Sweetgrass
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About this ebook
Sweetgrass is a historic tract of land in South Carolina that has been home to the Blakely family for eight generations. But Sweetgrass—named for the indigenous grass that grows in the area—is in trouble. Taxes are skyrocketing. Bulldozers are leveling the surrounding properties. And the Blakelys could be forced to sell the one thing that continues to hold their disintegrating family together.
When Preston Blakely suffers a stroke, his son Morgan returns from Montana to help run the property. Morgan’s mother, Mary Jane, has been estranged from Preston for years. But now she must take a hard look at the past. In Sweetgrass, Mary Alice Monroe shares a poignant tale of a family that must learn to unravel old patterns and weave together a new future.
Mary Alice Monroe
Mary Alice Monroe is the New York Times bestselling author of twenty-seven books, including the bestselling The Beach House series. Monroe also writes children’s picture books, and a middle grade fiction series called The Islanders. She is a member of the South Carolina Academy of Authors’ Hall of Fame, and her books have received numerous awards, including the South Carolina Center for the Book Award for Writing; the South Carolina Award for Literary Excellence; the SW Florida Author of Distinction Award; the RT Lifetime Achievement Award; the International Book Award for Green Fiction; the Henry Bergh Children’s Book Award; and her novel, A Lowcountry Christmas, won the prestigious Southern Prize for Fiction. The Beach House is a Hallmark Hall of Fame movie, starring Andie MacDowell. Several of her novels have been optioned for film. She is the cocreator and cohost of the weekly web show and podcast Friends & Fiction. Monroe is also an active conservationist and serves on several boards. She lives on the South Carolina coast, which is a source of inspiration for many of her books.
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Reviews for Sweetgrass
81 ratings11 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A long way from Prince of Tides but the echoes are there. There is drowning in this story but redemption as well. A few questions left unanswered or answered indirectly. In the end a feel good story.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A sweet book about family secrets, loss and healing.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Love this author but this book was same plot as her other books.Fractured family comes back to save the homestead. Remove the turtles from one book and insert plot saving Sweetgrass. The book was predictable. If you want a light summer story this is enjoyable,the character development was good. Difficult to get through this one.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A lovely story of a woman fighting to keep her home plantation and put her family back together again after her husband's stroke. Enjoyed it.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Sweetgrass is an historical tract of land that the Blakely family has called home for the past eight generations. But Sweetgrass - so named for the indigenous grass that grows in the area - is in trouble. Bulldozers are leveling the surrounding properties, and the Blakelys may be forced to sell the only thing that continues to hold their disintegrating family together. For some of Blakelys, the prospect of selling Sweetgrass is bittersweet - for others, it is completely unimaginable. But as the family finds the strength to stay and fight for their home, they slowly begin to realize that their bond as a family is truly all they need to stay together.
I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book. The story captured my attention from the very first page, drew me in and held me until the very end. I give this book a definite A+! and have already placed several of Ms. Monroe's other books on my Wish List. - Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5This was on a recommendation list for chicklit I was trying. I have been finding this isn't a genre to my liking, but I had hopes for this one given the blurb on the cover from Pat Conroy, a first rate writer of literary fiction about the South Carolina lowcountry in which this is set. From the beginning though, this struck me as wretchedly written. Clumsy dialogue with people dumping information already known to both of them and melodramatic in tone. It also features a plot device I find irritating--the eeeeeevil developer. I found it all the more irritating given what I was supposed to root for as worth preserving: Sweetgrass Plantation--in the Blakely family 300 years complete with a colonial mansion and a family crest. Tara ho! The book isn't even consistent about how long the place has been in the family. Supposedly for only 8 generations and with the founding matriarch supposedly in "nineteenth century" dress in her portrait. How does that go with three centuries? The utter last straw though is when the current family matriarch goes to see the old black housekeeper, Nona. Nona then talks to her daughter, Maize, of her pride that their family has served the Blakelys for generations going back to the days of slavery. At least poor Maize seems as bewildered as I was at the sentiment. But no, just no. Believe me, I'm far from politically correct. I love Gone With the Wind. Truly I do! But it was all more than my lil' Yankee heart could stand.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Blakely family has owned Sweetgrass for generations, but now a threat from within their own family makes it seem likely that they will lose the land to developers. After tragedy strikes father Preston, Morgan returns home from Montana and looks for a way to save the land. The story is much deeper than this. Sweetgrass is a metaphor that many readers will recognize even before it is discussed in one scene late in the book. The characters are outstanding in this book. There are some readers will like and others readers will not, but they all are woven together to come up with a very satisfying read that champions putting limits on development to protect natural resources. I've often admired the sweetgrass baskets when I've visited the Charleston area, but I had no idea that the sweetgrass used to make the baskets is becoming more difficult to find because so many of the lands which once thrived with it have been commercially developed.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5loved the book. a good southern tale of family
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The thing about Mary Alice Monroe's books is that you always learn something. Sometimes it's about loggerheads, sometimes about birds of prey. Sometimes it's about heritage and tradition, as well as preserving the beauty of this wonderful lowcountry. That's why I always snap up her books-- the stories are the vehicle, at times almost incidental (though always well charactered and well told) to share this wonderful place with the world. Thank you, Mary Alice.
