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
marsh and barrier islands, scalloped by dunes older
than time itself and thick with unique maritime forests
of live oaks, loblolly and slash pines, palmettos,
magnolia, and cedar. It is possible, on Peacock’s and
the other barrier islands of the Lowcountry, to en-
counter, in a day’s walk or canoe trip: bald eagles, os-
preys, wood storks, an amazing variety of ducks and
herons, wading birds and shorebirds and songbirds.
My grandfather said that someone had counted sixty-
nine bird species in the great arc of the Ace. You can
also see—or rather, perhaps, see tracks of—another
eighty-three species of reptiles and amphibians, includ-
ing a fearsome array of watersnakes and the big, thick,
brutish rattlers of the
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Lowcountry, and, of course, the ever-present ranks of
alligators. I have seen, during my summers there,
whitetail deer, bobcats, foxes, rabbits, otters, raccoons,
wild pigs, possums, and some fleeting things that I will
never be able to name. The ponies are an aberration;
no one is quite sure where they came from, but my
grandfather thinks they are offspring of the tough little
marsh tackies that used to dot the interior of Hilton
Head and the larger Sea Islands, themselves offspring,
perhaps, of the ponies brought by the English planters
to work the lowland fields. He believes that the first
of the Gullah settlers over in Dayclear brought the sire
and dam of this herd with them, and since no one is
sure when that was, the provenance of the ponies is
as misty and unsubstantial as the marshes themselves.
The Gullahs can only tell you that the ponies have
been there “always.”
The panther that my grandfather swore he heard in
the nights should not, by rights, have been on the is-
land at all, since no one has seen or heard of a panther
in the Ace Basin since time out of mind. I certainly
never saw one. But I believe there was one in my
grandfather’s time, for in that vast, succoring basin,
one-third light, one-third water, and only one-third
substantial earth, life in all its abundance has evolved
all but unseen for millions of years, infused twice a day
by the great salt breath of the tides, and that
62 / Anne Rivers Siddons
panther was as surely a child of the Southern moon as
the blue crabs and the dolphins and the eagles and the
men who came so late to it. I believe that. I do.
It was out into all this that we took Clay Venable,
my grandfather Aubrey and I, on a July afternoon in
1972, and none of us came back unchanged. You often
don’t, in the Lowcountry.
Alligator Alley is a straight stretch of Wappinaw Creek,
one of the secret black-water creeks and inlets that cut
the island like watersnakes. From my grandfather’s
dock you could reach it, in the Whaler, in a few
minutes. In the canoe, however, it took about a half
hour, and we passed that in near silence, broken only
by the slapping of hands on mosquito-bitten flesh.
They were mostly Clay Venable’s hands, and his flesh.
I had slathered myself with Cutter’s before I left the
house, and my grandfather, for some reason, never
seemed to be bitten. Finally, after watching Clay endure
the ordeal in silence, I relented, and reached into my
pocket and brought out the tube of repellent, and
passed it up to him. I sat in the rear of the big canoe,
and my grandfather in front. Clay was our middleman.
He took the ointment from me and turned and gave
me a level, serious look from the pale blue eyes.
“I forgot I had it,” I found myself saying
Low Country / 63
defensively, and felt myself flush red. I would be all
right, I thought, as long as I did not get the full bore
of those eyes.
Clay still did not speak, but I noticed that his head
was always in slight motion, turning this way and that,
as he looked at everything we passed. An osprey took
off from a nest on a dead bald cypress at the edge of
the creek and Clay tracked it. An anhinga dropped
from a low-lying limb of a live oak when we turned
from a broader stretch of creek into Alligator Alley and
he noted it. He marked and measured a turtle sunning
on a reed-grown bank; the flash of a whitetail far off
in a lightly forested hummock; the brilliant green ex-
plosions of cinnamon and resurrection ferns; the vast,
rippling green seas of cordgrass and the great,
primeval towers of the bald cypresses, dwarfing all
else. I had the notion that he was somehow photo-
graphing all of it, so that he would never lose it, but
could replay it at will on the screen of his mind
whenever he chose.
I learned later that this was not far from true.
Something within him, some sort of infinite receptacle,
must fix, store, catalogue, file away. It was my first
experience of his disconcerting, now-legendary intens-
ity. When he brought it into play, it precluded whimsy,
idleness, pensiveness, even the sort of comfortable,
unfocused dreaminess in which I and most other
people pass a good deal of our time. He can suspend
this thing, whatever
64 / Anne Rivers Siddons
it is, when he wants and needs to, and often does, but
I know by now that it costs him something; that the
effort is to drift on the moment, not to focus and record
it, as it is with most of us. That, of course, accounted
for the impact of those extraordinary eyes, and the
force of the smile was the sheer relief and exuberance
you felt when he freed you of it. The smile was his gift
to you. All this I saw in one great leap that afternoon,
from watching the back of Clay Venable’s head. The
knowledge did not sit comfortably on my heart.
The banks rise higher along Alligator Alley, as flat
on top as manmade dams, overgrown with reeds and
slicked with mud. Over them, far away, you can see
the tops of the upland forests, but in the near and
middle distance there is nothing but reeds and sky and
creekbanks. Stumps and broken logs punctuate the
reeds and grasses on the banks and in the edge of the
black water, and more stumps protrude from the water
at intervals. It looks for all the world as if heavy logging
had gone on along this creek. It is not a particularly
beautiful or interesting stretch of water, and the sun
beats relentlessly onto the tops of heads and shoulders,
and if you are in a canoe, your shoulder muscles have,
by now, started to sting from the paddling. In the ca-
noe, you sit very low in the dark water. The landscape
is completely bounded by the rough, looming sunblas-
ted creekbanks.
