Read The Scarlet Thread Online
Authors: Francine Rivers
your door dont mean you have to answer.
I think Lucas opened his door and invited the
devil in a long time ago.
We went to camp meeting again. I did not like
it much this time. Sally Mae Grayson and her
yellow hair came. She has not been to a meeting
in two years because she has bin living in Fever
River with her grandmama and going to school.
I wish she had stayed in Fever River with her
grandmama.
Even Matthew who thinks girls are stupid and
empty headed looked at Sally Mae like he was a
sick calf. All the boys were following her around
and wanting to talk to her. The only one she pad
attention to was James. They sat together during
meeting and ate together at supper. Sally Mae
kept looking at me and saying little pitchers have
big ears. James told me to go and get him another
mug of cider and when I did and came back with
it he was gone. So was Sally Mae.
I looked and looked until I found them.
Now I know what courting is.
I never want to talk about courting or hear about
it again. No one is ever courting me like that.
Mama found me down by the crek washing my
hand. She askt me why I wuz crying. I told her.
I thot she wud go and make them stop what they
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wuz doing or at least tell Mister Grayson. All she
did was hold me and rock me for a long, long
time. She said idols always have feet of clay.
Sally Mae is not going bak to school in Fever
River. James told Matthew that her grandmama
wrote a letter to her father saying she was ailing
and could not take her. She said Sally Mae wud
be better off staying at the homestead with her
papa. James said her schooling was lost on her
anyway. He said Sally Mae knows more than she
shud all ready.
I am going to die. My heart hurts so much
I know I will be in the grave soon. James is
goin. I’m never going to see him again. The only
consolashun I have is Sally Mae wont get him
either.
He thanked Mama and Papa over supper and
said he cud never repay them for their kindnes
to him. He said he is sixteen and old enuf to fend
for himself. Papa said Fever River is a big place.
James said he wants to be in a big place. He said
maybe he will even go east. He said he wud like
to see Boston and New York. He said he wud like
to see England and maybe even China.
He and Matthew talked the hole nite before
he left. I heard him tell Matthew he did not love
Sally Mae and it wud be smart if Matthew did not
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She will cut yor heart out and feast on it.
I walked with him to the crek bridge. I did not
cry. I askt him strat out what he thot he wud find
better in Fever River or China for that matter. He
said he was not looking for better. He was looking for different.
Mama said he is lost.
I know I am.
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“ B E C A U S E I T ’ S T H E W A Y T H I N G S A R E D O N E DOWN
here,” Alex said, irritated. “When are you going to stop worrying
about money? I just got a bonus. We can afford to have a professional decorator.”
“It isn’t just a matter of if we can afford it,” Sierra said, though
that did concern her. Alex was spending money at an alarming
rate, eating out at fancy restaurants every day for lunch, buying
expensive suits. Why wouldn’t he listen to anything she said anymore? “What’s the matter with the way we’ve decorated? People
are comfortable—”
“Nothing goes together. Look around you, Sierra. Does
Steve’s house look like this? Does Matt’s? Most of what we have
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married. That old armoire in the bedroom, the hatch-cover table
in the family room, those ridiculous brass lamps!”
“The armoire was the first piece of furniture your parents
bought when they came to California.”
“So what?”
“It has a family history to it! It meant something to them.”
“It means poverty to me. I don’t need reminding.”
“That hatch-cover comes from an old merchant ship that
sailed around the Horn and into San Francisco Bay in 1910. My
uncle refinished it for us as a wedding present. Those brass
lamps are almost a hundred years old.”
“And look every day of it.”
“I can get some new shades.”
“New shades won’t help. Don’t you get it? Everything we’ve
got is
junk.
If you buy something from a discount store today and
save it for a hundred years, it’s just hundred-year-old junk.
That’s what we’ve got. Old junk!”
Sierra stood there, stunned. Had he always felt this way? She
remembered how nice everything had looked in their small
Windsor house. Maybe he figured what they had just wasn’t
good enough in a 5,000-square-foot, upscale, ranch-style house
owned by an up-and-coming young executive.
“Look, Sierra,” Alex said, his tone gentling, “there’s a right
way and a wrong way to decorate a house, and hiring a professional is the
right
way.”
“Who told you that rubbish?” she said. But she knew without
even asking.
His dark eyes flashed with anger.
“I’m
saying it. All right?
Does that make it go down easier? I’m sick of living with other
people’s discards around me. I’m making good money. I bought
this beautiful house for you.”
Rolling her eyes, she turned away.
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“I don’t want it looking like it was decorated by someone running a flea market,” he said through his teeth.
