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)
gie, who was probably parked up some dirt road with Lucius.
“I’ll get it!” Timmy said. He jumped up and ran for the
door.
“Hi!” I heard Timmy say.“Sure, come on in!”
“Thanks,” said a male voice.
My momma stood up from the table, scraping the chair
along the floor. Livvie turned around from the stove, Henry
reached over for some more bread, and Timmy gave him a
karate chop just for the hell of it.
“Hi! I saw your sign and I was wondering if there’s still a
room for rent?”
He smiled and he had lots of dimples. Deep ones. And
brown eyes with gold flecks. Beautiful eyes, black lashes. His
nose was sort of big, and his mouth was kind of wide. He made
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me nervous and I didn’t know why. He just kind of filled up the
room. He was smart and funny and, boy, was he cute.
“Why, yes! Yes, we have rooms available!” Momma said.
“What’s your name, son?”
“Oh, sorry! I’m Simon Rifkin. I didn’t mean to disturb your
dinner, I was just riding by and saw the sign . . .”
“Oh! Don’t worry! We were just finishing. Would you like
some soup? Livvie made wonderful okra soup! She uses a ham
bone to flavor it. Delicious! I’m Marie Catherine Hamilton, and
these are my children, well, some of them, that is!”
“It’s nice to meet you, Mrs. Hamilton.”
He shook her hand and waved at us. He was wearing a navy
blue windbreaker with a little yellow alligator on the top left
side of it and khaki pants with a white shirt. I sat there like a tub
of lard while Momma droned on. I’ll bet he’s over twenty-one,
I thought.
“Why don’t I show you the room and you can tell me some-
thing about yourself. My brother, Louis, says I should find out
everything I can about somebody who wants to live in my house.
I mean, after all, a lady has to be careful, don’t you think so?”
“Yes, ma’am.” He caught my eye and winked at me. It was a
friendly wink, one that said to me that he knew Momma was
gonna blab and blab and he’d take it with good humor. My neck
got hotter and hotter. He wasn’t that tall. No, probably only
about five feet, nine inches.Why was I sweating? And why was I
wearing this nasty old sweatshirt? Livvie looked at me and raised
her eyebrows.
“What?” I said.
“Nothing, chile. Finish up your cornbread. Henry? You want
some more?”
“Sure!”
She knew. She always knew. Henry held his bowl up to her
and I fished a kernel of corn out of the bottom of my mine.
Simon Rifkin.What kind of name was that? Who was this guy?
A few minutes later Momma led Simon into the room like
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a pet dog or something.“Now, will you have some soup with us,
Simon?” she asked.
“No, no thanks. I gotta get back to the city.”
“All right, next time.Well, then, it’s all settled.You’ll move in
Monday?”
“Yes, ma’am. Nice meeting all of you! Well, see you then!”
The door slammed, Livvie jumped at the noise and I leapt
to the window to watch him walk to his car. He had a little dark
green British MGB convertible. Cool. He walked to it, zipping
his jacket, opened the car door and looked up at the house. He
saw me staring at him through the window. He waved at me
and I waved back, blood rushing back to my face like a rocket.
“I have to call Louis!” Momma said. “A hundred dollars a
month! This is wonderful!”
While washing the supper dishes we learned everything that
Momma had found out about him.
“He’s from where?” Livvie said.
“Michigan! Can you imagine? So far from home, poor boy.
He’s a student at the Medical University! A doctor! Anyway, his
father is a doctor too, and he’s divorced, and guess what?” She
whispered,“He’s Jewish!”
“Big deal,” I said.
“Well, it could’ve been, Miss Smarty Pants.Your Uncle Louis
wasn’t too thrilled about that, because, you know, Jews are peculiar
sometimes.”
I just rolled my eyes.“Momma, Jesus was a Jew,” I said.
“That’s a lie and you know it! The Jews killed our Lord and
that’s why Uncle Louis was a little worried.”
