Friday, December 9, 2011

That Thine Alms May Be in Secret


That Thine Alms May Be in Secret
Condensed from a story byy George D. Durrant
Most folks in Steelville were just a little bit afraid of Big Sam Edwards.  He’d lost his job when the mill closed and hadn’t been able to find work for six months.  He was a proud man; and now, with Christmas coming, he made a few phone calls to important people telling them that he didn’t want do-gooders trying to help his family.  He gruffly warned, “I’ll be staying up on Christmas Eve, and if anybody comes around trying to leave anything at the door, somebody’s going to get hurt.”
            On Christmas Eve, when his wife and his children had gone to bed, Sam sat in his small front room with a shotgun across his lap.  He became so weary that around two o’clock he fell asleep.
            The next morning when he awoke, there in front of him he saw a whole pile of toys, a large ham, a small Christmas tree, and an open Bible.  For a few seconds, he felt a surge of joy.  But then he became angry.  “I warned them, and somebody will pay for poking their nose into my business.”  Just then the kids came into the room and shouted, “Look, Daddy! See what Santa left us!”
            Sam jumped from his chair and quickly stepped between the children and the toys.  “Don’t touch those things!” he shouted.  “This is not our stuff, and somebody is going to pay for sneaking in here and leaving it.  That’s breaking and entering, and I’m not going to put up with it.”
            Sam went to the phone and called Sheriff Walt Durrant. “Sheriff, you get over here.  Somebody broke into my house.  I want them arrested.” 
            Sam looked over to the corner of the room where his children were standing. “You kids get back to bed,” he said.  They didn’t move, but fixed yearning eyes on their mother, who stood behind them.  She didn’t know what to do.  During the past few months, she had more or less given up on helping Sam.  If she voiced her thoughts, it always started an argument.
            Sam sternly repeated, “I said get back to bed.  It’s too early for you kids to be up anyway.”
            The children reluctantly retreated.  Kathryn went into the kitchen and started cooking some oatmeal.  Breakfast might be the best meal they were going to have that day.
            Thirty-five minutes later, Sheriff Walt Durrant knocked on the door.  “Come in!” Sam shouted.  The sheriff opened the door and said cheerfully, “Merry Christmas.”  Sam’s only reply was a look of disgust.
            “Now, what’s happened here?” asked the sheriff.
            “Somebody broke in last night and left all of this stuff on the floor, and I want them arrested.”
            “Well, Sam, that looks like pretty good stuff to me.  Did they take anything?”
            “No, they didn’t take nothing, but I’m fed up with all of the do-gooders in this town.  Didn’t I tell you to keep those meddlers away from here?”
            “Were you gone last night when they did it?”
“No, I was sitting right there in that chair.”
            “Well, Sam, you know nobody could have come in here without making a big racket.”
            Sam, more angry than ever, replied, “They might have made a big racket, but I guess I slept right through it.”
            “I guess you did,” the sheriff drawled.  “Funny thing is, when I drove down your lane from the road, I could see that nobody else had been down here since the big snow last night.”
            “Well, somebody drove or walked in here.  Now you find out who it was.”
            “I told you, there’s not a track out there.  The snow quit falling last night around nine, and nobody has been in here since then.”
            “Sheriff, there must be some tracks out there.”
            “Go see for yourself.  See if you can see where anybody came in here.”
            “I’ll show you,” said Sam.  “I don’t know why we pay taxes for a blind sheriff like you anyway.”
            Together the two men went outside.  Sam wandered down the lane searching for some tracks other than those left by the sheriff, but there were none.
            He returned to where the sheriff stood.  “Let’s go around the house,” he said.  “There will be some tacks out back.”
            Together they circled the house, but all around it the snow was as smooth as a calm lake.  Not a mark on it.
            Sam, more irritated than ever, shouted, “Somebody’s raked over the tracks.”
            “Nonsense,” said the sheriff, “nobody has been here.  I don’t know where that stuff came from, but I know this – nobody brought it here.”
            Sam didn’t know what else to say or do.  The sheriff spoke as kindly as he could.  “Look, Sam, we got Christmas waiting at home.  Why don’t you just take the stuff and enjoy it.  Forget where it came from.  Just be grateful.”
            Sam’s voice was choked with emotion as he replied, “Sheriff, I’m not grateful for nothing, except the stuff I provide for my own family.”
            The sheriff replied, “I know, Sam.  But you’ll get work soon.  Things will get better.”  He drove away.
            Completely mystified by what had happened, Sam came back into the house and sat in his chair.  Kathryn spoke softly.  “Sam, what does it matter how it got here?  It’s here.”
