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
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and doing the old dances, teaching visitors the songs
and legends.…”
“My God. A theme park. Gullah World. That’s just
extraordinary, Clay,” I said fiercely. Anger was begin-
ning to raise its snake’s head. It felt good, like scalding
hot coffee when you are frozen and exhausted.
“It’s not like that. It could be done with great taste
and dignity. Sophia Bridges…you know, the young
black woman with the child…she has an undergraduate
degree in cultural anthropology, and she did her thesis
on the Gullahs. She’s going to do a great deal more
research down here. She thinks it’s fascinating, and
that it could be an important cultural asset to the whole
region.…”
“Sophia Bridges wouldn’t know a real Gullah if one
tackled her and held her down and put her hair in
cornrows! This is not an experiment, Clay! Those are
real people over there! My God! And the ponies…what
about the ponies? Are you going to open up a Wild
West exhibit with them?”
“The ponies are ultimately the responsibility of the
government,” he said. “The Park Service. We’ve been
talking with them for months about the ponies. They’ve
given us at least six months to relocate them or to
cull…”
“
Cull
?”
He looked away again.
“They’re not healthy, Caro. They’re so inbred
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that their genetic weaknesses are going to kill them in
another generation or two. They don’t get enough
food, or at least not the right kind. They’ve just about
grazed out the available hummock grass on the island.
You can’t let them starve. They’ll be much better off
on one of the undeveloped islands, where the grass is
strong and new.”
“They’re not starving, they’re fat as pigs,” I cried.
“Clay, this is…I won’t do this, Clay. Not to the people,
and not to the ponies. I will not give you that land.”
He did not speak. I watched him, my chest heaving
with rage and anguish. Finally he nodded.
“Then, as you say, it’s your island,” he said.
There was another long silence, and then he said,
“Caro, I have to sleep. I’ll die if I don’t sleep. You
should, too. I’ll talk to Hayes in the morning, tell him
it’s off. The Atlanta people are still here; we can wrap
it up before noon. But right now I’m just plain done
for.”
He turned over and reached up and pulled the chain
on the bedside lamp. The room swam back into its
comforting darkness. I heard him settle into his pillow
and give the small sign that meant he was poised at
the edge of sleep. I felt my heart contract slightly with
the first frisson of pity. He had never before said he
was too tired to talk to me. This must have taken a
terrible toll on
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him. I remembered how it had been with him when
he was first learning the island, in the summer days
after Hayes had brought him over from Charleston the
first time. I remembered the sheer enchantment on his
face, the wonder in his blue eyes. You wouldn’t lose
that, not entirely.
I lay still, staring at the drawn curtains. A faint line
of pale, colorless light had appeared under them.
Dawn. The dawn of a day I wished I might never see.
“Clay…” I said softly into the darkness.
“Yeah.”
“Isn’t there any other way? I mean, anything you
could do so that the people at Dayclear and the…the
ponies and all…could stay, wouldn’t be disturbed?
Put it somewhere else on the island, or scale it down,
or something?”
After a long time he said, “We could try. If you’d
agree to think about it, I’d agree to go back to the
drawing board and see if we can’t do better for the
people and the horses. We have until spring before we
have to give the earnest money back. That money
would keep the Calista investors off my back for a long
time. Maybe long enough. I think we could…Caro? If
we could show you how much better it could be? If
we could show you it would really benefit the people
at Dayclear?”
“I…if you could really show me, I guess I
could…think about it. I guess I could do that. But oh,
Clay…”
202 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“We’ll talk about it in the morning, baby. I promise
you we can make it work. I promise you it won’t be
anything you’d have to hate.…”
“Will you promise me something else?”
“Anything.”
“Will you promise me not to talk about it anymore
until after the holidays at least? I don’t think I could
stand it, Clay. I don’t think I can talk endlessly about
this thing, or hear about it. Let’s just get through the
holidays. It’s going to be bad enough, looking at all
those poor, silly little new people and knowing what
you brought them down here for.…”
I should not have said it. No matter what, it was a
gratuitously cruel comment, designed to hurt, and it
did. I knew even before he answered that I had hurt
him.
“That shouldn’t be too hard,” he said in the chill,
neutral voice I fear most. “We don’t talk about any-
thing else.”
I lay still, wrapped in my own pain, until I heard his
breathing slacken into sleep. I meant to get up then,
and go to try to sleep some more on my daybed, but
before I could gather the energy I fell asleep, too, and
when I woke, the sun was high and straight over the
sea, and he was gone.
I
t’s funny how a night’s sleep can change the
complex-
ion of things. I couldn’t have slept more than five
hours, but when I finally got showered and dressed
and in some sort of forward motion, the terrible night
before had faded and bleached itself down to a kind
of half-memory, half-dream that lacked the poisonous
immediacy of the night itself. I knew it was something
I had done myself, while I slept, in order simply to
survive and go on; I had done it sometimes when the
pain of Kylie got too overwhelming. It was a kind of
interior litany that threaded my troubled sleep and
bore me up when I waked: Well, it was awful; it was
the worst thing in the world, but here it is the next day
and we’re still here. The sun is still shining, the birds
are still singing. It isn’t going to kill us, and what
doesn’t kill us can only make us stronger. There’s still
Clay and me, the fact of us. There’s still that.
204 / Anne Rivers Siddons
I was so proficient at it that it was buried deep in
my subconscious now, and I knew only that a night
had passed and a day had been born and we were still
intact. As long as we were, we could work this out.
