Read The Scarlet Thread Online
Authors: Francine Rivers
tremor of weakness in her mother’s grip. “This is my favorite
time of year. The cherry trees bud, and the daffodils come up.
Everything’s so green and pretty.” She sighed, and it was a
sound of contentment, not sadness. “How can anyone fail to see
God’s hand in all of it?”
Sierra’s throat closed. She stared out the window as the clouds
moved slowly across the blue sky. Her mother wouldn’t want
her to cry. She had to be strong. She had to be
brave.
But inside,
she could feel pieces of herself crumbling.
“Every year, Jesus shows us the Resurrection,” her mother
said and squeezed her hand lightly.
“It’s a pretty day,” Sierra said mechanically, thinking that
was what her mother wanted to hear. She couldn’t say what she
was really feeling. How could her mother talk about Jesus
now? She wanted to curse God, not praise him! Her mother
had served the Lord for as long as she could remember, and this
was her reward? To die slowly, in pain? Her mother saw God’s
hand in everything. But where was God’s hand in
this?
“Can you raise the bed?”
“I think so,” Sierra said and went to the controls. She pressed a
button, and the bed came up. When it stopped, her mother had a
good view down on the garden below.
“Oh, that’s nice,” she said, content.
Sierra checked her oxygen tube and readjusted the elastic
straps looped behind her mother’s ears. One had left a crease in
her mother’s cheek.
“Would you pick me some hyacinths?”
“Hyacinths?” Sierra said bleakly.
“I can see a few down by the walk, near the birdbath.” Her
hand trembled weakly as she tried to point. “The clippers are in
the bucket under the steps.”
Sierra hurried downstairs and out the back door to the porch.
She found the clippers exactly where her mother said they’d be.
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everything in its place.
Walking quickly along the brick path, Sierra was dismayed at
the state of the garden. Even during the winter, her mother had
weeded and raked and kept everything neat. Now it was clearly
neglected.
Sierra found a patch of the pretty blue flowers near the back of
the garden. Hunkering down, she selected two stalks of perfect
blooms and cut them for her mother. When she returned to the
upstairs master bedroom, she saw her mother had the controls in
her hand. She had raised the head of the bed a foot higher, giving
her a better view.
What must her mother feel looking out at the sorry, deserted
garden below?
“Thank you, sweetheart.” She touched the flowers with her
fingertips. She moved restlessly, pain flickering across her face.
“It always amazes me to think how God made the garden and
then placed man in it,” she said, her words coming slowly, sluggishly. “Everything he made, from the bottom of the seas to the
heavens, was for us to enjoy. Like hyacinths and blooming
cherry trees and sunshine. Sweetness, hope, light.”
Hope, Sierra thought. Where was hope when her mother’s
cancer advanced like an avenging army, ravaging her body,
sapping her strength? Where was hope when death was imminent?
She readjusted the oxygen tube. “Is that better?” she said,
touching her mother’s face tenderly.
“It’s fine, honey.”
At night, when Sierra lay on the cot she’d set up near her
mother’s bed, she’d listen to her mother’s breathing. And count
seconds. One. Two. Three. Four. Five. Her own heart would
stop after six and then beat faster at seven. Eight. Nine. Sometimes ten. And then her mother would take another precious
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breath, and Sierra would find herself relaxing for an instant before she started the count all over.
“Spring’s coming,” her mother said, gazing out the window.
“The garden’s always so beautiful.”
All Sierra could see were the weeds that had come up and the
suckers sprouting at the base of several unpruned rose bushes.
The fall leaves from the birch trees had never been raked and lay
like a heavy black blanket over the uncut lawn.
Over all the years the family had lived in this beautiful house,
it had been her mother who had kept up the flower gardens and
pruned the roses and trimmed the bushes and trees. It had been
her mother who had been the gardener to loosen the soil, mulch
in the compost, plant the seeds, and tend the young seedlings.
Her mother had been the one to lay out the design so that flowers
bloomed all throughout the year, filling the yard with a profusion
of brilliant color.