            Sam’s only reply was, “I just can’t figure out how somebody came here without leaving no tracks.”
            Little four-year-old Katie, who was standing nearby with the other children, excitedly said, “Daddy, maybe there’s some tracks on top of the house.”
            “I don’t think so, honey,” Sam replied gently.
            Then it hit him like a light.  Some troublemaker had actually rented a helicopter and landed on his roof!
            A few minutes later Sam propped his old wooden ladder against the side of the house and almost ran to the top. He looked carefully around.  Nothing.  Little Katie called up to him, “Are there any reindeer tracks?”
            Sam paused and looked down at her and the other children.  Then he winked at Kathryn and said with a chuckle, “Yeah, I think I can see some reindeer tracks over by the chimney.”
            Suddenly Sam had a feeling that he had not had in years.  He shouted out, “Well, what are you kids waiting for?  Those toys are for you, you know!”
            Soon the ham was cooking in the oven.  The children were playing with their toys.  The miniature Christmas tree was on the table.  Unnoticed by his family, Sam picked up the open bible.  A verse was underlined.  He softly read:  “That thine alms may be in secret: and thy Father which seeth in secret himself shall reward thee openly.”  Never before or since has more joy been packed into one little house or into one father’s heart than there was at that moment.
            From then on everybody in town knew that Sam had changed.  Almost everyone was touched by Sam’s kindness.  He’d done everything from helping Arnold Conder build a house to being the chief cook at the annual old folks’ dinner.  He was even honored as the city’s most generous citizen.  Sheriff Durrant, his closest presented him the plaque. 
            Sam wasn’t much of a public speaker.  As he accepted the award, he awkwardly said, “I don’t do no more stuff for others than anybody else around this here town.  I just wish I could do like Jesus said in the Bible.  I wished I could do something good and do it in secret so nobody would ever know.”
            As the years went by, he often said to Sheriff Durrant, “You remember, don’t you, Sheriff –that Christmas when there was no tracks nowhere?  If I could do something good for someone and leave no tracks, that would be the merriest Christmas of all.”  The sheriff would smile and say, “Maybe someday, Sam.”
            All in the community mourned when Sam’s wife died.  His children grew up, married, moved to larger cities to get work.  They and their children visited Sam as often as they could, but most of the time he was alone.
            Now it was Christmas Eve again.  Tomorrow Sam’s house would be filled with his family.  It was a tradition for them to come home on Christmas afternoon.  But tonight he was alone.  He would have gone to visit some friends but his eyesight was such that he could no longer drive, and his arthritis made walking a lot less than pleasurable.
            At about five o’clock the Gentrys had come over to sing Sam a Christmas carol.  They were a young family who’d moved into the old Conder home across the hayfield from Sam.  Their two young children, Lexie and Ben, had taken a special liking to Sam, and he to them.  They gave Sam a ride to church every Sunday and the children loved his stories.  They and their mom, Marinda Gentry, came to visit him often.
            This Christmas Eve tears moistened his cheeks as first Lexie and then Ben hugged him and said, “We love you, Grandpa Sam. Merry Christmas.”   A heavy snowfall began as they walked back to their home.
            Sam, who had difficulty in sleeping anyway, had decided to stay up late this night.  As he prepared for bed he looked out of the window and saw that the gentle snow had covered everything with a soft smooth whiteness.  The snow by then had stopped falling.  The winter scene reminded him of that mysterious “trackless” night so long ago.  As he let his mind wander in a multitude of memories, he was suddenly jolted back to reality.  Looking out across the field toward the Gentry house he saw an orange glow.  To his horror he realized that their house was on fire.  Hurrying from his chair he scooped up a jacket on his way to the back door.  He quickly climbed the wire fence that separated his house from the hayfield.  His pains forgotten in his fears for his friends’ safely, he hurried toward the burning house.  There he found a group of people standing together near the mailbox.  The fire truck had just arrived.
            No one saw Sam approach, all eyes being on the leaping flames.  Mrs. Gentry was screaming, “Bennie is still in there!” The boy’s father shouted, “I’ll try again!” but two men grabbed him.  “You can’t go back!  It’s no use!”  Unnoticed by anyone, Sam ran around and entered through the back door.  He couldn’t see because of the thick smoke but that didn’t matter because he knew the layout of the house, since he had helped build it.  Flames were everywhere.  He could feel the heat biting against him.  The smoke choked his lungs.  Suddenly he heard a faint cough.  He blindly made his way toward the sound and found little Bennie lying on the floor.  He scooped the crying child up in his arms and, running through the flames, made his way to the back door.  Once outside he held the boy close to his body and looked heavenward.  After coughing violently for several seconds the child began to cry.  He placed little Bennie down on the snow and told him to go out front to the mailbox to his mother.
