Read Sullivans Island-Lowcountry 1 Online
Authors: Dorothea Benton Frank
Tags: #Fiction, #Domestic Fiction, #General, #Sagas, #Women - South Carolina, #South Carolina, #Mothers and Daughters, #Women, #Sisters, #Sullivan's Island (S.C. : Island), #Sullivan's Island (S.C.: Island)
a beautiful, pastel-colored garden, with a stream of gray and pale
blue silk water running down its center.As a child the scene had
seemed so real to me that I could imagine myself there, climbing
the garden wall of stone and pale green ivy and then wading in
the water.
The front was pieced together from tiny swatches of fabrics
to form flowers, birds, trees and shrubs. She had probably col-
lected those swatches for years. The back of the quilt was now
ivory silk, blind-stitched over its original backing of cotton.
Hundreds of tiny French knots gave the quilt texture and
dimension. Its fragile state was so urgent; it should have been
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D o r o t h e a B e n t o n F r a n k
mounted as a wall hanging for the sake of preservation. If there
was one thing that Charlestonians did it was to preserve. But,
I couldn’t retire it as an art object. I preferred to wrap myself in
its cool folds, wondering if my grandmother—the one I had
scarcely known—was trying to tell me something.
I turned in our ancient, creaking bed—my parents’ bed—
solid mahogany, with carved shafts of rice decorating each of its
four red patina posters, a symbol of long-gone plantation crops.
We had once grown the most desirable rice in the world in
Charleston’s rice fields—Carolina Gold.The bed was a souvenir
of the past.
I remembered the day we had carried it into the house in
pieces, up the steep stairs from the front hall to our bedroom—
Tom and I—and together we had assembled it, fitting the neatly
labeled pegs in just so. There was not a single nail in it—only
handmade pegs. We had just bought our house then—an old
Victorian in the historic district of downtown—and my sister
had insisted that we have the bed as a housewarming gift.
My mind moved on. I tried to convince myself that the
gentle, rhythmic snoring of my husband was in fact the sound of
the tide coming in on Sullivan’s Island.The sounds of the Island
had never failed to help me fall off to deep sleep. But that night
no amount of imagining or remembering brought the rest I so
desperately sought.
It had been well past one o’clock when I finally got to bed
and I twisted and turned until past two. Somewhere around then I
kicked off the covers and opened a window. At that hour the city
noises of Charleston had at long last given up to near silence,
except for the occasional foghorn from the harbor or the lone car
engine revving up and flying away from a red light. The car’s
driver—probably a college student—knew no one was around to
stop him at that hour.
As I raised the sash, the night air rushed through my win-
dow, causing my curtain sheers to billow, and my bedroom air
became damp all at once. Damp and slightly chilled. I should
S u l l i v a n ’ s I s l a n d
3
have recognized the smell of impending disaster, but I didn’t. I
hurried back to bed and when the alarm failed to wake me at
six-thirty, I woke in a panic at seven.
The day began in a whirlwind of petty grievances. Beth
didn’t like the cereal I put out for her and whined about it as
though I were trying to feed her poison instead of a bowl of
healthy fiber. Tom couldn’t find his favorite cuff links and
accused me of being nosy for rearranging his jewelry tray. I had
done no such thing. Who had the time for that sort of house-
keeping? Rearrange his jewelry tray? What a joke that was. I had
barely had time lately to remember my name. He had probably
left them at the gym, I told him.
Half apologetic for his foul humor,Tom took our daughter
to school so that I could get to my office at the Charleston
County Library on time. Even he knew I had to make a major
presentation that afternoon at work.“Good luck!” he called out
on his way out the back door.
