Read The Scarlet Thread Online
Authors: Francine Rivers
make love to you again without wondering if I’m killing you in
the process?”
“Oh, Alex,” she whispered, putting her hand against his chest.
She felt his heart pick up speed; her own matched the rhythm.
He took her hand and removed it from him. “I almost didn’t
tell you,” he said hoarsely, “but you’ve got a right to know. It’s
something else you’re going to need to think about before you
make any decisions, isn’t it?” He moved away from her.
She knew he was heading for the door. “Alex . . .”
“I’ll call you,” he said hoarsely. Without looking back, he
opened the door and went out.
It has been three years since I wrote anything in
this journal.
We have spent our evenings reading Aunt Martha’s Bible. I found out who killed our beloved
Koxoenis and it near broke my heart. I might
never have known had I not noticed the amethyst
cross Charlotte Burrell wore to the Christmas
gathering. My heart stopped when I saw it
around her neck, and my throat closed so tight
I did not think I could draw breath let alone
speak. I was so full of anger I wanted to tear that
necklace from her throat, but You held me from
it. She asked me what was wrong. Soon as she
did I knew I could speak.
I did not ask her about the cross. Instead,
I did what You set in my mind. I told her about
our first winter in California and how we would
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the kindness of a Pomo Indian named Koxoenis.
Lester joined us as I told Charlotte about our
dear friend. I told them how Koxoenis gave us
meat and taught us how to find food. I told them
how he welcomed Joshua into his own home
and village and taught him how to make fish
traps and build a shelter that kept us dry and
warm through the cold, wet winter months.
I said he was as near an example of God’s love
as I had ever seen in my life and a true answer
to a prayer I had said in desperation. I told them
the only gift I was ever able to give him was an
amethyst cross on a gold chain exactly like the
one Charlotte was wearing.
Lester looked sick. His face got all white and
blotchy. I thought he was going to die right
there on the spot. He said he was sorry. He said
when he saw the Indian with his bow and
arrows, he thought he was a threat and shot him.
He took the cross because he thought Koxoenis
must have killed a white settler and stolen it.
Charlotte was too ashamed to say anything. She
gave the necklace back to me and could not say
a word.
I grieve now more for Lester and Charlotte
than Koxoenis. They will live with this on their
hearts for years to come. I told them I forgive
them and You do, too. But I don’t know that it
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made them feel any the better for taking an innocent man’s life.
Oh, Lord, how many things I have done without thinking of the cost to others.
Ham has a son of his own now. I have never seen
a man so taken with a child. He sits by the crib
and watches Micah, sometimes for an hour or
more. When Micah awakens at night, Ham
brings him to bed and watches me nurse him. It is
disconcerting at times. He said just last night how
blessed a woman is. When I asked him why, he
said a woman gets to feel a child grow inside her
and, once the babe is born, she provides sustenance with her own body. No man can ever experience that.
James never in all his days talked this way.
What manner of man have you given me, Lord?
I never thought I would love a man so much my
heart would break every time I looked at him.
And it is so. I fell in love with James the first time
I saw him, yet it is this fierce and rugged man
who has grown to be a part of me. I have wondered about it much of late. I think it is because
James withheld a part of himself. Kavanaugh
gives everything. James yearned for more than
I could give. Kavanaugh is so filled up with love,
it pours out of him onto me and my children.
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Kavanaugh would die for us. James touched me
and I burned. When Kavanaugh touches me, I see
heaven.
Lord, may I be a proper wife for him. He
deserves better.
The crops came in bountiful. As is everything.
I told Ham I am in a family way again. He was
distressed at first and asked if it was good for me
to be having another baby this soon. I could not
help but laugh. It is a little late to be worrying
about such things.
Lord, I thank You. And if You do not mind me
asking, I would like a girl this time.
Dear Lord, sometimes my heart swells so much
with love for You it closes my throat up with
pain. I am not much as children go, I know. I am
not like Mama or Aunt Martha.
Mama used to pray thank You prayers in the
meadows and sing to You. She said there are
earth psalms all around us singing praises to You
and it is nice to join in. Since I am not much good
at singing, I hope you will understand I am grateful for so many things.
Tears, a balm, soothing and cleansing. Cups, of
plenty and sorrow. Cold to make me appreciate
warmth. Manure, though I do not know if you
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will like me saying so. But Lord, when spread
over turned ground where new seeds have been
planted, it brings forth growth. Like my troubles
in my life, Lord. It was Affliction and Distress
that made me come to You and now I do not ever
want to leave.
I am thankful for the pieces of fabric the quilting club gave me—woven and designed like You
wove and designed me in my mother’s womb.
