Read The Scarlet Thread Online
Authors: Francine Rivers
operas. Now she found solace in them. For an hour, she could
forget how miserable she was and lose herself in the convoluted
lives of television characters. Their problems were more tragic
and complex than hers, their passions a lot more exciting. How
many times had Erica Kane been married anyway?
The laundry was folded and set aside well before the third
commercial promoting some new feminine hygiene product. She
put the towels and clothing away. Sitting down again, she kicked
her bare feet up on the coffee table and leaned back into the sofa.
She
should
be doing
something.
But what?
They’d been living in this apartment house for three months,
and she didn’t even know the family next door. She knew they
had children. The little boy ran along the corridor right outside
the living room window a dozen times every day, even when it
was raining. And there was that woman down on the first floor
who peered out her curtains all the time and then ducked back in
when someone chanced to notice her. What was her problem
anyway?
Sierra didn’t want to find out. There were twenty apartments
in this complex, and she didn’t know a single soul living in one
of them. Everyone protected their privacy. They probably had
guns in their side tables. She remembered having a phone conversation with her mother, in which her mother said, “Reach
out, Sierra. You can never tell who God has just waiting for you
to say hello.” So she’d said hello to one woman who came into
the laundry room, and the woman had barely acknowledged
her attempt at friendliness. She just dumped diapers into one of
the washing machines, poured in soap, twirled the controls, and
left.
Rebuffed, Sierra didn’t make the attempt again. If God had
someone waiting for her, he’d have to tell them to make the first
move.
She didn’t leave the sofa until the credits were rolling, and
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out the door. She had it all perfectly timed. If she left immediately after the soap opera, she’d pull into Carolyn and Clanton’s
school just as the other children were boarding school buses.
The kids pleaded for McDonald’s on the way home, and Sierra gave in. She didn’t feel like making spaghetti anyway, and
Alex had already said he wouldn’t be hungry. Something light.
Fine. She’d stop by the grocery store and pick up packaged salad
fixings and dressing.
She straightened up the kitchen while the children settled at
the table to do their homework and talk about their day at
school. At least they were making new friends.
Clanton dug through his backpack and produced a fistful of
school announcements, sign-up sheets, and graded homework.
“Can I sign up for Little League, Mom?”
“You’ll have to talk to your father about it,” Sierra said, putting
the last rinsed dish into the washer.
“You think Dad’ll coach again this year?”
“I don’t know, Clanton. You’ll have to ask him.”
Clanton did the minute Alex walked through the door. “Not
this year, champ,” Alex said, ruffling his hair. “I’m not going to
have the time.” He leaned down to kiss Carolyn hello.
Flipping the kitchen towel over her shoulder, she approached
as he stood loosening his tie. “Did you have a good day?”
“Great.” He gave her a firm kiss and pulled his tie free. Unbuttoning the collar of his shirt, he headed toward the bedroom.
“I’m going to change and take a quick run.”
Jogging was another new thing in Alex’s life. Steve and Matt
jogged; they claimed it was great as a stress reliever. So, of course,
Alex had followed suit.
By the time Alex returned, Clanton and Carolyn had taken
their baths and were dressed for bed. She read to them while
Alex showered and put on his worn Levi’s and UCB sweatshirt.
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When she came out to straighten the living room, he went in to
say good night to the children. She supposed she should be
thankful he spent the next half hour talking with them.
“Jack called me just before I left the office,” he said when he
came out.
Jack and his pregnant wife had rented their Windsor home.
“Problems?”
“On the contrary. He’s got enough for a down payment on the
house.”
“They’re buying it?” she said weakly. As long as they still
owned the Windsor home, she held out the hope that they’d
return. Alex’s words tore the crumbling foundations right out
from beneath her.
“That was their hope when they moved in. I told him what the
house was worth before we left. He said today his parents decided to give him a portion of his inheritance early. He’s contacting your father’s old partner to take care of the paperwork. They
shouldn’t have any problem qualifying for a mortgage. We’ll
have the money in our hands by the end of May.”
