Read The Scarlet Thread Online
Authors: Francine Rivers
Clanton and Carolyn began spending more and more time
with Alex. They’d come home from school, scarf down snacks,
rattle off some news, whiz through their homework, and take off
for
his
condo. She began wishing she’d said
no.
She missed the
sound of their voices, even the strident ones when they were
fighting. Sometimes she resented how eager they were to be with
him, and then she was always struck with guilt afterward. Sometimes she found herself aching with loneliness.
Is it a sin, Lord? You’re supposed to be enough. I love you. I do. Help me
to accept these changes and not be so jealous and needy. Help me to know in
my heart you are sufficient. Help me rest in you.
Choir helped. On those evenings, she and the children walked
to church together and then went out to a family café afterward
for a late dessert. Sunday was the one precious day a week, for
she had the children all to herself. They went to church early and
didn’t get home until almost one in the afternoon. After a late
lunch, she walked back to church with them so they could take
part in the youth activities and she could attend the evening
Bible study.
Gradually, she felt less alone. She used the time the children
were away to study and finish all the little projects she’d laid out
for herself but never had time to do. She turned on the radio and
listened to a Christian station that played contemporary rock,
free to sing along without anyone listening to her but the Lord.
Christmas drew closer. Rather than be elated, she was depressed. All her shopping was done, the packages wrapped and
hidden in her bedroom closet and under the bed. The children
knew better than to go poking around in her room after
Thanksgiving. She’d begun addressing Christmas cards the first
week of December and had started her letters. She always wrote
to everyone. It was the one time a year when she could catch up
on all the news from friends and family.
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Ron called again. “You sound a little down.”
“I’m writing Christmas letters, and I get a little depressed
every time I have to write, ‘Mom died of cancer, and Alex and I
got a divorce’ over and over again. Just the sort of glad tidings
friends like to read at Christmas time.”
“Would a proposition help cheer you up?”
Her mouth twitched. “That depends.”
“Strictly honorable, I assure you. I’m having a Christmas
fund-raiser at the Hyatt Regency, and I’m in desperate need of a
pretty hostess.”
“To serve drinks and appetizers?”
“No. To stand beside me and greet guests, the kind of guests
who have lots and lots of money and love giving it to good causes
like Los Angeles Outreach.”
“Are any movie stars going to be there?” she said, teasing.
“A few.”
“You’re kidding!”
“I take it you might be interested.”
She feigned hesitation. “Well, I don’t know. Is Mel Gibson
attending?”
“No.”
“Then I don’t—”
“I’m begging.”
She laughed. “I’d love to help out and you know it. How
dressed up do I have to get?”
“Very. I’ll be in a tux.”
Ron gave her the details. He would pick her up early. The
fund-raiser included a full-course dinner and dancing. “It’ll go
until the wee hours,” he warned her.
Clanton was just going out the door when she hung up the
telephone. “Honey, would you tell your dad I need to talk to
him? It’s important.”
The telephone rang a few minutes later. “What’s up?” Alex said.
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“Spend the night? Where are you going to be?”
“At a fund-raiser with Ron. He said it’ll be late before I get home.”
“I haven’t got any extra beds.”
He sounded so cold. “Maybe I can borrow a couple of sleeping
bags.” Maybe he had made other plans, plans she didn’t want to
hear about. “Never mind, Alex. I should’ve thought it through
before asking you. Carolyn’s been wanting to spend the night
with Susan, and Clanton can always go to—”
“I’ll stay with them over there,” he said firmly. “We’ll do something fun for the evening, and I’ll wait at your place until you get
back.”
“It’s going to be very late, Alex.”
“You’ve got a comfortable sofa.”
“Are you sure?” He sounded less than pleased about the whole
thing.
“Yeah, I’m sure.”
Taking a deep breath, Sierra called Audra and told her she’d
been invited to a formal fund-raiser and was going to be acting as
hostess. “I need to find a dress.”
“How much can you spend?”
“Don’t even think about Rodeo Drive.”
“What size are you?” When Sierra told her, she said, “Great.
You can borrow one of my gowns. When can you come over?”
By the time Sierra got there, Audra had already picked out the
dress she thought Sierra should wear. After seeing the others, Sierra had to admit she liked it the best. It was a deep red velvet that
fit her perfectly. “I bought it for a Christmas party four years ago
and never wore it,” Audra said, admiring it on Sierra. “My feet are
a little bigger than yours, but I know just where you can get some
satin pumps and have them dyed to match,” she said while snapping on a gorgeous necklace that glittered like diamonds.
“These aren’t real, are they?” Sierra said, fingering it.
