Read The Scarlet Thread Online
Authors: Francine Rivers
he will ride west as far as the ocean and then head
north. He is riding James’s horse and taking his
own for packing. I gave him what money we had
left for supplies. It was the last of what Aunt
Martha give me.
God, please, help him find his way there and
back to us.
Joshua has been gone four days. We have no
food and no ammunition. The fish are not biting.
God, I won’t ask you to help me. But please
help my children.
You must be watching over us, God. I can think
of no other reason for the Strange Occurrence.
A grizzly came into our meadow. I called a
warning to the children. The boys made it to the
wagon, but Beth froze. I told her to run, but she
was too scared to move with that she-demon coming straight for her and making a roar from hell
itself. I never even stopped to think. I just started
running for her and praying. Oh, God, did I pray.
Out loud. The words just came pouring out of me
in Pure Terror. I have not prayed so hard since
Mama was sick.
And You answered! You told me to sing to
that beast from hell and I did. Oh, I did. I
thought I must be going crazy with fear, but
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I did it anyway. I remember now MacLeod told
the men guarding the stock once to sing to the
animals during a storm. And we were in the
midst of a storm, hard rain, thunder and lightning and that Terrible beast coming from the
woods. I sang loud enough to wake James.
I sang whatever came into my head, mostly
hymns Aunt Martha used to play on the piano
and Mama taught me. Hymns I had not sung in
years. They come back. The bear was up on two
hind legs and only twenty some feet from us.
I thought we were dead for sure. That grizzly
was eager to tear us limb from limb and there
I stood with Beth tucked behind me singing like
a crazy woman.
But that bear stopped! Oh, Lord, she did.
She came down and cocked its head, and
looked at me. I did not look it in the eyes but
up at heaven, singing with all my might. The
beast moved its head back and forth. I was
afraid my voice would dry up, but it did not.
The words kept coming back to me, one hymn
after another. The bear stayed right there and
listened for so long I thought my hair was turning white! And then she just lumbered off, calm
and quiet as you please and disappeared into
the woods.
I sank down on my knees and laughed and
wept and held Beth to me. She said—Mama, it
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A Blessed Miracle.
I feel changed inside myself. Something gave
way or cracked open or something.
Oh, Jesus, You are there! Mama was right
after all.
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the light breeze crisp, the air clear. She’d taken the children
down to the Plaza and bought them donuts from the deli while
they wandered around, looking in shop windows.
Now, going up the steps of the old house, she felt the tug of
grief again. When they drove up the drive last night, she’d expected to enter a cold, empty house. Instead, someone had
turned on the furnace. A fire was going in the parlor, the
screen in place and wood in the basket. In the kitchen was a
Pyrex dish of warm enchiladas and a note from Alex’s mother.
“We look forward to seeing you and our grandchildren tomorrow. Dinner at three. Love, María and Luís.”
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safely and to thank them for their thoughtfulness. “Your brother gave
us the key,” María said. “We left it under the mat on the back porch.”
She called her brother to let him and Melissa know she’d arrived. “We’ll come by tomorrow morning,” Mike said. “There’s
something I need to talk over with you. It’s important.”
“What time?”
“Eleven. We’re supposed to go to Melissa’s parents for turkey
dinner. We’ll have to leave by one to get there on time.”
“Eleven it is.”
She and the children had just shrugged out of their coats when
Mike unlocked the door and his family poured in. For a few minutes, all Sierra could hear were the excited voices of reuniting
cousins. She kissed her niece and nephews and announced she
had brought back a bag of donuts from the deli.
Mike got right to the point. “A couple wants to buy the house
and turn it into a bed-and-breakfast.”
Sierra’s stomach dropped. “Buy the house?”
“They’ve been looking for property in the area for over a year.
They liked this house. Apparently they stopped by once, and
Mom invited them in for coffee and cookies. She gave them the
grand tour but said she wasn’t interested in selling. She told
them to check back in a year or two. They took her at her word
and came by a week ago. When they found out Mom had passed
away, they traced me through the church pastor.”
“Did you tell them we don’t want to sell?” Sierra said.
Mike exchanged a look with Melissa. He sat down and leaned
forward, his hands clasped between his knees. “No, I didn’t. I
wanted to talk it over with you first.”
“I thought you loved the house as much as I do.”
