by K. E. Silva
Out on the road I passed a slow walker with a machete, exchanged only stares.
I didn’t know Polly or Eugene’s last name, but there was a truck with a Koala Construction decal on its side, on the tarish next to their trailer.
Their dog, a purebred ridgeback, announced my arrival before I called out, Hello, hello, and walked up to their little porch area.
Eugene was sitting at a small table: a large, pale man in khaki shorts and a polo shirt, sweating profusely during the mildest part of the day, looking at some plans, architectural drawings.
Although farther away and inside the trailer, it was Polly who greeted me first, rushing out the door at a speed verging on desperation.
I told them I was Sophie’s daughter, come to return their pot, the beans were delicious, thank you very much.
They would have offered me juice, fresh-squeezed, if they were my grandmother, my aunt, my mother. Accepting their glass of water, I prayed it had been boiled.
I sat with them on their porch, stared out past the edge of the cliff to Granny’s blue sea. Looking away from the water to their faces, only when I absolutely had to, I did the minimum to maintain my welcome, frontloading all those things that would get them to excuse my rudeness and lack of interest: I am an attorney. I live in San Francisco. I grew up in the States. No, I do not visit Baobique often. I came to visit with my grandmother before she passed. But enough.
Eugene, a little more forthcoming than me, said they’d moved to Baobique a couple of years ago to do construction work. Koala Construction was his. He was doing relatively well. Their biggest project, a six-story hotel that was now only half-built, would be their home once it was finished. But, of course, I already knew that. When completed, their hotel would block the entire view of our cove from Tours. Polly would run it. They were hopeful that a new wave of white settlers, in need of housing, would give them everything they need, financially, to finish the hotel. They all went to Eugene to build their homes. It just worked that way there.
Polly got a bit more personal, although only about my family, not about herself. Living just around the corner from Tours, she saw a lot of things visitors like myself didn’t know about. Now that Granny had passed, Polly worried about Clara, who, bless her soul, was always losing her house keys. I should really have a duplicate set for both Auntie Clara’s house and Tours made while I was there and leave them with Polly.
Just the other day, Polly had gone over to visit Granny, found her alone, lying on the floor, unable to get up. Polly didn’t have a key to unlock the iron gate and Auntie Clara was in town, so Polly sat outside the house talking to Granny, making sure she was okay, until Auntie Clara got back an hour or so later. Polly should really have a set of keys.
Returning to Tours the back way, through the kitchen, I mentioned the story to my mom. But she just laughed at the idea, said Polly wanted those keys so she could have access to Granny’s rum, said Polly was an alcoholic. Polly’s last name was Whitchell. Just remember the witch, Mom said.
* * *
They were waiting for me out on the front porch in the lawn chairs just this side of Granny’s stiff body: Uncle Charles and Uncle Martin, the family’s remaining patriarchs, new to the throne and still uncertain of its reach.
No one knows why, but the law says corpses are to be buried feet facing east. The logistics of the family’s plot made it so Uncle George’s headstone lay at the wrong end of his body. At the funeral, Uncle Charles was quick to remind guests to pay their respects to the dirt at his brother’s head, so Uncle George could hear.
I was avoiding them, back there in the kitchen. I did it very well. The only thing I did better in Baobique, actually, was obey. So I came when they called.
They called me, not my mom, to discuss the situation with her house. But she followed me as far as the living room, busied herself by stacking and restacking the silverware underneath the dish towel in the corner, close enough to hear our words.
With Uncle Martin, the lawyer, everything he says comes out like argument, awaits rebuttal. But with Uncle Charles, a physician like Grampy, like Susan, his words come out with an authority hard to question, as if straight from God’s lips. I know this is schooled, wouldn’t want my doctor second-guessing himself over something as important as my life. But still, it was unnerving.
