Archive for the 'Devotion' Category

Jun 16 2007

Profile Image of sarah flanigan
sarah flanigan

Dear Dad

 

Dear Dad,

You’ve been gone a long time now. I still miss you. Obviously. We were the best of friends. Two peas in a pod. I was the chip off the old block. Much to Mom’s dismay. But maybe she didn’t really mind that much. Maybe secretly it made her proud that I loved you so. Maybe it assured her that I would grow up to be my own self - my own me.

So many things remind me of you. The early morning smell of coffee, deep and rich. Eyes, the color of the sky, backlit with sunshine. Strong, competent hands that know how to make things and fix things and hold onto things. A wink, a nod, that twinkle that says, “I understand.”

My memories aren’t the story or the words but the things that held me captive. That goofy grin of yours that I stole and made my own. Your proud exclamation that you were a hillbilly. The crook I snuggled into when I was tired or scared. The sips of beer I got for being ‘your girl.’ The collection of bows and arrows and rifles that hung on your wall. CB radios and old cars. Cowboy art and solving puzzles. You ground steel for a living but sowed seeds of curiosity in your kids. Your wisdom. Your kindness. Your papa-bear gruffness that could never hide your heart. All now, part of my heart, my being.

I just want to say, thanks - for always being there -for being my dad, my cowboy, my friend. For never giving up on me.

Happy Father’s Day, Dad.

All my love,

Sarah

6 responses so far

Dec 16 2006

Profile Image of sarah flanigan
sarah flanigan

Nick

“Sarah, what are you doing for Christmas?” Ellen asked. Her red hair and freckled face reminded me of an elf.

“Christmas?” I muttered.

Ellen flashed a grin. “Yeah, Christmas, heard of it haven’t you? The fat, happy guy delivers sweets and trinkets, people sing carols, eat like pigs and charge too much on their credit cards?”

I nodded absently. “Sounds familiar.”

“So, what are you doing?” Ellen tugged on my hair.

“The usual. Midnight Mass. Dinner at Mom’s. Presents for Molly,” I said, bored.

“Such enthusiasm!” Ellen teased.

I shrugged. “Just another holiday, El. The only fun I get out of it comes from Molly. It makes her happy.”

Ellen’s sapphire eyes darkened to indigo. “What about you?”

“We’ve known each other since high school, right?” She nodded, making her curls bounce like little red slinkies. “Still, you ask, what about me and Christmas?”

Ellen grinned impishly. “A person can always change their mind.”

“Like you said, too much eating, too much spending, too much everything.”

Ellen’s pixie face puzzled. “I don’t get this about you, Sarah. You’re such a good person, how did you become so anti-Christmas?”

I turned back to my computer screen, hoping she’d give up trying to convert me. She was my friend and I loved her for trying but some things really are lost causes.

“I guess you’re not interested in helping us at the shelter this year, either?” Ellen looked hopeful.

I shook my head. “Dishing out free food to welfare cases? No thanks, my taxes do that all year round.”

Ellen jotted an address on a post-it, as she did every year, and stuck it to my computer screen. “If you change your mind, this is where I’ll be on Christmas morning.” Refusing to be scrooged, she danced back to her desk, whistling Jingle Bells.

Though I was tempted to throw it away, I put the post-it in my pocket.

The music and chatter of the office Christmas party interrupted my concentration. Frustrated, I stuffed it all in my briefcase. I picked up the egg nog, cookies and fruitcake that littered my desk and dropped them in the trash and made for the door. Mr. Bush, my boss, blocked me at the exit. “Holiday, Sarah,” he smiled.

“But . . . ”

“It comes but once a year.” He opened my briefcase, emptied it of my work and gave it back to me. “It’ll keep,” he said. “Go home, relax and have a Merry Christmas.”

“Thank you, Mr. Bush,” I smiled. His expression cued me. “Oh, and Merry Christmas to you, too.”

*

When I got home, I made lunch for my munchkin. Tomato soup and grilled cheese sandwiches, Molly’s favorite. The back door slammed, announcing her arrival. “Mommy!” She always sounded so happy to see me that it melted my heart every time.

I grinned at my angel, rosy-faced from the cold. Golden strands of hair fell into her eyes, refusing the captivity of the barrettes I’d placed that morning.

She threw her arms around my legs. “Mommy, Mommy, I’m so excited!”

I stroked her plump cheek. “Why Pumpkin, what’s happened?”

“I got a new friend. He’s so nice. Can he eat lunch with us? We have lots of food, can he have some too?”

I pushed the hair out of her eyes. “Sure. Where is he?” I looked around.

Her eyes wandered to a spot on the ceiling. “Outside.”

“Outside?” I said surprised. “Tell him to come inside before he freezes his nose off.” I pulled another place setting from the cupboard.

“You’re sure it’s okay?” Molly had a funny look.

I stopped setting the table. “Molly, what’s the matter?”

“Nothing,” she said and shot out the back door.

As I ladled the soup into bowls, I heard the back door open and close again. The rush of icy air cheered me and made me giggle. “Okay kids,” I said, my back still turned, “sit down and eat it while it’s hot.”

“Looks mighty good,” a man said.

Startled, I turned toward that baritone and stifled a gasp when I saw my daughter’s new friend. “Molly, who is this?”

Molly sat and made her friend sit at the table with her. “This is Nick, Mommy.”

His clothes were torn and dirty and from his body odor it was apparent he hadn’t bathed recently.

“He’s a nice person. You don’t have to have new clothes to be a nice person, right?”

Nick grinned and I was surprised to see he had a beautiful smile. He stuck out his big, calloused hand. “How do you do, ma’am? Thank you for your invite to lunch. Appreciate it.”