Sierra remembered the hours she had spent with her mother
outside in the sunshine, playing with her small tin bucket and little spade while her mom plucked weeds, thinned seedlings, and
snipped dying blooms. She could remember the day her mother
had planted the trumpet vine, gently tying green shoots to the
lattice. The vine now covered the back wall.
Without her mother, everything would go wild.
Clouds moved across the sun, casting shadows over the yard
below. “I hope it doesn’t rain again,” she said softly.
“It can’t be sunshine all the time, or flowers wouldn’t grow for
lack of rain.”
Even now, hurting, dying, her mother saw the brighter side of
things. Sierra’s eyes burned. Her throat ached with tears. She
put her hand against her chest, wishing she could lift the weight
of grief that grew heavier every day. She was choking on it. Suffocating. If it hurt this much seeing her mother slip hour by hour,
what would life be like when she was gone?
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Seeing her hand fumble weakly, Sierra took it. “What, Mom?
Are you uncomfortable? Can I get you something?”
“Sit down, honey,” she said.
Sierra did as she was asked and forced a smile as she enclosed
her mother’s hand in both of hers.
“I want you to do something for me,” her mother said softly.
“What, Mom? What can I do?”
“Let me go.”
Sierra’s throat closed up. She had to press her lips together so
she didn’t cry out. She used every bit of willpower she had and
still the hot tears bubbled into her eyes. “I love you,” she said
brokenly. Leaning down, she put her head against her mother’s
breast and wept.
Her mother stroked her hair once and then rested her hand
weakly on her head. “I love you, too. You’ve always been God’s
blessing to me.”
“I wish I could go back to when I was a child, sitting out on the
patio in the sunshine while you worked in the garden.”
Her hand trembled in weakness. “Each stage in our lives is
precious, Sierra. Even now. The door isn’t closing on me, honey.
It’s opening wider with each breath I take.”
“But you’re in so much pain.”
Her mother stroked her hair again and spoke gently. “Shhhh.
Don’t cry anymore. I want you to remember that God causes all
things to work together for good to those who love him, to those
who are called according to his purpose.”
Sierra had learned those words as a child when she was in
Sunday school. Her mother had helped her memorize them as
they worked in the garden. But the words held no meaning.
What good was there in suffering? She breathed in the scent of
her mother and was afraid. Wasn’t God supposed to heal those
who had faith? Her mother had faith. She’d never doubted. So
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where was God now? She wanted to cling to her and beg her to
fight harder, to hang on to life; but she knew she could not speak
those words aloud and add to her mother’s burden of pain. It was
selfish to even think of asking her to endure more.
Anguish filled her. What would she do without her mother?
Losing her father had been hard enough, but her mother had always been her counselor, her fountainhead. How many times
had she run to her mother for help? How many times had her
mother walked through troubles with her, gently guiding the
way, showing her the higher road?
Sierra listened to the beat of her mother’s heart. No one in the
world knew her as well or loved her as much as her mother did.
Not even Alex, her own husband, who should. Sierra’s lips
thinned. Especially not Alex, who hadn’t even bothered to call in
the past three days, the hardest of her life.
“Oh, Mom, I’ll miss you so much,” she murmured, wishing she
could lie down beside her and die with her. Life was too painful,
the future so bleak.
Her mother’s hand moved slowly against her hair. “God has a
plan for you, Sierra, a plan for your welfare and not for calamity,
a plan to give you a future and a hope.” Her voice was so weak,
so tired. “Do you remember those words?”
“Yes,” Sierra said obediently. Her mother had taught them
to her as well, and like the others, they’d made no sense to her
either. It had been her father and mother who took care of her.
Then it was Alex. God had never come into the equation.
“Hold to them, honey. When you turn, you’ll know I’m no farther away than your heart.”
Sierra thought her mother had fallen asleep. She could still
hear the slow, steady beat of her heart. She remained where she
was, her head resting on her mother’s breast, taking comfort in
the closeness, the warmth. Exhausted, she stretched out beside
her, arm around her, and slept.
