Grief Cottage

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by Gail Godwin




  Grief

  Cottage

  Grief Cottage is dedicated

  to my three nephews

  Trey and Cam Millender

  &

  Justin Cole

  and to my great-nephew

  Matthew Millender

  BY THE SAME AUTHOR

  NOVELS

  Flora (2013)

  Unfinished Desires (2009)

  Queen of the Underworld (2006)

  Evenings at Five (2003)

  Evensong (1999)

  The Good Husband (1994)

  Father Melancholy’s Daughter (1991)

  A Southern Family (1987)

  The Finishing School (1984)

  A Mother and Two Daughters (1982)

  Violet Clay (1978)

  The Odd Woman (1974)

  Glass People (1972)

  The Perfectionists (1970)

  STORY COLLECTIONS

  Mr. Bedford and the Muses (1983)

  Dream Children (1976)

  NONFICTION

  Publishing: A Writer’s Memoir (2015)

  The Making of a Writer: Journals, vols. 1 and 2 (2006, 2011) edited by Rob Neufeld

  Heart: A Personal Journey Through Its Myths and Meanings (2001)

  CONTENTS

  Chapter I

  Chapter II

  Chapter III

  Chapter IV

  Chapter V

  Chapter VI

  Chapter VII

  Chapter VIII

  Chapter IX

  Chapter X

  Chapter XI

  Chapter XII

  Chapter XIII

  Chapter XIV

  Chapter XV

  Chapter XVI

  Chapter XVII

  Chapter XVIII

  Chapter XIX

  Chapter XX

  Chapter XXI

  Chapter XXII

  Chapter XXIII

  Chapter XXIV

  Chapter XXV

  Chapter XXVI

  Chapter XXVII

  Chapter XXVIII

  Chapter XXIX

  Chapter XXX

  Chapter XXXI

  Chapter XXXII

  Chapter XXXIII

  Chapter XXXIV

  Chapter XXXV

  Chapter XXXVI

  Chapter XXXVII

  Chapter XXXVIII

  Chapter XXXIX

  Forsterville: An Epilogue

  Acknowledgments

  A Note on the Author

  Also Available from Gail Godwin

  Not everybody gets to grow up. First you have to survive your childhood, and then begins the hard work of growing into it.

  I.

  Once there was a boy who lost his mother. He was eleven years, five months, four days—and would never know how many hours and minutes. The state troopers came to the apartment around midnight, but the accident had happened earlier. A part of him believed that if he had known the exact moment her car slid on a patch of black ice and somersaulted down the embankment, he could have sent her the strength to hold on. Please, Mom, you’re all I’ve got. And she would have heard him and held on. She had gone out to buy them a pizza. They were going to watch one of their favorite old movies on TV, the one where Alec Guinness and his band of thieves pretend to be musicians. They rent a room in a nice old lady’s house, shut the door, put a string quartet on the gramophone, and she is never the wiser. Before the movie is over, she is helping them move their stolen goods and she is still none the wiser. The star of this movie had special meaning to the mother and son because they had read an article about how Alec Guinness never knew who his father was because his mother had refused to tell him, but he had still grown up to be famous anyway.

  ***

  Aunt Charlotte was my mother’s aunt, which made her my great-aunt. I had only heard tales about her before I went to live with her. Even the tales weren’t much. She had run away from home early, married several times, and then gone to live by herself on an island. At some point she had taken up painting and had become a successful local artist. She wasn’t a letter writer but whenever Mom wrote to her she sent back a postcard with one of her paintings. I was always mentioned by name. Mom stuck the postcards up on the refrigerator, paintings of storm clouds over waves, orangey light on wet surf, a gloomy ruin of an old beach cottage. The paintings had names: Storm Approaching, Sunset Calm, Abandoned Cottage. My late grandmother had referred to her as “Crazy Charlotte,” or “my Bohemian baby sister.” She painted under the name of Charlotte Lee. “It could have been the name of one of her husbands,” Mom said. “Or maybe she chose it for herself.”

