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
too, to this day. It does help. I don’t know why, but
it does.
On this morning, I lay still in the tiny room that had
always been mine, that looked out through a great,
twisted, moss-shawled live oak
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to the marsh proper and the creek, and for a moment
I did not open my eyes. I knew that it must be late
morning or even early afternoon, for I had the
cleansed, heavy-wristed feeling that you get when you
have finally had enough sleep, but there was no sense
of the strong overhead sunlight that should have fallen
on my lids. I opened my eyes and looked out my un-
curtained window into a solid wall of white. Fog. The
dawn conflagration had told it truly: red sky at morn-
ing, sailors take warning. It was odd, though. We
usually get those heavy, solid, still fogs in winter and
very early spring.
I rolled over and stretched luxuriously, feeling each
separate vertebra pop, feeling the long muscles in my
legs pull. I lay still, smelling the peculiar island smell
of damp old percale and salt mud, listening. But I
heard nothing; not the songs of the migratory birds
who often lingered on their way farther south; not the
busy daytime rustle of the small communal wildlife in
the spartina and sweet grass; not the faraway tolling
of the bell buoy off the tip of Edisto; not the low throb
of engines on the inland waterway. Nothing. The fog
had swallowed sound as it had sight. I knew if any
noise did penetrate, it would sound queer and dis-
placed, without resonance. Fog bounces sound about
like a ventriloquist.
I knew that I would take no photographs until it lif-
ted, and toyed with the idea of simply
126 / Anne Rivers Siddons
burrowing back into the old piled, limp pillows and
going back to sleep. But I did not need sleep; I needed
to be out on the island, to let it slip its green fingers
into my mind and draw out the sad silliness of the
night before. Watercolors. That was what this day
called for. Watercolors of the intimate, ghostly body
parts of the island as they emerged from the whiteness
and were swallowed again: a live oak arm with its
sleeve of fog-covered moss, a cypress knee, the bones
of the dock, the red hull of my grandfather’s canoe,
bumping against the rubber tire fender. I thought of
John Marin and his watercolor
Maine Islands
, so much
more powerful and evocative for what it hid in the fog
than what it showed. Yes. A day for vignettes and
glimpses.
I got up and showered in the rusted stall in the
bathroom, letting the brackish, sulfur-kissed water
sluice every knob and crevice of my body. I was, I
thought, one of the few people on earth who liked the
paper-mill stink of the island’s water. I kept big drums
of spring water at the house, both for drinking and
cooking and for washing my hair, as I knew Clay hated
the smell of it after I washed it in island water. Like a
chemistry experiment gone wrong, he said. But I liked
it. Today I would be totally a creature of the island; I
would smell of it and taste of it, as well as see and
touch and hear it.
I put the jeans and sweatshirt back on and
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made coffee and found a rock-hard bagel and zapped
it in the microwave, then took my breakfast to the table
before the long windows that faced the creek. I ate
staring into the shifting wall of the fog. After breakfast
I rooted out my watercolor block and the tin box of
colors, filled a plastic two-liter cola bottle with water,
and started out the sliding door onto the deck. Silence
and wetness smacked me in the face. I stopped and
closed my eyes and breathed it deeply into my lungs.
I heard the hoofbeats while I stood, eyes still closed.
It did not frighten me; I knew that it was the ponies.
They had undoubtedly seen my lights and smelled my
bagel, and were hoping for a handout. The Park Service
maintained them nominally, but the Gullahs in
Dayclear fed them biscuits and corn bread and
whatever they had at hand, and so had my grandfather,
adding grain in the winters, and the ponies had grown
particular. I heard the stamping of hooves and an oc-
casional snort and whicker, and I knew they would be
grouped about the bottom of the steps up to the deck,
waiting to see whether they would dine or would be
forced to bolt. No one on the island mistreated or
shooed them, that I was aware of, but sometimes they
made a great, eye-rolling, hysterical show of fright and
persecution, and went lumbering off in a pod as if
ringmasters with chains were after them. There seemed
to be
128 / Anne Rivers Siddons
no pattern to it. My grandfather always said, when
they spooked and scattered like that, that they were
simply bored, but Clay maintains that their brains are
somehow smaller than those of normal horses, or that
their synapses do not meet, or some such arcane genet-
ic glitchiness. He does not care for the ponies. They
trample grass and gardens and keep the shallow banks
of the creek slick and muddy. And they leave their ex-
crement everywhere.
I inched my way down the steps, talking softly all
the while so that they would know I was there. I finally
saw them when I had almost reached the bottom step.
A small puff of breeze, the little wind off the mainland
that usually comes up in the afternoon, blew aside the
curtain of fog, and there they stood, perhaps seven of
them in a loose knot, staring patiently at the steps
where they knew I would materialize.
I do not know what they looked like originally, but
they mostly look alike now, distinguishing characterist-
ics blunted and buffed away by generations of inbreed-
ing and the years in the subtropical wild. Now they
are almost all a kind of taupish dun color, shaggy of
coat and tangled of mane, with fat, hanging bellies
from the rich marsh grass and the largesse of the is-
landers, and splayed, untrimmed hooves. Their coats
are caked with the dust of their mud wallows in hot
weather, when the slick odorous black mire is an
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effective fly and mosquito deterrent, and long and
tattered like beggars’ coats in winter. Their heads are
large in proportion to their stumpy legs, and there is
usually some sort of rheumy effluvia stuck in the
corners of their large, feminine brown eyes. They have
long eyelashes, ridiculously like cocottes in a French
farce, and pretty, curly mouths like a fairytale illustra-
tion of an Arabian stallion. They are a very long way
from being handsome creatures, but there is a kind of
tough, cocky competence to them, a chunky briskness,
that pleases the eye. They have attitude. For some
reason, the sight of them always makes me smile.
