Read The Scarlet Thread Online
Authors: Francine Rivers
for the rest of the evening.
The next morning, she tried to bring it up again.
“So, go ahead,” he said, sounding impatient. “What’s on your
mind?” He hadn’t even bothered to lower his
Wall Street Jour-
nal.
“Nothing in particular,” she said. How did you start a good
talk when you needed to talk about not talking?
“Pour me another cup of coffee, would you?” he said from
behind the paper.
She wanted to pour the entire pot over him. “We used to talk
about all kinds of things from the minute you walked in the door
until we went to bed.”
“We still talk.”
“About business. About the games you’re working on. About
the kids.”
At last he lowered the paper and looked at her. She could see
him putting on his armor, getting his weapons ready. He had always been better equipped for fighting than she was. “What are
you getting at, Sierra?”
God, what do I say? What do I do?
she screamed inside her
head. When Alex presented his cold front, she felt incapable
of reaching him—and that seemed to be the case almost all
the time now. Tears of frustration pricked at her eyes. He
used to sense when she needed him. Now, he didn’t seem to
care what she was feeling or thinking. She wanted to say she
missed him. She wanted to say she was lonely. She wanted to
tell him she was afraid they were drifting apart, and that
Audra was right: She was boring, uneducated . . . and losing
him.
The very thought filled her with a bleak terror. But she was
even more terrified to say those things aloud and find that he was
indifferent.
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Her eyes pled with him.
Just tell me you still love me, Alex. Don’t
make me ask you if you do.
He just sat looking at her, eyes narrowed, posture defensive.
And so she leaned back in her chair, overwhelmed with a sense
of defeat. “I’m not getting at anything,” she finally responded,
aching inside for the connection she had always felt with him.
How could you be with someone you loved so desperately and
feel so alone?
He stared at her, as though he were studying a particularly
curious insect on the window screen. He shrugged. “I guess we
haven’t been out for a while,” he conceded, folding his newspaper and tossing it onto the coffee table. His gaze drifted from
hers. Restless, he glanced at his wristwatch and got up. “I
wanted to get into the office early this morning. I’ve got a lot to
do.” He downed his coffee and headed for the kitchen. “Why
don’t you figure out where you’d like to go and make the reservations?”
He sounded so offhand, so uninterested. . . . She closed her
eyes against the pain swelling inside her. Alex had always been
the one to suggest places they could go and things they could do.
Several times, he’d surprised her with tickets to a show at the
Luther Burbank Center. He used to take her and the children to
pizza and a movie. Once, he’d even made arrangements for her
mother to take care of the children so he could whisk her off for a
romantic weekend at a bed-and-breakfast in Mendocino.
Now, he sounded as though the whole idea of taking her out
was just one more responsibility he needed to handle.
She suggested a rib place.
“Too much fat and cholesterol.”
Since when had he worried about fat and cholesterol?
They agreed on a movie, but that night Alex called and said he
had some work to do. She asked him to reserve Friday night for
dinner out with the children, but he called from the office at the
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couldn’t miss.
She gave up making plans.
Now, it seemed, he didn’t think she had the ability to decorate
their home properly.
The whine of the garage door closing and the roar of Alex’s
Mercedes as he floored it toward work brought Sierra back from
her dismal reverie. She needed to awaken the children soon so
they’d have plenty of time to get ready for school.
Carolyn was invited to a birthday party this weekend. Her
little friend, Pamela, lived somewhere in Studio City. Sierra
went back into the kitchen and jotted down a note to buy a
birthday present.
She glanced at the slip of paper Alex had given her:
Bruce
Davies Interiors.
She tacked it to her noteboard beside the phone.
She didn’t make the call until later that afternoon, after Alex
called and asked if she had done it yet.
The designer’s receptionist had a rich, velvety voice with a
heavy New England accent.
“I’m under orders from my husband to hire a decorator,” Sierra
said.
The woman was polite and efficient, making no promises and
hinting that Bruce was in high demand and terribly busy. Too
busy, Sierra hoped. “Please hold.” Yanni played softly in Sierra’s
ear.
The receptionist came back on the line. “Is your husband
employed by Beyond Tomorrow?”
“Yes, he is.” Had Alex called ahead?
“One moment, please,” the receptionist said, and Sierra heard
Yanni playing again. Plucking a pencil from the kitchen drawer,
she doodled flower and leaf patterns along the top edge of her
grocery list. But she’d barely gotten started when the receptionist was back.
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“I apologize for the wait, Mrs. Madrid. Mr. Davies will be
pleased to speak to you.”
Before she could protest, Bruce Davies was greeting her with
the familiarity of a long-lost friend.
