Read The Scarlet Thread Online
Authors: Francine Rivers
He asked their names and checked his list before nodding them
through. Other cars were already parked: two Cadillacs, three
Mercedes, and a little red sports car the likes of which Sierra had
never seen before. Everything reeked of money.
Sierra walked Carolyn to the front door, where a maid answered their ring. She was Spanish and dressed in a crisp black
uniform with white collar and apron.
Carolyn’s hand tightened. “Don’t leave, Mommy. Please.” Sierra forced a reassuring smile, but her daughter didn’t loosen her
grip until they entered a huge room with cathedral windows at
the back and she spotted Pamela with several other little girls.
Sierra spotted the mothers.
They were all standing near windows that provided a panoramic view of San Fernando Valley. Every one of the ladies
looked as though she had just stepped out of a fashion magazine.
Sierra cringed inwardly, wondering what they thought of her in
her faded teal sweat tunic, black leggings, and scuffed Reeboks.
Oh, God,
she thought,
please don’t let Carolyn be embarrassed by me.
One of the women glanced toward Sierra and Carolyn. Smiling,
she said a word to the others and left them.
“You must be Sierra and Carolyn Madrid,” she said, her tone
warm and welcoming. “I’m so glad you could come.” She
touched Carolyn’s hair lightly. “Pamela has talked of little else
since you came to school, Carolyn. She insists you’re kindred
spirits just like the girls in
Anne of Green Gables.”
Marcia Burton had class and grace and dissolved every bit of
Carolyn’s shyness. Smiling, the little girl held the present out to
Marcia. “Why, it’s perfectly lovely,” she said.
“My mother wrapped it,” Carolyn told her proudly, and Sierra’s
face went hot. She could see the other gifts on the polished mahogany coffee table nearby, all obviously from expensive stores and
professionally wrapped. She thought of the wooden box and
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cheap, gawdy jewelry inside it. She wished she could snatch it
back and run.
As Carolyn joined the other children, Sierra thanked Marcia
for inviting her and made her excuses to leave.
“Oh, please stay,” Marcia said, sounding as though she actually meant it. “Pamela said your son plays on the school’s baseball team, and I know they’re practicing today.”
She was right. Sierra had dropped Clanton off before bringing
Carolyn to the party. The coach had invited all the boys back to
his house for a barbecue and movie.
Marcia smiled, her blue eyes amused as she confided her belief
that Pamela had developed a crush on Clanton. “She says he’s
the most handsome boy in school.”
Sierra wasn’t surprised her son made female hearts flutter.
Clanton had Alex’s features and coloring, and her light green
eyes. It made for a startling combination that had always
attracted attention from the time he was a baby.
“I really had better go,” Sierra said.
“At least stay long enough to meet the other mothers.”
As Marcia Burton put her hand lightly beneath her elbow,
Sierra resigned herself to further humiliation.
All the ladies were polite. Only one looked her over as though
she were convinced Sierra had just crawled out of a homeless
shelter. Marcia, appearing not to notice, remained warm and
friendly to all, while staying close to Sierra’s side.
But the woman’s efforts did little to ease Sierra’s discomfiture.
After what seemed a polite interval of stilted small talk, she made
her excuses and left.
She breathed far easier after driving out the gate and heading
down the winding road out of the rarefied air of the Studio City
hills to the bank of smog in the flatlands of North Hollywood.
One thing was certain: She wouldn’t step foot over the threshold
when she returned to pick up Carolyn.
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had an afternoon free, and they were going to spend it together.
When he had asked her if she’d like to do so, quick tears of gratitude had sprung to her eyes. It had been so long since they’d
really been together, just the two of them. Maybe this would be
a chance for them to bridge the chasm that had developed
between them. Sierra wasn’t sure if they could, but she wanted
to. Oh, how she wanted to.
When she unlocked the door and went inside, she felt almost
lighthearted. “Alex? I’m home,” she called.
Silence met her.
“Alex?” she said again, going into the kitchen. The room was
empty, but there was a note on the refrigerator. Cold fingers of
disappointment closed around her heart as she moved forward
and took it down.
Sierra,
Steve called. A big client is in town unexpectedly, so
we’re taking him out to dinner. I’ll probably be home late.
That was it. I’m gone, I’ll be home late. No apology. No regret
at not being able to spend time with her.
Angry, Sierra crumpled up the note and tossed it into the garbage. She vacuumed, dusted, and made preparations for dinner
for three. She considered changing her clothes before going back
to pick up Carolyn, and then rebelled against the idea. She was
who she was. Besides, even dressed up she wouldn’t fit in with
that crowd.
Steeling herself, she headed back to Studio City. As she pulled
up before the palatial house, she saw that all the cars were exactly
where they were when she had left three hours before. Apparently, they had all stayed through the entire party, sharing the
catered hors d’oeuvres and luncheon and the beautifully deco8 6
rated cake, and enjoying the magician who had come to make
sure the children were properly entertained. She got out of her
car as several of the women and their little girls came out, each
child holding a bag of party favors.