“Momma.The Romans killed Jesus,” I said.“At least that’s what
it says in the Bible, if you can believe what you read these days.”
“Well, no matter about that. It’s just that, well, I don’t want
you to go discussing his religion with him or his daddy’s divorce
either. It’s not polite and we don’t want to be too nosy, do we?”
And she went on and on. I mean, here came the best-looking
guy I’d ever seen in my whole life and my momma had to have
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something to say about his religion! Maybe she was afraid we’d
stop going to Mass. Maybe she wanted to convert him so she
could sit next to the Blessed Mother in heaven.They say that for
every sinner you brought to wash away their heathen sins in the
Catholic baptismal font of conversion, you got a guaranteed seat
practically in the lap of the Blessed Mother, if and when you got
to heaven.
“I told him that I had prayed every night to Saint Joseph,”
Momma was saying, “who is the patron saint of families, by the
way, to send a nice person to live with us. I told him that so he’d
know we’re
Catholic
. Anyway, good old Saint Joseph came
through! I have to remind myself to light a candle for him
tomorrow. Such a reliable novena! Oh! This is such
good
news!
And, guess what else?” She whipped out a check for a hundred
dollars from inside her blouse. “Deposit! Louis never said
any-
thing
about deposit money! I thought of that
myself!
Ha! We
have an extra hundred dollars now and Christmas is gonna be all
right.What do y’all think? Should we get a turkey?”
I hadn’t seen Momma so animated in years. She was really
happy and it was catching.
“No more ham?” I said.
“I want a drumstick! Does he play ball?”Timmy asked.
“I don’t know! You’ll have to ask him!” she said.
“Can he fish?” Henry asked.
“I don’t know that either! We’ll have to find out!”
“Want to know what I think?” Livvie said.
“What?” Momma said.
“I think Gawd send this boy to take y’all’s mind away from
your own worry. He needs a family and y’all need something to
set y’all sailing back to the land of the living! He’s just the right
thing! Yes, sir! He’s a Gawdsend, sure enough.”
Sunday after Mass, Maggie and I went with Uncle Louis
and Aunt Carol over to Mount Pleasant to buy a Christmas tree.
It was cold for a South Carolina day, but that added to our
excitement about the holiday.
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I was excited for another reason. One more day and Simon
Rifkin would be sleeping under our roof. I had one short day to
turn myself into a girl and, unfortunately, Maggie was the only
person who could help me.
We lifted Christmas trees from their piles and stood them
up, debating their various shortcomings and assets.
“Too bare in the front,” Maggie said.
“Top’s crooked,” I said. “Hey, Maggie? What do you think?
Should I cut my hair?”
“I’ve got sap all over my hand. I hate that.” She pulled
another tree from the pile. “Yes, you should cut your hair. It
looks like a rat’s nest.You know I always tell you that if you’re
not willing to take care of long hair you shouldn’t have it. And
you live in a ponytail.”
“Right, you do always say that. So now I’m thinking I
might like to cut it.What do you think about a bubble cut?”
“And what then? You’re gonna stick a little velvet bow in
the front of your head like a birthday present? Spare me.”
“No, I’m not gonna stick a little bow in the front of my
head and look like a birthday present. I just think I need a hair-
style, you know?”
Maggie looked at me and narrowed her eyes. It was the first
time in my life that I ever said anything about trying to improve my
looks. She was the mad Dr. Frankenstein and I was her experiment.
“A little makeup wouldn’t kill you either,” she said. “Clean
up your pores, you know? It would make a big difference.”
“Probably, but I don’t know how to use it, you know?”
“I’ll help you when we get home. I’ve got a drawer full of
free samples. Let’s get this tree and get out of here. I’m freezing.
It must be forty degrees!”
“Done! You know what, Maggie?”
“What?”
“I’m getting sorta excited about Christmas, even though
we’re practically broke.”
