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
tiently so that it will not hang in her eyes. Her skin is
permanently the red-brown of old cordovan shoes,
from the sun. Her voice is nasal and flat, her eyes are
the faded blue of old denim, and her hands are the size
and shape of coal scuttles. She is also an artist of
stunning originality and talent. Her enormous, flaming
primitive oils hang in galleries and museums all up
and down the East Coast. Her strange, soaring iron
sculptures are in collections all over America. She gets
upwards of fifteen thousand dollars for her small
paintings and I don’t even know how much for the
larger ones. She works so slowly that she rarely does
more than three or four pieces a year, will not accept
commissions, and still lives in the ramshackle former
filling sta
Low Country / 43
tion that she moved into thirty years ago, on an undis-
tinguished two-lane blacktop road that threads the
middle of the island. My grandfather, who was in-
trigued with her gift and her grit, rented it to her some
years before he deeded the island to Clay and stipulated
that she be allowed to live there as long as she liked.
Clay thinks that she was more to my grandfather than
tenant, though she was only twenty when she first
came to the island, and he may be right. Lottie sleeps
with whomever she pleases and does not try to conceal
the fact, though with no one from the Plantation, that
I know of. Her gentlemen callers all seem to be from
off-island, to judge from the tags on their automobiles.
She built her studio herself, from random ends of
lumber, and it looks like a chicken house on the outside
and is glorious inside with light and space. When I
asked her, when we first met, why she chose Peacock’s
Island, she said, “The light,” and I knew what she
meant. I soon found that I usually did, about
everything. She is my best friend. Clay cannot stand
her, nor she him. Both of them have finally worked
around to a point where they simply do not discuss
the other anymore.
But there are other ways of showing enmity, and
Lottie’s disgusted snorts and Clay’s still, cold silences
get their messages across. I know he thinks she is
sluttish, slovenly, an eyesore in Eden, and worst of all
in his primer of sins, lazy. He is
44 / Anne Rivers Siddons
probably right on all counts. She thinks he is cold,
calculating, far fonder of money than me, and worst
of all in her primer, a despoiler of the wild. I never
thought of Clay as any of those things, not the Clay I
met and fell in love with and married. But so many of
the things I never thought have come about, and so
many that I did think have failed to do so, that I
sometimes trust my own judgment last after anyone
else’s. It’s easier to think Lottie is wrong about Clay,
though I have to admit that she has seldom been about
other things.
But we all have our blind spots, don’t we? Oh, yes,
we do. And I figure Clay is hers. Just as he is mine.
Lord, the day I first met him! He will never seem
more beautiful, more whole, more hypnotically
charming than he did on the day his friend Hayes
Howland brought him over to the island to meet my
grandfather. Poor Clay; he would hate that if I told
him, hate that in my mind, he reached his ascendancy
before I even knew him well. But I never have told
him, and I never will.
It was in July, just at dusk. It had been a strange,
unsettled day of running cloud shadow; little winds
that started up and doubled back upon themselves and
then died; sudden warm, hard spatters of rain that left
the earth and air steaming and shimmering. Later we
would surely have a storm. I was visiting from Colum-
bia,
Low Country / 45
where we had just moved, and had brought my water-
colors and easel with me and was sitting on the dock
at the end of the long, dilapidated wooden walkway
that led from the marsh house to the tidal creek, where
my grandfather kept his Boston Whaler and his canoe,
trying to catch the spectral light. I was between my
freshman and sophomore years at Converse, just tast-
ing my gift. The dazzle to the west, where the sun hung
red, preparing to flame and die behind the long sweep
of emerald marsh, was overwhelming; I could not look
into it without shading my eyes.
I heard them before I saw them, heard the slow putt-
putt of an outboard lost somewhere in the rose-gold
dazzle, and turned to look toward it, squinting. The
boat came out of the light, its engine silent, and loomed
up almost at the dock where I sat. It bumped the rub-
ber fender and wallowed to rest. Hayes got out first;
I knew him slightly, from other visits he had made to
my grandfather during my own summer stays, but I
stared anyway. He was resplendent in a white linen
suit, with the light gilding his red head, and looked far
better in both than he usually did. Hayes is substantial
and sometimes engaging, but he is not handsome.
“Hi, Caro,” he said. “I’ve brought y’all a visitor.”
“Hi, Hayes,” I said back. “That’s nice.”
A tall young man got out behind him. He
46 / Anne Rivers Siddons
wore white linen also, but you noticed the man and
not the suit, instead of just the opposite, as with Hayes;
it might have been his everyday garb, it seemed so
right and easy on his long body. A white linen suit in
an Edwardian cut, and white buck shoes. He had a
great, flowing blue satin tie. It should have looked
foppish but did not. The light made an old-gold helmet
of his hair and slanted into his eyes so that they flamed
out of his narrow, tanned face, an impossible, firestruck
blue. He smiled and the spindrift light glanced on white
teeth. He had a flower in his buttonhole, a small, tight,
old-fashioned pink sweetheart rose, and in his long,
brown hands he held a bouquet of them.
“This is Clay Venable,” Hayes said. “We roomed
together a couple of years at Virginia. He’s been a fool
over the Lowcountry since the first time I brought him
home with me, and I’ve finally talked him into moving
to Charleston. He wanted to see some real, unspoiled
marshland and I thought of your granddaddy’s place
right off the bat. I guess you can’t get much more un-
spoiled than Peacock’s. This is Caroline Aubrey, Clay.