“I do, Sis, but I’ve already got a home in Ukiah. My business is
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there. If I were to sell out and move, I’d want to go farther north
to Garberville. Or Oregon. I haven’t the money to hang on to
this place for sentimental reasons.”
Sierra got up and walked over to the fireplace. She ran her
hand along the dusty mantle and looked at the old Seth Thomas
mantle clock. It had run down months ago. Even with the furnace on, the house had a musty smell of disuse.
“The only other alternative is to rent the place out, and I don’t
want to do that either. I’ve heard nothing but horror stories from
friends who’ve rented property and had their places destroyed.
The law being what it is, someone can move in and wreck a place
before you get them out.”
Melissa rose. “I’ll make some coffee,” she said softly and left
the room. Sierra knew her sister-in-law was making it clear to
both of them that she had no say in their decision. It was up to
them what they did about the house.
Her family had lived in Sonoma County for over a hundred years.
Mary Kathryn McMurray had been the first one to put down roots
in the fertile soil now covered by tract houses. Ah yes, Mary Kathryn
McMurray, who had come with all the eagerness and joy that she
herself had felt when Alex had moved her to Los Angeles!
“Do you want the house, Sis?”
Oh, God, do I have to give up my home? You know how much I love this
old house. What do you want me to do?
Again, the answer was clear.
Let go.
“Sierra?”
She leaned her head against the edge of the mantel. What choice
was there? “No matter how much I want it, it’s beyond possible. I
don’t have enough left of my inheritance to buy out your share in it,
and then there are the taxes.” She lowered her hands and turned.
“And I just bought my condo. I’d take a loss if I tried to sell it now
with the market being what it is. That’s why I got it for such a good
price in the first place. And then, if it did sell, I’d be out of work up here.”
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She knew her brother would bend over backward to make
things easier on her, even at cost to his own family finances. “I
want what’s best for all of us,” she said quietly.
“So what do you think that means?”
She forced a smile for his sake. “What’s this couple like?”
A look of relief filled her brother’s face so that she knew
exactly what he wanted. No more burdens to bear. And could
she blame him? She was the one living in Los Angeles, too far
away to pitch in and help with maintaining the house. He had
been taking care of everything since their mother had died.
“They’re nice people, in their midforties, financially set. They’ve
been living in San José for the past twenty-two years. They have
two children, a boy and girl. The boy’s off at Bible college studying
to be a pastor. The daughter’s married with a baby on the way.
Jack’s hobby is woodcrafting, and Reka’s into gardening.”
Sierra thought of her mother’s backyard going wild. It would be
nice having someone pour love back into it and make it bloom
again. Hadn’t Mom invited these people in for coffee and cookies
and given them a grand tour? Hadn’t she been the one to say come
back in a year or two? She’d known she’d be gone by then. Full realization struck her, tightening her throat with tears. “It’s just like
Mom to tie up all the loose ends, isn’t it?” she said with a smile.
“Yeah,” Mike said, his voice husky with emotion.
“So,” she said more lightly. “Do you have their number?”
He nodded.
“Why don’t you call and ask if they’d like to come up on Saturday and we’ll talk turkey.”
He laughed, his eyes moist. “Sure.”
She debated telling María and Luís the next day. They were upset enough over Alex’s broken marriage, without adding to
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their worries of never seeing their grandchildren. One word
about selling the Mathesen Street house and Thanksgiving
would be ruined for María, who lived for her children and
grandchildren.
There were a dozen running around when Sierra arrived.
Clanton and Carolyn piled out of the Saturn and joined in the
games. They remembered their Spanish, picking it up as though
they’d been jabbering it nonstop at home.
Luís hugged her tightly when she came into the house and
then kissed her on both cheeks. She hadn’t seen him since Alex
had left her, and his greeting brought a lump to her throat. María
was right behind him, crying, and talking in rapid-fire Spanish.
Alex’s brothers and sisters treated her with the warmth they
always had. His older brother, Miguel, a vintner for one of the
Sonoma wineries, even flirted outrageously with her. His sister,
Alma, let it slip that Alex had brought Elizabeth Longford home
for a few days to meet the family.
“Papa wouldn’t let them stay here. He said Alex could take her
to a motel room, but he wouldn’t have them sleeping together under his roof. Alex rented a suite at the Doubletree. She refused to
come back with him the next day. Alex and Papa had words.
He’s called and talked to Mama, but I don’t think he and Papa
have talked since.”
