I dropped
the sucker before the first five bars were over.”
“God, Caro, couldn’t you have sung the National
Anthem or something?”
“Well, I did a tap dance while I was twirling. I never
could sing. It didn’t matter what you did, if your boobs
stuck out and you could walk in high heels. I had pretty
good boobs then.”
“That’s the most un-Lowcountry thing I ever heard,”
Lottie howled happily.
42 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“I keep telling you, I’m not from the Lowcountry,”
I said. “I’m a million miles removed from the Lowcoun-
try. I’m no more a Lowcountry native than you are.
Everybody just thinks I am because Clay has made a
religion of it. It’s almost as strange to me right now as
it was the first time I laid eyes on it. I get invited to
parties South of Broad about as often as you do. It’s
Clay who goes to those.”
Lottie is originally from West Virginia and is what
Clay calls good old country stock. What he means is
white trash. Hillbilly. She is nearly six feet tall, walks
like she is plowing a mule, has shoulders as wide as a
linebacker’s and dishwater-blond hair chopped impa-