“Our girls are playing in the family room,” Marcia said, greeting her at the front door.
“I’m sorry if I’m late.”
“You’re not late at all. Come in, please. Would you like some
coffee?”
“Thank you, but I’d better not. I’m in something of a rush. I
need to pick up Clanton soon.”
Marcia’s expression flickered with understanding and disappointment; it was an excuse, and both women knew it. “I’ll show
you the way,” she said quietly. “Pamela loved the treasure box
and scarf.”
Polite to the end, Sierra thought sarcastically, then felt a
twinge of shame for her critical attitude.
Shrew,
she chastised herself.
Marcia’s shown you nothing but kindness. But then, maybe you
don’t know how to react to kindness anymore. . . .
The girls were leaning close together and talking like little
conspirators. To Sierra’s surprise and pleasure, Pamela was
bedecked in the scarf and jewelry. Carolyn laughed happily at
what her friend was saying and then noticed her. “Oh,
Mommy,” she said, obviously disappointed. “Couldn’t I stay a
while longer? Please?”
“We have to go, Carolyn.”
“Clanton’s staying at—”
“Now,
Carolyn.”
Carolyn rose obediently. Remembering her manners, she
thanked Pamela and her mother for the lovely time and for the
bag of party favors and treats.
“Why don’t we get together sometime?” Marcia said as they
walked back upstairs.
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response. She knew sometime meant never. The girls were talking again and going ahead of them out the front door, obviously
trying to find another way to delay the inevitable.
“Are you free Monday?” Marcia said.
Startled, Sierra looked at her. “Monday?”
“For coffee,” Marcia said and smiled. “Or tea. Or water. I
don’t care.” She laughed at Sierra’s look, then reached out and
squeezed her wrist gently. “What I really want to do is get to
know you better.”
She spoke so sincerely, Sierra didn’t doubt her. Quick tears
burned her eyes, and she wondered that a casual invitation for
coffee could affect her so deeply.
“Monday sounds perfect.”
Mister Grayson cum over today, mad as a grizly.
He said Matthew is going to marry Sally Mae
or he is going to shoot him dead. Papa said no son
of his is going to marry a harlot. Matthew said
Sally Mae is no harlot and they are already married in the eyes of God.
Lucas laughed and called Matthew a fool.
Matthew hit him in the mouth and nocked him
down. He got on top of him and kept pounding
until Papa pulled him off.
Mama has not stopped crying for two days.
Papa said Mister Grayson is sending a rider
around to tell every one who comes to camp
meeting that his daughter is getting married to
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Matthew Benjamin McMurray. Papa said he is
actin proud about it.
Mama said some people have no sense of shame.
Matthew married Sally Mae today. She wore her
dead mother’s white wedding dress. I have never
seen Matthew look as happy as he did when he
put Mama’s ring on her finger.
Sally Mae almost did not have a ring at all.
Papa wud not let Matthew have Grandmama
McMurray’s ring. I heard Papa and Matthew
yellin at each other in the barn. Matthew said he
loves Sally Mae. Papa said no one like Sally Mae
was ever going to wear his mother’s ring. He said
he wuz sorry he listened to Mama. He said he
shud have taken Matthew to Fever River a long
time ago to let him larn some facts of life about
women and then maybe he wud not have fallen
prey to one.
So Mama give Matthew her own wedding ring.
Papa has not said a word to her since.
I wonder if James is still in Fever River and
what he’s doing there.
I got no time for writing in this journal, but it is
the only place I can put down my feelings. And
such feelings! Sometimes I think I will burst.
Mama is sick, bad sick. Sally Mae dont do nothing to help. She and Matt fight all the time. Or
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the taking. She says she is bored with her life and
bored with him. All he does is work in the fields
beside Papa and does nothing fun with her. Sometimes I hate her so much I wish her dead. Then she
cries and tells me she loves Matthew and wants to
be a good wife and I feel guilty. She just dont
know how to be good cause she never had a mama
like mine who wud not let her be anythin else.
Mama coughed up blood today. I dont know
what to do. Papa dont spend much time with her
because he cries every time he does. He said he
can’t bear to see her suffering. He told her he
dont know what to do without her. He dont
believe in God. He dont believe in nothing but
what he can do for himself and he can’t do nuthin
for Mama.
Mama said today she is not afraid to die and
I shud not be afraid to let her. She smiles when
I sit with her. She says she is getting closer to
God every minute. I tell her we need her more
than God does, but she says maybe she is in the
way. In the way of what I asked, but she coughed
so long and hard she had no strength to tell me.
Mama died today. She said she could smell the
lilacs through the window. She wanted to hold
some. So I went outside and cut some for her.
When I came back, she was dead.
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