From the Publisher
Sweetgrass is a historical tract of land in South Carolina that has been home to the Blakely family for eight generations.
But Sweetgrass -- named for the indigenous grass that grows in the area -- is in trouble. Bulldozers are leveling surrounding properties. and the Blakelys could be forced to sell the one thing that continues to hold their disintegrating family together. For some of the Blakelys, the prospect of selling Sweetgrass is bittersweet -- for others, it is completely unimaginable. But as they find the strength to stay and fight, they realize that their bond as a family is all they need to stay together. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A Carolina Lowcountry story of a family keeping their emotions knotted up tighter than the sweetgrass baskets made by their former housekeeper. Family patriarch Preston Blakely has suffered a devastating stroke leaving him unable to talk. It happens at a time when it seems as if the Blakelys will be losing the home that has been in the family for generations. For Mama June that prospect is bittersweet as she has known joy and heartache on the place that has divided her family. She must dive deep into herself to find the strength to keep going and fight for her family.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This book made me cry on more than one occasion. I loved the strong characters, especially Mama June, and their real relationships with one another. I especially enjoyed Preston and Mama June’s relationship and Morgan’s relationship with Preston. These characters aren’t just on paper but I could see them and I wanted to be their friends. Her descriptions of the Low Country can actually bring alive the sounds and smells of this area, rich in tradition and history.
Sweetgrass was heartfelt without being too over the top, and heart-wrenching without being depressing.
Book preview
Sweetgrass - Mary Alice Monroe
CHAPTER 1
Until fairly recently, the coastal region of islands, marshes, placid rivers and oak-shaded roads had seen relatively little change—but now change is widespread, often overwhelming and sometimes devastating.
—The National Trust for Historic Preservation
MARCH IS A MOODY TIME of year in the Lowcountry. On any given day, seemingly by whim, the weather is balmy and sweet-smelling and can lure reluctant smiles from the hopeful who dream of cool, tart drinks on steamy afternoons, creamy white magnolia blossoms and scented offshore breezes. Then overnight, everything can change. With a sudden gust of cold wind, winter will reach out with its icy grip to draw a foggy curtain over the gray marsh.
Mama June Blakely had hoped for an early spring, but she was well seasoned and had learned to keep an eye on the sky for dark clouds. A leaden mist hovered close to the water, so thick that Mama June could barely make out Blakely’s Bluff, which stretched out into the gray-green Atlantic Ocean like a defiant fist. A bittersweet smile eased across her lips. She’d always thought it a fitting symbol of her family’s turbulent history with the sea.
Perched high on the bluff was a weather-beaten house that had been in the Blakely family for generations. Bluff House had withstood countless hurricanes and storms to remain the bastion of family gatherings long after most of the old Charleston family’s land holdings were sold off. Each time Mama June looked at the battered house, waves of memories crashed against her stony composure. And when the wind gusted across the marshes, as it did now, she thought the mist swirled like ghosts dancing on the tips of cordgrass.
