Read The Scarlet Thread Online
Authors: Francine Rivers
Pressing the heels of her hands against her eyes, she tried not
to think about it. “How long can you stay?” she said, hoping Alex
would say as long as she needed him.
“I made reservations for tomorrow.”
She lowered her hands slowly, despair filling her. Alex had
given her three days of his precious time. She supposed she
should be thankful.
“The kids said they want to stay with you.”
“That’s fine,” she said in a brittle voice. She took down a cup
and saucer from the cupboard. “Do you want some coffee?”
“Sí.”
She glanced back at him and saw he was still staring into the
backyard. Maybe her mother had meant something to him after
all. She filled another cup and brought both to the table near the
windows.
“Mom and I sat here together only a few weeks ago, before
she was too weak to leave her bed.” The cups rattled slightly as
Sierra set them down and took a seat. “Roy Lubbeck is coming
over at five to go over Mom’s will.”
Alex sat down across from her. “I’ll stay another day or two if
you want me to, Sierra.”
Sure, she thought bitterly, he’d stay and resent every minute of
it. She shook her head.
“What are you going to do about the house?”
“Do?” she said blankly, glancing up at him.
“You’re going to have to rent it out or sell it. You can’t leave it
vacant. The place will fall apart. The garden’s already going to
seed.”
She could feel the blood flowing out of her face. “I grew up in
this house.”
“I know how much the place means to you, Sierra, but you
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have no idea what it costs to keep up a place like this. Your
mother was working on it all the time.”
“I buried my mother this morning, and now you want me to
give up this house?”
“Don’t make it sound like it’s my fault your mother died of
cancer,” he said, his eyes glittering.
“I didn’t, but it would’ve been nice of you to wait a few days
before telling me I should get on with disposing of my mother’s
property!”
“Bien, chiquita.
Take all the time you need. Stay for another
month! Keep the place if you want. I don’t care what you do!”
He scraped his chair back and grated out the rest. “Just don’t expect me to foot the bill for maintenance costs and taxes!” He left
her sitting at the table.
A moment later, Sierra heard the roar of the Cadillac’s engine.
He revved it loudly and then sent gravel flying as he backed out
of the driveway.
Pushing the cup and saucer back, Sierra put her head in her
arms and wept.
Mike pulled his van into the driveway an hour later. Carolyn and
Clanton piled out with their three cousins. After a quick kiss
hello, they went into the family room to watch a movie with their
cousins. Melissa put her hand lightly on Sierra’s shoulder and
then took the lasagna out of the refrigerator and put it into the
oven to warm up.
“Alex drove his mom and dad home,” Mike said, pouring himself a mug of coffee. “He said he was going to stay and visit for a
while, but to tell you he’d be back here before five. You told him
Roy’s coming by?”
“Yes.” Sierra kept her gaze on her cold coffee. “I’m sorry I left
the way I did.”
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Except Alex.
Melissa came back and took the seat Alex had left vacant.
“You look tired, Sierra. Why don’t you rest for a while? I’ll wake
you when dinner’s ready.”
Sierra nodded and rose. She felt her brother looking at her and
wondered if he’d guessed how bad things were between her and
Alex. If he did, he was sensitive enough not to say anything.
As she climbed the stairs and walked along the upper hallway,
she glanced at the narrow passageway to the attic. She remembered finding her mother there on the day Alex had turned life
upside down. It hadn’t turned right side up since.
She went up the steps and opened the door. Standing there,
she looked in, amazed at the change.
The attic was swept and dusted, new Nottingham lace curtains
hung over the four small windows. The old sofa had a new forest
green slipcover and four bright throw pillows, two of a deep
golden yellow, two white with embroidered sunflowers and
green ruffles. The coffee table had been refinished. On it were
several old picture albums. The old brass lamp, now polished,
stood between the sofa and her father’s old worn leather recliner.
The walls had been painted pale yellow, the open-beamed ceiling white. On the south wall hung a dozen paintings and pictures.
Sierra took one down. Not recognizing the face, she turned it over
and saw that her mother had written the pertinent historical information on a card and glued it to the newly papered back. She
smiled. Her mother had always been a stickler for detail.
The bookcase where her father’s old files had been stored was
now full of old books. The top three rows were designated for
Mike, among them
Robinson Crusoe, Treasure Island, The Collected
Works of H. G. Wells, The Earth Abides.
The bottom three were for
her. She pulled out a worn copy of
Little Women
and leafed
through it. Tucking it back in the shelf, she ran her fingers over
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Anne of Avonlea, Daddy Long Legs, Captain from Castile, The Black
Rose
and looked away.
