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Susanna Daniel - Stiltsville

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Susanna Daniel Stiltsville
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One sunny morning in 1969, near the end of her first trip to Miami, twenty-six-year-old Frances Ellerby finds herself in a place called Stiltsville, a community of houses built on pilings in the middle of Biscayne Bay. Its the first time the Atlanta native has been out on the open water, and shes captivated. On the dock of a stilt house, with the dazzling skyline in the distance and the unknowable ocean beneath her, she meets the houses owner, Dennis DuValand a new future reveals itself. Turning away from her quiet, predictable life back home, Frances moves to Miami to be with Dennis. Over time, she earns the confidence of his wild-at-heart sister and wins the approval of his oldest friend. Frances and Dennis marry and have a childbut rather than growing complacent about their good fortune, they continue to face the challenges of intimacy and the complicated city they call home. Stiltsville is the familys island oasisuntil suddenly its gone, and Frances is forced to figure out how to make her family work on dry land. Against a backdrop of lush tropical beauty, Frances and Dennis struggle with the mutability of love and Floridas weather, as well as temptation, chaos, and disappointment. But just when Frances thinks shes reached some semblance of higher ground, she must confront an obstacle so great that even the lessons shes learned about navigating the uncharted waters of family life cant keep them afloat. With Stiltsville, Susanna Daniel weaves the beauty, violence, and humanity of Miamis coming-of-age with an enduring story of a marriages beginning, maturity, and heartbreaking demise.

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Stiltsville

A Novel

Susanna Daniel

Dedication for my mother and for my father Contents Dedication 1969 - photo 1

Dedication

for my mother

and for my father

Contents

Dedication

1969

1970

1976

1984

1990

1992

1993

O n a Sunday morning in late July, at the end of my first-ever visit to Miami, I took a cab from my hotel to Snapper Creek marina to join a woman named Marse Heiger, whom Id met the day before. When I stepped out of the cab, I saw Marse standing in the well of her little fishing boat, wearing denim knee shorts and a yellow sleeveless blouse, her stiff brown hair pinned under a bandanna. She waved and gestured for me to climb into the boat. She poured me a mug of coffee from an aluminum thermos and started the engine. Ready? she said.

We puttered out of the marina, under a bridge from which two black boys were fishing with what looked like homemade poles, down a winding canal flanked by mangroves. The knobby, twining roots rose from the water. I sat on a cushioned bench and Marse sat in a captains chair at the helm. She handed me a scarf and told me to tie back my hair, which I did. We passed an egret standing stock-still on a mangrove root, then emerged from the canal into the wide, open bay. The Miami shoreline stretched out in both directions. Marse picked up speed, and each time we came down on a wave, I gripped the corner of my bench.

Id grown up in Decatur, Georgia, just outside Atlanta, and had been to the ocean only once, when I was eleven years old. My parents and I had spent a weekend on Saint Simons island, in a one-bedroom rental cottage three blocks from the beach. That weekend, Id seen a dark fin from shore, but my father had said it was probably just a dolphin. And though Id spent a few afternoons on lake pontoons with friends during college, never had I been out on the open water. From halfway across the bay I could see the low silhouette of downtown Miami, where Freedom Tower spiked above the blocky buildings. The bridge connecting the city to Key Biscayne looked like a stroke of watercolor. Above the wind and whine of the engine, Marse named Miamis parts for me, pointing: farthest southwest were the Everglades, then the twin nuclear reactors at Turkey Pointjust built but not yet in operationthen Coral Gables and Coconut Grove, then downtown. To the east, the Cape Florida lighthouse squatted at the tip of Key Biscayne, signaling the edge of a continent.

We landed hard on each wave and the spray hit my face. Marses boatan eleven-foot Boston Whaler with a single outboard enginewas, in my estimation, little more than a dinghy. When wed traveled fifteen minutes across the bay, Marse pointed ahead, away from shore. There was nothing there but sea and sky, but then a few matchbox shapes formed on the hazy horizon. They grew larger and I saw that they were houses, propped above the water on pilings. I counted fourteen of them. As we neared, I saw that some were painted, some were two stories high, some had boats moored at the docks, and some were shuttered and still. They stood on cement pillars, flanking a dark channel along the rim of the bay, as if guarding it from the open ocean. Marse slowed the boat as we entered the channel, and when we came to a red-painted house with white shutters, she shifted into neutral. A larger boat was tied to the dock, but there was no one around to greet us. Marse cut the engine and the world stilled. Where are they? she said. A plastic owl perched atop a dock piling. An open bag of potato chips sat in a rocking chair on the upstairs porch.

