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Barbara was driving her six-year-old
son,
Benjamin, to his piano lesson.
They were late, 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 extra shifts.
She was tired.
The sleet storm and icy roads added to her tension.
Maybe she
should turn the car around.
"Mom!" Ben cried, "Look!"
Just ahead a car had lost control on a patch of ice.
As Barbara tapped the
brakes,
the other car spun wildly, rolled over,
then crashed sideways into a telephone pole.
Barbara pulled over,
skidded to a stop and threw open her door.
Thank goodness
she was a nurse--
she might be able to help 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 were hit
from behind?
For a brief moment
Barbara considered going
on her way.
Someone else was sure to come along. No!
"Ben, honey, promise me you'll stay in the car!"
"I will, Mommy," he said as she ran,
slipping and sliding,
toward the crash
site.
It was worse than she'd feared.
Two girls of high school age were in the car.
One, the blonde on the passenger
side, was dead,
killed on impact.
The driver however, was still breathing.
She was unconscious and pinned in the wreckage.
Barbara quickly applied pressure to the wound
in the teenager's
head while her
practiced eye
cataloged the other injuries;
a broken leg,
maybe two,
along with probable internal bleeding.
But if help came soon, the
girl would live.
A trucker had pulled up and was calling for help
on his cellular phone.
Soon
Barbara heard the ambulance sirens.
A few moments later she surrendered her
lonely
post to 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 back to her car
a feeling of sadness overwhelmed
her,
especially for the family of the girl who had died.
Their lives would never be he same.
Oh God, why do such things have to happen?
Slowly Barbara opened her car door.
What should she tell Benjamin?
He was
staring at the crash site, his blue eyes huge.
"Mom," he whispered, "did you see it?"
"See what Honey?" she asked.
"The angel, Mom!
He came down from the sky while you were running to the car.
And he opened the door, and he took that girl out."
Barbara's eyes filled with tears. "Which door, Ben?"
"The passenger side. He took the girl's hand,
and they floated up to Heaven
together."
"What about the driver?"
Ben shrugged, "I didn't see anyone else."
Later Barbara was able to meet the families of the victims.
They expressed their
gratitude for the help she had provided.
Barbara was able to give them something more; Ben's vision.
There was no way he could have known--
by ordinary means--who was in the car or
what
had happened to either of the passengers.
Nor could the passenger door have been opened;
Barbara had seen it's
tangle of immovable steel herself,
yet Ben's account brought
consolation to a grieving family.
Their daughter was safe in Heaven.
And they
would see her again.
(Autor
Unknown)


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