  I did not get to Aunt Charlotte’s island until late spring. The wheels of the law had to turn first. A person from Social Services stayed with me the rest of that night and helped me pack my things. She asked about my next of kin and I showed her Mom’s life insurance policy. “We’ve got to get you a guardian ad litem quickly,” she said. “That’s someone who will be your voice in legal matters.” When I asked what legal matters, she said, “Determining who will be your permanent guardian and how your estate will be managed.” When I asked what estate, she said, “The estate from this insurance policy.” Our belongings from the apartment were put into storage and I was sent to live with a foster family and finished seventh grade from their address. I was a year ahead of my age because I had skipped sixth grade. The boy I shared a room with in the foster home had had the left side of his face crushed by his stepfather while his mother was out at work. From his right profile he looked like a normal boy, but from the front and left it looked like his cheek had melted. There was much plastic surgery ahead. At night I could hear him whacking off under the covers.

  I liked my guardian ad litem, William. He was the one who got me into the hospital morgue to see my mom and helped me decide on burial arrangements. William was so tall he had to stoop to get through ordinary doorways, and he wore a flowing dark beard. He could have been a stand-in for Abe Lincoln, though he had a shiny bald dome. He had grown up in the high mountains of western North Carolina and had a mountain twang so thick it sounded like it was making fun of itself.

  The foster parents had Bible study for us every night. It was called “Parable Party,” and they made it a competitive game. Even the little kids could quote chapter and verse from the gospel parables and I soon became a whiz at it myself. I was a fast learner and a good memorizer and I enjoyed a mental challenge. Mom and I had read the King James Bible aloud to each other because she wanted me to be grounded in its stories and language. Sometimes we used it as our augur, opening it at random to see what we should do about something. But it didn’t take precedence over everything the way it did in the foster home.

  Then one day I was told to pack my things. It was all set up legally and I was going on my first plane ride to live with my great-aunt at her beach cottage in South Carolina. “You are one lucky boy, Marcus,” the foster mom said. William stayed with me at the gate until I had a nametag hung around my neck and was escorted onboard by a flight attendant. William’s last words to me were, “Live long and prosper,” and we gave each other the Spock hand-blessing from Star Trek.

  Aunt Charlotte was waiting just on the other side of the security gate, a very thin lady in white slacks, loose white shirt, and scuffed brown sandals. She had stern, beaky features and a frosty mannish haircut. At that time she was fifty-seven, but she appeared elderly to me. Though she was my late grandmother’s younger sister by six years, she looked at least a generation older than that stylish, coiffed lady who had visited Mom and me several times. The flight attendant who had escorted me checked her papers. Then he handed me over and wished us good luck. I had steeled myself for a theatrical hug like the foster mother’s or some display of aunt-ish emotion, but she simply gave me a f
irm handshake and said, “Well, Marcus, here we are.”

  While we waited for my suitcases down in baggage claim, she told me “my boxes” had arrived and were stored in her garage, to unpack when I was ready. It took me a minute to realize she meant Mom’s and my stuff from our apartment.

  We went out into the suffocating heat and she had me heave the suitcases into the trunk of her old Mercedes sedan. The leather seats were boiling, but she said they would cool down in a minute. She wasn’t much of a talker. “Are you hungry? Do you like shrimp? We’ll go to a place where they serve all the shrimp you can eat.”

  The shrimp were very small and fried in batter and I ate three helpings. There were also these sweet fried bread balls called hush puppies. Aunt Charlotte picked at her salad and had two glasses of red wine. The waitress kept urging me to go back and refill my plate. Her name was Donna, which was stitched on her uniform, and she smiled a lot. Her teasing-affectionate tone with me reminded me a little of Mom and I went back for the third mostly to make her smile some more. Aunt Charlotte had not smiled once. Looking back on that first day, I realize she must have been as apprehensive as I was. I doubt if I smiled that day, either.