Pretty good manners for a bum, I thought. Molly was so happy about her new pal that I went along. They ate like prize fighters and laughed and talked like dear, old friends. I drank my coffee in silence perplexed by the rapport between them.

After lunch, I started the dishes. “Go wash up, honey.” Molly obeyed without protest - another first. When she was out of earshot, I seized the opportunity to interrogate Nick.

“How exactly did you and Molly meet?” I asked.

Nick beamed another smile. “She was waiting on her bus one day and I was collecting bottles right near the stop and she smiled a sweet little smile…” His deep blue eyes sparkled but my glare vanquished that light.

He shook his head. “No,it ain’t what you think. I’d never do nothing to little children that would hurt them. I think they are the most precious things. Had some myself, once . . .” he disappeared into his own world for a minute.

I don’t know why, but I believed him. I nodded. “She smiled at you and?”

The sparkle returned and he continued his story. “She asks me, what’s you doing looking for bottles? So I says, I’m thinking if I can get enough I can get a hot dog down at the Seven Eleven. So, she gives me her cheese sandwich and apple that she didn’t eat for lunch.” He grinned at me, “you sure do have a sweet, little girl.”

“Yes, I have,” I agreed, avoiding the persuasion of his charm.

“Next day I saw her again and we chatted a minute or two. Before you know it, seemed like we was seeing each other all the time.” His big grin receded as my suspicion returned. “I don’t sit on the bench with her or nothing. I just stand back a ways and we chat. Then I go on my way and she waves goodbye from the bus and I wave back.”

“Did you tell her, Nick?” Molly appeared in the doorway.

My heart skipped a beat. “Tell me what?”

Molly joined us at the table. “Bobby Miller tried to steal my lunch box. He pulled my hair so I’d let go.”

“Just kids being kids,” Nick interjected.

“It hurt!” Molly insisted. “I almost cried, but Nick came and chased him away.” She beamed at him as if he were an angel. “He saved me, Mommy.”

I realized that Molly saw him as nothing less than a saint. “Thank you, Nick for coming to my Molly’s rescue.”

Nick stood up and bowed. I was struck by the grace of a man so large. “My pleasure, ma’am.” He pulled on his shabby coat and moved to the door. “Thanks for the eats.”

He looked pitiful in the rags he wore. “Wait a minute,” I said. “Don’t leave just yet.”

I went into the hall closet and pulled out the goodwill bag. I found my brother’s old overcoat, a pair of trousers and a shirt that would fit Nick. I brought them back to the kitchen. “Maybe you’d like these.”

Nick flushed and bowed his head. “Thank you, ma’am.”

Molly glowed. “See Nick, now you won’t be cold!”

He smiled. “Yes, little Molly, you’re right.”

“Molly, it’s time for you to clean your room,” I said.

The light in her eyes went down a notch but she nodded. She blew Nick a kiss. He pretended to catch it and put it in his pocket.

When she was out of the room, I put a twenty in his hand. “Maybe you could go to the Y and get a shower and a good night’s sleep,” I said, surprised by my own charity.

He tried to give it back but I insisted. “No, really. It would make Molly happy.”

“Bless you,” he mumbled and he was out the door.

*

The next morning, a scraping sound outside my window awakened me. I peered out the bedroom window.

Molly decked out in her red snowsuit and Nick in his new clothes, shoveled the front walk. Dread did a little dance in my stomach. “Just like a stray cat,” I mumbled, “once you feed them, they’re yours . . . ”

I threw on some clothes and went outside. “Hi Mommy,” Molly chirped.

“Morning,” I said to Nick. “What brings you here?”

“I seen your walk needed shoveling,” Nick said as he kept at it. “Thought if somebody didn’t get to it pretty soon, you or Molly might slip and fall.”

I moved a few steps closer. “That’s very kind, but it’s not necessary. My brother usually helps us with these things.”

“Mommy, can Nick have some coffee?” Molly asked.

Nick caught my frown. “Now, Molly, we don’t want to bother your Mama. She’s got better things to do than make coffee for an old man.”

Molly disagreed, “but you’re our friend! Isn’t he, Mommy?”

I nodded and smiled. I went inside and made coffee, pancakes, bacon and juice.

Molly was oblivious to my skepticism and Nick’s embarrassment. She chatted happily as we ate, but Nick knew I wasn’t happy about his presence.

After breakfast, he insisted on doing the dishes. Molly pulled a chair to the sink and helped him. I don’t know which was more shocking that I had a bum doing my dishes or that my daughter was happily doing chores. The effect he had on her was magical.

“Thank you,” I said, “it was very sweet of you to come by and help us.”

“That bottom step on your back porch is a little loose,” he said. “Where do you keep your hammer and nails?”

Molly ran to the tool drawer and pulled it open. “Right here,” she pointed.

Nick took out the tools he needed and headed for the back door.

“No, thank you, but,” I stammered, “you don’t . . .”

They were out the door and hammering away before I could stop them. When he was done and Molly was out of earshot, I’d ask him to leave.

With Molly distracted, I grabbed to opportunity to wrap presents. I lost track of time until I heard scraping and dragging coming from the garage. “Oh jeez, now what are they doing?” I yanked open the garage door. Nick, huffed and puffed, as he swept, dragged and stacked, his favorite helper, Molly, right beside him.

“Look Mommy, we’re cleaning the garage,” Molly sang.

I smiled and nodded. “What would you two like for lunch?” I asked.

So went the day. Every time I thought I could persuade Nick to leave, he found another chore to do. Each time he did a chore, I felt obliged to feed him.

By the time we ate dinner, the dishes were done and Molly was in the bath, it was nearly seven o’clock. I found Nick in the garage sweeping up the last of the dust. “Nick? Can we talk for a minute?”

He smiled. “Yes, Ma’am. At your service.”

