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Hello,
subscribers. Some of you have asked where these stories come
from. Some I hear about and track down; others are sent by
people who want to share God's good news. I rewrite all of them
so they are easily readable, but I never change facts:
A group of
women gathered around my book-signing table in a Lexington,
Kentucky bookstore to tell about their neighbor, Barbara, who
had not been able to come and tell me the story herself.
Barbara was driving down the highway, her six-year-old son
Benjamin in the passenger seat. Ben was late for his piano
lesson and Barbara was beginning to think she should have
canceled it. There was always so much to do, and Barbara, a
night duty nurse at the local hospital, had recently worked some
extra shifts. She was feeling unusually tired. And today’s
sleet storm, and resulting icy roads, were adding to her
tension. Maybe she should turn the car around…
“Mom!” Ben cried suddenly. “Look!”
Barbara saw it
at the same time. The car ahead of them had lost control on a
patch of ice. As Barbara hit her brakes, the other car spun
wildly around, rolled over, then crashed sideways into a
telephone pole. The impact was horrible.
Barbara pulled
onto the road’s shoulder, skidded to a stop, and wrenched open
her door. Thank God she was a nurse—her skill might make some
difference in the fate of these unfortunate passengers! Then she
paused. What about Ben? She couldn’t take him with her—-little
boys shouldn’t see scenes like the one she anticipated. But was
it safe to leave him alone? What if their car was hit from
behind, or a stranger approached him? For a brief moment,
Barbara considered going on her way; someone else was sure to
come along…. No! She
pushed the door wide. “Ben, honey, promise me you’ll stay in
the car!” she cried over her shoulder.
“I will,
Mommy,” she heard him say as she ran, slipping and sliding,
toward the crash site.
It was worse
than she had feared. Two high school-aged girls had been in the
car. One, the blonde on the passenger side, was dead,
apparently killed on impact. The driver, however, was
unconscious and pinned in the wreckage. Barbara quickly applied
pressure to the wound in the teenager’s head while her practiced
eyes ran over the other injuries. A broken leg, maybe two,
along with probable internal damage. But if help came soon,
this girl would live.
A trucker had
pulled up just ahead, and was calling emergency on his cell
phone. Soon Barbara heard the ambulance sirens. A few moments
later, she was glad to surrender her lonely post to the rescue
workers. “Good job,” one said as he examined the driver’s
wounds. “You probably saved her life, Ma’am.”
Perhaps. But
as Barbara walked slowly back to the car, a feeling of sadness
overwhelmed her, especially for the family of the passenger who
had died. Their lives would never be the same. Oh, God, why did
such things have to happen?
Slowly she
opened her car door. What should she tell Benjamin? She
glanced at her son. He was staring at the crash site, his blue
eyes huge. “Mom,” he whispered in awe, “did you see it?”
“See what,
honey?” she asked.
“The angel!”
“What?”
“The angel,
Mom! He came down from the sky, real softly, while you were
running to the car. And he opened the door, and he took that
girl out.”
Barbara’s eyes
were filling with tears. “Which door, Ben?”
“The passenger
side. He took her hand, and they floated up to heaven
together.”
“What about
the driver?”
Ben shrugged.
“I didn’t see anyone else. Just the blonde girl. She looked so
happy. They were talking and laughing…
Mom, it was cool!”
During the
following days, Barbara was able to meet both families. They
gave her their love and gratitude for the help she had
provided. But she was able to give them something too, the gift
of Ben’s vision. There was no way he could have known-—by
ordinary means--who was in the car, and what had happened to any
of them. Nor could the passenger door have been opened; Barbara
herself had seen its tangle of immovable steel. Yet Ben’s
account brought consolation to a grieving family. Their
daughter was home safe in heaven. They were closer to her now
than they had ever been. And they would see her again.
(C) 2000
Joan Wester Anderson. I wrote this story originally for Angels
on Earth magazine, and it may be floating around the Internet by
now.
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