Thunder rumbled, low and threatening. She tugged her sweater closer to her neck and shifted her gaze to the lowering skies. Weather moved quickly over the South Carolina coastline, and a front like that could bring a quick cloudburst and sudden winds. Worry tugged at her mouth as she turned on her heel and made her way across the polished floors of her home, through the large, airy kitchen, the stocked butler’s pantry, the formal dining room with glistening crystal and mirrors, the front parlor appointed with ancestral furniture and straight out to the front veranda. Gripping the porch railing, she leaned far forward, squinting as she searched the length of ancient roadbed bordered by centuries-old oaks.
Her frown lifted when she spotted a broad, snowy-headed figure walking up the drive, a lanky black dog at his heels. Mama June leaned against the porch pillar, sighing in relief. At that pace, she figured Preston would beat the storm. How many years had she watched and waited for her husband to come in from the fields? Goodness, could it really be nearing fifty years?
Preston Blakely wasn’t a large man physically, but his manner and personality made him imposing to anyone who knew him. People called him formidable in polite company, bull-headed in familiar—and she couldn’t argue. He was walking with a single-minded purpose, heels digging in the soft roadbed and arms swinging. His square chin jutted out, cutting the wind like the mast of a ship.
Lord, what bee was in that man’s britches this time? she thought with a sorry shake of her head.
On reaching the house, Preston sent the dog to the back with a jerk of his index finger. Go on, now. Settle, Blackjack,
he ordered. Then, raising his head, he caught Mama June’s gaze.
Hellfire,
he grumbled louder than the thunder, raising his arm and shaking a fistful of crumpled papers in the air. They’ve gone and done it this time.
Mama June’s hands tightened on the railing as her husband came up the porch stairs. Done what?
They done got me by the short hairs,
he said on reaching the porch.
Who got you, dear?
The banks!
he roared. The taxes. The whole cussed economy, that’s who!
Sit down a spell, Press, before you pop a valve. Look at you. You’re sweating under that slicker. It’s too hot for such a fuss and, I swanny—
she waved her small hand in the air —I don’t know what you’re talking about. Taxes and banks and short hairs…
I’m talking about this place!
There’s no need to shout. I’m old, not deaf.
Then listen to what I’m tellin’ you, woman. We’re going to lose it.
What? Lose the land?
Yes, ma’am, the land,
he said. And this house you’re so fond of. We’ll lose it all.
Press,
she replied, striving for calm. I don’t understand any of this. How can we lose everything?
Preston leaned against the railing and looked out over his land. A cool wind rippled the wild grasses like waves upon the ocean.
Remember when we were reassessed a few months past?
When she nodded, he continued. Well, here’s what they say this property is worth now. And here’s how much they say we’ve got to pay. Go on,
he said, waving the papers before her. Read it and weep.
Mama June reached out to retrieve the crumpled papers and gingerly unfolded them. Her mouth slipped open in a soft gasp. But…this can’t be right. It’s three times as much as before.
Four times as much.
We can’t afford that. We’ll appeal. They can’t force us to accept this.
They can and they will.
There are lots of folks round here that won’t stand for it,
Mama June said, hearing aloud the indignation she felt stirring in her breast. This can’t just be happening to us.
That’s true enough. It’s happening all over. And there’s nothing any of us can do. Folks keep coming from the north in a steady stream.
He shrugged. And they all want to live along the water for the beautiful views. Trouble is, there’s only so much property to go around. So property values just keep climbing and developers, like my own sweet, avaricious sister, are licking their chomps just biding their time. They’ll wrestle away any and every acre of earth so they can turn around and plow it over with cement.
He raked his thick, short white hair with his fingers. Hell, I knew it was coming—we all did. I reckon I just didn’t think it would be so quick.
He gave a rueful smile. Kinda like a hurricane, eh? Well,
he said with resignation, looks like we miscalculated on this one. Just like we did with Hugo.
We’ve always managed to hang on before. Through the war, the gas crisis, the bad economy, even Hurricane Hugo.
I know it. I’ve done my best—God knows I’ve fought the good fight. But I’m old now. And I’m worn out. I don’t have it in me to fight them anymore.
Mama June stepped forward to rest her hand on his drooping shoulder, alarmed to her core to see her usual bear of a husband so defeated. She was about to offer some platitude, to say don’t worry, we’ll be fine,
when she felt his shoulders cord up again beneath her palms. He exploded in renewed fury.
Maybe if that no-good son of ours had stayed home we wouldn’t be in this mess.