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was grim and controlled. “Her hand’s cold.”
Sierra noticed other things. The fluid level in the catch bag
hadn’t changed in hours. Her mother’s skin color had changed.
She called the hospice, and a nurse was sent. Sierra recognized
her, but couldn’t remember her name. Her mother would have
remembered. Her mother always remembered everyone by
name. She remembered things about them, too, asking after family members and job situations. Little things. Personal things.
“It won’t be long,” the nurse said, and Sierra knew the woman
was saying her mother wouldn’t be waking up again. The nurse
adjusted the blankets and lightly stroked the hair back tenderly
from her mother’s temple. She straightened and looked at Sierra.
“Would you like me to stay with you?”
Sierra couldn’t make a sound. She shook her head. She just
kept watching her mother’s chest rise and fall slowly and
counted seconds. One. Two. Three.
“I’m going to call Melissa,” Mike said and left the room.
Soon after Melissa arrived, Luís and María Madrid came in.
Alex’s mother embraced Sierra and wept openly, while his father
stood with tearless, grave dignity at the foot of the hospital bed.
“When is Alex coming?” he asked.
“I don’t know that he is,” Sierra said dully, standing by the
window. “I haven’t talked to him in a while.” She listened to the
click of the oxygen machine and counted.
She didn’t want to think about Alex or anyone else just then.
She didn’t want to think about anything.
Seven. Eight.
Alex’s father left the bedroom.
Melissa came in a few minutes later and stood beside Sierra. She
didn’t say anything. She just took her hand and held it in silence.
Eighteen. Nineteen. Twenty.
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Melissa let go of her hand and moved to the bedside. She
touched Marianna Clanton tenderly and checked her wrist pulse.
Leaning down, she kissed her forehead. “Good-bye, Mama.”
Straightening, she turned slowly to Sierra. “She’s with the
Lord,” she whispered, tears running down her cheeks.
Sierra stopped counting. Her heart felt like a cold stone inside
her chest. She didn’t say anything. She couldn’t. She just turned
and looked down into the moonlit garden and felt the stillness
closing in around her.
“She’s not suffering anymore, Sierra.”
Why did people always feel they had to say something? She
knew Melissa meant to comfort her, but no words could. She
heard another click as the oxygen machine was shut off.
Everything fell silent. Everything was still . . . so still she wondered if her own heart had stopped beating. She wished it would.
She couldn’t think. She felt numb, so numb, she wondered if
she was becoming exactly like the little statuette of the Virgin
Mary her mother-in-law had brought and set on the windowsill.
Bloodless. Hollow.
Mike came into the room again. He didn’t utter a word. At
least her brother understood. He just stood at the foot of the
hospital bed, looking down at their mother. She looked peaceful, her body completely relaxed. When he turned away, he
touched Sierra’s arm. It was the merest brush of his hand, but
enough to let her know she was there, alive.
Crossing the room, Mike sat down in the chair and leaned forward, hands loosely clasped between his knees. Was he praying?
His head was down. If he wept, he did so silently. And he didn’t
leave the room or her, not until the men from the mortuary arrived.
Sierra followed the men downstairs as they took her mother
away. She stood in the front doorway watching until the doors of
the hearse closed. She’d still be standing upstairs if Melissa hadn’t
made the call.
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without anyone knowing. No fuss. No bother. Everything like
clockwork. She would be cremated by tomorrow morning.
Nothing but ashes left.
Sierra closed the front door and leaned her forehead against
the cold wood. She was so tired, her mind whirring like an engine in neutral, going nowhere.
The telephone rang. She heard Luís answer. After the first
word, he spoke in hot, hushed Spanish. The words might as well
have been spoken in Greek for all the sense they made to her, but
she knew he was speaking to his son.
He came into the parlor where she was sitting. “It’s Alex,” he
said and held out the portable telephone. “He’s been trying to
reach you.”