When I was little, just after the divorce, before my mom sunk roots into her mattress, Uncle Charles brought us up to Canada for a long visit. He had a brand-new house in an area zoned for development, with a swimming pool and a two-car garage with a Jaguar inside. One evening he took me out on the front porch to look at all the land, empty of neighbors. He rested his hand on my shoulder like my dad would have, if my dad were Uncle Charles.
Look around you, Jean. Someday, all this land will be built up, with houses and schools and shops. All it takes is a little vision, a little foresight.
There is something about land to a Pascal, as if without it we’ve no ground.
I could see the wheels turning, turning inside his head. When he and George were little, they’d walk, hidden in the bush, through the piece of land upon which now sits the Australians’ half-built hotel, to the end and its steep drop to the Atlantic. Their sights, nearly two hundred degrees. So they could see almost everything. Almost. And they knew they were rich, in beauty alone, to have so much. Even though that land wasn’t Grampy’s, Charles and George would take it upon themselves to tear down makeshift shelters built by squatters. Creating their own consensus, they worked from underneath its authority alone—called it law: taking someone else’s home, fabricating entitlement.
I knew those men like my alter ego.
But Uncle Charles thought he knew more about law than he really did; he wasn’t George.
He told me, like he’d looked at my tonsils and they had to come out, calmly awaiting my agreement, Jean, your granny has just died. We will bury her at Godwyn, of course, next to Grampy.
I knew that, agreed, Of course. But what was the catch?
Your Uncle Martin and I have been talking about Godwyn. And because it is becoming increasingly central to the family’s needs, with the burial plot, it needs to remain a family house—as Grampy intended.
I’m not sure I understand what you mean. I wanted him to say it.
Now that the ice was broken, Uncle Martin chimed in, in terms I’d understand. Title to Godwyn will go to all of us; not to your mother alone. It’s not fair for her to get the entire house to herself.
Uncle Charles: You wouldn’t keep us from our mother’s grave, Jean. I’m sure of that.
Of course not, Uncle Charles.
Good. It’s settled, then. Martin will draw up the papers.
I was surprised my mom was staying out of it; I knew she’d heard. Maybe she just didn’t understand what her brothers were trying to pull. But I did. And I didn’t stay quiet.
The thing is, Uncle Charles, it’s not me that’s keeping anyone out of Godwyn. The family has always owned the burial plot. It doesn’t belong to my mom. The house, though, and that land adjacent to the graves, does belong to her. With Granny’s passing, the joint title they shared already transferred to my mom.
No! He didn’t like my confidence. I just told you. The title will remain with the family … Let me ask you, Jean, do you know what this family has meant to this island?
It wasn’t really a question. So I didn’t respond. Anything I’d say, he’d attack.
Uncle Martin sat back, understanding, perhaps better than Uncle Charles, that this was an argument, not a diagnosis, and that we were at an impasse that would not be crossed from our current posture.
It was crazy. Granny barely cold under cotton sheets in the next room; our hands should have been clawing the earth, digging her grave. Uncle Charles was wrong. He and his swimming pool, his Jaguar in Canada. I would not let him claim my mother’s only roof. He’d always thought her more buoyant than she really was.
* * *
My mom almost drowned when her brothers taught he
r to swim. She was seven. Granny wouldn’t have any of her children being scared of things as essential to life as the sea and thought it was time my mom and Auntie Clara learned to make their way in the water.
Grampy told the boys to see to it.
So Uncle George, Uncle Charles, and Uncle Martin rowed the girls out to the middle of the bay down at Champagne, where the water is warmed by radiated heat and gasses from volcanic activity bubbling up from porous rock and loose sand. The bright red coral just beyond is a national treasure now, protected by one of Uncle George’s laws, but back then merely a marker of an underwater drop so steep it’s still to be measured.
Uncle Charles, calm as the surgeon he’d later become, told the girls they couldn’t sink because the salt in the water would buoy their small bodies to the surface. Uncle Martin, having just learned the trick himself, told them, Just look for the bubbles. Look for the bubbles. Follow them up. Uncle George rowed and rowed.