Mama June dropped her hand and wrapped her arms around herself. Let’s don’t start in on Morgan…
Don’t you go defending him,
he said, whirling around to face her. Not to me! He’s my son, dammit. He should be here, helping his father run this plantation. It’s too much for one man. I need his ideas, his energy. Is it too much to ask my only son to take his father’s place?
He needs to take his own place in the world,
she countered softly, even as she felt herself harden against her husband. This was an all-too-familiar argument.
The hell with the world! It’s Sweetgrass that needs him. It’s his duty. His heritage! A Blakely has run Sweetgrass Plantation for eight generations, and though there may only be a few hundred acres left, by God, Sweetgrass is still in Blakely hands.
He’s got his own land,
she reminded him.
His own land?
Preston’s eyes widened with incredulity. You mean those few measly acres in the wilds of Montana that he hides out in when he’s not out breaking some laws?
Oh, for pity’s sake. He’s not doing any such thing. He’s protesting!
And for what? To protect some bison? Hell,
he said with a snort. "Bison… He grew up calling them buffalo like the rest of us."
He’s trying to protect them.
He’s playing around. He’s not working that land. He’s not working, period.
Stop, Press.
His angry words were shredding her composure like razors.
Worthless,
he muttered, ignoring her.
She turned and began walking away. I can’t listen to this….
What did I bother working for all these years?
he called after her. That’s what I want to know. I have no one to pass this all down to.
She stopped and faced him with a cold stare. You have your daughter.
Preston scoffed and brushed away the suggestion with a sweep of his hand.
You can’t keep brushing Nan aside.
Didn’t she do just that to us when she sold off her land?
Her husband…
That weasel! He only married her for her land.
What a thing to say!
She’d thought as much herself but had never granted it voice. Lest you forget, I sold my land when I married you.
That wasn’t the same thing at all, and you know it.
I know no such thing.
See, there you go. You always take their sides over mine.
I do no—
"I’m your husband! I should be your first concern. For once! I’ve worked all these years like a bull in the harness to keep this land intact, to keep hold of this house with all those antiques you love so much."
Don’t even…
All of this.
His arm swept out in a grand gesture. I’ve sweated from dawn to dusk. I’ve spilled blood. I’ve given my heart and soul to this place. My dreams. My youth. And now…
He stopped, clamping his lips tight and looking out at the land with desperation shining moistly in his eyes. And now it’s gone.
Good!
she replied with heart.
Preston spun around to look at her. What’d you say?
"You heard me. I said good. Good riddance!" she cried out with a strained voice. She saw the pale blue of his eyes swimming with pain and shock at her outburst. But rather than take it back or soften the words, as she ordinarily might have done, she felt years of anguish burst forth with a volcanic gush.
"All you think about is the loss of this land! she cried, thrusting the papers into the paunch of his belly.
What about your family? What about that loss? You haven’t spoken with your son in years. Your daughter feels like a pariah. They don’t come around anymore. You’ve driven our children away. But you don’t care about that, do you? You didn’t fight to keep the family, did you? All you care about is this piece of earth. Well, it won’t be long before we’ll die and be buried on this precious land. But who will mourn our passing? I ask you, Preston, will our children weep when we’re gone?"
His face went still before he swung his head away, averting his gaze.
She took a breath to gather her strength and stepped closer to her husband, narrowing the distance. Pounding her breast with her fist, emphasizing each word, she said in a voice betrayed by a shaky timbre, This land has stolen my children from me. And that is a far greater loss to me. Good riddance, I say. I despise this land!
You don’t mean that.
Preston’s voice was low and husky.
She took a long, sweeping glance at the landscape she’d called home for close to five decades. The roiling line of clouds rolled overhead like the closing of a curtain. Then she met his gaze and held it.
I surely do. From the day I first stepped foot on it, all this land ever brought me was utter and complete heartbreak.
They stood face-to-face, silently recollecting the wide swath of years cut low by that statement.
Around them the storm broke. Fat drops of rain splattered loudly on the dry ground in gaining crescendo. With each gust of wind the grasses swayed and shook, rattling like castanets. Then the sky opened up and the heavens cried. The roof provided no shelter from the torrents of rain, and both felt the lash of water that whipped through the air.