She wondered if he knew how much his words hurt. She had
always done their decorating. People had always said she had a
knack for it. Friends had asked her advice, and one even offered
to pay her to decorate her house. She liked reupholstering old
couches and chairs, tole painting, and making wreaths. She liked
country!
Alex opened his daily planner and jotted some notes on her
grocery list. “I’m giving you a couple of names of interior decorators. The one in Beverly Hills is the best. Call him first. If he’s not
available, call the second one.” He tore the slip off the pad and
handed it to her. Stepping past her, he picked up his briefcase.
“Get it done today,” he said, like he was giving a subordinate a
command. It was all she could do to not salute him as he headed
for the door.
It wasn’t the first morning of late that he had neglected to kiss
her good-bye. Sierra followed him, slip of paper in hand, and
stood in the doorway to the three-car garage. Maybe he’d remember.
“I want it done as soon as possible,” he said, opening the door
of his new Mercedes. It was silver with black leather interior,
complete with tape deck, CD player, and car phone. Tossing the
briefcase onto the passenger seat, he slid in and slammed the
door. Tapping the garage door opener, he turned away, slinging
his arm over the passenger seat as he started backing out.
She looked at the white BMW sitting in the garage. Alex had
bought it for her birthday last month. He’d been so proud when
he drove it home.
“Where’s my Honda?” she’d said weakly.
“I traded it in,” he said, grinning and handing her the keys.
He’d fully expected her to weep with joy over having a new
car. She’d wanted to weep, all right. The Honda was the car her
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and Carolyn had ridden around in it from the time they were babies. It was like an old family friend. The BMW was an unwelcome houseguest.
Alex had never spent much time keeping up the Honda.
She’d vacuumed and washed it every few weeks. Now Alex
spent every Saturday vacuuming, washing, and hand-drying
both cars; first the Mercedes, then the BMW. He even rubbed
the already shiny dashboards with Armor All. He used a toothbrush to scrub the spoked hubcaps, for heaven’s sake!
Three days ago, Alex had told her he didn’t have time to make
Clanton’s Little League game—but he had two hours to spare
for the cars. And she couldn’t even remember the last time she’d
received an eighth of that much time and attention from him.
A stab of pain ripped through her as she remembered the days,
less than a year ago, when Alex couldn’t wait to come home to
her, to talk with her, to share and laugh and love. She remembered how it felt to sit together, sharing dreams and ideas. And
the wonder of melting into each other’s arms after a day apart.
How could life change so dramatically in the space of six
months? How could a man change so much?
She had always known Alex was ambitious and determined.
What she hadn’t realized was that his work could become the
driving force and focus of his life. He was consumed with his
career, impassioned by it, obsessed with it. It was as though the
success of his first game, Vigilantes, merely whetted his appetite
to do better on the next. Apparently success gave him an adrenaline rush she and the children couldn’t.
Sierra readily acknowledged that Alex was making more than
four times what he had made in his job in Santa Rosa. Two magazines had done articles on him in the past two months giving
glowing forecasts of the future of Vigilantes. She had seen ads on
television.
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“Sick of what’s happening in the world?” the announcer’s
smooth voice would ask. “Become the law!”
Industry columnists were predicting Vigilantes would be the
most popular arcade game of the decade. In the interview for the
second article, Alex said Beyond Tomorrow would be releasing a
new 64-bit CD-based system called The Monolith by the new
year. The system would come complete with a code breaker that
would allow owners to play any CD game on the market. The
Monolith was aimed at the older teens and adults and would
come packaged with Vigilantes. Stores were already calling
Beyond Tomorrow and placing orders before the system had
even hit the market. And Alex was working day and night on a
second game, The Chameleon, a role-playing computer game
utilizing the modem peripheral and the Internet so that players
from around the world could link up.
No doubt about it. Beyond Tomorrow was booming.
“Changing the future of gaming!” their company motto, was
becoming a catchphrase; Alex was determined to make it come
true.
But Sierra felt little pleasure at what was happening. It was
too much. Too fast.
Granted, Steve had proven himself a man of his word. He’d
kept every promise he made to Alex. Bonuses, salary increases,
benefits . . . He even hired a personal secretary for Alex and
added several new employees to the marketing and distribution
departments. Alex’s place and position were guaranteed; he was
a key in Beyond Tomorrow’s incredible success. He was on top
of the professional world.
And Sierra had never felt less secure in her life.
She and Alex barely talked anymore. He was constantly overworked and preoccupied. She tried to talk to him about it one
night, but he wanted to know what she
needed
to talk about. The
minute she said there wasn’t anything specific, he returned his
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