My mom and Auntie Clara were scared, kept shouting, Turn around! Turn around!
But the boys dropped anchor. Threw them in. And the girls went down against a flow of bubbles.
Uncle Charles was going to count to one hundred and twenty. But he only made it to ninety before George and Martin dove in after them, pulling their sisters back to the boat from the sandy bottom, willing their apologies light as air to breathe the life back in through Mom and Auntie Clara’s purple lips.
Sometimes he was simply wrong.
But we were both wrong to be warring right then. Uncle Martin reeled us in, but not without a jab of his own.
All right, gentlemen, he said, addressing us both, we will continue with this later. Charles and I have arrangements to make for Granny’s funeral.
CHAPTER 23
I needed some space from my uncles and I took it. I did not ask what I could do to help with the arrangements. And I didn’t ask my mom if she’d drive us back to Godwyn; I told her.
Let’s go, Mom. We’re leaving now.
In the car she lost her reticence. I got an unsolicited earful and started to see.
This was how things came around.
You should have been there for George’s funeral, Jean. You should have seen it. They wanted total control.
Who’s “they,” Mom? I had to direct her line of thinking if I was to get any useful information.
Charles! Martin! Who else?! They wanted to let people inside the house. My house! They said they couldn’t ask Dame Devon to sit under a tent. But if I’d let her in, everyone would have started in. What do they take me for, na? A fool? I said no! I locked them all out. Her eyes weren’t watching the road, they were watching the events of that afternoon: Dame Devon and Granny, come to pay their respects, pitched together under nothing but a tarp to protect themselves from the hot sun.
I reminded her where we were. Mom, watch the road. But I had to ask; didn’t want to have heard what I just did. You didn’t let anyone in the house during Uncle George’s funeral? No one at all?
It’s my house, Jean! They would have overrun it. There were hundreds of people.
What if they needed to use the bathroom, Mom?
The state brought in the portable toilets. They trampled a whole section of my crotons! Look! As we pulled up the drive, she pointed to the flattened area, overgrown with bush from so much recent rain.
My mother was out of control. Loss, I said.
What? she yelled back.
Nothing. We parked in the carport.
As if everyone in my family didn’t already have a head start, all that loss was making them crazy, bringing me right along.
Uncle Charles wanted Godwyn back because what he really wanted he couldn’t have: he wanted back his baby brother, whose cancer he couldn’t take away, and his mother, who died while he was on his way home. He wanted his family back, but all that was left was rotting cedar and a small patch of dirt upon which to lay their bodies, face their feet east.
Maybe it was me who needed to dig in my heels, stop our downward slide.
CHAPTER 24
At Godwyn we were cooled by intermittent showers, maybe reaching to Tours, maybe not. My mother disappeared again into the gardens. But I didn’t give chase. I sat on the covered porch, watched the rain, listened to it come and go under corrugated tin.
The flamboyant. The baobab. The guava. The plum. And me. All of us rooted there, growing.
With two beeps for notice, Susan’s muddy Subaru turned off the road and up the drive, parked under a cedar. Rising from my seat, I saw she was not alone. A tall, long-limbed man, with even longer dreds, exited opposite her. He was beaming, boyish, in jeans and a polo shirt.
Together, they walked along my mother’s croton hedge, the Jacob’s Coat, its two-toned leaves, soft and fuzzy, some more purple than green, some more green than purple. His hand resting lightly at the small of her back. Susan looked straight at me; smiled, too, but stiffly.
Hello, I greeted them cautiously, politely from the porch.
Jean, this is Marcus Greene. He’s a freshman in the assembly and has practically kidnapped me to come meet you.
Hello, Jean. His voice was confident but not arrogant. He took his hand from Susan’s back and reached out to me. We shook and he continued, I was a great admirer of your Uncle George. I followed his political career quite closely. I was so sorry when he passed … I’m sorry, too, about your Granny. That is certainly a lot for one family to bear.
