Read The Scarlet Thread Online
Authors: Francine Rivers
Alex wasn’t the only guilty player. She stood stripped before a
mirror, seeing herself as she had been: childish, self-centered,
filled with self-pity, casting blame, complaining.
It is better to live in the corner of a roof than in a house shared with a
contentious woman.
She was ashamed and grieved, yet oddly enough, a sense of
peace followed her self-examination. She was reminded of her
mother in the attic, the window open, the fresh air blowing in as
she dusted, swept, and sorted out trash from the treasure.
Oh, Lord Jesus, do that for me. Please. You know me better than I know
myself. Open my doors and windows and let the Holy Spirit move through
me. You are welcome in my house. Come into me, into my foyer and my
living room. Wander at will through my parlor and kitchen. Be with me in
my bedroom and bathroom. Go through every closet and every drawer,
from the basement to the attic of my life. I belong to you, Father. Stay with
me forever. Jesus, please remove everything in me that doesn’t glorify you.
Make me your vessel.
Oh, God, you are my God. I seek you. My soul hungers and thirsts for
you. My body longs for you as dry land beneath a heavy rain. Your love is
better than life.
“Are you falling in love again?” Alex said softly late that night
after they had talked for two hours.
Eyes closed, her head resting against the back of the sofa, she
smiled. “Yes.” But not with Alex—she’d never stopped loving him.
She was falling in love with Jesus.
We found our dear Koxoenis shot dead near the
banks of our stream today.
Lord, who would murder such a gentle man
who did nothing but show kindness and hospital4 3 6
ity to others? Kavanaugh thinks Koxoenis was
badly wounded and tried to reach us for help.
Thinking of him suffering fills me with anguish.
Oh, God, that we had found him sooner.
Kavanaugh said the wound was mortal and we
could not have saved him, but we could have at
least comforted him in his last hours upon this
earth. We could have held him close and prayed
for him.
Kavanaugh carried Koxoenis to our home. We
washed him and wrapped him in a blanket and
buried him beside James.
Lord, I am so grieved. Please do not hold it
against Koxoenis that I failed to explain You to
him. I tried so hard each time he has come to
visit, but sign language leaves so much unsaid. He
did not understand me, and I did not know how
to explain. And now he is lost forever.
Father, please let me speak on his behalf.
Koxoenis was kind and generous, and obedient to
Your will. He heard Your voice that day we were
so hungry. He came to us and gave us meat. He
showed us the food You had planted all around
us. He taught Joshua how to build us a shelter so
that we were warm and dry through the cold winter months. He was our first and dearest friend,
and though he did not know You, Lord, I believe
in my heart he was your child in spirit. I have
never known a man more humble and loving.
4 3 7
into Your kingdom.
Beth and I gathered flowers today and took them
to the small knoll where James and Koxoenis lie.
But when we reached it, we found Koxoenis’s
grave empty. The cross we had made for him lay
upon the mound of fresh earth and on it was a
Pomo gift basket. It is the most beautiful thing
I have ever seen with designs woven with red,
yellow, and green feathers and small beads.
Around the rim are tiny black topknot quail
feathers.
I have placed the basket upon our mantel and
will remember our beloved friend and his people
each time I look at it.
Kavanaugh brought supplies back from the settlement near the river yesterday. Beth and I walked
to Koxoenis’s village today to bring apple pies to
his wife and children, but when we reached it,
everyone was gone. No fires were burning. No
children were playing. No smoke came from the
sweathouse. No women sat working with stone
mortar and pestle crushing acorns. The village
was deserted and desolate.
Kavanaugh said Indians move where the food
is. He thinks this village site may be their winter
home. Spring and summer must be spent else4 3 8
where. The money beads the people wear are
made of clamshells. So I suppose the people must
spend time each year near the ocean. Perhaps
they are there.
We learned from Joshua that Koxoenis’s people ate fish, acorns, pepperwood nuts, buckeyes,
and a mixture of toasted seeds and grains ground
in a stone mortar and sifted in a basket. They
called it pinole. Now that spring is here, everything is green and growing. There must be a hundred different things to eat that we have not yet
discovered. And come summer, the berries and
wild apples will be ripe. They will taste better
than the dried ones I soaked to make the pies.
I hope we will see Koxoenis’s people again
come fall, but my heart tells me we will not be so
fortunate.
Lord, please be with them and protect them
from harm.
4 3 9
26
“ R E D R O S E S , M O M ! ” C A R O L Y N C A L L E D F R O M
the front door. “Come see!”
Sierra came down the stairs and gasped as she saw the arrangement being brought in. “Living-room table, ma’am?” the
deliveryman said. He was young, sporting a T-shirt that said
“God spoke and
BANG
it was,” long black hair, and a single hoop
earring.
“Yes, that’d be fine.”
When he set the arrangement down, he gave her a saucy grin.
“Someone’s either smitten or in deeeep trouble.”
She laughed.