“Sierra, I’m
so
glad you finally called. I knew anyone with such
a charming name wouldn’t let me down. Of course, I expected
your call several days ago, but this works out just as well. I’ve
just finished a stunning home only a few blocks away from you,
and I’m ready for something new and exciting! And believe me,
the ideas I have for your home are definitely that!”
After a two-minute conversation with Bruce, Sierra felt she
had been run over by a steamroller. He made the appointment
for late Thursday afternoon and informed her he would bring an
assistant with him. He knew who Alex was because Audra
Silverman had faxed him an article from a well-known computer
game magazine.
“Decorating for a game designer will be a challenge,” he said,
clearly eager.
“I’m not sure Alex will want to have much involvement, Mr.
Davies.”
“Oh, but he must. I
insist.”
Surprisingly, Alex didn’t quibble and assured her he would be
home early Thursday.
Bruce Davies turned out to be an attractive man in his late forties, trim and elegantly dressed, who absolutely exuded energy.
His assistant attended him in silence, writing notes as they
walked through the house, Alex at Bruce’s side.
It became apparent very quickly that Sierra was going to have
little say in what was done to the house. Country, Bruce informed her, was a definite “no-no,” and anything even remotely
Victorian “just wouldn’t do, darling.” Bruce was interested in the
architecture, made suggestions for some changes, and poured
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“A man who is going to change the future of gaming must have
a house that reflects his creativity,” Bruce said, his eyes sparkling as he surveyed the entryway.
By the time Bruce and his assistant left, Sierra was convinced
the house would bear the stamp of Bruce Davies Interiors, a
slight mark of Alejandro Madrid, and absolutely nothing of her.
“It’s going to be expensive,” Alex said, not noticeably worried
about it, “but it’ll be worth it. Bruce said he’ll have sketches
within a week, and decisions can be made.”
She knew who would be making the decisions.
The next morning, after dropping the children off at private
school, Sierra drove to the closest mall to look for a suitable present for Carolyn’s new friend. Nothing looked right to her: The
selection was too wide and the prices too high.
Depressed, she purchased a cappuccino and sat watching the
hustle of people in the mall. Most were women. Some strolled at
a leisurely pace, looking lonely and bored as they paused at window displays. Others moved with quick efficiency, looking for
all the world as though they knew exactly where they were going
and what they were doing.
Sierra longed for home. She wished her mother were sitting
across from her so she could pour out her heart and ask her
advice. But she’d done enough of that lately over the telephone.
Her mother’s parting words after their last conversation still
echoed in her ears: “Remember, honey, God is in control.”
If that was true, why did she feel so desperate?
Shaking her head, she turned her thoughts back to the matter
at hand. What was she going to do about that blasted birthday
present? When she was Carolyn’s age, she had liked nothing
better than taking her friends up into the attic so they could
spend hours dressing up in her mother’s and grandmother’s old
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clothes, high-heeled shoes, hats, and jewelry—all perfect props
for pretending to be Cinderella or Snow White or some other
fairy-tale character.
Did children do that sort of thing anymore? All the dress-up
Carolyn had ever done was back in preschool. The Windsor
School had provided plenty of clothes to choose from: surgical
gowns, nurses’ uniforms, suit jackets and briefcases, a fireman’s hat, a policeman’s uniform. Nothing frivolous or fanciful.
Everything geared to answer that all-important question: What
are you going to be when you grow up? Sierra could still remember her frustration when she’d discovered the teacher was
asking Carolyn and her classmates this. Was it really necessary
to know at the age of four or five what one was going to do for
the rest of one’s life? It seemed so long ago. Now she wondered.
Wasn’t being a wife and mother enough anymore?
Feeling defiant, Sierra finished her coffee and drove to Cost
Plus, the area warehouse store. Wandering through, she found
an intricately carved box imported from India. It was pretty and
inexpensive. She bought it and drove to Kmart, where she purchased three beaded necklaces, a gold-tone charm bracelet with
African animals on it, and two bright rhinestone pins, as well as a
long, thin multi-colored scarf. Pleased with her choices, she
headed home.
While watching her soap opera, she used the scarf to wrap the
gift. Twisting the tied ends, she curled them around until they
looked like a plump flower on top of the box. During a commercial, she rummaged through her wrapping-paper box in the hall
closet and found some gold ribbon. Cutting a long strip, she
tucked it around the fabric flower and wrote on the ends:
“Happy Birthday, Pamela. From Carolyn.” She sat back and
smiled, perfectly satisfied with the gift.
Then she drove Carolyn to the birthday party on Saturday.
Pamela’s house was near the top of the hills with an iron gate
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