Like you designed my children. I am grateful for
our new fireplace that gives us warmth, light
drawing each of us together.
Dust! The small particles dance on the light.
Would that I could dance like that for You in
broad daylight instead of going off in the woods
because the last time I did it my children thought
I was out of my head.
I am glad for the candles so I can see to write.
You are my lamp, Lord, lighting my way out of
darkness. I am thankful for the gold nuggets
Kavanaugh brought home yesterday, pure and soft
the way my heart should be. Lord, make me so.
Thank You for the Good Water we have. It
quenches my body’s thirst and reminds me that
You are Living Water for my soul.
Even the Air I breathe, Jesus. I cannot see it,
but it is there, moving and necessary to keep me
alive. Like You. And the Flowers. I have never
seen so many colors and kinds splashed across the
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You because they make me yearn for sunlight.
Seeds show me death and resurrection.
I do not know if You approve of me saying this,
Lord, but I am grateful for the way I feel when
Kavanaugh knows me. Even with James I never
felt this explosion of fire and light inside me like
a rain of stars.
Is all this but a hint of what it will be like to be
in full communion with You, Jesus? Do You
show us the part so that we yearn for the Whole?
I remember Aunt Martha reading to me once that
to look upon the face of God would bring death.
Still, sometimes every bit of me yearns to be in
Heaven with You all the while I still want to stay
here and live to be an old dottering woman seeing
her children and grandchildren around her. I do
not understand all that is changing inside me.
Sierra held the worn journal tenderly, tears streaming down her
face. Mary Kathryn’s beautiful letter to God was the last entry in
her journal. As she had turned the last page, she’d found an envelope carefully glued inside the back binder. Inside it was a single
sheet of paper. She recognized her mother’s clear, neat script.
Dear Sierra,
We have no other journals by Mary Kathryn
McMurray in our possession. If there were others after it,
I’m sorry to say they were lost or passed along to another
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branch of the family with whom we have no contact. We
do know through family records that Mary Kathryn and
Hamlet Bogan Kavanaugh had eight children together
and lived to a healthy old age. What records we do have
come down to us through your father’s ancestor, America
Farr, Mary Kathryn’s last child by James Addison
Farr. James was your great-great-great grandfather.
Mike has all the family papers if you are interested in
looking at the details.
I love you,
Mom
P.S. I went through everything carefully, but could
find no further mention of Joshua.
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27
S I E R R A S A T S T A R I N G A T M A R Y K A T H R Y N ’ S
quilt. Alex hadn’t called in several days. She knew he was giving
her time to digest what he’d told her. She
had
thought about it. She
had taken a couple of days off work to be by herself in order to
think things through. While the children had been in school, she
had walked through the mall and sat at the coffee shop. Later, she
sat in her breakfast nook, the sun streaming in through the window, and read her Bible and prayed. No solutions came.
I wish you would put answers in neon signs, Lord. What am I supposed to
do?
When she’d crawled into bed earlier, she couldn’t sleep, so
now she sat on the couch and stared up at Mary Kathryn
McMurray’s quilt.
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him back?
Sierra’s life had changed so much. She was happy with the
changes, comfortable with them. Alex would only turn her life
upside down again, not to mention the risks involved in trying to
make their marriage work. She wasn’t as worried about HIV as
Alex was. She was more worried about the emotional risks, the
fears inherent in loving him again the way she once did. Alex had
been the center of her universe.
Jesus, you are my center now. Is Alex going to be happy with the
changes in me?
They had barely brushed the subject of faith during their long
evening discussions. Truly, she had been afraid to broach the
subject with him. Church attendance had never been part of
their routine other than to attend Mass with his parents on special occasions. Did Alex understand how important Jesus was to
her now, that she needed the Lord more than she needed him?
She
wanted
Alex. She wanted him to share her life completely. If
she knew Christ had no place in his life, how could she reconcile
with him without compromising her new faith?
I lived with him thirteen years, Lord, and I don’t know what he believes.
Truth to tell, I don’t know much about the inner workings of his heart. It
was always my own that mattered.
Oh, God, why are we so proud and foolish? We don’t listen until we’re
faced with disaster, and then we come crying home to you, wanting you to
fix us! I love him, Father, but is this kind of love enough to make our
marriage work? We have so little in common. I never realized until now.
We come from different cultures, different social backgrounds, different
religions. He’s brilliant and I’m average. He graduated from college with
honors, and I managed to get out of high school and take a few business
courses. He likes ultramodern, and I like antiques and sunflowers and
lace. Lord, he likes ’70s music, and I’m sick to death of it. When I think
about all of this, my head reels. I wonder how we ever lasted as long as we
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