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“Zirconia. Stop sweating.” She handed her matching pierced
earrings and then helped her snap on the bracelet. Stepping back,
she looked her over. “Perfect. It looks better on you than it did on
me.” She went back into her closet and came out with a fur coat.
“Not on your life!” Sierra said, backing up. “Absolutely not,
Audra. If I damaged it or it got lost, I’d kill myself.”
“I thought you were going to say something about all the little
animals that lost their lives to make it.”
“Well, that, too,” Sierra said, making a quick calculation. It
would take a lot of cute little minks to make that coat.
“That’s what I told Steve, but men just don’t think about those
things when they’re trying to show the world how successful
they are.” She carried it back into the closet. “I wear it to the opera once in a while just so he won’t get upset about it. No one harangues me there. Oh,
good!
I knew I bought something to go
with that dress.” She came back out with a red velvet, satin-lined
cape. She draped it over Sierra’s shoulders and took a step back.
“Take a look at yourself.”
Sierra did, and her mouth dropped open. She looked like
someone else, someone who’d stepped out of a fairy tale. “I remember feeling this delight as a little girl up in the attic dressing
in grown-up clothes with my best friend.” Laughing, she looked
at Audra in the mirror. “What do you think?”
“I think you look fantastic. Does Alex know you’re going to
this affair with Ron Peirozo?”
“He’s babysitting.”
Alex came early on the night of the fund-raiser. She’d told him
Ron was picking her up at five, and he arrived an hour early.
“Mom, Daddy’s here.”
“Ask him if he’d like a soda, honey. I’ll be down in a little while.”
Nervous and excited, she had already bathed and was fixing
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dabbed on Shalimar before she stepped into her dress. Slipping
into the red satin shoes, she put on the jewelry. She was ready
half an hour before Ron was expected.
“Mom, you look so
pretty!”
Carolyn said as she came into the
living room.
Sierra smiled, gratified that at least one person in the room noticed the change in her. Alex just stared at her. He didn’t say anything. What had she been hoping? That his mouth would fall
open and his tongue loll out? She put the red cape carefully over
the back of a chair.
“Where’s Clanton?” she said as she laid her gloves and a red,
beaded purse Audra had found on top of the cape.
“Brady’s,” Carolyn said. He was a friend Clanton had met at
church who happened to live in the complex. “He said he’d be
home in a few minutes. He’s borrowing a video game. Are those
diamonds, Mom?”
“No, honey. I wouldn’t put my toe out the door if they were.”
Carolyn looked at her father. “Don’t you think she looks
pretty, Daddy?”
Blushing, Sierra avoided Alex’s eyes.
“Sí, su mama está muy hermosa,”
he said softly.
Her heart tripped as she looked at him. She looked into his
eyes and saw he meant every word.
Carolyn picked up her backpack and headed for her room.
Sierra turned, tensing. “Where are you going, honey?”
Carolyn glanced at her dad. “I’ve got some homework to do.”
“Tonight?”
“Just for a while. Daddy’s taking Clanton and me to Magic
Mountain. I guess I should take a bath, too.”
Sierra looked back at Alex and saw the sad smile touch his
mouth. “She was watching
Parent Trap
a few days ago.”
She put her hand over her stomach. “Great,” she said dully.
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He noticed the gesture. “Are you nervous?”
“A little.” Less about going out with Ron than she was seeing
that look in Alex’s eyes. She let out her breath and came around
the chair to sit down. The hatch-cover table was between them.
She liked having something between them.
Alex’s eyes narrowed slightly. “How well do you like this
guy?”
This guy?
“Ron’s one of my best friends.”
“How does he feel about you?”
She blushed. “Why are you asking?”
“You quit working for him. I’m curious why.”
She almost told him it was none of his business. Considering
his own behavior, he had a lot of nerve to ask
any
questions. Instead, she curbed her anger and decided to be honest. “I left because I knew if I stayed, I could end up in an affair with him.”
Alex’s eyes darkened, not with anger, but pain. “The way I did.”
“I don’t want to talk about the whys and wherefores of you and
Elizabeth, Alex.”
“Neither do I. I want to talk about you.”
“What about me?”
“You look . . . radiant,” he said heavily. “Are you in love with
this guy?”
There it was again, that tone. Was he baiting her? “I was
in love
with you, Alex,” she said before she thought better of it. She
paused, drawing in a steadying breath. This situation was impossible! “I don’t think I’ll ever feel like that again about anyone.
And if I did, I think I’d run as fast as I could to get away from it.”
“The way you ran from Peirozo.”
She could feel the prick of tears and fought them. “Are you deliberately trying to spoil my evening, Alex? I
like
Ron. He’s kind
and fun. I’m looking forward to this evening. I’ve never been to
anything like this. I just want to enjoy myself. Don’t you think I
have that right?”
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