“About all this help you’re giving us . . . ” I noticed the garage. I’d never seen it so clean and organized.

“You know, ma’am, a lot of people think I’m a bum. I can’t blame them. I got no home, don’t own anything . . .” His eyes were bright as Christmas lights, his shaggy hair sparkled like spun silver and I felt a sudden kindred connection to him. “But I ain’t a bum. I always try to return every kindness with a kindness. I don’t want to live off other folks. I want to earn my keep just like anybody.”

I forgot what I wanted to say.

“Sometimes, you just have a run of bad luck. But it don’t mean you aren’t trying to get back on your feet.” He smiled shyly. “Maybe you know what I’m saying?”

I nodded. “Maybe I do.”

He finished sweeping and leaned the broom against the wall. “It’s late and I best be getting on. Thanks for your hospitality. Tell little Molly I said, good night.” He pulled the garage door open and exposed the night, blanketed in white glitter. All of Nick’s shoveling a memory.

The cold air raised gooseflesh on my arms. “Where will you go?” I sounded like Molly.

“Shelter down the road. If I’m there before eight, I get a cot.” He patted my arm. “Ain’t nothing to worry about. I’m old and I lived a long time but I get by.”

I wanted to take him back into the house where it was warm and safe. Give him hot chocolate and cookies and offer him the guest room for the night. Maybe for as long as he needed it. I wanted to keep him from leaving, but I didn’t. Instead, I smiled and said, “Good night, Nick.”

“Night, ma’am.” He paused and smiled. “I’m glad we got the chance to talk.”

“So am I.”

I watched him as he trudged through the snow, bent against the night wind.

*

The next morning, I woke up at dawn. I had so much energy I couldn’t stay in bed. Molly snuggled in her bed and didn’t stir when I looked in on her.

Before I knew it, I had my cookbook opened to the cookie section and I was starting a batch of Christmas cookies. Mixing up the gooey batter, I developed a plan. I’d bake cookies all morning. Molly would wake up to the smell of Christmas and she’d light up like our tree. When Nick arrived, we’d have breakfast and then we’d go to the park and ice skate. A perfect plan for a perfect day. It was Christmas-time after all, and we would enjoy it! Maybe I wasn’t really anti-Christmas.

I hummed a tune as I baked. When I realized it was a Christmas carol I laughed out loud.

“Mommy?” Molly’s sleepy voice interrupted my fantasy.

I grinned. “Good morning, my peanut-butter cookie!”

Molly giggled and skipped into the kitchen. “Morning, my Gingerbread Mommy.” She laughed. “What are you doing?”

“Making cookies!” I said and put a batch in the oven.

Molly’s eyes widened. “You are?” She dragged a chair over, got up on it and looked for herself. “You are!” She hugged me tight.

We made batches and batches of cookies. Flour and cookie dough clung to our hair and our faces but we didn’t care. “When is Nick coming?”

“I don’t know.” She looked at the clock and frowned. “Maybe he’s not.”

My smile faded. “Of course he’s coming. He’s your best friend, isn’t he? Of course he’s coming.”

A knock sounded at the back door. Molly squealed, jumped down from her perch and opened the door.

“Come on in,” I said over my shoulder, “coffee’s on.”

“What’s got you in such a mood?” my brother, Michael asked.

I looked at him as if he were the dog catcher and I was a cornered stray. “What are you doing here?”

He shrugged his broad shoulders. “Thought I’d come shovel you out. It snowed all night, sis. Haven’t you looked outside?”

“No,” I said.

“Why didn’t you pull the car in last night?” Michael griped. “It’s going to be a pain digging it out.”

“I cleaned the garage,” I said absently, “forgot the car.”

“Mommy,is Nick okay?” Molly cried. “Is he buried in the snow too?”

I picked her up and hugged her. “No, honey, I’m sure Nick is safe.”

“Who’s Nick?” Michael helped himself to coffee and a cookie.

“We better get dressed and grab a shovel,” I said.

We dug the car out and cleared the drive, though Michael did most of the work. I noticed a snowman on my front lawn as if it had just appeared. Not just a snowman, but an ice sculpture, with detailing so intricate I expected him to awake and introduce himself. He wore the clothes I’d given Nick and sported a cigar in his mouth.

“Mommy,” Molly cooed, “it’s Frosty!” She trudged through the snow to it and hugged it. “I love you, Frosty.”

I spied an envelope pinned to its overcoat. Inside was a Christmas card from Nick. He’d enclosed a twenty-dollar bill and scrawled a note. “Thanks for sharing a few moments of your precious life with a grateful, old man. Merry Christmas. Nick.”

“Who’s it from? What does it say?” Molly hopped up and down.

“It’s from Nick. It says, Merry Christmas.”

“Where is he?” Molly asked.

“I don’t know. He doesn’t say.”

Molly touched the sleeve of the snowman’s overcoat. “Is this Nick? Did he get all frozen last night when it snowed?”

Michael tramped across the yard to us. “Who’s Nick?”

“How bad are the roads?” I asked him.

*

“How many shelters?” Michael complained.

“Just a couple more,” I said, peering out the window. I looked for anybody standing in doorways or by heater grates in the sidewalks. The streets were deserted.

“What’s with you?” he asked. “Molly brings home a bum . . . ”

“He’s not a bum.” “He’s our friend,” Molly explained. “Isn’t he, Mommy?”

“That’s right, honey.”

“Okay, a friend. Who mooches a few meals for doing some work? Then he gives you back the clothes and the money?”

“Uh huh.”

“He’s out of your life . . . and now you want to find him?”

“I want to make sure he’s all right,” I explained.

“Why? What’s it to you?” Michael was confused.

“He’s old. He hasn’t any family or friends or a home.” I strained to see through the wall of white.

“I know, but why do you care?” Michael asked.