A lie, kindly offered, but unconvincing.
She took the phone and held it to her ear.
“Sierra? I’m sorry about your mother.” He was silent, waiting.
She shut her eyes tightly. What did he want her to say? Did
he think one call and a little sympathy absolved him of days of
neglect? She’d needed him. “I tried to call you yesterday, but the
phone was busy.” She couldn’t speak, not with the weight of
grief bearing down on her. “Sierra?” One word and she’d shatter. Worse, she’d say things she’d regret.
“I’ll make reservations,” he said at last. There was no inflection
in his voice to give away his own feelings. “The children and I
will fly up to San Francisco tomorrow. I’ll rent a car. We should
be in Healdsburg by evening.” He sounded as though he was
making business arrangements. Silence again. It stretched. “Are
you all right?” His voice was almost gentle. It filled her with
infinite sadness and memories. “Sierra?”
Pressing the off button, she put the portable telephone down
on the side table.
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James works hard as Papa ever did.
He goes out at dawn and comes in for the midday meal. Then out again he goes until dusk. I am
left alone to care for Papa.
Papa has changed much in the four years
I have been gone. His hair has gone white and
he is so thin and weak he can not get out of
bed. I thought he was blind when first we
came, but when Joshua came to stand in the
doorway I knew he was not. His face got all red
and awful. He started shouting loud enough for
Aunt Martha to hear him all the way back in
Galena.
He said—Keep that devil child away from me
or I swear before God I will kill him.
Joshua ran out of the house. If I had not heard
him crying, I would never have found him inside
the hollow burned out tree. It was at the edge of
the fields Matthew burned.
When I came back to the house, James asked
why Papa would say such a terrible thing. I said
he is crazy.
I know what’s killing Papa. Hatred. It is eating
him alive.
Sometimes I wish Papa would die and there
would be an end to all his pain. And mine.
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himself. And nothing I do for him helps. It makes
things worse. He will not look at me or speak to
me. He would not even take food from my hand
until necessity and hunger made him. James does
not ask for explanations. He thinks Joshua is my
babee just like everyone else thinks it. I never told
him otherwise.
James moved Papa into the little bedroom off
the kitchen. We need the big bed for ourselves.
Papa did not say anything, but I saw tears in his
eyes.
I felt strange sleeping in the bed Papa shared
with Mama. James wanted to love me the first
night and I could not. All I did was cry. He said
he understood, but I do not think he did. He
thought I was tired and sad. What I feel is so
much worse than that.
Papa and Mama made Lucas and Matthew and
me in the bed James and I are sharing. Papa and
Sally Mae made Joshua. That was on my mind
too. I could see her sneaking in during the night
while Papa lay drunk and unawares. She was just
like Lots daughters. And look what come of that.
My only comfort is remembering that Ruth was
a Moabite.
I am all mixed up inside. Papa hurts me with
his silence and meanness. But I am angry, too.
And grieving. I wonder what Mama would think
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of all this. And me. I wonder where Matthew is
and what he is doing. I hope he is well and happy
wherever he is. But I doubt it. Matthew took
everything to heart.
Seems to me Papa is the one who should
answer for the pain he caused. Sally Mae did
not do what she did without him helping. Being
drunk is no excuse. I have not said so to Papa.
It would do no good and he is Determined
I done wrong by keeping Joshua alive. Papa
does not think he is to blame for anything. It
was all Sally Maes fault. And when she died, it
was all Joshuas fault. When I took him up, it is
all my fault.
So be it. I am stronger than Joshua and can
take the heat of silent hell Papa pours down on
me. Like God. I can feel it every time I walk
through his door. Hatred is a powerful thing.
Joshua will not even come into the kitchen
because he knows Papa is in that little back room.
I am glad of it. I think Papa would kill him if he
had the chance. And I do not intend to give him
one. But at night I lay wondering what will come
of all this.
When Joshua grows up he is going to want to
know who his father is. What do I tell him if he
asks?
I heard tell once that the sins of the father are
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