I had been up late working on a proposal for the South
Carolina Electric and Gas Company. It was pretty much a done
deal, but I still worried. I got paid to worry. I raced to work like
a madwoman. I couldn’t be late. An ugly side of government
employment involved time-clock punching and score keeping
at an obsessive level. If you were fifteen minutes late, your salary
was docked. Absurd. I had two master’s degrees, but if I was
fifteen minutes late for work, eyes rolled, eyebrows arched and
the bookkeeper had a smug moment of glee. Where had
they
been at one in the morning? Forget it. It wasn’t an argument
worth the blood pressure.You see, I’d learned. Pick your battles
carefully.
Anyway, I felt like a plate spinner. Remember those guys on
television?
The Ed Sullivan Show
, I think—some Russian fellow
who had twenty plates on flexible poles, all spinning at once
over his head. That was my life. My daughter, Beth, was one
plate—her academic career, her social life, her complexion and
her compulsion to spend. Oh, she spun all right. My husband,
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D o r o t h e a B e n t o n F r a n k
Tom, was another—spinning somewhere out of my direct line
of vision. The house was another—threatening to fall down
around my ears. It was always something—a broken pipe, a leak-
ing gutter—and it was my job to see about it all. Tom was too
busy. Or whatever. My sex life was another plate.That one spun
backwards, along with my wallet plate—slightly cracked. Don’t
ask. I just kept thinking that soon, things would be better—as
soon as I got to the bottom of the paper on my desk, filled out
all the health insurance claims, as soon as I did this or that.
I should not have been in the least surprised to discover,
when I made it to the library, that I had left the support materi-
als for the charts at home. Well, I thought, I could put a Band-
Aid on that one too. Instead of lunch, I’d just fly home as fast as
I could, grab the papers and fly back in time for the two o’clock
meeting. It wasn’t a big deal—just a mosquito bite in the
scheme of things.
I gave my diskettes to our development department secre-
tary, who swore up and down that it was no problem to print
the graphs on sixteen-by-twenty paper for the easel. I blew her
a kiss and ran back home at around eleven. If I got back by
twelve, it would give me two solid hours to assemble everything
and go over it again.
It was a gorgeous South Carolina morning. I don’t know
why, but I was struck by the clearness of the sky—all that blue.
So beautiful. I raced down Meeting Street, passing all the tourists
crossing the streets, thinking how pleasant it was to live in a place
that everyone wanted to see.And Charleston is no cheesy resort.
She is noble and grand. People came here to learn, to be
enriched. Of course my enthusiasm was tempered by the natural
reserve with which Charlestonians have the good fortune to be
born. No, no. During Spoleto Festival, we do not drive down
Murray Boulevard blowing our horns and swilling beers like in
the football towns. Heaven forbid. We open our gardens and
serve iced tea with mint sprigs to total strangers, treating them
like favored friends.
S u l l i v a n ’ s I s l a n d
5
I was thinking about all this graciousness and hospitality, and
singing “Sixty-Minute Man” along with the radio, as I swung
into my narrow driveway on Queen Street. I didn’t even slam my
car door, but left it open, intending to stay only long enough to
get what I needed. I was already bounding up the steps to Beth’s
room (somehow the family word processor had migrated there)
when I heard the voices. I stopped dead. Someone was in my
house. Someone was in my bedroom!
“Oh, God!”
I heard a
distinctly female voice cry out.
“Oh, my God!”
Was it Beth? Was
someone hurting my Beth? It sounded like someone having sex!
With my heartbeat loud in my ears, I sneaked back downstairs as
fast as I could and grabbed the fireplace poker. I was shaking all
over. I didn’t know whether to call the police first or try to stop
what was happening myself. I stood outside my bedroom door
and listened for a minute. My box spring was creaking and
groaning.
“Ride me! Yes! My tiger!”
Then an all too familiar voice said,“I’m gonna give it to you
like you want it! Tell me you want it!”
“Oh! Yes! Please!”
It took me about one split second to realize I was about to
confront some major bullshit. My heart sank. I could’ve walked
out of there and maintained my dignity, but oh, no. Not me.