I looked at my big brother. “I don’t know. I just do.”

Though we met many misplaced, sad people, we didn’t find Nick.

The weather worsened, though I pretended not to notice. Michael’s teeth chattered loudly. “I just came over to do my brotherly good deed. To shovel my sister and her kid out of the snow . . .”

I got the hint. “Okay, just take us to the police station so we can file a report. Then we’ll go home. Promise.”

“What’s gotten into you, sis?”

“Christmas,” I whispered.

*

“Don’t know his last name?” the officer asked sarcastically.

“Nick, just Nick,” I repeated.

After he finished typing the report and I signed it, he said, “You know we ain’t going to find him, don’t you?”

Molly’s eyes brimmed with tears.

“I know you’re going to try, right?” I shifted my gaze to Molly.

The cop softened, “Ah, yes Ma’am, we’re going to try.”

Michael hustled us toward the exit. A young officer stopped us before we got to the door. “Don’t let Stefanski get you down, ma’am. He’s pulling a double and chewing everybody out.”

I appreciated his kindness. “Thank you.”

“I’ll keep an eye out. I hear anything about your friend, I’ll give you a call.” He winked at Molly and went on his way.

Once we got home, Michael made it clear he wouldn’t take us out again.

I made an early dinner since none of us had eaten all day.

Michael gobbled so quickly, I doubt he even chewed. Molly played with her food. I nibbled a gingerbread man I’d made that morning. His cheerful face mocked me. I deserved it. If I hadn’t been so, what had Ellen called it, anti-Christmas, Nick wouldn’t have disappeared.

“We’ll see you tomorrow for Midnight Mass?” Michael asked. I didn’t answer him. “Sarah?”

“Yes, all right,” I nodded.

He gave me a bear hug. “Don’t worry so much.”

I couldn’t remember the last time Michael had hugged me and my face said as much.

He let go and laughed like a little kid. “Let’s not get all mushy.” He pulled on his gloves and hat and was out the door.

I tucked Molly in. “Time to go to sleep, Muffin. Tomorrow is Christmas Eve.” I pulled the comforter up to her chin.

“Why did Nick leave?”

“I don’t know,” I said.

“Is he coming back?” Molly asked.

“I don’t know that either.”

“I’m worried for him. Do you think he’s cold?”

“Why don’t you say a prayer for him?” I suggested. “Ask God to keep him safe and warm.”

She nodded, unable to keep her eyes open any longer.

I fell asleep on the sofa, watching Christmas in Connecticut. I woke to find Molly braiding my hair. “Hi, Mommy.”

I sat up. “What are you doing?”

“It’s Christmas Eve.”

I smiled. “I know, Muffin. Are you excited?”

She shrugged. “I guess so.”

“Santa’s coming tonight!” I sounded like one of Molly’s friends. Or Ellen.

Molly shook her head, “But I won’t get what I want.”

I tickled her. “Oh yes, you will. You’re the best little girl in the world. Santa will give you anything you want.”

Hope rushed into her face. “Do you think so? Will he bring Nick back?”

My smile disappeared.

Molly frowned. “I thought so.”

We devoted the rest of the day to last minute details. I had food to prepare for the family feast. Molly had parties to attend though I had to force her. “What if Nick . . . ?” she kept asking.

“I’ll come and get you. We’ll come and get you. I promise,” I kept responding.

She marched off like a soldier to war.

Despite the decorations and our dazzling tree, the house felt cold and empty. Every time the phone rang my heart leapt, only to fall when it wasn’t news about Nick.

A fund raiser for a local shelter called to solicit a donation, which I was happy to make. She was as surprised as I was by my response.

“You want to give us how much?” she asked.

“A hundred dollars? Will that help?” I looked at my check register and saw I could afford more. “How about two hundred?”

“Yes! Thank you!” I thought she’d leap through the phone.

“All right then,” I said. “Do you want to send someone by for the check?” Silence. “Is something wrong?” I asked.

“Wrong? No. It’s just that I’ve called you every year for the last five years,” she explained. “You never gave us anything. Last year, you hung up on me before I even finished. I almost didn’t call you.”

“I’m glad you did. I’ve had a change of heart.”

*

When Molly got home, exhausted from her parties, I put her down for a nap. I was tired too and fell asleep on the sofa. I probably would have slept until Christmas morning if the phone hadn’t rung.

“Yes?” I mumbled.

“Ms. Wayne? This is Officer Morgan. It’s about your friend, the homeless man?”

I was suddenly wide awake. “You found Nick?”

“Maybe. I don’t know . . . he’s in the hospital . . .”

My heart ached. “Where is he?”

*

On the way to the hospital, Molly cried. “Is he really sick?”

“I don’t know, honey,” I didn’t want her to get her hopes up too high. “We don’t know if it is Nick but we have to be brave girls. We can’t cry. Okay?”

She wiped away her tears. “Okay, Mommy, I’m brave.”

I had to convince the head nurse to let me take Molly in. She melted when Molly batted her baby blues and told her it was all she wanted for Christmas.

We entered the room hand in hand. “Nick,” I whispered.

He turned his head. My heart soared and fell in an instant. It wasn’t Nick. Just a poor, old fellow, sick and alone on Christmas Eve.

“It’s not Nick,” Molly cried.

“I’m sorry, Molly.” my own tears welled up.

We turned away but the man called us back.

“No. Don’t go. Don’t go.”

We felt bad for him. Where was his family? “I’m sorry . . . we didn’t mean to . . . ”

“Josie,” he whispered, “you came.”

“No,” I said, “you don’t understand . . . ”

“Is that Tracey there with you? Tracey, give your grandpa a hug.”

Molly looked at me.

I whispered in her ear. “He’s sick and he thinks we’re his family.”