In the far east corner of the attic, standing in a beam of sunlight, was the ornate wood-framed oval mirror. The old braided
rug had been cleaned, the trunk of dress-up clothing repainted
white with tole-painted flowers and leaves. She opened it and
saw everything had been washed, ironed, and neatly folded
away. Nearby was a small bookcase with children’s games and
books.
When she turned around, she saw two distinct stacks against
the west wall, one for Mike, one for her. Her brother’s red Radio
Flyer wagon was neatly packed with other mementos, favorite
books, an old worn teddy bear, a baseball bat and glove. Next to
it were boxes neatly labeled: “College Texts,” “Trophies,”
“Comic books,” “High School Mementos/Block sweater.”
Her own things were sorted, consolidated, and labeled as well,
“Clothing/Prom dress,” “Dolls,” “Scrapbooks/Albums,” “Stuffed
Animals.” In one container was clothing she’d tired of but had
been unwilling to give away. Mary Kathryn McMurray’s trunk
sat next to the new white boxes, a white envelope taped to the
top. “Sierra” was written in her mother’s familiar handwriting.
Sierra removed it and opened it carefully, extracting the note.
My dearest Sierra,
This trunk and all its contents were meant for you. I
read the journal before I sent it and couldn’t help but feel
you and Mary Kathryn McMurray share a great deal in
common. The quilt has a message for you. You may not
see or understand it now, but one day it will come to you
like a star bursting in the heavens. And what a day that
will be!
I love you.
Mom
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metal braces of the trunk. She could smell the linseed oil her
mother had used. Unlatching the top, she opened the trunk. The
scent of mulberry sachets rose and surrounded her. The beautiful antique quilt lay on top, cleaned and carefully refolded. Sierra
lifted it out and saw the gift wrap–covered boxes beneath. In one
was the Indian gift basket. In another were the carved wooden
animals with the note saying they were for Joshua. A blue velvet
box held half a dozen wedding rings, each tagged with a name of
the relative who had worn it. Her throat closed when she found
two tied together with a small tag reading, “Brian Philip
Clanton, Marianna Lovell Edgeworth, married December 21,
1958, in San Francisco.”
Sierra put everything back the way she had found it. She
folded the note and put it on top of the quilt. Closing the lid, she
ran her fingertips over the wood-and-metal braced surface. She
walked to the small attic window and pushed it open. A bracing
spring breeze fluttered the lace curtains.
“I’m no farther away than your heart.”
Grief tore at her, and Sierra went back to the sofa and sat
down. She opened the top album. On the first page were two
pictures of her father as a young man. One showed him with
shoulder-length hair and dressed in worn Levi’s and boots.
Right next to it was another picture of him clean-shaven, hair
shorn, and wearing a policeman’s uniform. She smiled at the
contrast. On the next page were pictures of her mother. In one,
she appeared to be dancing in a meadow. Her arms were outstretched, her head back, her waist-length hair swirling. In another, she sat on a beach gazing pensively out at the surf. There
were pictures of Mike, a bundled baby asleep on his father’s
shoulder, a baby playing in his crib, a toddler playing in the
sandbox in the backyard. On the next page were pictures of
her, wrapped in a blanket in her mother’s arms, another of her
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sitting in a high chair with her face covered with spaghetti, yet
another of her toddling along the cobblestone pathway in the
backyard garden.
Each year was chronicled in pictures. Stretching out on the
sofa, Sierra paged through the albums, seeing her mother and
father in the early years of marriage. She smiled over pictures of
Mike from infancy to his wedding. She went through her album,
reliving memories as she saw herself in the garden with her
mother, playing dress-up with friends in the attic, swimming at
Memorial Beach, playing baseball, wearing her cheerleader’s
uniform. She came across a picture of Alex in cap and gown. She
was standing with him, and they looked at one another with open
adoration. Young love in full bloom. She had forgotten her
mother came to the high school graduation ceremony. Her father
had ignored the invitation. On the next page, she saw herself in
the full bloom of her first pregnancy. The next picture showed
her in a hospital bed, looking tired and happy, Clanton in her
arms. María and Luís were on one side of the bed, her mother
and father on the other. Beneath the picture was written, “Reconciliation.”
Outside the attic window, a nest of baby birds chirped excitedly. Sierra laid the album against her breast and listened. She
knew when the mother bird was close and when it flew away by
the sounds of the chicks. Closing her eyes, she drifted.
“You can’t let it go.” Her mother smiled at her as they both worked on
their knees in the garden. “You need to take notice each day. See how
they’ve come up already. If you give these weeds a day or two, they’ll begin
choking the flowers.” She sat back on her heels and brushed strands of
dark hair back from her temples. She looked young again, healthy and
happy. “It’s like that with life, too, honey.”
Sierra awakened abruptly when the album was lifted from her
chest. Alex stood over her. “Roy Lubbeck is downstairs.”
“Oh,” she said sleepily.
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