He cupped her face. “I know how much that little place meant
to you.”
That little place.
He said it so casually, as though it had been a
shack or a hole in the wall. He couldn’t have any idea what it
meant to her, or he wouldn’t be so quick to sell it.
“Matt gave me the name of a good Realtor. I want you to start
looking at houses. Four bedrooms, three baths, with a pool. Get
together with Audra. She knows all the best areas. I want us in a
good
neighborhood.
“We were in a good neighborhood.”
He let his hands slide away. “We’ll be in a better one. Steve
gave me a raise today. A
big
raise. He’s that sure Vigilantes is
going to be big.”
She saw how bright his eyes were, aglow with ambition and
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with your children?”
Alex didn’t move, but Sierra could feel the cold front move in
worse than an Illinois winter.
The tongue is a restless evil, full of deadly poison . . .
her mother’s
voice echoed in her mind, and Sierra felt a stab of shame. But
before she could apologize, Alex spoke in a glacial tone.
“They like the idea of having their own pool.”
“Do they also like the idea of changing schools again?” she shot
back, trying to keep the edge of sarcasm out of her voice and failing.
“Audra suggested a private school. I have the name she gave
me written down.”
Naturally. “Has she offered to pay for it, too?”
Alex’s temper came surging to the surface. “What have you
got against her? You haven’t liked her from day one, and she’s
done nothing but be nice to you.”
“Is
that
what you call it? Remind me to kiss her feet the next
time I see her!” Sierra moved away from him, filled with resentment and feelings of betrayal. She had tried to explain to Alex
how Audra made her feel: uneducated, uncultured, and from the
lower classes in a supposedly classless society. Alex insisted it
was her imagination; she knew it was deliberate.
Every time she was with Audra, the woman made a point of
mentioning this course or that course that she had taken at USC,
any of which made her an expert on any given subject. Sierra
might have an opinion, but it was an uneducated one.
“Oh?” Audra had said only two days ago in response to a
comment Sierra had made. She arched her elegant brow. “And
how did you come to
that
conclusion?”
They had been discussing the abortion issue, and Sierra had
said she believed it was wrong to end the life of an unborn child.
Clearly what her mother had taught her just didn’t cut the
mustard in Audra’s eyes.
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“Sounds like fundamentalist brainwashing to me,” she said
with a pitying glance that dismissed Sierra’s lifetime of learning
from her mother’s knee. Then Audra launched into a dissertation complete with “facts” proving the nonentity of the
human fetus.
“Why didn’t you go to college, Sierra?” Audra finally said.
“You learn how to think for yourself at college. If your parents
couldn’t afford it, you could’ve gone to a junior college and then
finished at a four-year university.” She said it so sweetly it
sounded as though she genuinely felt sorry that Sierra had lost
out on the opportunities she herself had been given.
“Money was no problem. I just wasn’t interested.”
“Not interested?” Again the eyebrow arched. “Steve said Alex
graduated with honors from UC Berkeley.”
“Yes, he did.”
“You might think about taking some night courses,” she said
seriously.
Sierra waited for more, but it wasn’t forthcoming. Apparently,
Audra felt she had said enough, and indeed she had. Even now,
several days later, Audra’s implication rankled: Alex would lose
interest in her because of her lack of education. Sierra looked out
the window at the line of cars ahead, two lanes to the right and
two to the left. Just because she hadn’t gone to college didn’t
mean she didn’t keep up on what was happening in the world.
She read the newspaper. She read magazines. She watched
CNN!
Yet, even with all that, she was left feeling as though she were
standing on sinking sand.
Shopping was even more excruciating. She had accepted three
invitations from Audra because Alex insisted. Each time when
Audra arrived, she tapped her long, coral-colored acrylic fingernails on the door and jangled the keys of her silver Mercedes
when Sierra answered.
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child.
Chatting gaily, Audra drove to stores far beyond any ordinary
citizen’s budget.