Low Country / 65
I waited.
To me, it is always like those drawings you used to
see as a child, the one where you are supposed to find
the animals in the intricately drawn mass of a forest.
At first you see nothing, and then they begin to appear:
a lion here, a leopard there, the ruffle of a bird’s wing
in a tree, the smirking face of a lamb in the tall grass.
That is how the alligators come. At first you see noth-
ing but reeds and grass and broken stumps, and then
you see, as if by magic, the great, terrible, knobbed
head of a gator, and then the whole gator, and then
another, and then another. Afterward, you can never
understand why you did not see them at once.
So the alligators of Alligator Alley came. I heard
Clay’s breath draw in slightly as the first gator ap-
peared on the bank above us, as if in a developing
photograph. After that he was silent, but his head
tracked them as they materialized, one after another.
Eventually, there were eighteen or twenty of them in
sight. I can never be sure I have counted them correctly.
I have seen them every summer now since I was
seven or eight, and they never fail to stop my breath
and chill my heart. I know all the comforting folk
wisdom about them: that they cannot bite under water,
that they seldom attack humans except in self-defense,
that they do not go after things larger than themselves.
Certainly not a
66 / Anne Rivers Siddons
boat. I know that if you sit quietly in your craft, or
stand quietly, they will disregard you, and that they
have poor peripheral vision, so that if you stay to their
sides you are presumably safe. Still they make the hair
on my nape and arms rise and something deep within
me goes into an ancient and feral crouch. They are
simply such sinister, implacable things, knobbed and
armored like dragons out of nightmares, seemingly
formed of mud and stone and obsidian and malachite,
the color of stagnant water, the color of muddy death.
And as for their reputed harmlessness, every Lowcoun-
try native has a story about the cat, the dog, the small
child snatched from the bank by those incredible scal-
loped jaws. I have seen myself, on the island, the nubs
of an occasional hand or foot said to have been taken
by a gator. And down on Hilton Head, in the big, de-
veloped resort plantations, the shelf life of poodles and
shih tzus is not long at all, not in the prized lagoon
homesites.
My grandfather taught me early to be absolutely si-
lent when we passed the alligators, and so I always
am. They are not always in precisely the same place,
but they do seem always to be in a cluster, and so it
does not take long to pass them. These today did not
move much, except to lift their huge heads lazily as we
drifted past, and once or twice I heard the dry swish
as a thick tail stirred in the reeds. They are usually on
the bank
Low Country / 67
this time of day, in the summer, taking the sun now
that some of the heat has gone out of it; earlier, they
would have been in the water, only their knobbed
yellow-rimmed eyes showing, so that they seemed to
be submerged logs, or the knots of limbs and roots.
Then you cannot see their size, but when they are on
the bank, of course, you can. These were big ones,
mostly. I’d say they ran from about ten feet to thirteen
or fourteen. One or two smaller ones, adolescent chil-
dren, lay curled close to their mothers, blending into
the grayish mud. If there were very small ones they
would be out of sight near the nests. Even with their
fearsome bulk, they are misleadingly innocent when
they bask lazily like this. They look as if they could not
move except ponderously, dragging that scaled huge-
ness on short, bent legs. But they can move like light-
ning, can be down a bank and into the water in an eye
flicker. I have seen that. I usually hold my breath until
we are past them.
We almost were when one of the submerged logs
in the water began to move, to glide lazily after the
canoe. I drew in my breath and did not let it out again.
My grandfather looked back at Clay and me and shook
his head almost imperceptibly. I knew that he meant
us to be still and silent. The alligator did not lift its
head, but the eyes followed us, closing on the canoe,
and my grandfather kept up his steady, leisurely pad
68 / Anne Rivers Siddons
dling. I followed suit, but my shoulder muscles cried
out to dig in, to paddle faster, to stroke with all my
might. I did not look to the right or left, except once,
and then I could see the gator’s head almost abreast
of me in the rear of the canoe. I looked back slightly
farther. Just under the sun-dappled surface of the water
I could see its body. It seemed, in the shifting green-
blackness, to go on forever. It was like looking down
into a bright summer sea and seeing, under its glittering
surface, the long, dark, death’s shape of a submarine,
ghosting silently beside you. I shut my eyes and
paddled.
After what seemed an eternity my grandfather said,
in his normal voice, “I heard there was a big one
around this year. Shem Cutler saw him early one
morning, taking a raccoon. Said he looked like a
damned dinosaur. Shem reckoned he might be eighteen
or twenty feet. I hear they’ve been losing pigs and a
hound or two over at Dayclear, too. I wouldn’t be
surprised if it ain’t old Levi.”
“Levi?” I croaked, finally looking back. The gator
had apparently lost interest in us and turned toward
the bank. He did not come out of the water, though.
In another stroke or two we were past the convocation
of gators.
“The Gullahs tell about a giant alligator that’s always
been around these parts, bigger than any of the others
by a country mile. They
Low Country / 69
say you can hear him bellowing in the nights as far as
Edisto. Every time a piglet or a dog or a chicken goes
missing, they say that it’s Levi. Nobody much sees him
and they say you can’t catch him. Gators do live to be
right old, but if the tales are true, this old boy would