Wonderful. I looked to Susan for an explanation.
Marcus came with me to George’s funeral, she offered.
We all looked to the ground, away from each other, for a split second.
Fine. They were standing in my mother’s yard, I had to say something. So I did. It’s nice to meet you, Marcus. I’m sorry for their deaths, as well … But I’m afraid I’m not like my uncle, politically, at all. I’m sure I’d disappoint you if you knew me. I wasn’t feeling friendly toward this man with his hands all over Susan.
He was not troubled by my tone, threw back his head and laughed. Clapped a couple of times to some funny joke only he’d understood. I know, Jean. I know.
I asked, What’s so funny?
Marcus confided, Jean, I admired your uncle’s abilities, not his platform. He was much too conservative for the new Baobique.
The new Baobique? I was curious.
Susan rolled her eyes, sighed. Please, please! Don’t get him started. I’m only on a lunch break. We just came to say hello, not to give O.O.F.I. speeches.
O.O.F.I.? Still curious, but not just about politics. Mostly, I wanted to know why Marcus could touch her so easily, why she rolled her eyes at him like they were an old married couple, and why his smile was so big by her side.
The only explanation I got, though, was the politics. Marcus was a member of the island’s newest party, Free Islands. Free Islands was grabbing at the reigns of control with new ideas of banding together with other small islands, gaining strength through numbers in the international arena as an organized political unit—O.O.F.I., they call themselves, the Organization of Free Islands.
It was getting increasingly difficult for the island to gain revenue with no land tax and the bulk of its workable soil still tied up in private estates, owned by just a handful of families, as if no time at all had passed since the Europeans left Baobique to run itself.
Marcus told me all of that in mock confidence, pretending to keep the secret from Susan, shielding her side of his mouth with his hand, bending in my direction.
Weed that I was, I was green with envy at their interplay.
I will see you later, Jean, Susan assured me, as she initiated their departure, pulled away.
Marcus waved his long arms, called to me out the window, I hope she will let us meet again, Pascal! Happy, like a man with the world at his feet.
* * *
Jean! Jean … come!
My mom was out back by Grampy’s grave, where the cliff dropped, steep, to rocks and a salty sea, clearing space for Granny.
Never mind her brothers’ threats, the situation’s volatility. I do believe, honestly, that my mother will never change; always planting herself before it’s time.
But Susan was right when she’d laid it out for me the day before. It was time I stopped asking my mother to be someone other than herself; time I met her where she was, instead of where I kept wanting her to be.
She waved me over with her machete, past the star fruit tree, the cherry guava, the larger, grafted guava. I cut my ankle on a low-lying pineapple plant, its long serrated leaves like a bread knife on my skin, drawing that blood the mosquitoes drank like rum.
Come. I want you to see this—talking with her hands, even as she carried a cutlass; I gave her a wide berth.
What’s that? I did not reprimand her for jumping the gun, working the land before we smoothed things out with Uncle Martin and Uncle Charles. I gave up easily, played her game.
She held up a plant the length of her arm.
What is it? I asked.
It’s a sego palm. The oldest in the world, she explained.
Neat. Where’d you get it?
Fatima brought it up from Sommerset. From Pastor Christian’s garden. God bless his soul. He lived there forty years and then the church moved him to Bato. He was getting so old. They couldn’t risk him living in the country. But mark my words, that man will die without his garden.
My mom put the palm back down, began to dig a hole on the cliff side of the graves, just in back of the headstones at Grampy and Uncle George’s feet. Hard to tell if she kept moving out of purpose or worry.
I’ve decided the sego is going to be my signature plant.
The way my mom deals with the possibility of losing everything is to put everything she has into it. I, on the other hand, am the cautious one. I never rely on anything that could possibly be taken away, turn left and right around holes, like the ones still left in me from her.
She continued, When they grow, the trees will act as a windbreak to protect the graves and slow the erosion of the cliff.
That day, I did it her way.