Molly knew just what to do. She climbed onto the man’s bed and hugged him and kissed his forehead. “I love you, Grandpa.”

The ailing man’s face filled with life as tears rolled down his cheeks. “Tracey, Tracey, Tracey,” he cooed. “Grandpa loves you too.”

I took his hand and held it until he drifted back to sleep.

On our way home Molly said, “How come that man didn’t know who we were?”

“Because he was sick and confused and lonely.”

“Does he feel better now?” Molly looked hopeful.

“Yes angel, I think he does.”

*

That night, we snuggled on the sofa. “Molly, you know there are many lonely people in the world? Like the man we saw tonight?”

Molly’s azure eyes darkened. “Yes.”

“That for some people, Christmas is a really sad time?”

“Yes, Mommy.”

“This Christmas, I think maybe we should help some of those people. What do you think?”

She considered it for a moment. “Yes, we should. Do we have enough food to feed all of them?”

“There’s a shelter that Ellen goes to every year. Like the places we went with Uncle Mike. We could go there and help. People send money and food then cook it all up and feed people who have no place to go for Christmas.”

“Who do we feed?” Molly asked.

“Anybody who’s hungry and comes inside.” I hugged her.

“What about Gramma and Grandpa and Uncle Mike and Aunt Suzie? Are they coming too?”

“We can ask them,” I said. “If they don’t want to, it’s okay because you shouldn’t do things for people unless you really want to.”

*

Midnight mass was breathtaking. The choir and the lights at St. Pat’s were always magnificent to me, but this night they held a special magic. It filled me with the soul of Christmas.

Afterwards, Mom chattered on about the feast we would stuff ourselves with and how Molly would be in Heaven when she saw what Santa had brought her.

“Mom . . . there’s been a change in plans.”

“A change?” she blinked.

“Molly and I are going to the 6th Street shelter to help.”

Mom was speechless for a moment. Then she chortled. “Good one, Sarah. You got me for a minute.”

“I’m not joking, Mom.” She stopped laughing. “Ellen has been begging me for years to help and I think it’s about time I did.”

“I don’t know what to say,” Mom said. “I’m just surprised.”

“I am too. But, I’ve realized that Christmas isn’t just about me anymore. I don’t want Molly growing up to think it’s all about her, either. It’s supposed to be about peace and goodwill and reaching out to other people.”

“I know that, dear. I just didn’t know that you did.” She searched my face with a mother’s eyes. “Something’s changed you.”

“More like someone,” I said.

Mom hugged me like she’d been waiting my whole life to hear me say those words. “Merry Christmas, honey.”

On Christmas morning, Molly and I sprang out of bed. We ran for the tree and seized our presents. We raced to rip off festive wrappings and squealed with each discovery. I hadn’t had so much fun on Christmas morning since I was Molly’s age. We made a mess and didn’t bother cleaning it up. The shredded paper and ribbons made the room look so happy. We had cookies and chocolate milk for breakfast.

On the drive to Mom’s Molly asked, “Do you think Nick is at that shelter place?” Her face glowed at the thought.

“No, I don’t think he is there.” I smiled.

“Then why are we going?” Molly asked.

I pulled the car over to the curb. “Because there are many Nicks and I have a feeling we’ll meet several of them today.”

“I never met anybody named Nick, before,” Molly said.

“No, I don’t mean their names are Nick. I mean people like Nick. Down on their luck but trying to get back on their feet.”

Molly laughed. “Mommy, you sound just like him!”

I laughed too and pulled away from the curb.

*

Suzie, my sister, pouted. “Why do you have to go down there, Sarah? Are you trying to ruin our Christmas?”

“No Suzie, I’m trying to make our Christmas better. Me and Molly. I’m sorry you don’t understand.” I hugged her.

“I don’t understand.” She tried not to hug me back but couldn’t help herself.

“Suzie, leave your sister alone,” Dad said. “If she wants to help some old folks at Christmas, that’s her business. Don’t criticize her.” I smiled at Dad; he would always be my first and best knight. He winked at me. “Some of us grew up in the Depression. Some of us understand.”

*

The streets were quiet. Our feet crunched across the snow and our breaths fogged around our heads like halos. Molly held my hand tightly and looked up at me. “I think I’m a little scared.”

“Me too,” I said and pulled the door open.

The smell of turkey, stuffing and sweet potatoes filled my nostrils. “It smells like Gramma’s!” Molly laughed.

Our jitters disappeared and we waltzed into the mission like we were home. It was clean and as festive as drugstore decorations could make it. Tables and chairs were set up in long rows. Three women assembled a cafeteria style serving line. They debated how to best situate the food, guessing how many people would come, versus how many they could feed. What struck me about them was that they were ordinary women, probably with little of their own and here they were, worrying about other people.

“Excuse me,” I said.

The tall woman looked up and smiled. “Merry Christmas.”

Molly and I came across the room to her. “Merry Christmas. I’m Sarah and this is Molly. We came to help?”

The woman took my hand and shook it firmly. “I’m Vera.” She pointed to a petite woman, “this is Louise. And Mabel,” she nodded to a heavy set woman.

Vera grinned. “I don’t suppose you’ve ever done this before?”

“No,” I admitted, “I haven’t.”

“All right, then. That ways the kitchen, get yourself an apron and then get back here and we’ll figure out what to do with you,”

she winked.

I saluted. “Yes, ma’am.”

Molly looked up at Vera. “Can I have an apron too?”

We all laughed. Vera knelt down and tweaked Molly’s nose. “Why, sweetie, you can have anything you want.”

Molly smiled and hugged Vera. “Oh, thank you!”

Soon, people drifted in, delighted by the smell of the feast to come. The room buzzed with excitement and simple joy. In an instant, it was like any other Christmas gathering I’d known. Smiling, happy people, anticipating a good meal and celebrating a day of peace and goodwill.

