Authors: Duncan W. Alderson
“Was that when you had to leave the university?”
“Yes, after my sophomore year.”
“Were you disappointed?”
“The worst part was giving up my Olympic dreams.”
“That must have been devastating.”
“It’s what sent me to Texas. I was hoping to make back the money we lost. I didn’t want my mother to suffer.”
“It doesn’t matter now. We have each other.”
Garret’s beard scratched her lips when he kissed her, but she didn’t care. She loved him just as he was, unshaven, unheroic, and barefoot.
“You’re worth more to me than all the money,” he said, in between kisses.
“Then why didn’t you call me? You knew where I was.”
“I was waiting to see if you’d come looking for me.”
“Why?”
“Don’t you know?”
She shook her head.
“I thought you were going to go back to Lamar.”
“You did?” Hetty sat up, making the hammock swing. “Oh, Mac, you poor thing!”
“Well . . . you seemed awfully interested in fighting with him.”
“I was stupid. I don’t know what got into me. But it’s not because I’m in love with Lamar!”
“It’s not?”
Hetty looked out through the rusty screens in frustration. “No, honey. I don’t want Lamar. I don’t know how many times I have to tell you.”
“It’s really been eating away at me.”
Hetty looked back at the man lying in the hammock. What she saw caused her to put her foot on the floor and stop it from swinging. Tears welled in Garret’s blue eyes. His face was that of a boy’s: guileless, hurt, his pain unprotected. “I left you before you could leave me.”
She reached for him. “You’re the one, Mac. You were always the one.”
She’d never seen him weep like this. She held him close while a riptide of emotions broke loose, all the doubt and the disappointment and loss of the last few months flooding out. She could feel everything crashing around their heads: Pick and the Ada Hillyer, Cleveland and the interest owners, Splendora and Anaconda and a thousand oil wells sitting idle. Garret needed her to hold him while he tore through his anguish and told her how sorry he was. She consoled him, her breasts wet with tears.
Soon, Pierce woke up and started crying for her from the iron bed. Hetty and Garret dressed and took him out to the beach. Garret played with his son for a long time in the sand. When they grew hungry, she cut up the apples she’d bought and found some cheddar cheese to slice out of the icebox. Swaying in the hammock, they talked through the dusk, until the salty air put Pierce to sleep early on his blanket. Hetty nestled him in the old iron bed where he’d taken his nap. Then she swung back into the hammock and wrapped her arms and legs around Garret, swimming in his heavy scent. She rocked him for a while, feeling close but not erotic, blending her breath with his. The sound of the surf rose and fell like the voices of lovers murmuring at midnight. She nuzzled her mouth close to his ear and whispered, “Now I’m rich,” but he had fallen asleep. Mac was finally at peace.
Hetty woke in the night and found Garret unbuttoning her blouse. An old moon had crept out of the ocean and built a nest of pale light in the clouds. She couldn’t see her husband’s face, but she could make out his naked body stretched out on the hammock, aroused and smelling like wetlands musky with heat. She let him undress her and suck at her nipples until they ached with pleasure. She wanted him so much she was delirious with it, still half asleep and reddening in the face. As he lifted above her, she spread her legs all the way, causing the hammock to fan out to its fullest berth. There were no more barriers in their way; she was dripping with fertility and ready to yield everything to his need. He lay on top of her and penetrated her slowly, taking his time. They were so ripe with love they couldn’t have stopped if they’d wanted to. His arms came around her, her legs entwined him, and they cleaved to one another breathlessly as the hammock rocked and pitched through the night.
Hetty rises through the ceiling and stands on the cedar shingles of the porch. Music washes in from the Gulf. A yacht is passing by, the Rusk yacht, all one hundred and three feet of it lit up for a party as it glides through the water. On the back deck, Nella and Charlotte and Lamar sit in deck chairs talking. Hetty’s friends Belinda and Wini lean over the railing. Diana Dorrance is flirting with the captain. No one is paying any attention to Hetty except for Cora, who smiles at her as the yacht flows by. She looks as beautiful as Hetty has ever seen her, lounging in a silk
rebozo,
gesturing to the east. Hetty follows to where her finger is pointing: Dawn is splintering the darkness. Out of the blue fog, the spires of the Galvez Hotel rise into the morning light.
“That’s where we spent our honeymoon,” she says to the partygoers, but they have drifted away.
Children appear in the clouds, refugees from a baroque ceiling. They sit there enormous, translucent, as if made of glass, gazing at her with ancient eyes. A boy and a girl. The boy is naked except for the paintbrush in his hands. He is painting the dawn by dipping bristles into the sun. He doesn’t streak the sky with the usual russet and orange, but blends his palette from the dark side of the spectrum, mixing a radiant magenta out of red and purple, crowning it with golden light and resting it on the turquoise of the sea. He circles the girl with his rainbow of darkness and draws it across the sky like a comet’s tail, a Roman candle. Hetty watches it arch and dive. Then it enters her womb.