Guys? called Marse. She stepped to the houses dock with the stern line. I took her cue and stepped up with the bowline. I imitated Marses knot, a figure eight with an inward loop, and after the boat was secured, I heard shouting in the distance. I turned. Two men stood on the dock of a stilt house eighty yards east; they waved at us. One was dark-haired and held a duffel bag, and the other was fair-haired and wore bright orange swimming trunks. Marse waved back, and because the waving went on for several seconds, I raised my arm as well. As I did, the fair-haired boy dove off the dock into the water, then started to swim.

Id taken the train from Atlanta two days earlier to attend the wedding of a college girlfriend. Id met Marse at the reception, and wed spent an hour chatting about Atlanta and Miami, and about the bridesmaids dresses and the best mans toast. Her given name was Marilyn, but Marserhymes with arse , as she put itwas a family nickname. From what little I knew of the city, I concluded that Marse was a true native daughter: she was darkly tan, with premature lines around her eyes, and she dressed in a confident, sexy way that anywhere else would have seemed showy, but in Miami was unexceptional, even practical. Shed grown up in Coral Gables, in a Spanish-style bungalow with a wraparound porch and no air-conditioning, and had never considered moving out of South Florida. When shed invited me to spend the day with her at a place called Stiltsville, Id accepted readily. So that Sunday morning, Id dressed in a pair of Bermuda shorts and my most becoming topstill plain compared with Marses blouseand called a taxi.

While we waited in rocking chairs on the upstairs porch for the boys to arrive, Marse filled me in. The dark-haired boy was Kyle, her older brother, and the fair-headed one was Dennis DuVal, whose parents owned the stilt house where we were sitting. Kyle and Dennis were in their last year of law school at the University of Miami; Marse was a year behind them. Youll like Kyle, Marse said. Girls tend to.

And Dennis?

Dennis is mine. Thats the plan, anyway.

She wore dark sunglasses and shed pulled off her top to reveal two triangles of purple bikini. Her stomach was flat and tan, with taut creases across the navel. The boys were yards from the dock, arms and legs lashing, sending up brief white wakes. Does Kyle know Im coming? I said.

She nodded. Dont worry, theres no pressure. Youll be gone tomorrow, anyway.

It was true: my train back to Atlanta left the following afternoon. In the time since Id graduated from college, Id dated a few colleagues from the bank where I worked as a teller. I was twenty-six years old, and though Id come close, Id never been in love. Whats your plan with Dennis? I said.

She took lip balm from her pocket and applied it, then handed it to me. Theres this fund-raiser every year at Vizcaya, she said. She didnt explain what Vizcaya was but I already knewit was a Renaissance-style villa on the bay in Coconut Grove, surrounded by elaborate formal gardens, open for tours and events. Id visited Vizcaya the day before the wedding, sightseeing. Id walked alone through the overdressed rooms, then stood on the limestone terrace and watched sailboats cross the bay. Everyone dresses up and picnics on their good china and drinks champagne.

Youre going to ask him? I said.

Im hoping hell ask me.

What if he doesnt?

She frowned. Youre no fun. She stood and lifted one bare foot onto the porch railing, then folded over to touch nose to ankle. I was tall but Marse was taller, and her limbs were sleek and muscular. Besides, thats why its so great that youre here. Youll be my impartial third party. Just watch him, see how he acts.

Ill do my best.

The boys reached the dock in a flurry of splashing and pulled themselves onto the transom of the big boat. The fair oneDennistook a towel from the console and dried his hair, and the other oneKylehauled up a small duffel bag hed strapped over one arm, then reached into a cooler and opened a can of beer. They resembled, in their unself-conscious mannerisms and the energetic timbre of their voices, overgrown children. Dennis called up, Welcome!

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