Mama June doubted the rain hid from Preston the tears coursing a trail down her cheeks. Yet he did not move to console her or offer any word of either argument or comfort. Her shoulders slumped and she retreated inside the house.
Preston stood rock still and watched her go. He was unmoving as he listened to his wife’s tread on the stairs, knowing she made her way to her bedroom. She would likely cloister herself for hours, perhaps for the rest of the evening, shutting him out.
Same as always.
He wouldn’t go after her, wouldn’t try to talk things through lest the words dredged up the past. She couldn’t handle that, and he didn’t know if he could anymore, either. Besides, it wasn’t worth the risk of her retreating to a place far more inaccessible than her bedroom.
He sighed heavily, her name slipping through his lips. Mary June…
He’d spoken harshly and was sorry for it. She was delicate when it came to matters of the family. He’d always tried to shelter her from bad news. But this… He squeezed the papers once more in his fist. This had hit too hard. He couldn’t bear this alone. Hellfire, he’d needed someone to share this burden with, and who better than his wife? She was his wife, wasn’t she?
He cast a final glance up toward her room, where she was crying, and knew a sudden pain, as if the lightning in the sky just shot through his heart.
To hell with it!
he cried, drawing back his hand and throwing the cursed papers into the storm.
The wind caught the papers, hurtling them toward the marsh faster than a Cooper’s hawk. They landed, tangled in the tall grasses, beaten by the rain. Lightning flashed in the blackening sky, and by the time he heard the rumble of thunder, he was in the house, reaching for the snifter of brandy.
* * *
The storm passed quickly on its march from the mainland to the sea. Now the air was fresh and the pastel pinks of the sunset had deepened to a rich ocher. Preston sat on the porch, his clothes damp and his skin cold, staring out at the purpling sky while the brandy did its work. Usually Mama June sat rocking beside him in a companionable silence. He felt her absence deeply.
At least you’re here, aren’t you, boy?
he said, reaching down to pat the black Labrador retriever curled at his feet. Blackjack, who had sneaked back onto the porch the moment Mama June left, raised his dark, melting eyes and gazed at Preston with devotion while his tail thumped with affection. Good ol’ dog.
With a heavy sigh he turned his gaze back to the westward slide of the sun. In the years past, he used to relish these waning hours of the day, just rocking and watching the sun set over Sweetgrass, knowing that, at least for one more day, he’d kept the Blakely heritage intact. The plantation once consisted of 1300 acres, yet over the span of three hundred years, one thousand of those acres were sold off. He’d always felt it was his duty as the last remaining Blakely male to try to hold on to what was left so that a Blakely would always have a place to call home. Thinking about this used to bring him a bone-deep satisfaction.
Tonight, he felt no satisfaction in anything. Tonight, he felt that all his efforts had been in vain.
Mama June’s words had cut him to the quick. They’d extinguished the flicker of hope he’d harbored deep in his heart that someday, in the not-too-distant future, his prodigal son would return. Though he’d told no one, night after night he’d see that dream in the hallucinatory hues of the sunsets. In that dream he would be just like that father in the Bible he’d read about. He’d see his son coming up the road and go running out of the house to greet him with outstretched arms. He’d call for a feast to be held, for music to be played, for riches to be shared—all to celebrate his beloved son’s return home after years of fruitless wandering. In his dream he would smile at Mama June and quote, My son was lost but now is found.
Preston’s frown deepened. Tonight he couldn’t see his dream in the shadows of the sunset. His rays of hope had extinguished along with the sinking sun, and all that was left was this cold, dark silence. He felt as if he were already dead and put in the earth. Mama June’s words came back to him: Will our children weep when we’re gone?
They would not, he concluded bitterly. Then he downed his drink.
Gripping the sides of the chair, he pulled himself out, tottering as a wave of dizziness swept over him. Too much brandy, he thought as he plodded across the porch. Inside, the warmth of the house enveloped him. Glancing up at the tall clock, he realized with surprise that he’d been sitting out on the porch for several hours. It was no wonder he was chilled to the bone. He moved closer to the staircase and cocked his ear, straining to hear sounds from Mama June’s bedroom. All was quiet. She must have fallen asleep, he thought, resigned to the fact that he would not likely be getting a hot meal for dinner this night.