“Yeah, me too.Who cares?”
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She put her arm around my shoulder and gave me a squeeze.
I thanked God the old Maggie was back.
I sat on the kitchen stool in front of the bathroom mirror,
staring at my face. She cut my hair straight off across the bottom
at my shoulders with the same scissors we used to cut wrapping
paper, coupons and everything else.
When she finally stopped yanking and measuring my hair,
she combed globs of gel through it and rolled it on orange juice
cans, sticking the clips almost through my scalp.
“Ouch! Maggie! Stop! You’re killing me!”
“Pride knoweth no pain!”
“What the hell is that supposed to mean?”
“Grandma Sophie used to say it all the time when she saw
me pulling my eyebrows with tears running down my face.”
“Yeah, so?”
I was getting cranky and fidgety. Now that she had my whole
head wrapped around her version of rollers, she taped my bangs
to my forehead to give them a final trim.
“Hold still or you’ll look like Moe! It means that vanity
has a price. If you want to look good, don’t complain about the
process.”
“Are you sure these cans are clean? I don’t want bugs in my
hair.”
“You know what, Susan? You’re skating on thin ice. I’m
doing this for you for nothing except an unselfish desire on my
part to help you out and you are being a little pain in the butt.
Plain and simple.”
“Sorry.”
She pulled the hair dryer out of the closet and spread the
big hood over my head, tightening the strings.When she flipped
it on, my head got as big as a basketball.
“Forty-five minutes! You’ll be dry in forty-five minutes!”
I pulled my ears out of the hood.
“I’m not deaf ! Do you have tweezers?”
“Do I have tweezers? Of course.” She shook her head, com -
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pletely exasperated with her nincompoop of a sorry-ass sister, as
she fumbled around in her makeup case. “Here. Use this too.
Brush your eyebrows toward your scalp and just pluck the hairs
that aren’t in the line.”
I peered into the mirror and did as I was told. It hurt like all
hell too.
“Jesus, Maggie! This is awful! I’m bleeding!”
“Give them to me! Who told you to pull out fifty hairs at
the same time? You won’t die from this.”
The end result was rather stunning. I didn’t look like my old
self hardly at all, except that I was the same size. Of course, the
wonders of elastic had rearranged some of that. Maggie had
produced another invention of torture—a Maidenform bra.
“Put this on,” she said.
“I’d rather eat glass,” I said. A bra? No way.
“Put it on,” she said.“I’ll buy you some more next week.”
The major change was my head, inside and out. On the out-
side, my hair looked shiny and it swung when I turned my head.
And it wasn’t all kinky and fuzzy, thanks to the orange juice
cans.The makeup that Maggie had finally decided was the right
color for my skin covered my freckles and made my skin look
smooth. A little mascara, a squirt of Estée Lauder Youth Dew
and I felt like a big deal. I felt like Maggie’s peer. She made me
confess why I was doing this and she insisted that he’d fall right
in love with me.
“He’s about a zillion years old,” I said.
“So what?” she said.“You look really beautiful.”
Anyway, all this led me to believe that I
had
changed and I
was ready for Simon to appear on the doorstep. At least that’s
what I told myself.
Nobody said much about my transformation. Livvie just
smiled and nodded her head, Momma said, “Oh, you cut your
hair,” and Henry wouldn’t have noticed anything different about
me if his life depended on it. However, Timmy’s eyes got big
when I brought in a box of ornaments from the hall closet.
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“So what’s
this
supposed to mean?” he said.
“What’s
what
supposed to mean?” I said, embarrassed to hell
and back.
“I mean, you look, you know, grown up or something weird
like that.”
“Thanks a lot,Timmy.”
“No, I mean, you look good, just different.”
I wanted to slap him.
The day passed slowly. Bing Crosby crooned from the stereo.
Momma was taking a nap. Livvie was making rum balls—and
sandies for us.We decorated the tree, unwrapping each ornament