Read The Scarlet Thread Online
Authors: Francine Rivers
tween us and didn’t understand. You didn’t see that much of
your father when he was home because he had to sleep during
the day. I spent most of my time telling you two to be quiet and
trying to keep you busy with games and puzzles and long walks.
The hours and stress were bad enough for Daddy, but I think it
was missing you and Mike that finally made him quit. Before he
did, he studied for his real estate license. He gave it a try and
loved it. As God would have it, he started at the time when real
estate was booming. It was a seller’s market. Within two years of
getting his license, your dad was one of the top Realtors in
Sonoma County. He became so busy, he dropped residential and
specialized in commercial properties.”
She squeezed Sierra’s hand. “The point I’m trying to make
is this, honey: It took your father sixteen years to settle into a
career he enjoyed.” She smiled. “Alex knew what he wanted to
do when he went to college. The trouble is he’s never had the
opportunity to accomplish it. The greatest gift you can give him
is the freedom to spread his wings.”
Again, this wasn’t what Sierra wanted to hear. “You talk as
though I’ve put a ball and chain around his neck.” She stood and
began pacing again. “I’d like to have been consulted, Mom. Is that
so hard to understand? Alex didn’t even discuss the offer with me.
He accepted it and then informed me of his decision. It’s not fair.”
“Who ever said life was fair?” her mother responded, hands
folded.
Sierra felt defensive and angry. “Daddy didn’t make you move.”
“No, he didn’t. I would have been delighted if he had.”
Sierra turned and stared at her. “I thought you loved
Healdsburg.”
“Now I do. When I was younger, all I could think about was
getting away from here. I thought how wonderful it would be to
live in a big city like San Francisco where lots of things were
going on. You know I grew up on Grandma’s farm in the central
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wanted to go to the theater and attend concerts. I wanted to immerse myself in museums and culture. I wanted to walk through
Golden Gate Park. And, despite warnings and pleadings from
my parents, I did just that.”
“And met Daddy.”
“Yes. He rescued me from a mugging on the Pan Handle.”
Sierra thought of the wedding photo on the mantel downstairs.
Her father’s hair had been long then, and his “tuxedo” consisted
of worn Levi’s and heavy boots; her mother, dressed in a black
turtleneck and Capri pants, had woven flowers in her waist-length
auburn hair. The photo had always jarred with the image she had
of her parents. They had been
young
once—and rebellious, too.
Her mother smiled, remembering. “If I’d had my way, we
would have settled in San Francisco.”
“You never told me that before.”
“By the time you and your brother came along, my ideas about
what I wanted had changed drastically. Just as your ideas will
change. Life isn’t static, Sierra. Thank God. It’s constantly in
motion. Sometimes we find ourselves caught up in currents and
carried along where we don’t want to go. Then we find out later
that God’s hand was in it all along.”
“God didn’t make the decision to move to Los Angeles. Alex
made it. But then, I suppose he thinks he’s God.” Sierra could
hear the resentment in her voice, but she hardened herself
against any regret or guilt. Emotions raged and warred within
her: resentment that Alex had made such a decision without talking to her beforehand; fear that if she fought him, she’d lose anyway; terror of leaving a life she loved and found so comfortable.
“What am I going to do, Mom?”
“That’s up to you, honey,” her mother said gently, tears of
compassion in her eyes.
“I need your advice.”
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“The second greatest commandment is that we love one
another as we love ourselves, Sierra. Forget yourself and think
about what Alex needs. Love him accordingly.”
“If I do that, he’ll walk all over me. Next time, he’ll jump at a job
in New York City!” She knew she was being unfair even as she
said it. Alex had given her two beautiful children, a nice threebedroom home in Windsor, and a secure, happy life. Life had been
so smooth, in fact, she had never once suspected the turmoil
within him. Realizing that frightened her. It made her feel she
didn’t know Alex’s heart or mind as well as she thought she did.
She couldn’t see a way out. Part of her wanted to pick up the
children from school and come back here to the Mathesen Street
home and let Alex face the real estate woman alone; he couldn’t
sell the house if she didn’t sign. But she knew if she did that, he’d
be furious. The few times she had unintentionally hurt him, he
had retreated into anger, putting up a cold front and withdrawing into silence. He didn’t come from a family of yellers. She
didn’t even want to think about how he would respond if she
hurt and angered him deliberately.
“It might help to take your mind off the matter for a few hours
and then try to think about it later,” her mother said.
Heart aching, Sierra sat down on the sofa again. She looked at
the open trunk and piles of boxes. “Why are you doing all this
now, Mom?”
Something flickered in her mother’s eyes. “It’s a good winter
activity, don’t you think?” She glanced around. “It’s such a mess.
Your father and I meant to go through all this stuff years ago, but
then . . .” She looked sad. “Time has a way of getting away from
us.” She looked around the room at the odd assortment of treasures, some ratty and from long-forgotten sources. “I don’t want
to leave all this chaos for you and Mike to have to figure out.”
