Read The Scarlet Thread Online
Authors: Francine Rivers
years before being blown off a transport. He landed in a field
hospital where he spent another three months before he was
shipped stateside.
“While I was away, Freda had our son and managed a
part-time job. When my father got sick with cancer, she quit and
stepped into his shoes to help my mother run the family grocery
store. My Freda was a home-front soldier.” His expression softened in memory, his eyes glistening with tears. “So I called her
‘Trooper,’ and it stuck.”
“We have to close down, Dynah!” Sally said from behind the
counter. She said it loudly enough so that poor Mr. Packard
would hear. Dynah looked at his face and wanted to weep.
Taking the hint, the old man got up. “Everybody’s in a hurry
these days,” he said with a glance toward the kitchen. Then his
eyes came to rest on her again.“Good night, Dynah. You be careful out there tonight.”
“I will, sir,” she said with a fond smile, touching his shoulder as
he passed. “Try not to worry.”
Juan Garcia began putting chairs upside down on the tables.
Gathering Mr. Packard’s spoon, cup, and saucer, Dynah
watched the old man walk stiffly across the room. His arthritis
was troubling him again.
“I didn’t mean to break up your little chat,” Sally said as
Dynah put the things into the big industrial dishwasher and
pulled the door down. “Some of these old people could talk until
your hair turned gray.” She took her sweater from the hook on
the wall. “They’ve got no place to go and nothing to do.”
“He misses his wife,” Dynah said and thought about following
Mr. Packard’s suggestion and asking Sally for a ride.
“I know. I miss my husband. I miss my kids. You miss your
handsome fiancé.” She dumped her shoulder bag onto the counter and shrugged into her sweater and parka. “And as Scarlett
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O’Hara always said, ‘Tomorrow is another day.’” Picking up
her bag, she said a brisk good-night and headed for the back
door.
Sally seemed in such a hurry, Dynah didn’t want to impose
upon her. Besides, it wasn’t that far to the bus stop, and there
were plenty of streetlights along the way. Getting her backpack
from the storage room, Dynah slipped off her rubber-soled
white shoes and pulled on her snow boots. Zipping the shoes into
the backpack, she said good night to Juan. Crossing the dining
room, she went into the lobby that opened out onto the back
parking lot. Sally had already turned the lights down for the
night. There was only the soft glow of security lights and the
bright lights behind Dynah where Juan was getting ready to
wash and wax the floors.
Pulling on her parka, Dynah went to the back door.
The idea that she needed to be concerned hadn’t ever crossed
her mind before. The Manor wasn’t exactly a center of crime.
The worst thing that had happened was someone’s spray painting graffiti on the walls three months ago. The manager had
painted over the bubble letters and numbers by the next afternoon, and the police increased the number of times they drove by
each evening. The vandals hadn’t returned.
Pushing the door open, Dynah stepped outside. The air was
crisp; the snow from last week’s fall was packed hard and dingy.
Her breath puffed white in the stillness. She heard the lock click
behind her and shivered slightly. She zipped her parka up to her
neck and looked around. Maybe it was Mr. Packard’s warning
that made her edgy. There was nothing else to bother her. It was
an evening like any other, no darker, no colder.
There were shadows all around, but nothing unfamiliar or
threatening as she walked down the wheelchair ramp. She took
her usual path through the back parking lot to Maple Street. It
was only a few blocks down to Main, another eight to Sycamore,
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took fifteen minutes to reach her stop at Henderson. From there
it was seven blocks to the dorm.
Dynah glanced at her wristwatch. Nine-thirty. Janet Wells,
her roommate, would be in the library studying late tonight.
Janet always left things till the last minute and then aced every
exam. Dynah smiled to herself, wishing she were that fortunate.
She had to study all term long to pull grades high enough to keep
her scholarship.
Relaxing as she walked, Dynah enjoyed the clear night. She
had always liked this street with its turn-of-the-century houses.
She could imagine people sitting on their front porches in the
summertime, sipping lemonade just the way Mr. Packard remembered. Like something out of a movie. It was a life far removed from the way she had grown up on Ocean Avenue in San
Francisco—and yet similar as well.
Looking back, she realized how she had been protected by her
parents and cloistered in home schooling. In many ways, she had
led an idyllic life with few bumps and twists in the road. Of
course, there had been times when she had been curious to know
what lay beyond the hedges her parents had planted around her.
When she asked, they explained, and she complied. She loved
and respected them too much to do otherwise.
Her mom and dad had been Christians forever. She couldn’t
remember a time when they hadn’t been involved in the church
or some community service project. Her mother sang in the choir
and led Sunday morning Bible studies. Dynah had grown up
surrounded by love, protected and guided every step of the way,
right up to the doors of New Life College. And now it seemed her
life would continue that way, with Ethan Goodson Turner at the
reins.
