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)
time I didn’t think about what I was putting on. We made our
way downstairs to find the living room lit with twenty candles,
using every candleholder I owned. A bottle of white wine was
on a tray with two glasses and a bowl of salted nuts.
“I’m going to bed,” Beth said, kissing me on the cheek and
then Tom.“Call me if the house falls down.”
We watched her follow the light of her flashlight up the
stairs, not saying a word. It was a powerful demonstration of her
love for both of us.
“Now what?” I said.
“Would you like a glass of wine?”
“Sure.”
He poured the wine and handed me the glass, looking into
my face. His eyes told me everything I wanted to know but still
I needed to hear the words.
“It appears that our daughter has plans for us,” he said.
“Yes. Apparently she does.”
“You’re nervous, aren’t you?”
“Yes, I am.”
“Well, if it makes you feel any better, so am I.”
We were still standing, not knowing what to do, where to
sit, whether to launch the long overdue discussion, or to let the
past slide and just come together again. “Tom, we have to talk,”
I began.
“I know we do. I’m a no-good bastard.”
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I was the injured party and the injuries still stung. “That’s
good for openers, but that’s not really what I want to hear.”
“I’ve done a lot of thinking, Susan. I was a fool, a complete
fool to leave you. I got swept away with a young woman and I
made the biggest mistake of my life.”
“It’s common.”
“So they tell me. But now I see what an idiot I was and I’m
begging you to forgive me and take me back. I want to come
home.”
“Oh, God,” I said and immediately choked up.
He put his glass down and took mine, placing it next to his on
the coffee table. He took my arms and draped them around his
neck, putting his arms around my waist. I didn’t know what to say.
Tears began to slide down my face.Then he was kissing me, wip-
ing my face with his fingers, pushing back my hair. I needed to be
kissed. I realized how much desire I had and how many eons it
had been since I’d been held. I returned every kiss, gesture, and
touch with a surprising, growing passion. I began to grow hot,
perspiring a little. He pulled me to the couch and I did not resist.
Who was this? It wasn’t the Tom I remembered, the one
who groped for me in the dark and then before I could spell my
last name was in the bathroom washing up. No, this man, this
slow, tender Casanova, was all new to me.
We began the slow waltz of serious lovemaking. He undressed
me and took a long look at me, saying I was beautiful. He was
beautiful too. But unfamiliar. We were new partners, breathing
together, moving together, following the lead of the other’s
pleasure. I could feel the quickened beat of his heart against my
chest as he held me tighter. Over and over, he said he loved me
in a pleading whisper that begged me to love him too. I could
feel it. He thrilled me, as I never had been thrilled in all our
years of marriage. He had obviously learned more than a thing
or two in his absence, and while that was a stunning reminder of
his infidelity, he made me want him like I never had. At last, we
rested. We were too tired to move.
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“Damn!” he said.“So I really do love you, you know.”
“Really, really?” I said, feeling more than a little wicked.
“Yeah, really really. A lot.” I could feel him smiling against
my shoulder.
“I love you too,” I whispered into his neck and kissed him
there, ever so softly, branding him with a kind of tenderness that
I hoped he’d never forget.
Nine
The Aftermath
}
1963
HE Lowcountry had been trampled. I knew it even
before I opened my eyes. My father’s cries from the
T yard and the cries of our neighbors reached up
through our bedroom windows.“Oh, my God! Look at this! . . .
You got power? Lights went out last night about seven and that
was all she wrote, bubba! In all my days . . . How’d this boat get
in my yard? . . . Can’t find my dog! . . . Where’d the porch go?”
I listened to them as sleep dissolved into morning light. I
squeezed my eyes tight. I remembered the night before as if it
were a terrifying nightmare. I wasn’t getting out of bed. I never
wanted to see my father or my aunt again. I thought about my
mother lying in the maternity ward and wondered if she had any
inkling of what my father was up to. My heart was splitting for
her. She deserved a parade in her honor for delivering twins, but
I knew that she would return home to more lies and deception.
Momma would be in the hospital for a week and I was glad
of that. She needed the rest. In the meantime, I would organize
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my brothers, Maggie and myself to help her.When we were in
school, Livvie would be in charge of the twins. When we got
home, we would rotate their care.Then Momma could rest, lose
some weight, regain her sense of humor, make herself pretty and
Daddy would fall in love with her all over again.
I rolled over to my night table and picked up the photo-
graph of Momma and Daddy taken on the day of their engage-
ment. My mother had been a beautiful woman when she was
young. Her chestnut hair was carefully curled, her lips full,
turned up in a smile of mischief, and those fabulous Bermuda
blue eyes were filled with a love for anything life would throw
her way. She was fine-boned and graceful, like a Dresden fig-
urine, but quick and lively, like a sprite.
I ran my finger around the photograph, staring at her young
face. She had wanted to go to college, but it was right after the
Depression and there was only enough money to educate Uncle
Louis.To this very day my grandparents thought it was a waste of
money to educate women.That was not what women did.They
made a good marriage and had a pack of children and settled
down.
As God intended they should,
Grandpa Tipa would say, like
the refrain of an old song. It was obvious to me that they had dis-
couraged my mother from college because she might have left
them, moved to Philadelphia or someplace, and married a Yan-
kee. She had become their caretaker, and they were not grateful
in the least. They were entitled to her servitude, or so they
thought.
That would never happen to me. Somehow I would get to
college. But, before that, I would try to help her dig her way
back to life.