She rose and walked around the attic, brushing her hand
lightly over an old rocking chair, a bookshelf, a baby’s pram.
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in the north corner. You two can decide what you want to keep and
what you want to throw away. Special things from your father’s
family and mine, I’ll repack. Most of your father’s papers from the
business can be burned. There’s no point in keeping them. And
Grandpa’s paintings . . . some of them are disintegrating.”
“Some of them are really bad,” Sierra said, grinning.
“That, too,” her mother agreed with a laugh. “It kept him occupied.” She stopped near the window, glancing out at the front
lawn, her expression pensive. “There are a lot of family papers.
I’ll have all winter to go through and organize them for you and
Mike.” She glanced back at Sierra and smiled. “It’s a big job, but
I think it’ll be fun and interesting.”
She came back and sat down on the old flowered sofa. “This
trunk belonged to Mary Kathryn McMurray. She was one of
your ancestors. She came across the plains in a wagon in 1847. I
was just glancing through her journal when you came,” she said,
taking up a leather-bound volume from the trunk and brushing
her hand over it. “I hadn’t gotten very far. Apparently, this was
an assignment book and then it became her diary.”
She set the volume between them on the couch. Sierra picked
it up and opened it, reading the childish scrawl on the first page.
Mama says livin in the wildurnes aint no resun
to bee ignurant. Her papa wuz a larnud man and
wud not want fuls in his famlee.
“The trunk was part of Grandpa Clanton’s estate,” her mother
said. “I haven’t gone through these things in years.” She lifted
out a small carved wooden box. “Oh, I remember this,” she said,
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smiling. Inside was an embroidered silk handkerchief. She unfolded it carefully and showed Sierra the antique gold chain and
amethyst cross.
“Oh, it’s beautiful,” Sierra said, taking it and admiring it.
“You may have it, if you’d like.”
“I’d love it,” Sierra said, opening the small clasp and putting it
on.
Her mother took out an old tintype in an oval frame. The couple were dressed in wedding clothes, their expressions solemn
rather than joyful. The groom was handsome in his dark suit and
starched shirt, his dark hair brushed back cleanly from chiseled
features and intense pale eyes. Blue, Sierra decided. They would
have had to be blue to be so pale in the picture. The bride was
very young and lovely. She was wearing a gorgeous white lace
Victorian wedding dress. She sat while her husband stood, his
hand firmly planted upon her shoulder.
Sierra took out another box. Inside, wrapped in tissue paper,
was a small woven Indian basket with designs. Around the top
edge were quail plumes and beads. “I think this is a gift basket,
Mom. It’s worth a lot of money. They have them in the Indian
Museum at Sutter’s Fort.”
“Is there anything inside the box to tell about it?”
Sierra removed everything and shook her head. “Nothing.”
“Look at this old Bible,” her mother said, distracted. As she
opened it, a section slipped free and fell onto the floor. Her
mother picked it up and placed it on the sofa beside her.
Sierra picked up the paper yellowed with age and read the
pretty script.
Dearest Mary Kathryn,
I hope you have changed your mind about God. He
loves you very much and He is watching over you. I do
not know what hardships and losses you will face on the
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end of the trail. What I do know is God will never leave
you nor forsake you.
You have my love and are in my morning and evening
prayers. The ladies from the quilting club send their love
as well, as do Betsy and Clovis. May the Lord bless your
new home.
Aunt Martha
Sierra’s mother thumbed through the black, cracked leather
Bible and then picked up the portion that had fallen. “Look at
how worn the pages are.” She smiled. “Mary Kathryn favored
the Gospels.” She took the note from Sierra and read it. Folding
it, she tucked it in the loosened pages and set the Bible carefully
beside Mary Kathryn McMurray’s journal.
Sierra took out a decaying flowered hat box. She found a note
on top saying simply, in beautiful black calligraphy, “Save for
Joshua McMurray.” The box was full of animals, carved of
wood, each wrapped carefully in a scrap of flowered calico or
checked gingham. She unwrapped a fierce-looking wolf, a majestic buffalo, a coiled rattlesnake, a prairie dog standing on its
hind legs, a comical jackrabbit, a beautiful antelope, two mountain goats locked together in fierce battle, and a grizzly bear
standing on its hind legs, ready to attack.
At the bottom of the trunk was a large package wrapped in
butcher paper and tied with string.
“I don’t remember this,” her mother said and slipped the string
off so she could remove the wrapping.
“Oh,”
she said in wonder
and excitement. “I think it’s a crazy quilt.” She unfolded it
enough so that Sierra could take one end of it and then stood,
spreading the folds to reveal the full pattern.
It wasn’t a crazy quilt, but a picture quilt with squares made
of hundreds of different scraps of cloth, each with a different
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