Read The Scarlet Thread Online
Authors: Francine Rivers
it. Sinnott’s son is from his first wife who died.
Paralee is the second wife. She told me a few
nights back Franklin has poured all the money
she inherited into what he is carrying in those two
wagons. Two of his oxen have died already from
pulling the load. It appears to me Franklin
Sinnott is more worried about getting his goods
to Oregon than he is about little Patty lost in the
wilderness.
We made 20 miles today. Paralee did not come
out of her wagon even for the nooning. Everyone thought she was grieving in quiet. They did
not know until we camped that Franklin had
her tied so she could not get free and gagged
her so she could not cry out. MacLeod is fit to
be tied himself now that he knows what the
man did to his wife. Franklin insists he did it
for her own good. He said she would have run
off looking for little Patty otherwise.
Kavanaugh told Franklin and Paralee yesterday
the Cheyenne do not have their little girl. I sat
inside our wagon and cried. It was what he did
not say that grieved me so. Little Patricia
Sinnott is dead. Everyone but Paralee knows.
The nights are bitter cold and the days hot and
dry. The child had no blanket or water. And
there are coyotes and mountain lions and
2 8 2
grizzlys and wolves. No three year old child
could have survived one night out there.
Nellie asked me to pray with her that little
Patty was taken home to heaven quickly and did
not suffer long. I said I can not remember a time
when God heard anything I said to him. The last
time I tried was for Deborah and look what came
of that. Nellie was shocked and said—God loves
you, Mary Kathryn Farr, and you have got to
believe that. I told her that God loves those he
wants to love and I am not one of his chosen
people. I told her that it was all right because
I have no love for him either.
I did not mean to make her cry.
We are camped near a great rock that looks like
a giant turtle. Almost everyone has carved their
names upon it. Even me. Joshua and some of the
others have climbed to the top.
Devils Gate is not far from here. Joshua is riding over for a closer look. I can see it fine from
where I sit writing in my journal. It looks like a
giant ax cut through the stone mountain to let the
Sweetwater River run through. And sweet water
it is after the muddy Platte. It tastes so good. We
will follow the river west.
James had to shoot one of our oxen yesterday it
was suffering so. Beth is grieving over it. She
2 8 3
answer for her. Nellie was sitting with us and said
death is just a door believers walk through to be
with Jesus. Her words did not cheer Beth nor I.
Why does she have to keep on talking about
Jesus? Her words just raise a jumble of questions
and heartache. Beth said Old Tom was just an ox
and how could he know what to believe. Nellie
knew she had raised trouble. Beth said it was not
fair that people go to heaven and animals do not
because animals are nicer than a lot of people.
She is right about that but I could not let her go
on with such thinking. A child needs a little hope
in this world.
I told Beth Aunt Martha read to me about
heaven once and I remember it said the lion
would lie down with the lamb. Nellie said that
was right. She looked it up in her Bible right
there on the spot. And I said I remember Aunt
Martha reading that Jesus would ride down to
earth on horseback. Nellie found that too. I told
Beth there had to be animals in heaven for any
of that to happen. Lions and lambs and horses
maybe Beth said. She wanted to know if Werner
Hoffman would see his dog again in heaven.
I said likely so if Werner could get himself there.
We buried Dunham Banks today. Celia would
not let him be buried in the road. The men dug as
2 8 4
deep as they could but we are going over hard
rocky ground. MacLeod said words over him.
Celia gave baby Hortense to Beth to hold and
started gathering rocks to stack on top of poor
Dunhams grave. I helped her until the job was
done. So did Nellie.
It is dark now and Celia is still sitting by the
mound.
2 8 5
17
uniform. He was waiting at the front steps just as he said he
would be, and beside him was a young woman holding a baby.
He grinned when he saw her.
“Be polite,” Sierra said to her own children who stood glumly
beside her, annoyed at being dragged off to church. Their father
hadn’t taken them to Mass more than three times in three years. In
fact, the last time they had been inside a church was for their
grandmother’s memorial service.
“Welcome, Mrs. Madrid,” the officer said, extending his hand.
“I neglected to tell you my name. I’m Dennis O’Malley, and this
2 8 7
As people moved around them to enter the church, Sierra introduced herself and her children. Rather than be annoyed at them
for blocking a portion of the steps, people smiled warmly.
