Read The Scarlet Thread Online
Authors: Francine Rivers
pay for what Papa did?
Life is not fair.
I put a marker on Sally Maes grave.
Papa is worse. His mind is going. Today when
I went in to wash him and change the bedding
again, he thought I was Mama. He said—Where
have you been Katie love. I have missed you so
much.
I took his hand and said I have been with Jesus
these long years.
And Papa said real soft with tears in his
eyes—Put in a good word for me.
I cannot stop crying. He was a good man once
for all his drinking and wild ways. And he loved
Mama more than life. Hearing him talk today
made me remember what he was like when
Mama was alive. And remembering made me
miss her so much my body hurts with it. Everything inside me is clenched tight, aching and
lonely.
It seems to me when God took Mama from us,
Satan waltzed in the door and he has been living
in this house ever since.
Papa is fading away. He does not eat. He sleeps
most of the day. When he is awake, he does not
speak. He looks at the corner of his room as
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though someone is there visiting with him. Sometimes he smiles and mumbles something.
I am afraid. His curse still lays so heavy upon
me.
Papa died this morning.
He was restless last night. He kept moving and
moaning. I did not know what to do to comfort
him. He could not breathe easy. He was better
when I raised him up and sat behind him and held
him in my arms. I stroked his hair and talked to
him just like I do my babies when they are fretful.
And then near dawn a thought came into my
head so powerful and clear it was like a real voice
talking to me. I knew what was wrong with Papa
and what he needed. I struggled against it but it
was like a hand squeezing hard around my heart.
I laid him back and went down on my knees
beside the bed.
I said—Papa I forgive you. Do you hear me
Papa? I forgive you.
His fingers moved. Just a little. So I took his
hand and kissed it. I said—I love you Papa. And
I meant it. Just for that minute after all the time
before and between up to now. I meant it. I forgot
how much he hurt me and saw how much he was
hurting. Be at peace, Papa, I said. I couldn’t say
no more than that.
And he seemed so. He did not say anything.
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was gone.
We buried Papa in the suit James wore when we
were wed. I sewed Papa inside the wedding quilt
Mamas friends made for them. With Mister
Grayson dead, there was no one to come see Papa
laid to rest beside Mama and the babies they lost.
It was just me holding Beth and James holding
Hank and Joshua who stood beside the grave.
I read words from the Bible. Mama would have
liked that.
It has been raining ever since. Fitting weather
for my feelings.
I cannot help wishing Papa had said something
to me before he passed on to whatever was waiting for him. Even my name would have been
enough. Or if he had looked at me before he died.
Maybe then I would not feel this awful ache
inside me.
Papa didn’t say a word to me. Not from the day
he cast me out to the day he died. But at the end,
when he had no strength left, I think he wanted
to. I hope so anyway.
Oh, what foolish creatures we are. Cursed with
our pride! Cursed with our stubbornness!
No wonder God has forsaken us.
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12
Mike sat on the aisle, Melissa at his side, his three children next
to her. The sanctuary was packed with people. As the pastor offered the eulogy, Alex took her hand. He had hardly touched her
since arriving three days ago. She’d saved her tears for privacy,
unwilling to share them with him or anyone else.
She couldn’t stop thinking about the small polished wooden
box placed on her father’s stone at the cemetery. Was that all
there was to a human being? One small box of ashes that
weighed less than a newborn baby? The pastor had met them
there and led the solemn but brief ceremony. Only family mem1 8 7
Melissa and their children, and Luís and María Madrid. So few.
Too many.
Her mother’s ashes would be mixed with her father’s, and in a
few days a stone carver would come and add the date of her
death to the slab that would cover them both.
Now, half listening to the pastor’s homily, she wondered if the
forget-me-not seeds the children planted around the marble
would come up.
“Marianna Clanton walked in the Spirit,” the pastor said, using the opportunity to proclaim the gospel. Tearful, he rejoiced
for his friend and parishioner. “Marianna will be sorely missed,
but we can take comfort in knowing she’s in the arms of her beloved Savior. And those of us who share her belief have the comfort of knowing she isn’t lost to us. We will see her again.”
One of the church ladies sang “Take my life and let it be / consecrated, Lord, to thee. . . .”
Numb with grief, Sierra stared at her mother’s picture on the
linen-covered table at the front of the sanctuary. She would have
chosen a different photo. On each side were vases filled with
bright yellow daffodils. In fact, the sanctuary was full of flowers—not funeral wreaths, but spring arrangements bursting
with color and a mood of celebration.
“It was your mother’s wish,” the pastor had explained upon
their arrival and her question. “She brought me this picture several months ago.”
Far from the usual formal portrait used in solemn services, her
mother had chosen one when she was years younger, laughing,
with a bucket of yard trimmings in one gloved hand and her clippers in the other. She’d left a note as well. “Rejoice with me.”