I was scooping mashed potatoes like a pro by the time Ellen sauntered in, donning a Santa hat and an elf’s grin.

“Am I dreaming or is this my dear friend, Sarah Wayne?” she grinned so wide, her face must have hurt.

“You aren’t dreaming any more than usual,” I teased.

Molly, perched on a milk crate, served peas. She waved to Ellen. “Merry Christmas, Ellen!”

Ellen was so overjoyed she could barely speak. “What are you doing here?”

“I was invited,” I said as I plopped potatoes on a little girl’s plate. “Merry Christmas, honey.”

Ellen came around the table and hugged me. “But what made you finally come here?”

I thought of Nick and smiled. “Change of heart.”

Ellen laughed. “Like a transplant or something?”

I checked my bucket. “We’re getting low on potatoes. If some people would quit gold-bricking and get to work, I’d have a fresh supply here.”

Ellen pinched me. “Bossy, bossy,bossy,” she said and went into the kitchen for my potatoes.

As I watched Ellen go into the kitchen I said a silent prayer to Nick and thanked him for giving Christmas back to me.

copyright 2006

15 responses so far

Dec 14 2006

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sarah flanigan

There Is

There is quiet
in a crowd
noise in an
empty room

There is strength
in gentleness
there is happiness
in the gloom

Light in the shadows
darkness in the
sun

There is hope
for us all
Every One

©2006

3 responses so far

Dec 13 2006

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sarah flanigan

A Soldier’s Christmas

I received this today in an email with this message:

PLEASE, would you do me the kind favor of sending this to as many people as you can? Christmas will be coming soon and some credit is due to our U.S service men and women for our being able to celebrate these festivities. Let’ s try in this small way to pay a tiny bit of what we owe. Make people stop and think of our heroes, living and dead, who sacrificed themselves for us.

LCDR Jeff Giles, SC, USN
30th Naval Construction Regiment
OIC, Logistics Cell One
Al Taqqadum, Iraq

I don’t know if LCDR Jeff Giles is the author but I believe it is worth the read and perhaps a small prayer afterwards.

    A Soldier’s Christmas Poem

The embers glowed softly, and in their dim light,
I gazed round the room and I cherished the sight.
My wife was asleep, her head on my chest,
My daughter beside me, angelic in rest.

Outside the snow fell, a blanket of white,
Transforming the yard to a winter delight.
The sparkling lights in the tree I believe,
Completed the magic that was Christmas Eve.

My eyelids were heavy, my breathing was deep,
Secure and surrounded by love I would sleep.
In perfect contentment, or so it would seem,
So I slumbered, perhaps I started to dream.

The sound wasn’t loud, and it wasn’t too near,
But I opened my eyes when it tickled my ear.
Perhaps just a cough, I didn’t quite know,
Then the sure sound of footsteps outside in the snow.

My soul gave a tremble, I struggled to hear,
And I crept to the door just to see who was near.
Standing out in the cold and the dark of the night,
A lone figure stood, his face weary and tight.

A soldier, I puzzled, some twenty years old,
Perhaps a Marine, huddled here in the cold.
Alone in the dark, he looked up and smiled,
Standing watch over me, and my wife and my child.

“What are you doing?” I asked without fear,
“Come in this moment, it’s freezing out here!
Put down your pack, brush the snow from your sleeve,
You should be at home on a cold Christmas Eve!”

For barely a moment I saw his eyes shift,
Away from the cold and the snow blown in drifts..
To the window that danced with a warm fire’s light
Then he sighed and he said “Its really all right,
I’m out here by choice. I’m here every night.”

“It’s my duty to stand at the front of the line,
That separates you from the darkest of times.
No one had to ask or beg or implore me,
I’m proud to stand here like my fathers before me.
My Gramps died at ‘ Pearl on a day in December,”
Then he sighed, “That’s a Christmas ‘Gram always remembers.”
My dad stood his watch in the jungles of ‘ Nam ‘,
And now it is my turn and so, here I am.
I’ve not seen my own son in more than a while,
But my wife sends me pictures, he’s sure got her smile.

Then he bent and he carefully pulled from his bag,
The red, white, and blue… an American flag.
I can live through the cold and the being alone,
Away from my family, my house and my home.
I can stand at my post through the rain and the sleet,
I can sleep in a foxhole with little to eat.

I can carry the weight of killing another,
Or lay down my life with my sister and brother..
Who stand at the front against any and all,
To ensure for all time that this flag will not fall.”

“So go back inside,” he said, “harbor no fright,
Your family is waiting and I’ll be all right.”
“But isn’t there something I can do, at the least,
“Give you money,” I asked, “or prepare you a feast?

It seems all too little for all that you’ve done,
For being away from your wife and your son.”
Then his eye welled a tear that held no regret,
“Just tell us you love us, and never forget
To fight for our rights back at home while we’re gone,
To stand your own watch, no matter how long.
For when we come home, either standing or dead,
To know you remember we fought and we bled
Is payment enough, and with that we will trust,
That we mattered to you as you mattered to us.”

