Read The Scarlet Thread Online
Authors: Francine Rivers
I told him when something sounds too good to
be true, it most likely is.
But all he said to that was—Free land, Mary
Kathryn. Think of it.
I said—Free land two thousand miles away.
Free land we have not seen and know nothing
about. We have land right here already.
He said—Poor land full of rocks and roots and
heartache.
Sometimes James sounds just like he did when
he was talking about going off to New York and
England and China.
I am sick of hearing about Oregon.
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3
The Surrender
S
13
in, lugging their suitcases through the kitchen and down the hallway to their bedrooms. Sierra set her own down in the living
room and wandered through the house.
Something didn’t feel right. Sierra couldn’t put her finger on
it, but a strange foreboding filled her. At first, she wondered if
the house had been burglarized, but nothing was missing. She
opened the drapes in the living room and let the spring sunshine
in, but that didn’t help dispel the dark atmosphere.
Picking up her suitcases, Sierra went down the hallway to the
master bedroom. Her brows lifted slightly when she found the
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bed. The rugs had been vacuumed. Clean towels hung in the
bathroom. She put her hand on the doorknob to the walk-in
closet and then hesitated, irrational fear gripping her. Taking a
deep breath, she opened it and breathed in relief when she saw
Alex’s suits hanging to the right. The shelves at the back were
neatly stacked with shirts.
She went back into the bedroom, where she had put her suitcases. Hefting one onto the bed, she unlatched it and began unpacking. As she tucked her clothing back into the dresser and
put her toiletries into the bathroom, she couldn’t shake the
doubts and fears that had been building since Alex had left
Healdsburg.
The children had raised them.
Over the past two weeks while she’d remained in Healdsburg
to make some decisions with her brother, little things had come
out in conversations with the children. During the time Sierra
was in Healdsburg by herself, Dolores had spent the night
babysitting four times, and Clanton and Carolyn had spent one
weekend at Marcia Burton’s.
“Daddy!” Carolyn cried out in the other room, and Sierra
heard Clanton chattering away as their father returned early
from work. Sierra’s pulse skyrocketed. She looked around the
bedroom again and bit her lip. Had he hired a maid service? If
so, why now when he never had before? Closing the empty suitcases, she lifted them off the bed and set them near the door. She
would put them away in the garage later.
Her stomach knotted with tension. Trying to calm down, she
sat in the chair by the window. Resting her hands on the arms,
she waited.
It seemed an hour before Alex stood in the doorway. “I’m glad
you made it back safely.” His tone and expression were enigmatic.
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“Thanks.” Her heart drummed harder, not in the way it used
to when she looked at him, but with something deeper, something primeval. “Where are Carolyn and Clanton?” she said,
keeping her tone neutral.
“Carolyn’s on the telephone with Pamela, and Clanton’s down
the street playing soccer with some friends. He’ll be in before
dark.” His eyes narrowed slightly. “What’s the matter?”
“You tell me, Alex,” she said without inflection. When he said
nothing, she drew in her breath slowly to keep herself from shaking. “I heard Dolores had to spend four nights with the children
while I was gone.” His expression flickered slightly. “And they
spent a weekend with Marcia.” A pink hue seeped up from his
collar and filled his face.
Sierra closed her eyes.
Alex came into the bedroom and closed the door quietly behind him. He leaned against it for a moment, saying nothing.
When he spoke, his voice was low and heavy. “I didn’t want to
talk about this. Not the first day you got home.” He sat down on
the bed and leaned forward, clasping his hands between his
knees. “Things aren’t working between us anymore.”
She opened her eyes and looked at him. His eyes grazed hers
and shifted away.
“You don’t understand what’s important to me,” he said.
“What is important, Alex?”
He looked at her then, coolly. “My work. You’ve resented
what I do from the beginning.”
“Can you tell me truthfully it’s
work
that kept you away for six
nights while I was gone?”
The small lines around his mouth deepened. “We’ve got nothing in common anymore. Our marriage started disintegrating a
long time ago.”
“We have two children in common,” she said quietly. “We’re
married to one another. We have that in common.”
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anymore.”
Sierra hadn’t realized how much it would hurt to have Alex
say those words straight out. She remembered listening to
Meredith talk about her ex-husbands.
“They always say you never
understood them, that you don’t have anything in common anymore. But
it usually boils down to one thing. Another woman.”
Her heart sank into the pit of her stomach.
“I’m sorry, Sierra. I—”
“Who is she, Alex?”
He looked away from her and sighed. Standing, he moved
restlessly, finally stopping near her dresser. “What difference
does it make?”