  When I threw up in my aunt’s car, she pulled over. “No problem, the seats are leather and most of it’s on the rubber mat.” She set me up with an eight-ounce bottle of spritzer water, a roll of paper towels, and gallon of windshield wiper fluid from her trunk. It rained a lot during this season, she said, so she always carried reserves of wiper fluid. “I’d use the spritzer water for the front of your shirt and the wiper fluid for the rest.” Then she withdrew to the grassy embankment and appeared to be studying the traffic. Heat waves rose from the asphalt and made wavery squiggles around her thin white form. The good thing about the heat was that my shirt was dry before I even finished cleaning the car. When we were on the road again I apologized for the smell. “All I smell is wiper fluid,” she said.

  After we crossed the causeway to the island, she stopped by a store with gas pumps in front and we bought some things for supper. The man at the counter told her the day’s shrimp catch had just come in, but she said, “My nephew has already had his fill of shrimp for the day.”

  II.

  Whenever I try to crawl back into the skin of that boy Aunt Charlotte suddenly found invading her precious solitude, a boy who was neither a charming child nor a promising young man, I am surprised that after living alone by choice for so long she was able to tolerate my company as well as she did. She spoke like someone who wasn’t used to social talk. She said what needed to be conveyed and stopped. (“Are you hungry? Spray yourself with sunblock even if it’s overcast. If it’s anything urgent, Marcus, you can always knock on my studio door.”)

  Mom had guessed right about the Lee surname: Aunt Charlotte had made it up. (“It was the obvious choice to take the surname of their hallowed Confederate general, Robert E. Lee. In these parts people still refer to the American Civil War as ‘the great unpleasantness’ or ‘the war of northern aggression.’ If I was a ‘Lee,’ I had a better chance of blending in.”)

  Aunt Charlotte and Mom had grown up in West Virginia, known to Southerners as the “turncoat state” because it separated from Virginia and joined the Union in the Civil War. Neither of them had any accent other than a mid-Atlantic one, if there was such a thing. Aunt Charlotte’s voice was dispassionate and flat compared to my mother’s emotional range. Mom could please, tease, or appease, whatever the situation called for, whereas Aunt Charlotte, even when she was in one of her rare good moods or making fun of somebody, stuck to a gruff and matter-of-fact monotone.

  After we had established a routine for ourselves that consisted mainly of each mapping thoughtful routes around the other’s privacy, she had a serious talk with me about money and my “trust.” She invited me into her studio for this. She removed some books and papers from a chair and asked me to sit down. There was the smell of turpentine and oil pigment, a smell that connects me even today with the pleasant idea of someone making something alone. Her studio faced the north end of the beach and had a milky, regulated light, less yellow and warm than the other rooms in the cottage. She also slept in the studio behind a curtain.

  It took me longer than it should have to realize she had given up her bedroom to me.

  “I have always worked,” she began. “Ever since I left home at sixteen, I have held a job. When I married, I supported the first of my no-good husbands and I worked twice as hard as the next two slackers. I will never be rich, but this fluke of a talent has made me safe for the time being. People want paintings of the beach. My style is on the primitive side, but that’s an asset, too, don’t ask me why. For a large part of my life now I have lived alone and supported myself by my painting and it has suited me.” She was perched on a high stool in front of a gigantic paint-spattered easel on wheels. Its large canvas was covered with a cloth. She was looking at me, but actually she was looking through me as she carefully picked her words. “When they contacted me back in February about your mother, they said I was the only living relative. I asked about your father’s people, but I was the only name listed on the policy. Did you know she had taken out an insurance policy on her life?”

  “It was in case anything happened to her.” Mom and I had imagined some fatal illness that would take her away and leave me all alone. We didn’t foresee that something as ordinary as driving two miles on a winter night to pick up a pizza could accomplish the same ending.

