Beach Music
by Pat Conroy
List Price: $7.99
Pages: 800
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 0553574574
Publisher: Bantam Books

In 1980, a year after my wife leapt to her death from the Silas Pearlman
Bridge in Charleston, South Carolina, I moved to Italy to begin life anew,
taking our small daughter with me. Our sweet Leah was not quite two when
my wife, Shyla, stopped her car on the highest point of the bridge and
looked over, for the last time, the city she loved so well. She had put
on the emergency brake and opened the door of our car, then lifted herself
up to the rail of the bridge with the delicacy and enigmatic grace that
was always Shyla's catlike gift. She was also quick-witted and funny,
but she carried within her a dark side that she hid with bright allusions
and an irony as finely wrought as lace. She had so mastered the strategies
of camouflage that her own history had seemed a series of well-placed
mirrors that kept her hidden from herself.
It was nearly sunset and a tape of the Drifters' Greatest Hits
poured out of the car's stereo. She had recently had our car serviced
and the gasoline tank was full. She had paid all the bills and set up
an appointment with Dr. Joseph for my teeth to be cleaned. Even in her
final moments, her instincts tended toward the orderly and the functional.
She had always prided herself in keeping her madness invisible and at
bay; and when she could no longer fend off the voices that grew inside
her, their evil set to chaos in a minor key, her breakdown enfolded upon
her, like a tarpaulin pulled across that part of her brain where once
there had been light. Having served her time in mental hospitals, exhausted
the wide range of pharmaceuticals, and submitted herself to the priestly
rites of therapists of every theoretic persuasion, she was defenseless
when the black music of her subconscious sounded its elegy for her time
on earth.
On the rail, all eyewitnesses agreed, Shyla hesitated and looked out toward
the sea and shipping lanes that cut past Fort Sumter, trying to compose
herself for the last action of her life. Her beauty had always been a
disquieting thing about her and as the wind from the sea caught her black
hair, lifting it like streamers behind her, no one could understand why
anyone so lovely would want to take her own life. But Shyla was tired
of feeling ill-made and transitory and she wanted to set the flags of
all her tomorrows at half-mast. Three days earlier, she had disappeared
from our house in Ansonborough and only later did I discover that she
had checked in to the Mills-Hyatt House to put her affairs in order. After
making appointments, writing schedules, letters, and notes that would
allow our household to continue in its predictable harmony, she marked
the mirror in her hotel room with an annulling X in bright red lipstick,
paid her bill with cash, flirted with the doorman, and gave a large tip
to the boy who brought her the car. The staff at the hotel remarked on
her cheerfulness and composure during her stay.
As Shyla steadied herself on the rail of the bridge a man approached her
from behind, a man coming up from Florida, besotted with citrus and Disney
World, and said in a low voice so as not to frighten the comely stranger
on the bridge, "Are you okay, honey?"
She pirouetted slowly and faced him. Then with tears streaming down her
face, she stepped back, and with that step, changed the lives of her family
forever. Her death surprised no one who loved her, yet none of us got
over it completely. Shyla was that rarest of suicides: no one held her
responsible for the act itself; she was forgiven as instantly as she was
missed and afterward she was deeply mourned.
For three days I joined the grim-faced crew of volunteers who searched
for Shyla's remains. Ceaselessly, we dragged the length and breadth of
the harbor, enacting a grotesque form of braille as hoods felt their way
along the mudflats and the pilings of the old bridge that connected Mount
Pleasant and Sullivan's Island. Two boys were crabbing when they noticed
her body moving toward them beside the marsh grass.
After her funeral, a sadness took over me that seemed permanent, and I
lost myself in the details and technicalities connected to death in the
South. Great sorrow still needs to be fed and I dealt with my disconsolate
emptiness by feeding everyone who gathered around me to offer their support.
I felt as though I were providing sustenance for the entire army in the
field who had come together to ease the malignant ache I felt every time
Shyla's name was mentioned. The word Shyla itself became a land mine.
That sweet-sounding word was merciless and I could not bear to hear it.
So I lost myself in the oils and condiments of my well-stocked kitchen.
I fatted up my friends and family, attempted complicated recipes I had
always put off making, and even tried my hand at Asian cuisine for the
first time. With six gas burners ablaze, I turned out velvety soups and
rib-sticking stews. I alternated between cooking and weeping and I prayed
for the repose of the soul of my sad, hurt wife. I suffered, I grieved,
I broke down, and I cooked fabulous meals for those who came to comfort
me.