The blue light of dawn drew Hetty out of a blissful slumber. She thought she heard voices in the tide. Rolling out of the hammock, she picked the striped beach towel off the floor and wrapped it around her shoulders. She opened the screen door soundlessly, descending the wooden steps to the sand. The old moon was setting, pale and evanescent in the growing light. She followed it along, wading in the surf, curious to see what the ocean had spawned in the night. A brine of cockleshells and twisted whelks littered the beach, along with braids of seaweed and broken sand dollars. The pink inside a seashell reminded her of the dark rainbow she’d seen in her dream last night. A dream that was not of the earth, born of the sea. She remembered how Cora had described what happens when the two darkest sides of the spectrum meet: something unexpected and rare, a shimmering pink lighter than the purple and red that give it birth—a cosmic color that must be what flows in the arteries of angels in place of blood.
That’s what happened to Mac and me last night,
Hetty mused.
Our darkest colors touched and gave birth to something radiant and new. A light and joyful magenta. Love made visible.
She looked across the gleam of the water at the ghost of a moon sinking below the horizon. It was speaking to her in its silent language, the language understood by every woman and by women only. She let the towel gape open in the morning breeze. Her breasts lolled out, full and promising. She cradled her abdomen with her hands. She remembered how the dream ends.
Please turn the page
for a very special Q&A
with Duncan Alderson!
What inspired you to write
Magnolia City
?
I grew up seeing photographs of my mother, Dottie May, as a flapper from a remote, more romantic time in Texas history. The exotic woman in the pictures wore furs and long strands of pearls, staring into the camera with a kind of flaming defiance missing in the practical housewife who was raising me. I had to write a book to explain who that other woman was. She sparked my imagination in so many ways as I tried to picture her on a honeymoon in Galveston, sneaking into the Balinese Room for one of the fashionable new bootleg cocktails. “Dottie” shape-shifted into “Hetty” and sprang to vivid life in my mind. Henry James said that every writer must find his donnée (what’s given to him by life). I found the thread of my donnée in those old faded photographs of my mother. When I yanked on it, a whole book unspooled.
Why did you choose the title
Magnolia City
for a book about Houston, Texas? That brings to mind the Deep South.
As I delved into the history of my hometown, I discovered many surprises. The biggest one was that Houston’s historic nickname was “the Magnolia City.” This may seem odd until you realize that during the period my novel is set, the 1920s, Houston was still a gracious bayou town, steaming at the edge of the Old South but awash in the new money of Spindletop oil. The city didn’t get varnished with the Western Myth until the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo kicked off in 1932. Before that, there were no cowboys and Indians in Houston’s history. But there was a Lost Eden. During Edwardian days, Houstonians took the trolley out to Magnolia Park along Buffalo Bayou, an earthly paradise that rivaled Central Park and was planted with 3,750 Southern magnolia trees. It was wiped out by urban sprawl in the 1920s but it lingered in the collective memory of Old Houstonians like the lost scent of the lovely white flowers that gave the city its name.
Hetty’s mother, Nella, is a complex, fascinating character, one who can be both magical and infuriating. Is she based on a real person?
Nella is a fictional collage that I glued together from many different scraps of real life: an elegant grandmother who lived in a hotel; a witty aunt who wrote letters in calligraphy; a mystical Mexican woman who worked in an herb shop and entranced me with her glittering eye. I took an earring here, a pair of lips there, a gesture, a tone of voice, a memory, an innuendo, then cut and pasted them all together in my imagination, fitting the pieces like a puzzle. People who accuse writers of identity theft don’t understand how the creative process works. Characters stolen wholesale from real life often come across as flat in fiction. There’s an alchemical process that must happen, just as in making a collage. Suddenly all the clippings coalesce, and a new face is staring out at you.
Why did you choose to write from a woman’s point of view?
I didn’t choose it, it chose me. I was trying to write a novel about a male protagonist in the 1960s who was loosely based on myself. At one point in the story, his mother returns home and drifts off into a long reverie about her youth in the 1920s. I was studying at the Humber School for Writers at the time and my writing coach, the Canadian novelist Sarah Sheard, said, “You know, the best part of this manuscript is the flashback. Why don’t you let the mother tell her story?” It turned out to be a good suggestion. As soon as I allowed my imagination to dance, Hetty MacBride was born. That one chapter mushroomed into a whole book, and suddenly, I discovered I had this strong female voice living inside of me. I was as surprised as everybody else.
Larry McMurtry pioneered a spare prose style for his novels about Texas, a lyricism as “clean as a bleached bone.” Why have you chosen to write in a more descriptive style?
Most of McMurtry’s books are set in the Panhandle Plains or the Big Bend Country of West Texas.
Magnolia City
unfolds along the Gulf Coast, in the moist subtropical part of Southeast Texas. In place of the wide-open sky of the West, Houston has moss-hung bayous and lush azalea gardens flickering in the shade of twisting post oak trees. It’s a different geological zone and a different culture. In order to capture the intricacies of Old Houston, with its elaborate social customs and Art Deco skyscrapers, I needed a language as rich and heady as one of those big, fragrant Magnolia grandiflora blossoms.
A READING GROUP GUIDE
Duncan
W. Alderson
ABOUT THIS GUIDE
The suggested questions are included
to enhance your group’s reading of
Duncan W. Alderson’s
Magnolia City
.