Indeed, you do matter to us. God speed. God bless. And Merry Christmas.
sarah flanigan

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Dec 08 2006

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sarah flanigan

Silver Bracelets

 

Silver bracelets
and golden rings
hearts of lace
soft whispered words
warm smile
shining eyes
the promise of tomorrow
and the hope of today

Sweet moments shared
stolen in the night
remembered in the day
Secrets told
secrets held…
Dreams made true
life made sweet
time forgotten
and put aside…

The light that falls upon
your Golden Hair

copyright 2006

2 responses so far

Dec 07 2006

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sarah flanigan

Be

 

Be not my adversary
but be my friend
Be not my opposer
but teach me to bend

Be not my advisor
but give me your ear
Speak not loudly
just that I may hear

Be not my path
but show me the way
Leave not my side
but know I might stray

Show me not
through your eyes
but through my own
Stand with me
but let me stand alone

Be not my keeper
but be my mate
Know that I love you
no matter our fate

Be not my shadow
but be my twin
Speak of my good deeds
and know of my sins

Be not my fire
but keep high the flame
Know my passions
and make me not tame

Be not perfect
but be what you can
Know that I give you
all that I am

© 2006

2 responses so far

Dec 03 2006

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sarah flanigan

David’s Angel

 

David was a good man. And everything about him said kindness and caring.

“Fuck Christmas!” he muttered after passing the 50th storefront display. “I fucking hate Christmas.”

The crunch of the snow underfoot serenaded him as he trudged along. His breath, a smoky fog led him to the train station. Thunk, went his book bag on the seat next to him. A little girl in a Christmas red coat, smiled at him and his heart softened. She reminded him of Emily at that age. He smiled back.

The little girl’s mother seared him with a look and pulled the girl along to another seat at the front of the car.

“For cripes sake,” he said to himself. “People are fricking paranoid.” He caught a glimpse of himself in the window and shut up. No wonder the little girl’s mother was worried. He looked like one scary dude.

He slumped in his seat and let his mind wander during the long ride home. He tried to do Christmas math in his head. If he didn’t pay this bill or went without new shoes and didn’t replace the bald tires on his truck he could get his wife something pretty. Not expensive or extravagant, like a pair of diamond earrings - too far out of his reach. Plus he had his girls too. Some books, a few CDs, maybe a little more. His head ached. From the beginning of time, it seemed to him, Christmas had always been a problem. A disappointment. Proof positive that he couldn’t do what he wanted for the three people in his life whom he loved more than anything. That he couldn’t shower them with anything their hearts desired stabbed at his heart daily.

The train slowed and signaled his stop was upon him. He rose, shouldered his book bag and shuffled to the exit. A split second before the doors opened he saw the little girl again, reflected in the glass. She smiled at him. And he thought he saw wings. Swoosh. The doors opened and the little girl was gone.

The two blocks home he took slowly, still thinking about what he would do for Christmas. He already worked all the overtime he could get - there just wasn’t any room to do more. He heaved a sigh and his breath fogged a cloud in the night air.

“David,” the voice came softly.

He stopped and looked around the empty street. Nothing there. No one there.

“You’re so damned tired now you’re hearing voices,” he scolded himself. The chill air made him shiver. He thrust his hands in his pockets and started walking again.

“David,” the voice came again - from nowhere, from everywhere.

“Who is that?”

He turned and there she was again, the little girl from the train. No longer in the red coat. No longer accompanied by her mother. But perched on the fountain in the square. She smiled again and warmth embraced David as though he stood at the edge of paradise.

“Who are you?”

“I am your heart,” she said in a voice that caressed his cheek.

He took a step closer. “Am I really seeing you? How did you get up there?” He reached out his arms afraid she would fall but she disappeared. “Where’d you go?”

No answer came, no children appeared. He went home.

Kathy was cooking in the kitchen and the smell of homemade soup made him realize he was famished. David slipped his arms around her waist. “Hi beautiful.” He nuzzled her neck. Her golden curls smelled of lemons.

“Ah, the warrior returns.” She giggled. “Hungry?”

Soon, he, Kathy, Emily and Susan sat around the table and it was all good. It was safe. It was home. It never stopped amazing him that he had such beautiful girls in his life. How blessed he was to have them. What he had ever done to deserve them he never knew. His heart ached again for all he couldn’t give them.

The girls chattered about school and boys and movies. They giggled and tugged on his beard when he tried to hug them. “Oh Dad.”

“What? You too big for your old dad to give you a hug?”

Rolling eyes, more giggles and they were off to their rooms and their teenage worlds.

He looked after them. “They are growing up too fast.”

Kathy smiled and shook her head. “We’re getting old too fast.” She cleared the table and filled the dishwasher.

“Want some help?”

She waved him off. “No, dear husband, I have it all under control. Go relax.”

He woke hours later, lying on the couch, television going. “Oh cripes.” He stumbled to bed - Kathy fast asleep - the house a silent cocoon.

***

“David…” The voice stirred his dreams into images of love and color. He nestled closer to Kathy, a smile on his face, a warmth spread through him.

“David, I am your heart…” the voice of the little angel girl came again. He opened his eyes and her face filled his field of vision. Her smile made him helplessly happy.

“Who are you, really? Why are you here?”

She took his hand and then they were flying. Above the rooftops, and traveled with the stars.

“It’s so beautiful,” he murmured. “Can I stay here forever?”

“Honey? Honey!”

David’s eyes opened and saw Kathy’s worried face.

“What?”

She let out a breath. “My God, I thought you were dead.” Tears sprang to her eyes and she pressed her cheek to his. “Are you okay? Are you sick?”

He held her tightly. “I’m fine. I’m fine.”

She untangled herself from his arms and scrutinized him. She put her hand to his forehead. “You feel warm, I’m getting the thermometer.”

He sat up in bed. “I’m fine,” he insisted. In fact, he had never felt better. “It’s just a little warm in here.”

She paused.

“You know me, I’m like a furnace when I sleep. Come on, everything is fine.”

She nodded, though her eyes didn’t believe him. “Okay. Okay.” She pulled her robe around her. “Up and at em then, time for breakfast.”

His day was like a dream - lovely in muted color and feeling. Nothing, no one, bothered him. His step was quick and easy. Life seemed so good and yet nothing had changed. He still worked a ten hour day. He still had a long commute to work and home. The air was still frigid, the world still covered in snow. But the smile never once left his face.