It was only a short time after we buried Shyla that her parents sued me
for custody of my child, Leah, and their lawsuit brought me running back
into the real world. I spent a dispiriting year in court trying to prove
my fitness as a father. It was a time when I met a series of reptilian
lawyers so unscrupulous that I would not have used their marrow to feed
wild dogs or their wiry flesh to bait a crab pot. Shyla's mother and father
had gone crazy with grief and I learned much about the power of scapegoating
by watching their quiet hatred of me as they grimaced though the testimony
regarding my sanity, my finances, my reputation in the community, and
my sexual life with their eldest child.
Though I have a whole range of faults that piqued the curiosity of the
court, few who have ever seen me with my daughter have any doubts about
my feelings for her. I get weak at the knees at the very sight of her.
She is my certification, my boarding pass into the family of man, and
whatever faith in the future I still retain.
But it was not my overriding love of Leah that won the day in court. Before
she took her final drive, Shyla had mailed me a letter that was part love
letter and part apology for what she had done. When my lawyer had me read
that letter aloud to the court, it became clear to Shyla's parents and
everyone present that laying her death at my feet was, at best, a miscarriage
of justice. Her letter was an act of extraordinary generosity written
in the blackest hours of her life. She blew it like a kiss toward me as
a final gesture of a rare, exquisite sensibility. Her letter saved Leah
for me. But the ferocity of that court battle left me exhausted, bitter,
and raw around the edges. It felt as though Shyla had died twice.
I answered my wife's leap from the bridge and the fierceness of that legal
battle with a time of disorientation and sadness; and then with Italy.
Toward Europe, I looked for respite and hermitage, and the imminence of
my secret flight from South Carolina again restored a fight spirit within
me. I had made a good living as a food and travel writer and running away
had always been one of the things I did best.
The flight to Europe was my attempt to place the memory of both Shyla
and South Carolina permanently in the past. I hoped I would save my life
and Leah's from the suffocation I was beginning to feel in the place where
Shyla and I had come of age together. For me, the South was carry-on baggage
I could not shed no matter how many borders I crossed, but my daughter
was still a child and I wanted her to grow into young womanhood as a European,
blissfully unaware of that soft ruinous South that had killed her mother
in one of its prettiest rivers. My many duties as a father I took with
great seriousness, but there was no law that I was aware of that insisted
I raise Leah as a Southerner. Certainly, the South had been a mixed blessing
for me and I carried some grievous wounds into exile with me. All the
way across the Atlantic Leah slept in my lap and when she awoke, I began
her transformation by teaching her to count in Italian. And so in Rome
we settled and began the long process of refusing to be Southern, even
though my mother started a letter-writing campaign to coax me back home.
Her letters arrived every Friday: "A Southerner in Rome? A low country
boy in Italy? Ridiculous. You've always been restless, Jack, never knew
how to be comfortable with your own kind. But mark my words. You'll be
back soon. The South's got a lot wrong with it. But it's permanent press
and it doesn't wash out."
Though my mother was onto something real, I stuck by my guns. I would
tell American tourists who questioned me about my accent that I no longer
checked the scores of the Atlanta Braves in the Herald Tribune
and they could not get me to reread Faulkner or Miss Eudora at gun-point.
I did not realize or care that I was attempting to expunge all that was
most authentic about me. I was serious about needing some time to heal
and giving my soul a much needed rest. My quest was amnesia; my vehicle
was Rome. For five years, my plan worked very well.
But no one walks out of his family without reprisals: a family is too
disciplined an army to offer compassion to its deserters. No matter how
much they sympathized with all my motives, those who loved me most read
a clear text of treason in my action. They thought that by forcing me
away from South Carolina, Shyla's leap had succeeded in taking Leah and
me over the rail with her.
I understood completely, but I was so burnt out I did not care. I threw
myself at the Italian language with gusto and became fluent in the street
talk of the shopkeepers and the vendors of our neighborhood. In the first
year of our exile, working all the angles of my trade, I completed my
third cookbook, a compilation of recipes I had gathered over a ten-year
career of dining out in some of the best restaurants in the South. I also
wrote a travel book on Rome that became popular with American tourists
as soon as it hit the giornalai. I urged every American who read
it to understand Rome was both sublime and imperishably beautiful, a city
that melted into leaf-blown silences and gave a splendid return to any
tourist adventurous enough to stray from the main trade routes of tourism.
