Another story.........
By Fulton Oursler
Peter
Richards was the loneliest man in town on the day Jean Grace opened his door. You
may have seen something in the newspapers about the incident at the time it
happened, although neither his name nor hers was publicized, nor was the full
story told as I tell it here.
Pete’s
shop had come down to him from his grandfather. The little Christmas front
window was strewn with a disarray of old-fashioned things; bracelets and
lockets worn in days before the Civil War; gold rings and silver boxes; images
of jade and ivory, porcelain figurines.
On this
winter’s afternoon a child was standing there, her forehead against the glass,
earnest and enormous eyes studying each discarded treasure, as if she were
looking for something quite special. Finally, she straightened up with a
satisfied air and entered the store.
The
shadowy interior of Pete Richards’ establishment was even more cluttered than
his show window. Shelves were stacked with jewel caskets, dueling pistols,
clocks, lamps, and the floor was heaped with andirons and mandolins and things
hard to find a name for. Behind the counter stood Pete himself, a man not more
than 30 but with hair already turning gray. There was a bleak air about him as
he looked at the small customer who flattened her ungloved hands on the
counter. “Mister,” she began, “would you please let me look at that string of blue
beads in the window?” Pete parted the draperies and lifted out a necklace.
The
turquoise stones gleamed brightly against the pallor of his palm, as he spread
the ornament before her. “They’re just perfect,” said the child, to herself.
“Will you wrap them up pretty for me, please?” Pete studied her with a stony
air. “Are you buying these for someone?” “They’re for my big sister. She takes
care of me. You see, this will be the first Christmas since Mother died. I’ve
been searching for the most wonderful Christmas present for my sister.” “How
much money do you have?” asked Pete warily. She had been busily untying the
knots in a handkerchief and now she poured out a handful of pennies on the
counter. “I emptied my bank,” she explained simply. Pete Richards looked at her
thoughtfully. Then he carefully drew back the necklace.
The
price tag was visible to him but not to her. How could he tell her? The
trusting look of her blue eyes smote him like the pain of an old wound. “Just a
minute,” he said and turned toward the back of tile store. Over his shoulder he
called: “What’s your name?” He was very busy about something. “Jean Grace.”
When Pete returned to where Jean Grace waited, a package lay in his hand,
wrapped in scarlet paper and tied with a bow of green ribbon. “There you are,”
he said shortly. “Don’t lose it on the way home.” She smiled over her shoulder
as she ran out the door. Through the window he watched her go, while desolation
flooded his thoughts. Something about Jean Grace and her string of beads had
stirred him to the depths of a grief that would not stay buried.
The
child’s hair was wheat yellow, her eyes sea-blue, and once upon a time not long
before, Pete had been in love with a girl with hair of that same yellow and
with large eyes just as blue. And the turquoise necklace was to have been hers.
But there had come a rainy night–a truck skidding on a slippery road–and the
life was crushed out of his dream. Since then, Pete Richards had lived too much
with his grief in solitude. He was politely attentive to customers, but after
business hours his world seemed irrevocably empty. He was trying to forget in a
self-pitying haze that deepened day by day.
The blue
eyes of Jean Grace jolted him into acute remembrance of what he had lost, The
pain of it made him recoil from the exuberance of holiday shoppers. During the
next ten days trade was brisk; chattering women swarming in, fingering
trinkets, trying to bargain. When the last customer had gone, late on Christmas
Eve, he sighed with relief. It was over for another year. But for Pete Richards
the night was not quite over. The door opened and a young woman hurried in.
With an explicable start, he realized that she looked familiar, yet he could
not remember when or where he had seen her before. Her hair was golden yellow
and her large eyes were blue.
Without
speaking, she drew from her purse a package loosely unwrapped in its red paper
a bow of green ribbon with it. Presently the string of blue beads lay gleaming
again before him. “Did this come from your shop?” she asked. Pete raised his
eyes to hers and answered softly: “Yes, it did.” “
Are the
stones real?”
“Yes.
Not the finest quality–but real.”
“Can you
remember who it was you sold them to?”
“She was
a small girl. Her name was Jean. She bought them for her older sister’s
Christmas present.”
“How
much are they worth?”
“The
price,” he told her solemnly, “is always a confidential matter between the
seller and the customer.”
“But
Jean has never had more than a few pennies of spending money. How could she pay
for them?”
Pete was
folding the colorful paper into its creases, rewrapping the little package just
as neatly as before. “She paid the biggest price anyone can ever pay,” he said.
“She gave all she had.”
There
was a silence then that filled the little curio shop. In some faraway steeple,
a bell began to ring.
The
sound of the distant chiming, the little package lying on the counter, the
question in the eyes of the girl and the strange feeling of renewal struggling
unreasonable in the heart of the man, all had come to be because of the life of
a child.
“But why
did you do it?”
He held
out the gift in his hand. “It’s already Christmas morning,” he said.
“And
it’s my misfortune that I have no one to give anything to. Will you let me see
you home and wish you a Merry Christmas at your door?”
And so,
to the sound of many bells and in the midst of happy people, Pete Richards and
a girl whose name he had yet to learn, walked out into the beginning of the
great day that brings hope into the world for us all.
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