Bobby was getting cold sitting out in his back yard in the
snow. Bobby didn’t wear boots; he didn’t
like them and anyway he didn’t own any. The thin sneakers he wore had few holes
in them and they did a poor job of keeping out the cold. Bobby had been in his
backyard for about an hour already. And,
try as he might, he could not come up with an idea for his mother’s Christmas
gift.
He shook his head as he thought, “This is useless, even if I
do come up with an idea, I don’t have any money to spend.”
Ever since his father had passed away three years ago, the
family of five had struggled. It wasn’t because his mother didn’t care, or try,
there just never seemed to be enough. She worked nights at the hospital, but
the small wage that she was earning could only be stretched so far. What the
family lacked in money and material things, they more than made up for in love
and family unity.
Bobby had two older and one younger sister, who ran the
household in their mother’s absence. All three of his sisters had already made
beautiful gifts for their mother. Somehow it just wasn’t fair. Here it was Christmas Eve already, and he had
nothing.
Wiping a tear from his eye, Bobby kicked the snow and
started to walk down to the street where the shops and stores were. It wasn’t
easy being six without a father, especially when he needed a man to talk to.
Bobby walked from shop to shop, looking into each decorated window. Everything
seemed so beautiful and so out of reach.
It was starting to get dark and Bobby reluctantly turned to
walk home when suddenly his eyes caught the glimmer of the setting sun’s rays
reflecting off of something along the curb. He reached down and discovered a
shiny dime. Never before has anyone felt so wealthy as Bobby felt at that
moment.
As he held his new-found treasure, a warmth spread
throughout his entire body and he walked into the first store he saw. His excitement quickly turned cold when the
salesperson told him that he couldn’t buy anything with only a dime. He saw a
flower shop and went inside to wait in line.
When the shop owner asked if he could help him, Bobby
presented the dime and asked if he could buy one flower for his mother’s
Christmas gift. The shop owner looked at Bobby and his ten-cent offering. Then he put his hand on Bobby’s shoulder and
said to him, “You just wait here and I’ll see what I can do for you.”
As Bobby waited he looked at the beautiful flowers and even
though he was a boy, he could see why mothers and girls liked flowers. The
sound of the door closing as the last customer left jolted Bobby back to
reality.
All alone in the shop, Bobby began to feel alone and afraid.
Suddenly the shop owner came out and moved to the counter. There, before
Bobby’s eyes, lay twelve long stem, red roses, with leaves of green and tiny
white flowers all tied together with a big silver bow.
Bobby’s heart sank as the owner picked them up and placed
them gently into a long white box. “That will be ten cents young man.” the shop
owner said reaching out his hand for the dime. Slowly, Bobby moved his hand to
give the man his dime.
Could this be true? No one else would give him a thing for
his dime!
Sensing the boy’s reluctance, the shop owner added, “I just
happened to have some roses on sale for ten cents a dozen. Would you like
them?”
This time Bobby did not hesitate, and when the man placed
the long box into his hands, he knew it was true. Walking out the door that the
owner was holding for Bobby, he heard the shop keeper say, “Merry Christmas,
son.”
As he returned inside, the shopkeeper’s wife walked out.
“Who were you talking to back there and where are the roses you were fixing?”
Staring out the window, and blinking the tears from his own
eyes, he replied, “A strange thing happened to me this morning. While I was
setting up things to open the shop, I thought I heard a voice telling me to set
side a dozen of my best roses for a special gift. I wasn’t sure at the time
whether I had lost my mind or what, but I set them aside anyway. Then just a few minutes ago, a little boy
came into the shop and wanted to buy a flower for his mother with one small
dime.
“When I looked at him, I saw myself, many years ago. I too,
was a poor boy with nothing to buy my mother a Christmas gift. A bearded man,
whom I never knew, stopped me on the street and told me that he wanted to give
me ten dollars.
“When I saw that little boy tonight, I knew who that voice
was, and I put together a dozen of my very best roses.” The shop owner and his
wife hugged each other tightly, and as they stepped out into the bitter cold
air, they somehow didn’t feel cold at all.
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