All the pangs and difficulties of my own homesickness went into the writing
of that book. The artfully hidden subtext in those first years was that
foreign travel was worth every discomfort and foul-up, but took a radical
toll on the spirit. Though I could write about the imperishable charms
of Rome forever, I could not quiet that pearly ache in my heart that I
diagnosed as the cry of home.
I kept that cry to myself, in fact, did not even admit that it was something
I heard or felt. I concentrated on the task of raising Leah in a culture
alien to me and I hired a maid named Maria Parise from the Umbrian countryside
and watched with pleasure as she took over the task of mothering Leah.
Maria was a simple, strong-willed woman, God-fearing and superstitious,
as only a peasant can be, who brought an undiminishable joy to the raising
of this small motherless American.
In a short amount of time Leah became part of the native fauna around
the Palazzo Farnese, a beloved romanina adopted by the people who
loved and plied their trades around the piazza, and she rapidly turned
into the first real linguist produced by my family. Her Italian was flawless
as she navigated the teeming stalls along the Campo dei Fiori with its
wild rivers of fruit and cheese and olives. Very early on, I taught Leah
how to tell where we were in the Campo by using her sense of smell. The
south side was glazed with the smell of slain fish and no amount of water
or broomwork could ever eliminate the tincture of ammonia scenting that
part of the piazza. The fish had written their names in those stones.
But so had the young lambs and the coffee beans and the torn arugula and
the glistening tiers of citrus and the bread baking that produced a golden
brown perfume from the great ovens. I whispered to Leah that a sense of
smell was better than a yearbook for imprinting the delicate graffiti
of time in the memory. I knew that Leah had developed a bloodhound's nose
when in the middle of the second year she stopped me as we passed by the
Ruggeri brothers' alimentari and said, "The truffles have arrived,
Daddy, they're here," as I caught the signature odor of pure earth. As
a reward, I bought Leah a fraction of that truffle, priced as dearly as
uranium, and sliced it into her scrambled eggs the next morning.
The raising of Leah consumed a large portion of my days and made me place
my own sorrow over the loss of Shyla in a seldom visited back lot of my
life, allowing me no time to devote to my own complex feelings over her
death. Leah's happiness superseded everything in my life and I was determined
I would not pass our family's infinite capacity for suffering on to her.
I knew that Leah, as Shyla's child and my own, would get more than her
portion of the genes of grief. Together, our families contained enough
sad stories to jump-start a colony of lemmings toward the nearest body
of water. I had no idea if the seeds of our madness burned in secret deposits
in my beautiful child's bloodstream or not. But I vowed to protect her
from those stories, from both sides of her family, that could set in motion
the forces that had brought me spiritually bloody and beaten to the Fiumicino
airport in the first place. I confess that I became the censor of my daughter's
history. The South that I described to Leah at bedtime every night existed
only in my imagination. I admitted no signs of danger or nightmare. There
was no dark side to the Southern moon that I recalled to my daughter,
and the rivers ran clean and the camellias were always in bloom. It was
a South that existed without sting or thorns or heartache.
Because I have inherited my family's gift for storytelling, my well-told
lies became Leah's memories. Without realizing it, I made the mistake
of turning South Carolina into a lost and secret paradise to my daughter.
By carefully editing what I thought would harm her, I turned my childhood
into something as glamorous as forbidden fruit. Though Rome would mark
her with its most exacting emblems, I did not note the exact moment I
touched my child with a lust to see the fierce, rarefied beauty of her
birthplace. Even as Leah became part of the secrets that Rome whispered,
she was not a native of the city, not indigenous like the flowery lichens
that grew along the wall that held back the Tiber.
Excerpted from Beach
Music by Pat Conroy. Copyright© 1996 by Pat Conroy. Excerpted
by permission of Bantam, a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.
No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission
in writing from the publisher.
Excerpted from Beach Music © Copyright 2009 by Pat Conroy. Reprinted with permission by Bantam Books. All rights reserved.
Click here now to buy this book from Amazon.
top of the page