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
Abuelo…Grandfather said I could surprise you. Are
you surprised, Caro?”
I reached down slowly, almost reluctantly, and
touched the damp curls on top of her head. It was all
right. They were springy and a bit wiry, not like Kylie’s
at all. I ruffled them.
“I
am
surprised,” I said. “You must be a witch. I
didn’t think the old lady would let anybody near her.”
Not again, my heart said.
Luis pulled sugar cubes out of the pockets of his blue
jeans and offered one to the nervously pawing Nissy.
She looked at him, the whites of her eyes showing so
that she looked wall-eyed and stupid, and then took it
delicately. The colt came skittering up and nosed at
Luis’s hand, and gobbled his sugar so fast that he
choked a bit, and coughed, and tossed his big goblin’s
head. We all laughed. He would grow up to be an
ordinary, homely little marsh tacky like the rest of his
herd, but right now he was an enchanting mixture of
grace and caricature.
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“He really does need a name,” I said.
“He has one,” Lita said shyly. “That is, if you like it.
I call him Yambi. It means ‘yam’ in the Vai language.
Ezra told me. He eats all the yams we bring him.
Auntie Tuesday lets Abuelo take the leftover ones and
put them under your porch, and they’re always gone
when he comes back. I know it’s him that eats them.
Abuelo found one that had little tiny teeth bites in it.”
“Yambi it is then,” I said. “Hello, Yambi. Are you
an honorary Gullah like Lita?”
The colt cocked his head at us, saw that no more
sugar was forthcoming, wheeled, and fled away on his
still-delicate hooves. In a moment the entire herd had
one of its feigned panic attacks and went thundering
back down the road toward the line of the woods.
Lita’s small face screwed up with dismay, and Luis
said, “They’ll be back after a while. You wait and see.
They’ll come back for lunch. There’s not a marsh tacky
alive that can resist the smell of…what, Caro?”
“Ham sandwiches. Egg salad. Tuna fish on hoagy
rolls. Potato salad I made myself. Estelle’s fruitcake.
Chocolate chip cookies. Oh, and taco chips.”
“Taco chips,” Luis said triumphantly. “Marsh tackies
never get enough taco chips. They’ll be back begging
and pleading.”
We stowed the groceries and my picnic bas
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ket and Auntie Tuesday’s big plastic jug of lemonade,
and went back out into the sun. As if by previous
agreement, though there had been none, we drifted
across the wet grass to the edge of the marsh and stood
looking across it toward the creek. The grasses waved
in the soft, fish-smelling breeze like the sea that lay
beyond, and I saw for the first time the faintest tinge
of gold-green, just at the tips, so that they looked as if
they were haloed. That suffusion of new green meant
the coming of the spring in the Lowcountry.
Please, no, something inside me whispered. It is not
time for the spring yet. It’s much too early for the
green-up. It’s merely an aberration. We have weeks of
winter yet.
And we did; I knew that. This haze of green
was
an
aberration; it happened sometimes on the marshes,
when there had been a lot of rain and almost no cold.
I was still safe there in the bubble of winter.
The weight of the sun on us was palpable, and the
smell of salt and clean mud and the billions of things
growing and dying deep in the black silt was mesmer-
izing. Small white clouds that looked like washing hung
out, sailed across the tender blue sky. Songbirds set
up their choruses in the small knots of myrtles and
scrub trees on the little hummocks that dotted the sea
of grass. We stepped onto the creaking wooden
boardwalk over the marsh and strolled out
286 / Anne Rivers Siddons
toward the water that glittered in the noon sun like
crumpled foil. No one spoke. Sun and sleepiness lay
heavy on my eyelids.
We sat silently for quite a long time on the little
dock, swinging our legs over the edge toward the wa-
ter. The Whaler and the canoe had been put away in
their cradles under the house, but I had forgotten the
salt-faded old oilcloth cushions, and we laid them on
the uneven old boards and stretched out on them in
the sun. I closed my eyes under its red weight. I could
hear the water slapping hollowly against the pilings
below and smiled slightly. It was the sound of all my
summers in this place.
Beside me, Luis said quietly, “How is it for you? Is
it all right?”
“Yes,” I said, not opening my eyes. “So far it’s all
right. It seems that so long as the sun is out, it’s okay.”
“Then we shall stop the sun,” he said in the tone of
Moses commanding the Red Sea to part, and I smiled
again. Pretty soon the slapping water faded, and I think
that I slept for a while.
A great splashing and shrill shouts from Lita woke
me. She and Luis were standing at the very edge of the
dock, looking back toward the shore. I scrambled to
my feet, sweating and confused, and staggered over to
join them.
Dolphins. A school of them, huge and rubbery and
silvery, so close that you could see their
Low Country / 287
silly, cunning smiles and hear the wet, breathy little
noises of their blowholes. They were churning straight
for the marshy banks of the creek, silvery thrashing
ahead of them. And then, incredibly, they drove a
roiling school of small fish into the reeds and
floundered, slapping and blowing, out of the water
and onto the bank after them. Each of the six or seven
huge dolphins managed to eat a fair number of the fish
before they half rolled, half flapped themselves back
into the water. They frisked for a moment, flashing
tails and fins, and then were gone.
I began to laugh.
“My grandfather told me about them,” I said. “I
never believed him. He said there was a…what? A
group, a pod…of salt river dolphins that actually drive
the fish on shore and go after them and eat them. He
said they only exist from about Seabrook down to
Hunting Island, and that they taught themselves to do
that ages ago, and it’s almost a genetic thing with them
by now. But only with this particular group. Any visit-
ing schools have got to do it the old-fashioned way.
They work for it.”