Grandfather. Father. Son.
Sierra changed the subject, but Alex’s name kept coming up.
And then he called. He talked to his mother. Then he talked to
Clanton and Carolyn. Papa went outside for a walk. When he
came back, Alex had long since hung up. For the rest of the evening, she could feel Luís watching her. María, too.
God, how much we hurt others without even thinking about it. We think
we can make a decision without it tearing other people’s hearts in two.
Sierra took Clanton and Carolyn aside when she found an
opportunity. “How would you feel about coming and spending a
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eager responses, she knew she could approach Luís and María
about the idea. She found the chance while helping María wash
and put away dishes.
“Would you and Luís like to have Clanton and Carolyn spend
a few weeks with you next summer?”
María started to cry.
“Sí, sí,”
she said. “As often as possible.
What about Christmas?”
Sierra hugged her. “We can’t come Christmas, Mama. We’re
in a pageant at the church. Easter. We’ll come for Easter, if that’s
all right with you.”
“Sí.
You come home Easter.”
Most of the relatives had already headed home to Santa Rosa
or Cloverdale or the Bay Area where they lived. Clanton and
Carolyn were the last of the younger generation lounging
around in the small, neat country house on the edge of the
vineyard.
“The family is scattering,” María said, teary as each one left.
“Alex off in Connecticut—”
“Mama!” Luís hissed and gave Sierra an apologetic look.
“It’s all right, Papa,” Sierra said, trying to ease their discomfort. “I know about it.” The children reported everything, even
when she wished they wouldn’t.
Luís walked her to the car. “When are you and the
niños
leaving?”
“Sunday morning. Early. It’s a long drive.”
“I’m going to six o’clock Mass.” He looked old—old and
hurt—and she loved him unbearably.
She kissed his cheek. “We’ll meet you there.”
He cupped her cheek. “My son is a fool.”
Sierra’s eyes filled. “No, Papa.
I
was the fool.”
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Dear Lord, since that bear I have been thinking.
And I have been looking and seeing lots of
things different from before. It is like something
changed inside me. It seems to me everything
around me now cries out You are here. You have
put your stamp on every created thing. I can hear
Mama from so long ago pointing out flowers and
trees and birds and animals and saying how they
are all gifts from You. She said to me once that
You decorated the world from the depths of the
sea to the heavens just for us.
Maybe I am wrong, but I do not think You did
all that purely for our pleasure. I think now you
did it so we could see You.
I see things differently now, Lord, and spent
a good part of my day choked up with grief over
the hard things I have said about You.
It rained today and I kept thinking how it
washes everything clean and the earth drinks and
becomes fertile. Aunt Martha used to talk so
much about the Word being a double-edged
sword revealing to us our sins so that we could
confess and ask forgiveness and receive Your
Mercy and Grace. The
so that
part always eluded
me. Now it seems to ring in my ears day and
night.
And I was thinking too about time. I suppose
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I am glad I have more of it.
The fog last night reminded me of how clouded
my thinking has been where You are concerned,
Jesus. I could feel the oppressing Fears that have
been my companion for so long closing in again
like that misty gray blanket. I was awake most of
the night worrying over so many things. And then
Dawn came pink and orange and took my breath
away and the fear with it. How could I think of
dying and my children starving before such
Glory?
A good night’s sleep is a precious thing, Lord.
Sometimes I am so tired I ache for rest and sink into
a cottony place where even hard ground feels like
a feather bed. Maybe tonight will be like that now
that I have told You what has been on my mind.
I guess if You heard my prayer over that bear,
Lord, You can hear me about this. We are hungry, Jesus. We made do with two fish Hank
caught today, and I am thankful to You for them.
But it is not enough to keep us going. So, I am
asking You again to save us from death. Please,
Lord, help us again or we will starve just like
those poor folks who did not make it through the
mountains.
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“ W H A T H A P P E N E D ? ” S I E R R A S A I D W H E N C L A N T O N
unlocked the door and walked in at three in the afternoon on Saturday instead of ten in the evening when Alex usually brought
him home.
“He dropped me off,” he said, slinging his backpack onto the
wing chair she’d just finished recovering.
“Did you have a fight?”
“Not with him.”
The look of defiance on his face and swelling across his left eye
made her stomach drop. Had Alex hit him? “Did you say something to Elizabeth?”
“Yeah, you could say that, but she said something to me first.”
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