“I’d like to hear the news from you before I hear it from someone else.”
Alex pushed his hands in his pockets, reminding her of the
night Roy Lubbeck had given him a letter from her mother. Had
he ever bothered to read it?
“Elizabeth.”
“Elizabeth?” Her heart plummeted. “Elizabeth Longford?”
she said weakly, cold clarity washing over her like a tidal wave.
“The woman from Connecticut?”
“Yes.”
“The one who graduated from Wellesley?”
“Yes.”
Alex said she didn’t understand him. Oh, but he was wrong, so
wrong. She knew him better than he knew himself. She saw him
so clearly in that instant. It was as though all the veiling had been
ripped away, leaving his soul bare for her to see.
“You finally made the grade, didn’t you?” she said softly, hurt
beyond anything she could ever have thought possible.
Alex turned slowly and looked at her. Sierra watched her husband’s face change. Shock. Pain. Rage. She knew her words had
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struck true, right to the very heart of the matter. He knew exactly what she meant. The poor farm laborer’s son who had
never felt good enough had finally bagged himself a worthy trophy. Beautiful, well-educated, accomplished Elizabeth Longford, daughter of the American Revolution. Maybe he didn’t
fully realize she had always understood his insecurities and loved
him despite them. Certainly she had never expected to throw
them in his face. But then, she had never expected him to betray
her with another woman.
“Bruja,”
he said through his teeth.
“And what are you, Alex? A cheat and a liar.”
Had Alex been another kind of man, he would have struck her.
She saw how much he wanted to. She almost wished he would.
Maybe then she wouldn’t feel this sick anguish. She’d be glad to see
him leave. She wouldn’t care. It wouldn’t feel like he was ripping
her heart out. Looking into his eyes, she saw no hint of tenderness
or regret. She saw a man determined to be free, eager to be gone.
“This farce of a marriage is
over!”
he said, enraged.
Pain gripped Sierra until she could hardly breathe. She knew
Alejandro Luís Madrid so well. If she apologized, it would make
no difference. She had done the unthinkable by putting light on
his secret pain. If she begged, it wouldn’t change anything. He
would never forgive her. His very blood would cry out against it.
“It’s not over for me, Alex. It never will be.”
Crossing the room, he opened the door. “That’s your problem,” he said and walked out.
Lucas came back today.
If I could wish a man dead, it would be him. He
was a bad seed as far back as I can remember and
he has grown up tangled and full of treachery.
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and dressed in fine clothes, claiming the homestead belongs to him. I told him he was a thief and
a liar. He laughed and said it dont matter. What is
important is he is Papas firstborn and I am disinherited. He has a letter from Hiram Reinholtz to
prove it.
And then he said bold as brass—But since
James has done such a fine job working the
place, I will be generous and allow you to stay
on as sharecroppers. And if you don’t like that
arrangement, Mary Kathryn, you can pack up
and go straight to hades.
James said he will not fight Lucas over the land.
No matter what I say, he will not listen. This land
is my home. I was born in this house. James has
done more work in the fields than Lucas ever did.
And now my no-good brother shows up after all
these years and says the homestead all belongs to
him. Not without a fight, I say.
James says no. He says we are going to Oregon.
Lucas came to the house today and he brought
a man and woman with him. They all were in a
wagon. I stood on the front porch with a rifle, but
James took it from me before I could shoot my
brother dead. Lucas brought Elder right into my
house. The man had his hat in his hand and
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would not look at me. It did not help knowing he
is ashamed for taking my home from me. Lucas
said he has a contract with Elder. Elder will work
the land and share profits.
I am writing this in the barn by candlelight as
I am pushed out of my own home and my own
husband helped. I am sleeping in the hay with my
babies. Where James is sleeping I don’t know
and I don’t care.
Aunt Martha welcomed us with open arms. So
did Betsy and Clovis. I had not cried a tear until
I saw them and now I cannot stop.
It was a long ride here by farm wagon from the
homestead. Not in miles. The children fretted and
kept asking how long it would take to get to
Galena. James was short-tempered. If it’s like
this for two days travel, what does he think it will
be like on a two-thousand mile journey through
Indian infested wilderness?
He said—You will see I am right when we get
to Oregon, Mary Kathryn.
I did not answer or even look at him.
I hoped in vain that by the time we got here,
he would change his mind. I hoped he would see
I am right and he would turn this wagon around
and go back and fight for what belongs to us.
He didn’t change his mind about nothing. He’s
dug in his heels deep as Papa ever did. He went
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