Finishing his homily, the pastor opened the service for sharing. One by one, friends stood and talked about Marianna
Clanton and what she had meant in their lives. Some of the sto1 8 8
ries were funny, making people laugh. Others brought a hush
and quiet tears. When all who wished to had spoken, Melissa
went forward and spoke briefly on behalf of the family. More
hymns were sung by all. Her mother’s favorites. “Amazing
Grace.” “Ave Maria.” “Standing on the Promises of God.” And
last, drawing tearful laughter, “Father Abraham.” Everybody
was on their feet, waving their arms and turning around. Even
Sierra pretended to join in the spirit of rejoicing.
“Rejoice in the Lord always,” the pastor said in benediction.
“Again I will say,
rejoice.
Let your forbearing spirit be known to
all men. The Lord is near.” Sierra felt him looking down at her as
his voice softened. “Be anxious for nothing, beloved, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which
surpasses all comprehension, shall guard your hearts and your
minds in Christ Jesus.”
A reception followed in the social hall.
Steeling herself against her inner turmoil, Sierra smiled and
thanked everyone who came through the receiving line. The
kind words slipped like water off a duck’s back. She couldn’t afford to let them sink in. Not now. Not here in front of everyone.
Later, when she was alone, she’d bathe in the pool of tears.
Alex stood beside her, close but not touching. He was like a
handsome stranger in his dark suit—polite, distant, but not indifferent. Everyone was impressed with his obvious success.
They didn’t know the cost.
Clanton and Carolyn sat with their three cousins across the
room. They talked among themselves, sharing refreshments.
Sierra was ready to leave before the others. She asked Melissa
if she’d mind watching Clanton and Carolyn. She knew the children wanted to visit as long as possible. “Why don’t you let them
spend the night?” Melissa said.
“I didn’t mean—”
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We see so little of them since you and Alex moved south.” As
soon as she said it, Sierra could tell she wished she hadn’t. “Just
don’t worry about them. You need to rest.”
Alex had driven his rented Cadillac to the cemetery and church.
She debated asking him to take her home and decided against it.
He appeared to be deep in conversation with his father.
She spoke briefly with the pastor and slipped unnoticed out
the side door of the social hall. It was beautiful outside, everything in bloom. Her mother would have loved a day like this.
Three blocks away Alex pulled up beside her. “Why didn’t you
tell me you were leaving?”
It wasn’t concern that tinged his tone, but impatience, anger.
He didn’t ask if she was all right. “You were busy.” He was
always too busy.
Alex got out of the car. When he touched her, he did so with
gentleness. Then he put his hand beneath her elbow, his expression shadowed with sadness. “Get in the car, Sierra. Please.”
She did as he said. Putting her head back against the black
leather seat, she closed her eyes, feeling utterly bereft.
“What do you think people are saying about us when you just
walk out the door without so much as a word to me?”
She looked at him. Was that it? Was that why he’d come after
her? “Since when did you ever worry about what
other
people
say?”
“You ought to care. Those people are family and friends.”
“Don’t worry, Alex. I didn’t tell anyone you only called me
three times in the past month.” Ron had called more often than
her own husband.
“The phone works two ways.”
“It does, doesn’t it? But then, every time I called you, you
weren’t home.”
A muscle jerked in his cheek and he didn’t say anything more.
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When he pulled into the drive alongside the Mathesen Street
house, he turned to her. “I’m sorry. Sierra, I—”
“Forget the excuses, Alex.” She got out of the car and walked
along the cobblestone pathway to the front steps. Fumbling for
her key, she shoved it into the lock and opened the door.
Shaking, she walked along the corridor toward the kitchen.
Maybe a cup of coffee would brace her against whatever came.
The kitchen smelled of lasagna. The Pyrex dish still sat on the
butcher block where she’d placed and forgotten it this morning.
Sally Endecott had dropped the lasagna off along with a cellophane-covered bowl of tossed salad and a chocolate cake. Every
day someone from the church came with food—spaghetti one
day, the next a turkey dinner complete with dressing and cranberry sauce. Another brought roast beef and mashed potatoes,
creamed carrots, and peas. Other friends brought home-baked
apple pies and Tollhouse cookies.
No one wanted her to worry about having to cook. No one
wanted her to worry about anything.
Not the least hungry, she measured coffee into the filter-lined
holder and slid it in place. As she poured water into the top of the
coffeemaker, she heard Alex come into the kitchen. He stood for
a moment, saying nothing. When she kept her back to him, he
went to the windows. She knew he was looking out at the back
porch and garden.
“The house doesn’t feel the same without her, does it?” he said
quietly.
Sierra swallowed hard. She couldn’t shake the feeling that her
mother was still upstairs or down the hall. If she called aloud, her
mother would answer.
But it wasn’t true. She had to remind herself her mother was
dead. The ceremony in the cemetery this morning should have
driven that fact home. Ashes to ashes, dust to dust. A few pounds
of it equaled a human life.
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