“Ah,
Dios
, how perfect,” Luis said softly. “They know
so much better than we do how to use their world,
and they do not need to either destroy it or leave it.
They’re very smart fish, dolphins. Do you know that
some of the old Gullahs call them horsemen?”
288 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“Horsemen? Why?”
“I’m not sure I understand. It’s a tale one of the old
men told around the stove at the store one night. I
think it’s because the fishermen used to know a trick:
they’d go out to where they knew the dolphins liked
to hang out, and they’d bang on the sides of the boat
underwater, slow, heavy bangs, and for some reason
that attracted the dolphins, and they’d come swimming
toward the boat, driving the fish before them. So there
was fish for everybody then: the fishermen and the
dolphins alike. I made out that they call them horsemen
partly because they work for men like intelligent horses
do. The ‘men’ part I think has to do with certain…ah,
bodily parts that apparently are quite like…”
“I get you,” I said, feeling myself redden.
He leered.
Lita came running back from the bank, flushed with
excitement.
“I touched one!” she cried. “I just reached right out
and touched him on his head, and he let me! It was
like touching wet rubber!”
“They’re pretty tame,” I said. “The ones around here,
anyway. You know, sometimes they sleep right off this
dock, just sort of drift suspended in the water and sleep
all night.”
“How do you know they sleep?” Lita said. “Maybe
they’re just fooling. I do that sometimes.”
“You can hear them snore,” I said. “No kidding, I’m
serious. I’ve heard them snoring in the
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nights in summer, when the windows are open, so
loud that you can’t sleep. It’s a funny, snorty, bubbling
sound, but it’s definitely snoring. When eight or ten
of them are doing it, you can kiss your slumbers good-
bye.”
“I don’t believe you,” Luis said, obviously wanting
to.
“Scout’s honor. My grandfather said they’d been
doing it since he was a young boy out here. If you
don’t believe me, you just come spend the night
sometime and listen yourself—”
I stopped, reddening again.
“I’ll do that,” he said.
“Isn’t it lunchtime?” Lita said from the end of the
dock, where she was watching in case the dolphins
came back.
“Can you wait a little longer?” Luis said. “We’re
having company for lunch.”
“Who, Abuelo?”
“It’s a surprise.”
“Not much of one,” I said, as the menacing growl of
the Harley-Davidson curled into the still air. It grew
rapidly until it and the machine burst into the clearing
at the same time. I saw that three people rode astride,
one sandwiched between the other two.
“It’s Mark!” Lita shrieked in an excess of joy. “It’s
Mark the nark and Ezra Shmezra!”
“And Sophia, of course,” Luis said dryly, giving her
a long look.
290 / Anne Rivers Siddons
“Yeah. Her, too. Okay. I know. I’ll be polite.”
I lifted my eyebrows at Luis over her head.
“Competition,” he mouthed silently, and I laughed.
“It starts young.”
“Does it ever. Of course, she is one fine-looking lady,
you must admit.”
“Yeah,” I said. “I guess I must, at that.”
“Just not my type.” He grinned. “I like ’em down and
dirty.”
I bridled, and then looked down at myself. I was all
black mud up to the knees of my blue jeans, and my
rubber Bean shoes were caked with it. My T-shirt was
spattered with marsh water. My hair hung around my
face and stuck to it with noonday sweat, and I could
feel twigs and bits of moss caught in it. In disgust I
twisted it up off my neck and secured it with the rubber
band I carry with me always, for just such a purpose.
“That’s pretty,” Luis said. “You look sort of Spanish
like that.”
“Like one of Velázquez’s
majas
?”
“Yeah. Like that. I’ll bet you’ve been told that be-
fore.”
“Only once,” I said.
Mark and Lita rushed to meet each other, shrieking
in the ear-piercing treble of small children everywhere;
I had almost forgotten it. They rushed off together
down to the edge of the creek,
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where, from her extravagant gestures, I gathered that
Lita was telling him about the dolphins. Ezra and
Sophia came down the little rise to the edge of the
boardwalk. He wore blue jeans and a red T-shirt and
looked, Luis said in my ear, like a brick shithouse.
Sophia, to my surprise, wore skintight, faded blue jeans
spattered with black mud and a large, flapping man’s
blue work shirt with an elbow out and filthy, wet
sneakers. She still managed to look like an Ibo princess,
though. Just a slightly grimy one. She was carrying the
smart Louis Vuitton tote that I never saw her without,
and I saw the outline of the ubiquitous camera and
tape recorder inside it, as well as several small, plastic-
wrapped bundles and a long, pale brown baguette.
“Brothers and sisters,” boomed Ezra. “Let us break
bread. Since we brought it, that is.”
“We did, too. Caro brought enough for an army,”
Luis said, clapping Ezra on his massive shoulder. In
the sun that poured straight down, Ezra Upchurch
shone almost blue. It was a beautiful color, rich and
virile and somehow royal. I thought that he would
match Sophia Bridges in elegance any day, as long as
he stood in sunlight.
“Caro,” Sophia said coolly. She looked levelly at me.
Her face was calm and courteous, but closed.
“Sophia,” I said back.
We lapsed into silence, and the men stood
292 / Anne Rivers Siddons
quietly, too, watching us. What is the matter with
everybody? I thought in irritation, but still I did not
speak, and still we regarded each other, Sophia Bridges
and I.
What are you doing here? her long almond eyes
said to me as clearly as if she had spoken. You are not
a part of this company. You belong on the other side
of that bridge. You belong with Clay Venable. Where
do you stand in this?
I might ask you the same thing, my eyes said back
to her. So do you belong with Clay Venable. So do
you belong on the other side…of the bridge and the
fence. Where do you stand in this?
We were silent for another moment, and then, just
as Ezra drew a breath to speak, we burst into simultan-