Something made me open the door. The tiger—whose bare
backside faced me—was none other than my husband, Tom.
The female he rode—whose ankles he held high in the air
while she clung to my headboard—was the chemically
enhanced and surgically improved young woman who ran the
New Age bookstore on St. Phillip’s Street. I stood there in the
doorway with the poker, anger rising like a geyser, waiting for
them to realize they had company, thinking for a split second
that a poker was a rather Freudian and humorously named
weapon to have at the moment. I cleared my throat as loudly as
I could when it was clear my husband and his love puppy didn’t
have a clue. She was the first to react.
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D o r o t h e a B e n t o n F r a n k
“Tom!” she screamed. “Stop! My God!” She scrambled to
cover herself with
my
sheets.
He turned around to face me and started screaming,“What
are
you
doing here?”
“I live here,” I said. My voice sounded weak.“I forgot some
papers.” I couldn’t move.
“Well, go get them,” he said, “and close the door!” He
sounded cold and foreign. Not like the man I had shared the last
sixteen years with.
His dismissal finally infuriated me beyond reason. “Get out
of my house,” I said,“both of you.” I crossed the room and raised
the fireplace tool over Tom’s head.They were suddenly horrified
and begged me to put it down.They scrambled to the other side
of the bed to escape, caught in the sheets, knocking a lamp from
the end table, sending it smashing to the ground.
“Please, Susan! I can explain! Don’t do this!”Tom was plead-
ing with me and, thank God, I heard him. I would’ve hit them
both, bashed their brains in. I dropped the cast-iron poker to the
floor and began trembling. I’d never hit anyone in my life and
suddenly there was a raging murderer inside of me.
“Get out,” I said to her in a low voice. My heart pounded so
hard I thought I might have a stroke. She slipped out of the bed,
naked and wet with perspiration, her blond hair all matted in
the back from her tiger ride. Her dark pubic hair was shaved
into a heart shape.“Who do you think you are?” I hissed at her.
“You’re not even a real blond!”
“Go downstairs, Susan,” Tom said, “try to pull yourself
together.”
“Really?” I said. “Pull myself together? You’re in my bed
with this slut and I should worry about how I
behave
? This bitch
is screaming ‘Ride me like a tiger!’ and
I
should compose
myself
?
I’ll tell you what, Tom Hayes.You get that cheap whore out of
my house and get your ass dressed and downstairs in five min-
utes. If you can’t give me the apology of your life, I want you out
of this house today. Is that clear?”
S u l l i v a n ’ s I s l a n d
7
I didn’t even know if he answered me. I slammed the door
so hard behind me that it thundered all over the house. I don’t
remember going to the kitchen, or lighting the cigarette I found
myself smoking a few minutes later. I heard the front door close.
Silence. I waited for Tom to appear. Silence followed by silence.
I went back to the foot of the stairs.
“Tom?”
He was gone.
I called my office after some time and apologized, saying
that I had become ill, asking my boss to do the presentation. My
illness wasn’t a lie. The room spun around me as I fed the sup-
port material for the presentation through the fax in Tom’s
study. I pulled the sheets and pillowcases off our bed and flipped
the mattress. I got a sponge and wiped down every square inch
of my bathroom and dusted every surface in my room. It wasn’t
until I put the linens in the washer that I began to cry. I saw by
the kitchen clock that it was afternoon—it was two-thirty. Beth
had cheerleader practice and she wouldn’t be home until five.
What would I say to her?
I debated calling Tom’s office but before I could think of
what to say, I heard the front door open again. In a matter of
seconds I turned to see Tom staring at me. I knew I looked
horrible. My eyes were all swollen and red. Somehow the
favorite dress I had chosen to wear to work now seemed
frumpy and dowdy. I stood there in my stocking feet. I felt a
run growing by my big toe on my left foot—it ran right up the
front of my leg. I had to wear black pantyhose today? It came
to me in a rush that my nails were chipped and my hair hadn’t