From my bed I could hear Daddy moving planks of wood. I
couldn’t imagine why but at that moment I didn’t care. The
sounds of dragging branches across the yard, interspersed with
my father’s obscenities, drifted up to my window. Finally, I heard
the brakes of Livvie’s bus. I heard her voice from the yard and I
jumped up, ran to the window and had a look down.
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179
The boards I had heard were laid across concrete cinder
blocks to form a bridge over the small lake in our yard. Daddy
was wearing waders and he sloshed through the water to help
Livvie.We would have frogs in the millions. Normally I would’ve
run to Timmy and Henry’s room, dragged them out of bed, gone
and jumped in the water. No doubt Daddy would’ve lost his
temper and screamed at us to quit goofing off, get into dry
clothes and help him. But today everything that had been nor-
mal was falling away by what I had seen the night before. I won-
dered if Daddy knew that I knew. Maybe I would use it against
him. No, I wasn’t that brave.There would be nothing on my face
that he would be able to identify or trace. I felt sick inside, faint.
I had to gather myself and go downstairs to face everyone.
I dressed and went to the kitchen. Livvie was there, pouring
out cereal for everyone.Aunt Carol was having a glass of juice. She
had spent the night in our house because the storm had started to
kick up something terrible and Uncle Louis had thought it would
be better for her to be with us, Momma being gone and all.
“So I said to Louis, I said, ‘Louis? Don’t forget to feed the
babies,’ that’s what I call my dogs,‘and let them in the bed with
you because they’re gonna miss their momma.’ Do you know
what he said?”
“No’m,” Livvie said. Livvie was staring at her so funny that
I thought for a moment that she knew.
“Morning,” I said.
“Morning, Susan. Well, he said, ‘Carol, honey? Your babies
can stand one night away from you, but what am I gonna do?’
Isn’t that just like a man? Can’t live without us! I swear, he loves
me so! Well, I guess I’d better end this tea party and get on home
to my Louis.”
“Yes’m, you do that. I imagine he’s missing you something
terrible.”
Then Aunt Carol picked up her pocketbook to leave and
turned to us to say good-bye, and there was Livvie drinking a
Coke from Momma’s best crystal goblet. No one was allowed to
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use her crystal, especially a colored woman. Momma saved that
crystal in case President Kennedy decided to come for dinner.
Aunt Carol turned purple, puffed up like a blowfish and stormed
out of the back door. I was stunned, but I didn’t say a word.
The morning gathering of our tribe was getting under way at
the same moment of Aunt Carol’s departure. First came Maggie
in shorts and a T-shirt and her hair up in a ponytail. She looked
more like she was going out to a beach party than getting ready to
clean a yard. She always looked like that. Perfect.
One by one, they swung into action, doing their parts to
help. Maggie stirred powdered juice into a pitcher and the boys
set the table with paper plates. I kept my face straight, hiding
under the mask of just waking up. They expected me to be
crabby in the morning. But I was just plain shocked and, I
thought, hiding it pretty well.
“Can’t be wasting no water washing dishes, y’all ’eah me?”
Livvie was giving orders and handing out paper cups. “Yemoja
done dump all the water in the sky on us yesterday.”
“Who?” I said.
“Yemoja, Obatala and Oya.Yes, sir, they done they worst to
Charleston. Nearly blow us all to kingdom come.”
She was talking about her African gods again. I decided they
must have something to do with storms. We knew that when
there was a big storm we had to wait a day or two to be sure the
water came back on and was all right to drink.We’d fill the sinks
and tubs before a storm to drink, wash dishes or flush the toilets.
Naturally, my brothers and my father would use the occasion as
an excuse to use the yard as a toilet. Maggie and I would hold it
until we turned blue. On Sullivan’s Island, we were proud to
have our own water supply—a combination of deep wells from
which blended water was pumped by electricity. But when the
lights went out, drinking water went with it. Truth told, the
water reeked of sulfur but made the creamiest grits.Anyway, in a
day or so we would have water and lights again. In the mean-
while we would put orange juice on cereal and laugh about it.
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181
We were professionals in the aftermath business. At least no one
would have to fight about taking baths tonight. Until the power
came back on we had a holiday from all that.
“No electricity. Sophie’s going to have a fit that she can’t
have her toast and egg,” Grandpa Tipa said, coming in the
kitchen.“Can’t you children say good morning?”
We were busy stuffing our mouths with Frosted Flakes and
Tang at this point.
“Good morning, Grandpa,” I said.“Did you sleep okay?”
“Of course I did. Said the rosary, you know. It’s what good
Catholics do when we need protection,” he said.“Mrs. Singleton,
I nearly ran myself ragged protecting my property yesterday!
Thank you for clearing the porch for us.We certainly have a lot of
electrical plugs in this house. I must’ve unplugged one hundred
things.”
“Think his Hail Marys saved the Island?” I whispered to
Maggie.
“No, it was the plugs,” she replied.
“Well, I’d better go deal with Sophie,” he said. “Oh!
Mrs. Singleton! I forgot to ask, how did you and all the Africans
make out last night?”
“Me and
the Africans
made out just fine, thank you, sir. Just
fine,” Livvie said, narrowing her eyes at him.
I could see she wasn’t pleased but she decided to let the
remark pass. He had to let her know that she came from a tribal
world of dark skin. He was such a big pain in the butt. He
embarrassed me all the time when he said things like that.
Tipa fixed a plate of bread and a bowl of cereal and carried it
off to Sophie’s room.A few minutes later we heard a plate crash.
Everybody stopped moving, waiting for the screaming to start.
Either it was dropped by accident, or old Sophie had thrown it