Smitten
was such an antique word for such a
modern young man. “Hang on a minute,” she said and gave him
4 4 1
breath and ferns:
Happy Valentine’s Day. I love you. Alex.
Twenty-four red roses in a crystal vase.
She called him. “Thank you for the roses.”
“What do you say we take the children out tonight? Dinner
and a movie.”
She smiled. “I’d like that.”
“How about letting them sit in the front row while we sit in a
back corner and neck the way we used to?”
She laughed. “How about we all sit in the middle
together?”
They had a wonderful evening together. As it turned out,
Clanton and Carolyn pleaded to sit closer to the front, and she
and Alex sat in the middle. At first Alex didn’t touch her. They
sat side by side, both staring up at the big screen with the animated Disney characters frolicking, both wound up like a couple
of two-dollar clocks. Halfway through the movie, Alex took her
hand. When she didn’t try to withdraw, he finally relaxed.
“Aren’t you going to invite him in?” Carolyn said when they
reached the condo.
“I want to show him my new game,” Clanton said as though on
cue.
Sierra looked between them and knew what her children were
hoping. How could she explain she wasn’t ready?
“Another time,” Alex said, coming to her rescue. He took a
step back.
“Mom,” Carolyn whined, her heart in her eyes.
“It’s all right, Alex,” she said. “Come on in. I’ll fix us some hot
cider while you take a look at Clanton’s game.”
She was in the kitchen putting cinnamon sticks in the cups of
steaming cider when Alex came back. “Are the children coming
down?” she said, glancing toward the stairwell.
“They’re playing a video game.”
“Carolyn?” She had never been interested before.
4 4 2
He shrugged. “You look nervous.”
“I am a little,” she said, giving a self-conscious laugh. “Why
don’t we sit in the living room?” She gave him a mug of hot cider,
took one for herself, and led the way to the couch she’d recovered. She sat at the far end, curling her feet up beneath her.
Neither knew what to say to break the tension. She remembered other nights on this couch. The silence stretched along
with her nerves.
“It does get in the way, doesn’t it?” Alex said heavily.
“What?”
“Wanting you this much. Knowing you want me, too.” He
looked at her, hiding nothing.
Sierra’s heart began to drum hard. Alex set his mug of hot
cider on the hatch-cover table and stood up. She looked up at
him, afraid he’d kiss her and start something she couldn’t let him
finish. Or worse, he would leave.
His expression softened. “As much as I’d like to, I’m not going
to rush you.”
“I’m not trying to be difficult, Alex.”
“Yo sé.
You’ve got to learn to trust me again.”
She looked down into her cider. “So much has happened to me
in the last year. I’ve changed in ways I don’t think you understand.” She looked at him again. “The Lord is the center of my
life, now. I can’t go back—”
“Dennis and I talked about it.”
She was surprised. “You did?” She knew Dennis wouldn’t
hold back; he’d lay out salvation one, two, three.
“I go to Mass, Sierra. I have every Sunday since I moved
here.” He glanced away, rubbing the back of his neck. “I figured
it was time I confessed and did penance. Dennis talks about
grace, but there’s justice, too.”
She put her mug down and stood up. “I forgive you, Alex.”
He looked at her, his eyes moist. “I knew that when you said
4 4 3
doesn’t matter that they were in Reno and not in a church. I
could have been saying them in a parking lot and I still would’ve
known I was speaking before God. The last thing I ever thought
I’d do was commit adultery. And then I did. I never thought I’d
be capable of hurting you. And then I did that, too. Deliberately.
Every chance I got.”
She wanted to put her arms around him, but he moved away
slightly, putting distance between them. He was gripped with
guilt. It was eating at him. She knew that look. She also knew he
wanted to tell her something—something she wasn’t going to
like. The muscles in her stomach tightened.
No more, Lord. Please, no more.
“Father O’Shea asked if I’d had a blood test.”
Sierra could feel the blood draining from her face. She blinked.
“Yeah, you look exactly the way I felt,” he said bleakly. “That
aspect never occurred to me, either. Not until a celibate priest
brought it up. I called Elizabeth and asked some blunt questions.
She wasn’t very happy about them, but she was honest. I knew I
wasn’t her first. But I didn’t know how many. Do you know
what I’m saying, Sierra? Do you understand?”
“Yes.”
“She’s been with five other men, one in high school, two during
college, one afterward, and the guy she’s marrying. She said she
didn’t think there was a chance any of them were HIV-positive,
but there’s no way of knowing, is there?” His eyes were haunted.
“I can’t stop thinking about it.” His eyes filled. “You came to me a
virgin. You never even kissed another guy before me.”
“Are you telling me you’re—?” she couldn’t finish the question.
“No. I’ve been tested four times over the past few months. All
negative, but who knows? Are we hearing the truth about this
thing?” He came to her and cupped her face. As he stroked her
cheeks, his eyes welled with tears and torment. “How do I ever
4 4 4