            Now for the first time Sam could feel the pain.  His lungs seemed to be on fire and his skin felt as though he had been immersed in boiling water.  He wanted to be home.  Home was where he wanted to die.  Without knowing how, Sam, as if carried by angels, crossed the snow-covered field, climbed the fence, and staggered into his home. 
            A fireman found Bennie crying and making his way through the snow.  Soon the little boy was in the arms of his mother, who embraced him as she wept with love and gratitude.  As she held him, Bennie repeated over and over, “Sam, Sam, Sam.”  Overwhelmed with emotion, the parents didn’t register this, but someone else did.  The former Sheriff Durrant, now too old to be a regular lawman, but always a volunteer, stood up straight, and a look of wonder crossed his face.  “Sam,” he said softly to himself, and he walked back a few yards, so that he could see across the field.  Just as he did, he saw the light go on in Sam’s bedroom window.
            The sheriff walked back to where he could watch as Doctor Jones looked at the boy.  After just a minute the doctor said: “He looks fine, other than his curly hair is mostly gone.  But why don’t you drive down to the hospital, and I’ll come down and we’ll have a good look.  Then we’ll find a good place for you to stay until the house can be rebuilt.”
            The sheriff tapped the doctor on the shoulder and said, “You rode out on the fire truck.  Why don’t you let me give you a lift down to the hospital?”  As the old sheriff and the doctor pulled out of the Gentry lane, the sheriff said, “let’s just stop in and wish old Sam a Merry Christmas.  It will only take a minute.”  The doctor replied, “He’d be sleeping, wouldn’t he?” 
            “No, I don’t think so,” the sheriff replied.  “I think he stays too busy to sleep much.”
            As they pulled down Sam’s lane, the sheriff said softly, “No tracks in or out.”
            “What’s that?” asked the doctor.
            “Oh, nothing.”
            The deep new snow on the doorstep was undisturbed.  The two men knocked, but there was no response.  The door was not locked.  The sheriff pushed it open and entered.  The doctor said, “Let’s go, he’s asleep.  Let’s not wake him.”
            “Sam,” shouted the sheriff, as he moved further into the house.  “Let’s look back here,” he said, as he walked toward the bedroom.
            A few seconds later they switched on the light and found Sam lying fully dressed on his bed.  He didn’t stir as the sheriff said, “Sam! Sam! Are you okay?”  At the same time, the doctor took Sam’s limp wrist in his hand.  There was a faint pulse.  He put his hand on Sam’s forehead.  “He looks flushed,” he said softly.  “Feels like he has the flu that’s all over town.  He’s burning up with fever.”
            The sheriff moved closer and said, “I can smell smoke, can’t you, Doc?”
            “Yeah, it must be on our clothes,” replied the doctor.
            The sheriff spoke again, “Sam, can you hear me?”  There was no response.  “Sam, have you been over to the Gentry’s?”
            “What are you talking about, Sheriff?” the doctor asked.  “This man’s one of my patients.  He can hardly walk.”
            The sheriff leaned down so his face was only a foot away from his old friend and asked, “Sam, did you go to the Gentry’s?”
            “What’s wrong with you, Sheriff?  I told you he can’t walk much, and he’s sick, and besides, when we drove in here I noticed that there wasn’t a single track out there in the snow.”
            An almost indistinguishable smile crossed Sam’s face.  A smile that only someone like the old sheriff could have seen.  Then his head fell to the side.  Sam Edwards had died.  The doctor placed his fingers around Sam’s wrist, and after a few seconds he said: “He’s gone.”
            Near two in the morning, the sheriff had the Gentrys settled in at the local motel.  Warren Anderson from the mortuary had come and taken Sam’s body away.  Now the sheriff came back to Sam’s house.  There was something he felt he had to know.
            Sheriff Durrant parked his car in front of the dark and quiet house.  In his heart he felt certain that in some miraculous way Sam had gone to the burning house.  Soon he would know.  Were there tracks out back and across the field?  Had Sam saved the boy and brought the greatest joy a family could ever know?
            As the old sheriff’s boots crunched into the cold snow, he felt for a moment he could hear the angels singing.  He paused and looked up at the stars.
            He spoke softly as he looked up.  “Oh, heck, Sam!  You and I both know there ain’t no tracks out there.  Besides, I need to be home.  It’s Christmas.”
            As the sheriff opened his car door, he looked back at Sam’s house.  He’d miss his old friend.  A tear ran down his cheek, and he felt he heard Sam’s voice saying, “I finally did it, Sheriff.  Merry Christmas.”
            Already there was a rumor in town that the life of a little child had been saved by a miracle.  Sheriff Durrant felt satisfied with that.