Not that I am complaining, Lord. I am thankful, so thankful. You have
blessed me with the parents I have and the man I’m going to marry. Every-
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where I look, I see your blessings. The world is a beautiful place, up to the
very stars in the heavens.
Lord, would you please give poor old Mr. Packard a portion of the hope
and joy I feel? He needs you. And Sally, Lord. She’s always fretting about
something and always in a hurry. She has so little joy in her life. And
Juan said tonight one of his children is sick, Father. Pedro, the little one.
Juan can’t afford insurance and—
A car passed slowly.
Dynah noticed a Massachusetts plate before the vehicle sped
up. The red taillights were like a pair of red eyes staring back at
her as the station wagon went down the street, then squealed
onto Sycamore. Frowning slightly, she watched it disappear.
Odd.
Her thoughts wandered again as she walked more slowly past
her favorite house. It was two doors from Sycamore, a big Victorian with a porch around the front. The lights were on behind the
Nottingham lace curtains. The front door was heavy mahogany
with small leaded panes of glass and stained glass at the top. The
pattern was a sunburst of golds and yellows.
It would be nice to live on a shady street like this one, in a big
house, complete with a trimmed lawn, a flower garden in the
front, and a yard in the back with a swing and a sandbox for the
children. She smiled at her dreaming. Ethan would probably be
offered a church in a big city like Los Angeles or Chicago or New
York. A man with his talents for preaching wouldn’t end up in a
small college town in the Midwest.
She couldn’t believe a young man like Ethan would look twice
at her, let alone fall in love and ask her to marry him. He said he
knew the day he met her that God meant her to be his wife.
She wouldn’t have met him at all if her parents hadn’t insisted
she visit New Life College. She had already decided on a college
in California. When they mentioned NLC, she declined, convinced the cost and distance should eliminate it. They assured
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for her. They wanted her to become more independent, and attending college in Illinois was a good way to accomplish that. Besides, her grades were good enough that she could receive
scholarships.
Dynah smiled about it now. Her parents had never been subtle in what they wanted for her. Her mother had left pamphlets
of a dozen Christian colleges scattered about the house to tweak
her curiosity. Each had been opened to beautiful, idyllic places
with stretches of lawn lined with manicured gardens. NLC had a
quad with six majestic brick and white-columned buildings, two
to the east, two to the west, one on the north and a church to the
south. But what appealed most to Dynah were the wonderful
young, smiling faces of the students.
There had never been any question that she would end up at a
Christian college. Where better to learn how to serve the Lord
than in an environment centered on Christ? Yet, the Midwest
had seemed so far from home she had dismissed it.
While completing her final year of work for her high school diploma, she sent out a dozen applications and received as many
acceptance letters. She narrowed it down to four possibilities,
dismissing all those outside the state. Her father suggested she
and her mother take a trip to southern California and see the
three campuses that were there. After visiting one in San Jose,
she contacted the others and made appointments with the dean
of admissions to discuss programs and scholarships.
While she was gone, her father had contacted four colleges he
thought “good enough” for his daughter. One was in Pennsylvania, one in Indiana, and two in Illinois. One sent a video. Two
had students call and talk with her about the campus, activities,
and curriculum. The last was New Life College. They sent a catalog and an invitation to come and take a firsthand look at what
they had to offer.
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She thought it preposterous and a terrible waste of her parents’ money, but her father insisted she go. “You have to learn to
fly sometime.”
It was the first time she had gone anywhere without her parents or a church group. All the arrangements had been made by
the college beforehand, so she had the safety net of knowing she
wouldn’t be on her own long. A student would meet her at the
airport and bring her to the campus where she would spend two
days with a personal guide.
Dynah smiled as she remembered her reaction when she first
saw Ethan with a sign bearing her name. She thought he was the
most gorgeous young man she had ever seen. Her mother had
told her the college would probably send a nice young man to
meet her and drive her to the college. She hadn’t expected someone who looked like he belonged in the movies. She was completely flustered and tongue-tied, but by the time they were
halfway to the campus, he had put her so much at ease that she
had shared her Ocean Avenue life with him. By the end of the
trip, she knew Ethan didn’t just look good, he was good. He was
on fire for the Lord, ambitious for godly service, and filled with
ideas about ministry.
“My father’s a pastor, and his father before him,” he told her.
“My great-grandfather was a circuit rider for the gospel. I’m following in their footsteps.”
By the time they drove beneath the brick arch to the NLC
campus, she was convinced Ethan Goodson Turner would be
the next Billy Graham.
Upon their arrival at the women’s dorm, Ethan introduced her
to Charlotte Hale, a music major from Alabama. Charlotte was
vibrant and full of southern charm and hospitality. A senior
graduating in June, she had already made plans to go with a mission group to Mexico and present the gospel in music and drama.
Over the next two days, every minute was taken up seeing the
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