  “I met your mother only once. She was a girl, still in high school. Your grandmother brought her to visit me here. I liked her and I felt she liked me. But it was not a successful visit. Did she ever mention it?”

  “She talked about your beach house and how nice it was to lie in bed and hear the ocean so close. She said maybe one day we would go back and visit you. I mean, not stay with you, but in a hotel.”

  “You would have been welcome to stay here. It was my sister Brenda who spoiled that visit. Always putting everyone down. She couldn’t stand my lifestyle. I think that was her reason for bringing your mother to see me; I was to be a warning. But I must remember that Brenda was your grandmother, so you probably loved her. Funny how the same person can be an entirely different entity to various people. Where do you think you’d like to go to school? There’s the public school across the causeway and a few of those so-called ‘academies.’ Or you could go to boarding school. There’s enough money. You know that, don’t you?”

  “It was supposed to be enough to get me through college,” I said.

  “Then it will be, we’ll see to it. Meanwhile, it will pay your expenses until you’re old enough to live on your own. And as your guardian I get a nice monthly stipend from the trust. You understand about that, don’t you? I want everything to be aboveboard between us.”

  I said I understood. But her insistence on aboveboard-ness, which would turn out to be one of her sterling qualities, had a bitter effect on me that day. So it was the money, I thought, she only took me because of the money. Without that nice stipend she would never have forfeited the solitary life that suited her so well. She went on to explain the trust and how it was set up with a law firm in Charleston that specialized in that sort of thing. There would be monthly statements about how the money was invested and how well it was doing. It seemed that if you had a certain amount of money, you should expect it to make more money out of itself. “And you are welcome to examine these statements anytime you want, Marcus.”

  “Maybe I’ll just leave them to you for now,” I said.

  It was all I could do to sort out the information arising out of this talk we were having. The revelation about her “nice stipend” had deflated any grand illusions of my being wanted simply because I was me. On the other hand I saw advantages to her scanty information about my past. When she had said, “I asked about your father’s people, but I was the only name on the policy,” I realized she had assumed that my father was the person whose last name I bore—Harshaw—even thoug
h Mom and Mr. Harshaw had parted ways two years before I was born. With my background being so vague to Aunt Charlotte there would be less embarrassing information to worry about her finding out. “Look at it this way, Marcus,” Mom had said when I almost killed the grandson of her employer and we had to leave her good job at Forster’s furniture factory in the flatlands of North Carolina and move to the mountains. “In a new place we can tell people what we want them to know and that will be our past.”

  To cover the readjustments going on inside me, I asked Aunt Charlotte what she was painting. After apologizing for it being one of her “bread and butter commissions” she removed the cloth from the large canvas on the easel. So far she had only outlined a substantial-sized beach house and some palmetto trees in dark blue. She explained she was working from a color photo provided by the owners. “I don’t paint from life anymore. It’s too messy. Sand blows into the pigment and nosy people crowd around and make dumb remarks. If you’re interested in seeing the actual house, it’s down at the south end of the beach, where they’re building the new McMansions. So far it’s the only one with three stories. And a fake cupola. For my honest paintings I go to the north end of the island. Those are the old houses, when people built behind the dunes. There’s one old house I must have painted at least fifty times. But people keep asking for it. Since I took my business online I can’t keep up with the orders for that one house. I paint it from photos now, but they are photos I took myself.”

  “What’s a fake cupola?”

  “A cupola is a tower where you can look out at the view. But this one is just stuck up there for show, with no way to get to it.”

  “Why do people want paintings of that other house?”

  “It’s a very old cottage, what’s left of it. It’s a ruin and it has a haunting quality. I’m still trying to do justice to its quality. Walk up there and see it for yourself. It’s the very last structure at the north end. It’s half gone, but it emanates a powerful mood. The locals call it Grief Cottage. The town commissioners have been dying to tear it down, but the historical society’s on their back because it was built in 1804. I need to go up there and get some more photos in case they lose the battle.”

 

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