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
to Clay after a while. They were on their second or
third leisurely bourbons, and off in the trees the katy-
dids and marsh peepers had started their evening
chorus. Overhead the huge, swollen stars flowered in
the hot night.
“No, I come from hill country, in Indiana, around
Bloomington. I’d never seen the ocean till I got to
Virginia and came home with Hayes. My folks were
red-dirt farmers, poor as church mice. After that…well,
I guess I was sunk. It was like I was born in the wrong
place and only just found the right one when I got
down here. There’s never been any other part of the
world I wanted to see, not after I saw this. I went back
to Indiana after I graduated and worked at an insurance
agency until I could save enough to pay off my student
loans and get a little ahead. Then I headed down here
like an arrow from a bow. I don’t know yet what I’ll
be doing, but I’ll be doing it here. I do know that.”
52 / Anne Rivers Siddons
It was 1972, and a looming recession threatened
hundreds of thousands of workers across the country.
Small businesses were closing; larger ones were cutting
back or at the very least freezing their hiring. Around
Charleston, the strictures of an energy crisis and un-
available gasoline slowed the flood of tourist dollars
to a trickle. It was a disaster of a year, all told, and yet
Clay Venable sat on my grandfather’s porch and spoke
calmly of a limitless future in the Lowcountry that was
an assured fact, a done deal. I believed him absolutely,
even before Hayes Howland laughed ruefully and said,
“Lest you think he’s blowing smoke rings, at least three
guys at Marguerite MacMillan’s as much as offered
him jobs tonight. I don’t know what it is he’s got, but
whatever, this old boy’s gon’ do all right for himself
down here.”
My grandfather laughed. It was a friendly sound, a
laugh offered by one equal to another.
“What would you do if you had your druthers,
Clay?” he said.
Clay did not hesitate.
“I’d take all this”—and he gestured around him at
the marsh and the night—“and I’d make sure that
nothing ever changed the basic…nature of it, the sense
of it, like it is now…and I’d make it available to a few
very special people who would see it for what it is, and
love it for that, and want to live here. And no one else,
ever.”
Low Country / 53
Hayes snorted, and my grandfather said, “You
mean…a subdivision, or something? Develop it?”
His voice was still mild and interested, but I knew
how he felt about the marshes and the islands of the
Lowcountry. My heart sank. I might have known Clay
Venable was too perfect; there had to be something
wrong.…
“What I have in mind is about as far from a subdivi-
sion development as it’s possible to get,” Clay said,
looking intently at my grandfather. In the lamplight
his blue eyes burned. “In my…place…the land and the
water and the wildlife would come first, people second.
Not a house, not a hedge, not a fireplug would go up
that did not blend so perfectly into the wild that you
had to look twice to see it. Not an alligator would be
relocated; not a raccoon or a deer would be run out.
I would never forget who was here first. And I would
have no one in my place who did not feel the same
way.”
We were silent for a moment.
“Never heard of a place like that,” my grandfather
said finally.
“There’s never been one,” Clay Venable said. “But
there will be, and it will be mine, and it will be some-
where on this coast. I know that.”
“Take more money than God’s got,” my grandfather
said.
“I can get the money,” Clay said. “If I can get
54 / Anne Rivers Siddons
the right piece of land, I can get the money.”
“Don’t you have it backwards?” My grandfather
chuckled. “How you gon’ get a chunk of prime ocean-
front or marshland without any money? Not much of
that left. And another thing…any empty land I can
think of around here hasn’t got mainland access. Not
an automobile bridge between here and Hilton Head.
How you gon’ find this wild land with a bridge already
built?”
“Because I’ve got a master plan,” Clay Venable said.
“It’s as detailed and complete as it’s humanly possible
to make it. I’ve been working on it for three years, ever
since I got out of college. Since before then, really;
since the second or third time I came down here with
Hayes. I’ve gotten two or three of the best young archi-
tects on the East Coast to work on it, strictly gratis,
and city planners and environmental specialists and
lawyers, and I’ve gotten the Sierra Club people and
the Coastal Conservancy folks to put in their two cents’
worth, and the U.S. Corps of Engineers. None of them
would take a penny. It will work. It’s a beautiful plan.
It’s a beautiful concept. It’s ready to go. I am absolutely
sure that if the right people see it, the land and the
bridge and then the money will follow. I
know
that. I
don’t mind working at…whatever…for a few years
until I can get it going.”
Low Country / 55
My grandfather took a long swig of bourbon and
rattled the ice in his glass.
“Where is this plan?” he said.
“In a bank vault back in Charleston. And there’s a
copy at my bank at home in Bloomington.”
“Who’s seen it?”
“Nobody yet. Except the guys who’ve worked on it,
of course, and they’re sworn to secrecy. They’ll be
partners, so I don’t worry about them letting it out.
Outside of them, nobody.”
“I’ll say,” Hayes said. “Not only have I not seen it,
I haven’t heard the first word about it. Jesus, Clay…I
had no idea! Why didn’t you tell me, show it to me?
I can help you with it.…”
“It’s not time yet. When it’s time, I will. I wasn’t
hiding it from you, Hayes.”
“I’d like to see a thing like that,” my grandfather said,
as if to no one in particular. “I reckon that would be
something to see.”
“I could bring it out tomorrow or one day soon,”
Clay Venable said, and smiled, a swift, transforming
smile that I had not seen before. My breath stopped.
“Why don’t you do that?” my grandfather said.
“Me, too?” Hayes said.
“Not yet. But soon. I promise,” Clay said.