Truth was, he wasn’t hungry, anyway. All that fighting and drinking made his gut feel off. Besides, he was feeling too restless to eat. He never could settle down after a quarrel with Mama June. Couldn’t rest until they’d made peace. That woman had his soul in her hands and he wondered if she even knew it. Some days, it seemed that she hardly even knew he was here.
He felt his aloneness acutely tonight. It was thrumming in his brain with a pulselike rhythm. He removed his slicker, letting it lie on the back of a chair, and wandered restlessly. His damp feet dragged and his blurry eyes barely took in the rooms as he meandered. His mind was fixed on Mama June’s words.
I despise this land!
Could she have really meant that?
From the day I first stepped foot on it, all this land ever brought me was utter and complete heartbreak.
For him, the day Mary June Clark first stepped her tiny foot on Sweetgrass land was forever etched in his mind. His boyish heart had never known such infatuation, and later, much later, that youthful adoration had matured into a man’s utter and complete devotion.
He’d never heard her speak so plainly. She usually kept strong opinions to herself, never wanting to make another person feel uncomfortable. But those words…it was as if they had all bubbled up from some deep, dank well. Very deep, he thought with a grimace. What was it that Faulkner had said? The past is never dead. It isn’t even past. It nearly broke his heart to think that his life’s efforts had been for naught. No man could bear that.
During one circuit of the house he poured himself another drink. After another, he headed toward the small mahogany desk in the foyer and dug out Mama June’s blue address book. His eyes struggled with the letters and he fumbled for his reading glasses, an indignity of old age to which he’d never become reconciled. After a brief search through her feathery script, he picked up the phone and dialed the number in Montana.
His heart beat hard in his chest as he waited. Steadying himself against the wall, he listened to the phone ring once, twice, then two more times. At last he heard a click and the dreaded pause of a machine.
Hi. This is Morgan. I can’t come to the phone right now. Leave a brief message and I’ll call you back.
Preston was unprepared for the impact of his son’s voice after so many years of silence. He fumbled with the phone cord a moment, his tongue feeling unusually thick in his mouth. When the beep sounded he skipped a beat, then blurted, Uh, Morgan, it’s your dad. I, uh…
Preston felt a sudden confusion and struggled to put his thoughts to words. He gripped the phone tight while his heart pounded. I called to…to talk to you. Anyway, I—
This was going badly. He had to end it. Well, goodbye, son.
Preston’s hands shook as he hung up the phone. He leaned against the desk, panting as if he’d just plowed the back forty. Damn, he was even sweating! What bad luck that on his first call in years he got some damned answering machine.
The sadness in his heart weighed heavily in his chest. He couldn’t catch his breath and he felt as weak as a woman, barely able to bear his own weight. He pushed back from the desk, straightening, then felt again a surge of light-headedness, as if he might pass out. He staggered out to the porch, determined to let a few deep breaths of the cool ocean air balance him.
At the creak of the door Blackjack leapt from the cushioned settee and came trotting to his side, tail wagging.
Back, boy,
he mumbled, stumbling past him.
The dog whined and pressed his muzzle persistently against his leg.
Back!
he cried, swinging his arm. He lost his balance and reached out in a panic, searching for something—anything—to hold on to. His eyesight went blurry, and with frightening suddenness, he was teetering in the darkness. The thrumming in his head became a brutal pounding, building in crescendo, louder and louder. He was going down. His arms reached out toward the house as he hit the floor and it felt as if the lightning struck in his brain this time, jolting him, seizing his muscles. Everything went white with blinding pain.
Mary Ju—
The white faded to black. Then all was still.
CHAPTER 2
Sweetgrass (Muhlenbergia filipes) is an indigenous, long stemmed plant that grows in tufts along the coastal dunes from North Carolina to Texas. This native plant is fast disappearing from the landscape due to urbanization and development of coastal islands and marshland.
THE ENGINE OF THE PICKUP truck churned loudly as it idled before the ornate black wrought-iron gates. Atop the gate, fashioned in the same elaborate scroll, a single word was forged: Sweetgrass. The truck vibrated with the idling engine, but that was not the cause of the quake in Morgan Blakely’s heart.