9 comments:

  1. I'm excited to discover this site. I want to to thank you for ones time due to this fantastic read!! I definitely really liked every little bit of it and I have you bookmarked to see new information on your website.

    Also visit my blog post - Louis Vuitton Handbags

    ReplyDelete
  2. This blog was... how do you say it? Relevant!
    ! Finally I have found something which helped me. Thanks!


    Also visit my web site - Montre Guess

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hmm it appears like your site ate my first comment (it was extremely long) so I guess I'll just sum it up what I submitted and say, I'm
    thoroughly enjoying your blog. I as well am an aspiring blog blogger but I'm still new to the whole thing. Do you have any suggestions for inexperienced blog writers? I'd
    certainly appreciate it.

    Have a look at my web-site Gafas Oakley

    ReplyDelete
  4. Wonderful work! That is the kind of information that
    are meant to be shared around the web. Shame on the search engines for
    now not positioning this put up upper! Come on over and consult with my web site .
    Thank you =)

    My web site - Sidney Crosby Jersey

    ReplyDelete
  5. Pretty! This has been an incredibly wonderful article.
    Thank you for providing this info.

    Feel free to surf to my web-site: Wholesale Jerseys

    ReplyDelete
  6. Hello there! This article couldn't be written much better! Going through this article reminds me of my previous roommate! He always kept preaching about this. I'll forward
    this article to him. Pretty sure he's going to have a great read. Many thanks for sharing!

    Here is my site Louis Vuitton Outlet

    ReplyDelete
  7. It's going to be end of mine day, except before ending I am reading this impressive article to improve my knowledge.

    Visit my homepage Tory Burch Flats

    ReplyDelete
  8. Hello, i believe that i saw you visited my weblog
    so i got here to return the choose?.I'm trying to to find issues to enhance my website!I assume its ok to use a few of your ideas!!

    Also visit my weblog - Sac Louis Vuitton Pas Cher

    ReplyDelete
  9. Hey exceptional website! Does running a blog like this require a massive amount work?
    I have absolutely no understanding of computer programming however I was hoping
    to start my own blog soon. Anyway, should you have any recommendations or tips for new
    blog owners please share. I understand this is off topic however I simply wanted
    to ask. Appreciate it!

    Feel free to visit my blog post Sac A Main Louis Vuitton

    ReplyDelete