“Aren’t you going to buy anything, Sierra?” Audra said the
last time while signing the slip for an eight-hundred-dollar dress.
“That blue dress you were looking at would make you look wonderful.”
“At six hundred and fifty dollars, even a chimp would look
wonderful in it.”
Audra had laughed at her remark, but Sierra felt the full force
of an affronted glare from the elegantly attired saleslady. One
just didn’t say such things on Rodeo Drive.
Actually, Sierra had wanted to say more. She wanted to add
for both women’s benefit that if she had an extra six or seven
hundred dollars lying around, she certainly wouldn’t put it all on
her back!
Audra offered to treat her to lunch at Lowry’s. Sierra declined.
She had been taught to reciprocate, and she doubted Audra
would feel suitably recompensed at Denny’s.
“I’m sorry, but I need to get home, Audra. The children will be
getting out of school soon.” She’d glanced at her watch to make
her point. “I always pick them up.”
“You should get involved in a car pool,” Audra had commented, shooting the Mercedes in and out of traffic with the skill
of an experienced Indianapolis 500 driver.
Sierra was tired of Audra “should”ing all over her. “Chauffeuring children to school is one of the delights of motherhood.”
“Delights?” Audra laughed. Weaving smoothly across three
lanes of dense traffic, she glided down an off-ramp. “That
doesn’t say much for the quality of your life.” Her eyes twinkled
merrily. “We’ll have to do something to give you a little excitement.”
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And now it seemed she had.
Was it really Alex’s idea that they look for a house so soon? Or
had Audra through Steve advised they do so? Once they were
under the weight of a mortgage, it would be pretty hard to
change their minds about working in Los Angeles.
She pushed thoughts of Audra away and tried to reason with
Alex. “I think it’s too soon to think about buying a house,” she
said.
“You like living in a cramped apartment?”
She bristled anew at his sarcasm but remained calm. “You
haven’t even been at your new job for four months, Alex. What if
you decide you hate it?”
“I
love
it.”
“I’m saying
if
you changed your mind. You’re having a honeymoon at Beyond Tomorrow right now. The whole thing may
come down around your head like a house of cards.”
“Thanks for your vote of confidence.”
“I’m confident in
you,
Alex, but I don’t trust
them.
Everything’s
moving too fast. It’s all too easy. We should wait at least a year,
Alex. So much can change—”
“Get it through your head, Sierra. I’m not changing my mind
about anything.” Face rigid and pale with anger, he glared at her.
“I’m getting pretty tired of you walking around with a black
cloud over your head all the time.” He picked up his briefcase
and went to his computer. Opening the briefcase, he took out a
diskette. He turned on the computer and slipped the diskette
into the slot. “Either you can look around for a house and help
make the decision, or I’ll just take care of it myself,” he said, his
back to her. “The choice is yours.”
So much for priorities, she thought, tears brimming as she
went into the kitchen.
She called the Realtor the next morning and made an appointment. Roberta Folse said she would be by at ten, which would
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her grocery shopping.
Roberta had penny-red hair, dark brown eyes, and was
slightly overweight. She was elegantly dressed in a green suit
with a gold silk blouse and a string of pearls.
“Your husband said you moved recently and you were having
a difficult time settling in,” she said when they were on their way
in her sleek black Jaguar. “He didn’t mention where you lived
before.”
“We both grew up in Healdsburg,” Sierra said, wondering
how much else Alex had confided in this attractive stranger. “It’s
about seventy miles north of San Francisco, in the wine country.”
“I’m familiar with the area,” Roberta said and smiled with
complete understanding. “God’s country. No wonder you’re
having trouble. Culture shock. This area must seem like another
planet to you.”
Sierra warmed to her at once and felt herself relaxing. From
that point on, they talked easily. Roberta had four children, all
grown-up and in college or married. She had gotten her real
estate license when the market was booming. “I’ve always
loved looking at houses,” she said, driving along pretty
tree-shaded streets with charming ranch-style houses and
some with a hint of Victorian. “You know, most people I know
dream of retiring in the wine country or farther north in the
redwoods. I like Garberville myself. It has an old-fashioned
feel to it.”