The truck door squeaked on its hinges as he pushed it open. A breeze of sweet-smelling air rushed into the stale compartment, awakening him from the lethargy of travel. With another push, his feet landed on Lowcountry soil for the first time in more than a decade. He rolled his shoulders, stiff under his denim jacket. Then, lifting his face to the moist, early morning air, he yawned wide and rubbed his face with callused palms. Forty some hours of hard driving sure could make a man’s muscles ache, he thought. He still felt the miles rolling beneath his feet. No wonder. It had taken him 850 miles on I-90 just to get out of Montana.
He hadn’t thought the Road Buzzard would make the journey, but the old Chevy limped along the roads like a dog finding its way home. Nope, they didn’t build them like they used to, he thought, giving the battleship-gray truck a pat of respect. He’d bought it when he was twenty-one and, being young and proud, had pumped serious money into it, adding a hitch, a winch, a toolbox and liner and, of course, a powerful sound system. Back then, he had money burning a hole in his pocket, dreams of adventure blurring his vision and enough anger and rebellion in his gut to fuel his own manifest destiny. He’d roared down this same road full throttle and never looked back.
It had been a long, hard journey. Now, years later, his tires were worn and his speakers were blown. Before leaving Montana, he’d stuffed what little extra money he had into his wallet, enough to get him home.
Home. Morgan surveyed the impenetrable wall of bush and pines that surrounded the family property from the prying eyes of folks zooming along busy Highway 17. A ragged culvert ran along the road—like a moat around a castle, he thought, mulishly kicking the gravel. He walked off to open the heavy gates. A moment later, he drove into his family’s estate.
The sunlight dappled the road as the truck crawled along. In the surrounding trees, birds and squirrels chattered at the dawn, and from the ground, a quail fluttered, squawking, into the air. At every turn, sights brought back memories he’d kept pushed back for a long while. He saw the crumbling ruins of the old smokehouse where, in colonial time, meat was preserved. Not far from it, near an underground stream of water, was the foundation of what was once a dairy. Milk and cheese used to be kept cold in the frigid waters. The spot had been a favorite play fort for the Blakely children.
Farther on by the western border lay a large peach orchard. Morgan frowned with worry at the sorry condition of the once meticulously maintained grounds. Beyond that lay the family graveyard. A little farther up the road, the trees opened to reveal a vast, cleared and mowed space that was used by the parish for Sunday picnics, oyster roasts, turkey shoots and other church functions.
He rounded a final, wide curve in the road. What he saw made him bring the truck to a stop. As the engine rumbled beneath him, he leaned forward on the steering wheel. The wave of homesickness surprised him.
Before him in the misty air of early morning was the long, formal avenue to his family home. Massive live oaks dripping lacy moss lined the narrow dirt road, sweeping low, like ancient sentries from a graceful time long gone. If the road’s culvert was the moat of this kingdom, he thought, then these noble oaks surely were her knights.
At the end of the long avenue, the Southern colonial house awaited him like a charming belle—petite, pretty and eager to welcome him into her warmth. His father loved the house like a woman—its slender white columns, the sweeping Dutch gambrel roof and the delicately arched dormers framed with quaint squares of glass. The low foundation was made of brick and oyster-shell lime, meant to last.
And it had. The house had survived two hundred years of storms, wars, tragedies and the vagaries of fortune. She was a survivor. His father had fondly referred to the house as having pluck.
Suddenly the front door swung open and a petite woman with hair as white as the house appeared on the threshold, clutching a pale-blue night robe close around her neck. Morgan swallowed hard with recognition. Why had he never noticed before how very much like the house his mother was? It dawned on Morgan that his father must have made that comparison many times, as well.
Morgan slowly rounded the circle, then stopped before the house. Blackjack bounded from the porch and scurried down the front stairs, tail straight up and barking in warning. Morgan cut the engine and the truck shuddered to a halt.
When did her hair grow so white? he wondered. Or grow so frail a gust of wind could carry her away? The years seemed to stretch long between them as he stared out through the dark windshield and calculated that his mother was now sixty-six years old.
The black Lab had aged, too. Blackjack ran on stiff legs and his muzzle was completely white now, but he could still raise the dead with his barking. Morgan pushed open the door. Instantly, the large dog bounded forward, lowering his head, ears back, sniffing hard.