He had said so, hadn’t he? He had said they’d go back
to the drawing board with ideas for Dayclear. He’d
said we didn’t need to speak of it again until spring.
It would take at least that long to come up with a better
plan. I didn’t have to do anything at all about this
until then. The light would have turned to pale, tender
gold and the marshes would be greening up before I
ever had to think of it.
I ran down the stairs two at a time, eager to be out
in the crisp, clear light that flooded the back garden.
I would have coffee there, and then cut the last of the
roses and bring them in. Then I would go back over
to the island. There was one more thing I had to do
before I could pack the enormity of Dayclear away.
An hour later I stopped at the little unpainted cabin
that had served the settlement as a general store and
community center since I was a small child, to ask
where Ezra Upchurch’s house was. I knew that Janie
and Esau Biggins, who had kept the store almost that
long, would know. They had served the settlement’s
needs and wants and its deepest aches for forty years.
And they were Gullahs, too, originally from Edisto.
There was
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little about the people of Dayclear they did not know.
The vertical planks of the little house were blackened
with age and weather, and several had rotted through.
The roof was rusted tin and missing many squares.
The listing porch held a long-defunct metal Nehi
cooler that squatted stolidly in a corner, like an aban-
doned god. Usually someone sat on it, or a group
played checkers or cards on its pitted surface, but the
day was sharp, and I knew that everyone would be
inside, clustered around the black iron stove that would
surely, as my grandfather always said, burn the place
down one day. A few chickens pecked and scratched
in the swept dirt yard and under the porch. They were
Domineckers; I had always admired their precise tweed
dress and vaguely African demeanor. They seemed to
me so much more exotic than the fat, complacent
Rhode Island Reds, almost as picturesque as the
beautiful, witless, pin-head guineas that sometimes
foraged alongside them. These did not stop their
noshing as I walked through them and up the steps.
Inside, the thick, rank semigloom smelled of smoke
and licorice and the dusty peanuts in their shells in a
big barrel by the counter, and something else darker
and older: dried blood from the carcasses of the
chickens that were slaughtered out back and sold. I
felt a little uncomfortable,
206 / Anne Rivers Siddons
for I knew that mine would be the only white face, but
I had been here before, many times, and I was known.
I would be treated with courtesy because of my
grandfather. He would have been treated with affec-
tion.
Janie was behind the counter this morning. She
smiled her gold-toothed smile and nodded but did not
speak. That was for me to do first, and I did.
“I’m looking for the house Ezra Upchurch is staying
in, Janie,” I said. “He’s got someone staying with him,
a Mr. Cassells, that I need to see.”
“Ezra, he stayin’ with his auntie down at the end of
the row, but he ain’t to home,” she said equably. “Seem
like he say he goin’ to town today.”
I did not know if “town” meant the village on Edisto
or Charleston or what, but it did not matter, since it
was Luis Cassells I wanted. I was glad that I would
not have to say what I had to say to him in front of
Ezra Upchurch. The great wind of Ezra’s presence
would, I knew, overwhelm me. This was going to be
hard enough.
“That’s okay. I’ll just walk on down there and see if
Mr. Cassells is there. Thanks a lot,” I said.
“I’m here,” a masculine voice said from somewhere
in the gloom behind the stove, and I peered into it.
Luis Cassells was sitting in a spavined old rocking chair
in the shadows, drink
Low Country / 207
ing coffee and smoking a large black cigar. Both
smelled good, rich and masculine. They reminded me
of my grandfather. There was a cardboard box beside
him on the floor, and I heard a scuffling and scratching
from it. Walking back, I peered in. There were three
small black and tan hound puppies there, curled
around one another. Luis was scratching their heads
with the hand that held the cigar. He smiled up at me,
his teeth flashing white in the murk.
“Pull up a chair,” he said. “I’ll buy you a cup of cof-
fee. Or maybe you’d prefer a puppy. Esau’s trying to
find homes for them. Their mama got run over on the
bridge.”
“I wish I could,” I said. “If he can’t place them, I’ll
put a notice in the office. Where’s Lita this morning?”
“Ezra’s auntie is teaching her how to wrap her hair.
She’s been after me for a week to let her. Says that way
I won’t have to comb it for days and days, and she
won’t have to cry. She has a point. Combing hair is
not one of my long suits.”
I smiled. Then I said, “Mr. Cassells…”
He raised an eyebrow at me and I felt myself blush,
and was glad of the darkness.
“Luis,” I said. “I came to apologize. I was pretty
crappy to you yesterday. And…you were right about
Dayclear. There are some plans to develop it. I didn’t
know about them. But that doesn’t mean it’s going to
happen; I
do
own this
208 / Anne Rivers Siddons
part of the island, and if it seems to me that the prop-
erty would harm the settlement in any way, it’s not
going to happen. Clay and I have an agreement about
that. I thought you might pass the word along. Nothing
at all is going to be done until spring, and then only
with their blessing.”
He studied me for a space of time.
“I see,” he said. “Well, that’s good to know. Why
don’t you come on back with me and tell them your-
self?”
“Because they’ll be more apt to believe it if it comes
from you,” I said, knowing it was true. “They’re nice
to me because of my grandfather, but I’m whitey all
the same. We don’t have a great history of truth-telling
in these parts. But you’re one of them. They’d trust
you.”