Over the last several days, since her experience on the freeway, she’d had a growing sense of . . . something. All the pain, all
the crying out, had left her feeling empty. Drained. She had
reached the end of her endurance, the end of her abilities to deal
with the mess her life had become. And yet, much to her surprise,
she wasn’t depressed, or hopeless, or any of the things she’d
expected to be. Instead, she felt . . .
directed—
as though a gentle
hand rested on her shoulder and guided her. With love. She
knew whose touch she felt. She’d heard her mother talk about
the “presence of God” more times than she’d cared to listen. But
now she understood better. She didn’t know exactly what it all
meant, but she was ready. She’d spent enough time trying to figure things out for herself, and look where that had gotten her.
Now she wanted answers. Real answers.
And for some reason, she felt a certainty that this was the place
where she’d find them.
The O’Malleys ushered them into the church and selected a
pew near the back. Clanton sat on one side of Sierra, muttering,
“What a bore,” under his breath. Carolyn sat on her other side.
Dennis sat nearest the aisle, while Noreen sat at the far end of
the pew beside Carolyn and near the outside aisle.
“Just in case I have to leave,” she said with a smile. “Sometimes Sean wakes up hungry. He’s small but he makes a big
noise.” Her blue eyes were full of warmth. Seeing Carolyn’s
look, she smiled. “Would you like to hold him?”
“Could I?”
People turned around from the pew in front. Dennis made
more introductions. Everyone was so friendly. They looked
happy to see Sierra and her children, and she felt the oddest
2 8 8
sense of connection, as though she’d finally come home. The feeling was even more poignant when the service began. Everything
was so familiar, yet different. It wasn’t that the pastor said anything she had never heard before. She had heard the gospel from
her mother since she was old enough to remember. Yet now,
inexplicably, it all made sense. It filled in the gaps of her life.
Oh!
Her soul sighed.
Ohhhhh.
The pastor spoke and the words pierced her. Her throat closed
even as her heart opened wide. Parched from wandering in the
wilderness, she drank in the living water of the Word.
“Why’re you crying?” Clanton whispered, embarrassed and
worried.
She shrugged, smiling at him. There was no time now to explain
how she felt.
Connected.
A part of something tremendous and exhilarating.
Whole.
She tried to stop the tears, but they flowed like
cleansing balm. Sorrow poured over and through her, filling her
and bringing with it a deep hunger for the Lord. In its wake came
hope and reassurance that everything would work out.
Forgive me, Father, for I have sinned mightily against thee. Mea culpa,
mea culpa. Oh, God! Oh, God!
How was it possible to feel so
alive
today, when only two days
ago she had longed for death?
The congregation rose to sing, and she rose with them, fumbling
through the hymnal and mouthing the words when emotion kept
her silent. She couldn’t read the words or even utter a sound, but it
didn’t matter. Her heart
sang.
Carolyn stood beside her, oblivious
and enthralled with baby Sean in his mother’s arms while
Clanton, on her other side, fretted, convinced she was going nuts.
She uttered a soft laugh and put her arm around him.
“I love you,” she whispered.
“Let’s
leave,”
he hissed back.
“No, we’re staying.” Forever.
It was Dennis who served her Communion. She smiled up at
2 8 9
streamed past them on the Hollywood Freeway.
You know what I
was doing when you pulled up beside me, Officer?
Praying.
So much for
divine intervention.
God had been intervening, all right. Mightily. He had brought
her to a screeching halt on the dusty shoulder of a Los Angeles
freeway rather than allow her to hurtle herself off the nearest
cliff. And he did it because he loved her and would not let her go.
She almost laughed as realization came, bringing joy with it. She
had been standing on sacred ground and hadn’t even known it!
“Bless the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me, bless his
holy name . . . ,” the congregation sang, and she sang with them,
unable to remember a time when she had felt so happy.
“Boy, am I glad that’s over,” Clanton said on the way home.
“You’d better set your mind to get used to it. We’re going
back.”
“Oh, good!” Carolyn said.
She earned a glare from her brother. “You want Mom blubbering again?”
Sierra smiled at him. “I’ll try to contain myself.”
Lying in bed that night, Sierra knew she needed to make
some changes in her life. Immediate changes. For one thing, she
couldn’t work for Ron anymore, not knowing how he felt about
her. She realized her own feelings for him were confusing. She
had always found him profoundly attractive. Several times,
she’d thought how much better her life would be had she been
married to Ron rather than Alex. That stopped her.
She was too vulnerable right now to think rationally. With
Alex gone, she was needy. She was afraid of so many things. Ron
was strong and confident. It would be too easy to turn to him for
solace. Seeking solace could lead her into an affair.
She was still married. She needed to remember that, despite
the present circumstances. For better or worse, Alex was her
2 9 0