Hey there, Blackjack,
Morgan said as his feet hit the earth and he slowly extended his hand. Remember me?
At the sound of his voice the dog took a step closer, placing his gray muzzle right to the hand. Then recognition clicked in the dog’s cloudy eyes, and with a sudden leap Blackjack began yelping and barking with unbridled joy.
You’re getting old, aren’t you, Blackie, ol’ boy?
Morgan said with a laugh, playfully petting the old dog and feeling a surge of affection for being welcomed with such devotion.
Morgan!
The sound of his mother’s voice pierced Blackjack’s clamor. Morgan closed his eyes for a moment, then slowly raised himself and looked over his shoulder toward her. His gaze locked with a pair of blue eyes that were shining bright through tears. It had been a long time since they’d seen each other. Mother and son stood staring for an intense moment, then she flung open her arms and took a faltering step forward.
Morgan wiped his hands on his thighs and then closed the distance to her side in a few long strides. Mama June reached up to wrap her arms around him in a trembling embrace and instantly Morgan was enveloped again in the scent of gardenias.
Oh, my dear, dear boy!
she cried. It’s so good to see you. Shame on you for staying away so long. I’ve missed you!
She felt his resistance in the stiffness of his arms and it pained her deeply, yet she clung a moment longer, as though her love would be strong enough to melt his iciness.
He felt awkward in the sudden emotion and drew back with shuffling steps, offering her a perfunctory kiss on the cheek.
Hello, Mama June.
She held him at arm’s length. Darlin’, let me get a good look at you. You’re so thin! Aren’t you getting enough to eat?
I eat fine.
I’ll just bet you do…. Don’t you worry, we’ll take care of that while you’re here.
As her eyes devoured him, his did likewise. She was different somehow. Mama June had always been slender, but time had rounded her edges and softened her skin. Her face was sleep-worn and he figured Blackjack’s barking had awakened her. Yet she didn’t look tired—that wasn’t the right word. Older. It shocked him to see it.
In his mind, his mother was always the same age as the last time he’d seen her. She was a wren of a woman, with bright eyes that shone with curiosity and quick movements that, while graceful, reflected the swift turns of her thoughts. Her hair, still long, was now a snowy white and loosely bound in a thin braid that fell over one shoulder. It was a style both old-fashioned and reminiscent of a young girl’s.
He’d known she’d be older, of course. He’d not been home in years. But knowing it and seeing it were two different things. Yet her excitement colored her high cheekbones with a youthful flush, her joyous smile brought out deep dimples and her blue eyes sparkled like a light burning bright in a window.
Mama June grinned with elation. I…I just can’t believe you’re here! It’s a blessing! A true blessing. Oh, Morgan, what a surprise! Why didn’t you call and let us know you were coming?
I didn’t want to put anyone out. I figured y’all had your hands full with Daddy right now.
Her smile slipped. You got my message?
Morgan nodded. And I talked to Nan.
Confusion flickered in Mama June’s eyes. Nan? Your sister didn’t tell me she spoke with you.
I asked her not to. I wasn’t trying to be secretive, nothing like that. I just wasn’t sure what I was going to do and, well, I didn’t want to…
Get my hopes up?
He laughed shortly and shuffled his feet. Yeah, I guess.
Her brows furrowed. What made you decide to come?
He seemed surprised by the question. "I couldn’t not come. I know it’s been strained between us, but hell, he’s still my father."
Oh, Morgan, I’m sorry not to have been the one to tell you. I tried to call you right after your father was brought to the hospital, but there was no answer. I kept trying and finally just left the message. It wasn’t an easy message to leave and I hated doing it. I’m glad Nan at least called you.
"She didn’t call me. I called her. After I got Daddy’s phone message."
She skipped a beat and her eyes widened. His…his what? Preston called you? When?
A little over a week ago. Out of the blue. As luck would have it, I was on a hunting trip and didn’t get the message till the following week.
He paused, releasing a short laugh. When I heard his voice on the machine, I sat hard in the chair, I can tell you. I listened to that message over and over again, just so I could believe it was the ol’ coot. Then I got your message.
He paused. It hit me pretty hard. I just grabbed a map and every dollar in the house, got in the truck and drove south.
Mama June’s jaw was slack with disbelief. Preston called you…