When the group shifted and I saw emerging from its
middle the little goblin shape of a colt, I laughed aloud.
I had not seen a baby in the herd since I myself was
small.
One of the adults ambled out of the herd and
stretched a stubby neck out toward my hand, and I
opened it so that the sugar cube was visible. Long
yellow piano-key teeth closed over the sugar and raked
it none too daintily into a blacklipped mouth. Pianis-
simo. Nissy. And then the colt came scampering out,
too, and bobbed its head against her flank and looked
around her shoulder at me with huge, black-lashed
eyes, and I both heard and felt my breath come out in
a little puff of wonder and delight.
“Oh, Nissy, you have a baby,” I breathed. “How
pretty he…she?…is. What shall we
130 / Anne Rivers Siddons
call it? Oh, wouldn’t Kylie love this, though!”
I fished in my pocket for more sugar and Nissy came
closer and so did the colt, stretching its miniature neck
out like its mother, ever so slowly, its head actually
trembling with shyness and curiosity, and finally, del-
icately, it took the cube from my palm and crunched
it, then wheeled and galloped away on its long, still-
slender legs. Nissy swung her big head around to watch
it, but she did not follow. The colt disappeared back
into the body of the expectant herd. I threw a handful
of cubes down on the ground and stepped back. Sol-
emnly, not jostling and pushing as dogs or children
would have done, the marsh tackies lipped up the
sugar cubes, crunched them reflectively, waited a while
until no more were forthcoming, and then, as if one
of them had given a signal, wheeled and scampered
clumsily away in one of their mock-panic attacks,
snorting and whickering. The fog swallowed them al-
most immediately, and in another moment swallowed
the sound of them. I was left standing on the bottom
step surrounded by swirling white, with nothing for
company but the memory of them and another memory
that bobbed to the surface of my mind like a cork,
bobbled there tantalizingly for a moment, and then
lay still and whole in my head.
Another day of such fog, long ago, almost the only
time I remembered a fog like this one,
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for we did not come to the island so often in winter.
There was too much going on on Peacock’s for the
children then. But for some reason we were here, Kylie
and I, in a chilly, silent white fog like this one, she
perhaps five or six, still tiny in her yellow slicker,
waiting for my grandfather to finish whatever he was
doing in his bedroom and come and take us crabbing
over on Wassimaw Creek. I would not have taken the
boat out in such weather, but he knew every inch of
all the island’s waterways by heart, and knew that al-
most no one else would have a boat out. It was, he
had said the night before, a fine day for crabbing. So
we waited, and Kylie chafed. I usually let her run free
on the island, but not in fog like this.
Kylie had no fear. You needed a little, sometimes.
The phone rang, and I went into the kitchen to an-
swer it and talked for quite a while to Clay, who was
leaving on a trip to New York and could not find his
cuff links. When I hung up, Kylie was gone.
My grandfather came out then, and together we went
out into the white nothingness, groping our way down
the steps and across the grass to the edge of the marsh,
which dropped a half-foot or so down from the hum-
mock on which the grove and the house sat. Scarcely
six inches, but the difference in terrain was dra
132 / Anne Rivers Siddons
matic. On the high ground, the earth was firm and
level. On the marsh, it was ephemeral, trembling, not
quite solid underfoot. Not precisely watery, or outright
bog, but…not solid. When you could not see, as we
could not on this day, the feeling was eerie, unsettling,
as if you stayed on the surface of the earth only by its
capricious sufferance. We called and called for her,
hearing our voices stop short against a wall of fog,
hearing nothing in return but the dripping from the
old live oaks and the slap of the creek against the dis-
tant pilings of the dock. For the first five minutes or
so I was very angry with her. On the sixth the fear
came. By the time we had groped our way to the edge
of the hundred-foot plank walkway that wound across
the marsh to the creek, I was weak-kneed and nearly
sobbing with fear.
“She can’t have gotten far,” my grandfather said over
and over. “She can’t be in any real trouble. If she’d
fallen or something, we’d hear it.”
“You can’t hear anything in this fog,” I quavered.
“You can’t even hear the fog buoy.…”
“You’d hear if she fell into the water,” he said sens-
ibly. It did no good at all. I was halfway down the
walkway when we did hear a noise. I stopped. It was
the muffled thundering of the ponies coming up over
the hummock from the opposite direction, behind the
house on the high ground. Above it I could hear Kylie’s
laughter. In
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the distorting fog, it seemed to come from everywhere
around us and from far away, from nearby and
nowhere.
I was back on solid grass by the time the ponies
materialized out of the mist, running hard. One of
them was a good half-head in the lead. It was Pianis-
simo, and Kylie was on her back, bent low over the
thick neck, hands woven into the straggly mane,
clinging like a yellow-clad monkey. Kylie, laughing as
hard and joyously as I have ever heard her laugh in
her life.
While I stood there, speechless with relief and anger,
the pony set her stumpy legs and stopped abruptly,
and Kylie half slid, half fell off her back, still laughing.
By the time I reached her, Pianissimo had lumbered
away, back into the fog with the other ponies. I could
hear them as they trotted along the line of the hum-