Mr. Aubrey’s granddaughter. Did I tell you she was
an
artiste
as well as a beauty?”
“Miss Aubrey,” Clay Venable said, holding the bou-
quet out to me. “I thought you might like these. We’ve
been at a fancy garden party in Charleston and I stole
them off a bush on the way
Low Country / 47
out. Better take them before my hostess comes after
me in a motorboat.”
“Her gardener, you mean,” Hayes said lazily. “In a
cigarette boat. We’ve been at Marguerite MacMillan’s,
Caro. I thought if Clay was going to be a Lowcountry
boy he might as well start out in the virtual holy of
holies. Little did I know he’d be filching roses out of
her garden before the afternoon was over. Can’t take
him anywhere.”
I put out my hands and took the roses, but I did not
speak. I could not seem to look away from this tall,
radiant being clothed in white and molten rose-gold
light. I remember thinking that his voice did not really
sound Southern; it was deep and soft and slow, but
somehow crisp. There was something else about him
that did not seem native, either, though I could not
have said what it was then, and still cannot. Clay was
born on a farm in Indiana, but by that time he had so
submerged himself into the fabric of the Lowcountry
that there were few traces of the rural Indiana scholar-
ship boy left, and of course by now there are none at
all. Clay is more a denizen of this coast now than
someone generations born to it.
“You gon’ ask us in, Caro?” Hayes said, and my face
flamed at the amusement in his voice.
“Yes. Please come on up to the house. Granddaddy’s
having his sundowner. He’ll love some
48 / Anne Rivers Siddons
company. He’s always saying he’ll never make a
drinker out of me. Well, not that he’d really want to,
of course…thank you,” I said, remembering the roses,
and caught my platform heel in a crack of the dock,
and lurched to one knee. The roses sailed over the
weathered cypress railing and disappeared into the sea
of reeds and black water.
There was a small silence, and then Clay Venable
said, “A simple ‘no thank you’ would have sufficed.”
I froze in mortification, and then the amusement
under his words penetrated my fog of misery, and I
began to laugh. He laughed, too, and helped me to
my feet, and Hayes laughed, and after that it was all
right. By the time he had been introduced to my
grandfather and the bourbon had been poured, and
we sat on the screened porch looking out over the sil-
vering marsh, Clay Venable was as much one of us as
Hayes or any of the other young men from Charleston
and the islands that my grandfather was accustomed
to greeting when he encountered them hunting or
fishing or canoeing on the wild tidal creeks and inlets
of Peacock’s Island. It was common knowledge that
the island belonged to my grandfather, but it was also
common knowledge that he did not mind the occasion-
al sporting visitor, so long as they did not disturb the
pristine tranquillity of the marsh and woods. Indeed,
he had known most
Low Country / 49
of them since they were small boys and came to Pea-
cock’s with their fathers.
Dark fell, the sudden thick, furry blackness of the
Lowcountry marshes, unpricked by any lights at all
except the kerosene lantern that sat on a table on the
porch and the citronella candles I had lit. The house
had electricity, but my grandfather disliked it, and often
went days without lighting an electric lamp. He had
no such qualms about other appliances, and happily
used his small, battered refrigerator and the old stove
and even the jerry-rigged washer and dryer that sat on
the other end of the porch. But he loved lamplight,
and it is what I use mostly when I am at the house
even to this day. I find that it calls him back to me as
little else does.
I don’t remember much of what we talked about:
Hayes’s job at one of the ubiquitous law firms on
Broad Street, I think, and how restless he felt there,
closed away from the beaches and marshes and rivers
and creeks where so many Charleston boys spent great
chunks of their boyhood. My studies at Converse, and
the painting that I was doing on the island that sum-
mer. The herd of wild ponies that had chomped and
stomped its stolid way around the back part of the is-
land since I could remember. The monster bull gator
my grandfather had seen the day before, and the pan-
ther that he swore he had heard scream in the deep
blacknesses of several
50 / Anne Rivers Siddons
past nights. The drought that was decimating the coast
that summer and how badly my grandfather’s year-
round property in McClellanville was suffering from
it. I did not think he was unduly upset about the
drought in McClellanville; since my grandmother had
died several years before, he had spent more and more
of his time at the marsh house, and left it now largely
to look after his banking business in Charleston, or to
make a run to a hardware or grocery store. He had
even, the winter before, put in a big cast-iron stove in
the bedroom where he slept, so that, with the huge
stone fireplace in the living area, the house was habit-
able through the brief, icy spasms of the Lowcountry
winter.
“Don’t you get lonesome out here?” I asked him
once.
“No,” he had said in honest surprise. “Why would
I? Everywhere you look something alive is slapping
the water or shiverin’ the bushes. And when you run
out of the live ones, there’s plenty of not-so-live ones,
let me tell you. Many’s the night I’ve passed in the
company of somebody who left these parts a hundred,
two hundred years ago.”
I knew that he was teasing me, but only with the
top part of my mind. The old, bottom part nodded
sagely: Yes. I can see that that’s so. I have always felt
that there were many levels of beings on Peacock’s Is-
land, many more souls than cur
Low Country / 51
rently wear flesh. It is not, on the main, a bad feeling
at all.
Finally, that night, we got around to Clay Venable.
I knew that my grandfather was as curious about him
as I was, but his natural, grave good manners decreed
that he make Clay feel at home before asking him to
share much of himself.
“I don’t think you’re native to these parts, but you
seem to have taken to them right well,” he said mildly