“My brother owns a place there. He has twenty acres out near
White Thorn on the way to Shelter Cove. He likes to go up on
weekends and relax.”
“Heaven.” Roberta sighed. “Well, we’ll see if we can’t find you
a house down here that’ll have the country feel. Why don’t we
take a look at this one?”
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Roberta showed her four homes, all with four bedrooms, three
bathrooms, and a pool. The prices made Sierra’s head spin and
her stomach drop. They were four times what she and Alex had
paid for their Windsor home! What was Alex thinking? Sierra
confided her concerns to Roberta.
“It is a shock, I know. Your husband told me what you’re going to make from the sale of your home and what he’s currently
making. It’ll be tight, but I don’t think you’ll have problems qualifying. Especially with Steve Silverman cosigning.”
Sierra could feel the blood running out of her face. “Cosigning?”
“It’ll speed up the process of you and your husband having a
new home. Steve simply guarantees the loan.”
“So they would own part of our home?”
“Oh no, but should you fall into financial difficulties, which is
very unlikely, Steve would have to assume responsibility for the
mortgage. Alex told me his primary concern is location, which is
wise. Should you decide to resell after a few years, any one of
these homes would be snapped up quickly.”
Warning bells were going off in Sierra’s mind, but she couldn’t
pinpoint the cause. She tried to talk to Alex about it that night,
but he thought she was suspicious of Steve’s motives in offering
to guarantee their loan and took offense.
“That’s not what I said!” Sierra protested, upset.
“Pretty close.”
“You don’t
listen.”
“Then try making sense. Try thinking things through before
you open your mouth.”
“Forget it,” she said, hurt. Did he think she was stupid just
because she wanted all the facts? “Just forget it. We’ll buy a
house. After all, it’s
your
money. Right? This marriage isn’t a
partnership. I’m just the stupid, uneducated little homebody
who happens to be your wife!”
“I didn’t say that!”
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Alex said barely a dozen words to her over the next week.
James Farr has come to live with us.
He talks to me sometimes when Matthew has
other things to do. He is laid up with a broken leg
and he is very sad because his mother and father
was both dead from a terible Tragedy.
I herd him tell Matthew what happened.
James and his mother and his father was riding home from the camp meeting when his father
says he sold out and they were moving West.
James said his mother got crazy. She said she
was tired of moving and had roots. She said if
she was moving anywhere, it was back east to
her family. His father said thar was better land
West, and she said it werent land he was after.
Her crying and his shouting made the horses
start running. They wud not stop. A wheel brok
off and the wagon turned over. God tuk mercy
on James and threw him on soft ground. But his
fathers head got cracked open like a melon and
his mother got crushed when the wagon rolled
over her.
I am sorry his mother and father are dead, but
I am not sorry James is with us. I hope he stays
forever.
When I grow up I am going to marry him.
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James let me sit with him today. He did not say
much to me and I did not know what to say to
him. I read him two chapters from Exodus about
Moses in the bullrushes and pharaoh’s daugher
finding him. James said thank you very much. He
took my hand and kissed it.
I will never wash my hand again as long as I live.
God says we are to love one another, but it is very
hard to love Lucas.
Lucas told Mama he wuz in the barn when I got
locked in the henhouse. He’s a liar. He always lies
and Mama is so good she dont know the difference. I saw Lucas close the door. I heard him
drop the bar. And I heard him laffing while I was
screaming at him to let me out. He knows I am
affeered of chickens.
Mama asked me why he wud do such a thing to
his sweet little sister. I said he done it because he
is mean. She said that was a very bad thing to say
about my own brother.
Sometimes Mama dont want to hear the truth
because then she will have to do something about it.
Matthew wud have done something. But Matthew
was out in the fields with Papa.
Sometimes I wish I was a boy so I could grow
big enuf to punch Lucas hard enuf to nock him
down like Matthew does. Lucas needs nockin
down.
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