“Well, I like that! I take you to the party of
56 / Anne Rivers Siddons
the year at the numero uno hostess’s house in
Charleston, and introduce you to the movers and
shakers, most of whom are falling all over themselves
to offer you jobs, and you won’t let me see your…vil-
lage Eden,” Hayes groused. I thought that he was only
partly kidding.
“You’ll see it before anybody in Charleston,” Clay
said, giving Hayes the smile. Hayes nodded, apparently
satisfied.
“Would you like to see it, Miss Aubrey?” Clay said
to me.
I jumped. He had not really looked at me since we
had settled ourselves on the porch. His attention had
been bent upon my grandfather.
“Very much,” I said, and my unused voice cracked,
and I cleared my throat. “I would very much like to
see it. If you can do all that and still keep the
land…untouched, as you say…it would be something
to see indeed.”
I realized that I sounded adversarial, and started to
amend my words, and then did not. I did not think
what he proposed was possible, and I did not want to
see his master plan and find that, after all, it was an
ordinary subdivision that would clump on stucco feet
through the rich, fragile coastal land and leave little of
it intact.
“Then maybe tomorrow?”
“Tomorrow would be fine,” my grandfather said.
“You boys come out about midafternoon and I’ll take
you out in the Whaler. Let Clay run
Low Country / 57
Alligator Alley and see if he still wants to save the
gators.”
“I’m a working man myself,” Hayes said, “but I know
Clay would enjoy Alligator Alley. What a great idea,
Mr. Aubrey. That’s just what you all should do. Only
why not take the canoe? See ’em better that way.”
He came at three the next afternoon in the same out-
board they had brought yesterday. I recognized it now
as the one Shem Cutler, over on the tip of Edisto,
sometimes rented out to hunters or crabbers. I was not
waiting for him on the dock—I would have died
first—but I was watching from the porch of the house.
It is set on stilts, a former hunting shack grown large
and rambling over the years, and you can see a long
way from it. He was not nearly as proficient as Hayes
with the boat. I could see that he was coming in too
fast, and he hit the dock with a resounding smack,
bounced off it, and had to balance himself with an oar
when the resulting watery circles rocked him crazily.
I smiled to myself. Ever since he had spoken about his
impossibly idyllic Lowcountry community I had felt
vaguely and sullenly resentful of him, the dazzle of his
initial appearance safely dissipated. This place, this is-
land, belonged to us, my grandfather and me, and the
small settlement of Gullah Negroes over in Dayclear,
at the other end of the island, and the
58 / Anne Rivers Siddons
ponies and the gators and the ghosts and all the other
beings, quick and dead, who had their roots here. Who
was this man, this upstart, land-bound Yankee, to come
down here and tell us that he was going to transform
it?
I was obscurely pleased to see, as he walked carefully
down the listing boardwalk toward the house, that in
the full afternoon light he did not look golden at all,
not impossibly slim and tipped with flame. His hair
was merely brown, the silverbrown of a mouse’s fur,
almost the same shade as his face and hands, and he
was more skinny than slender. I could see, too, now
that he wore an ordinary work shirt with the sleeves
rolled up and not a suit of radiant white linen, that the
tan stopped at his wrists, as a farmer’s did, and that
his legs, in a pair of faded cut-off jeans, were the
greenish-white of a fish’s belly.
“The mosquitoes are going to eat him alive before
we’ve left the dock,” I said with satisfaction to my
grandfather, who stood beside me, and was surprised
at myself. Where was this venom coming from? I had
been ready to follow him to hell or Bloomington when
I first met him.
“Young feller got under your skin, has he?” My
grandfather grinned, and I had to grin back. It had
long been a joke between us that as soon as a young
man showed substantial interest in me, my own evap-
orated like dew in the sun. A fair number of them had,
over the years; I had my
Low Country / 59
mother’s vivid darkness and my unremembered father’s
fine-bladed features, and knew that they all added up,
somehow, to more than they should have. I was not
particularly vain of my looks, Miss South Carolina
notwithstanding; good looks had not, after all, gotten
my mother very much except a young husband who
left us when I was four and another who was, to me,
as remote as a photograph. In my experience, a man
who came in the front door was that much closer to
the back one. I solved that by leaving first. I could see
that I was doing it again. My grandfather was right.
Clay Venable had gotten further under my hide in a
shorter time than anyone ever had.
Just the same I was glad that he had proved to be
an ordinary, skinny, milk-pale Yankee after all. I had
nothing to fear from him. And then he raised his head
and saw us on the porch and smiled, and the ordinar-
iness vanished like smoke in the wind, like a disguise
that he had cast off. My heart flopped, fishlike, in my
chest.
“Shit,” I whispered.
My grandfather laughed aloud.
Peacock’s Island is a small barrier island in St. Helena’s
Sound, fitting like a loose stopper in the bottleneck
formed by Edisto and Otter Islands to the north, Har-
bor and Hunting Islands to the south, and the shallow
bay created by the conflu
60 / Anne Rivers Siddons
ence of the Ashepoo, Combahee, and Edisto Rivers to
the west. It lies in a great, 350,000-acre wilderness
called the Ace Basin, an estuarine ecosystem so rich in
layers upon layers of life, so fertile and green and
secret, so very old, so totally set apart from the world
of men and machines—and yet so close among
them—that there is literally no other place remotely
like it on earth. Other areas in the Lowcountry that
were once this pristine have irrevocably gone over to
man now, and cannot be reclaimed, but a combination
of private and public agencies have set their teeth and
shoulders to safeguard the Ace, and now protect sizable
swatches of it.
The bottom 91,000 acres of the Ace Basin are tidal