On his walk to take the train home he lingered and looked in the shop windows. They dazzled him. All gold and silver, sparkle and light. The jewelry store drew him in. A place he would normally avoid and knew he had no right to even enter opened its arms to him.

“May I help you?” the saleslady asked.

“I want to get my wife something nice,” he said as though he had the budget to shop there.

“What did you have in mind?”

The next hour was spent looking at diamond earrings for Kathy and gold necklaces for the girls.

The cell phone buzzed in his pocket. “Hello?”

“David!” Kathy cried. “It’s Emily!”

The world crashed down around him. “What? What about Emily?”

Kathy cried, unable to speak.

“Where are you? What is happening?”

“Huntington Hospital,” she sobbed. “Come now!”

***

Kathy and Susan huddled in green, plastic chairs in the corridor. Their tear-stained faces white with worry stabbed at his chest. He ran to them. “What’s happened? Where is Emily?”

“We were just fooling around,” Susan weeped. “Throwing snow balls. Just playing, Daddy…”

David couldn’t breathe and the world felt so small.

“She didn’t see the car. She slipped and…”

***

David stood vigil over Emily’s bed. She looked so helpless and pale. Hooked up to machines like some freakish life-sized doll. Kathy and Susan slept in chairs unable to fight the exhaustion any longer.

“Why, why, why?” his mind screamed.

There is no why,” the voice came again. And there she was, the little angel girl who appeared at will.

“Go away!” he screamed her. “Stop coming into my head!”

“You have to let her go.” She touched his hand.

“I do not! I won’t! You can’t make me!” He sobbed and clung to Emily’s hand. It was so cold. Why was it so cold?

“David…”

He put his hands to his ears. “No, I don’t hear you. I won’t hear you!”

He fought and fought hard but exhaustion captured him and he fell to fitful sleep. He fell down, down, down and could do nothing to stop it. Then she caught him and his landing was soft and sweet.

“Why do you catch me when I’m falling?” he asked.

She took his hand and led him down a corridor. It was so quiet, so still. “See this,” she said.

David was in the room where a little girl lie in a bed. Small, frail, barely breathing a breath. He shook his head. It couldn’t be. It was his little angel girl. Her father sat at her bedside, her hand to his cheek. He prayed in a whisper, he wept without sound. Her hand went limp.

“I don’t want to see this. I don’t. Don’t make me look,” David cried.

A light filled the room and a hand reached out to the little angel girl and she rose from her body to take the hand offered.

“I know what you’re trying to tell me. I know,” David screamed. “Why God, oh why?” His words echoed the little angel girl’s father.

She paused and looked back at them both. “I am your heart and shall never leave you.”

Blackness.

***

“Daddy? Daddy!”

David lifted his head at Emily’s bedside. He couldn’t believe his eyes - she was awake and making her funny face at him. “Is it you?”

She laughed like a little windchime. “Who else?” She tousled his hair.

He sat up. “But…the accident…you were…” He looked for Kathy or Susan but they were gone. “Where is your mom and Suz?”

“They went to the cafeteria. Don’t worry, they’ll be back.”

He couldn’t speak or stop the tears that ran down his face.

Tears sprang to her eyes too. “I’m sorry Daddy. I’m so sorry I was so stupid. I’m sorry I scared you.”

He hugged her the best he could. “No baby, it’s okay - Daddy’s here. It’s all okay.”

And as he hugged his daughter and thanked God for not taking her from him he saw his little angel girl smiling at him. “I am your heart, I shall never leave you.” And she became the sunlight that spread in the room and glowed warm and gold.

“I am your heart too,” David murmured. “Always and forever.”

6 responses so far

Dec 02 2006

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sarah flanigan

I Gave You a Tie

 

I gave you a tie
you gave me a hat.
We trudged through the snow
winter’s white mat.

Our cheeks went all red
the air crackled cold
the wind blew right through us
but we were still bold.

Our hearts were alive
with good Christmas cheer
because my dear friend
we were always so near.

One response so far

Nov 16 2006

Profile Image of sarah flanigan
sarah flanigan

My Pledge

I gave them my pledge
I agreed to the oath
I went on my missions
and did what they told me.

Right or wrong.
I did as I was told.

Many a rock I sat upon.
Barron lands
my eyes did come to know.
Every stretch of unwanted
black, desert space
had come to be
my stations
my posts.

Where the sun never shone.
Where no sun there was.
On fond thoughts
of warmth and fresh air
I did live.
Sweet memories
of friends
and good talk.

I sighed.
I shrugged.
I had given my pledge
taken my vows.
A good soldier was I,
A good officer I was.

I questioned nothing.
Year after year
I reported for duty.

The dreams that
had moved me when a boy
the hopes
the images that
leapt and sprang
from my mind
and my heart.
Were but that - dreams.

For the uniform
had not made me
braver still.
Had not bestowed
the courage
or strength I sought.
It had given only
the answers to
the lines in my father’s face
and the worry in my
mother’s eyes.

I inherited
the lonliness of my uniform
separated from all
that was precious to me.

In the War for Freedom
I planted the Flag.
Watching the dying
faces of my friends
hearing the cries
of life’s last breath.
With each
my heart became heavier
my fear stronger.

I was lost
I was tired.
My purpose
long forgotten.
My deeds less pure
my actions more human.
Each day
a nothing.
No tears left
only a dull ache.

In the night
I saw a shining!
it shone ever more
in my approach.
I sped toward the light
my heart lifted
my hopes rekindled.

More brilliant it became
as we drew closer
So sure was I…
so certain, so right…

The impact
the explosion
the screams of my crew
were swallowed…

The next thing
I knew
I was a small girl
sing songs
no one seemed to know.

copyright 2006

2 responses so far

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