THE COST OF A
MIRACLE
Tess was a precocious eight-year-old when she heard her
Mom and Dad
talking about
her little
brother, Andrew.
All she knew was
that he was very
sick and they
were completely
out of money.
They were moving
to an apartment
complex next
month because
Daddy didn't
have the money
for the doctor's
bills and our
house. Only a
very costly
surgery could
save him now and
it was looking
like there was
no one to loan
them the money.
She heard Daddy
say to her
tearful Mother
with whispered
desperation,
"Only a
miracle can save
him now."
Tess went to her bedroom and pulled a glass jelly jar
from its hiding
place in the
closet. She
poured all the
change out on
the floor and
counted it
carefully. Three
times, even. The
total had to be
exactly perfect.
No chance here
for mistakes.
Carefully
placing the
coins back in
the jar and
twisting on the
cap, she slipped
out the back
door and made
her way 6 blocks
to Rexall's Drug
Store with the
big red Indian
Chief sign above
the door.
She waited patiently for the pharmacist to give her some
attention but he
was too busy at
this moment.
Tess twisted her
feet to make a
scuffing noise.
Nothing. She
cleared her
throat with the
most disgusting
sound she could
muster. No good.
Finally she took
a quarter from
her jar and
banged it on the
glass counter.
That did it! "And what do you want?", the
pharmacist asked
in an annoyed
tone of voice,
"I'm
talking to my
brother from
Chicago whom I
haven't seen in
ages.", he
said without
waiting for a
reply to his
question.
"Well, I want to talk to you about my
brother.",
Tess answered
back in the same
annoyed tone.
"He's really, really sick and I want to buy a
miracle."
"I beg your pardon?" said the pharmacist.
"His name is Andrew and he has something bad growing
inside his head
and my Daddy
says only a
miracle can save
him now. So how
much does a
miracle
cost?"
"We don't sell miracles here, little girl. I'm sorry
but I can't help
you, the
pharmacist said,
softening a
little.
"Listen, I have the money to pay for it. If it isn't
enough, I will
get the rest.
Just tell me how
much it
costs."
The pharmacist's brother was a well dressed man. He
stooped down and
asked the little
girl, "What
kind of a
miracle does you
brother
need?"
"I don't know," Tess replied with her eyes
welling up.
"I just
know he's really
sick and Mommy
says he needs an
operation. But
my Daddy can't
pay for it, so I
want to use my
money".
"How much do you have?" asked the man from
Chicago
.
"One dollar and eleven cents", Tess answered
barely audibly,
"and it's
all the money I
have, but I can
get some more if
I need to."
"Well, what a coincidence," smiled the man.
"a dollar
and eleven
cents-the exact
price of a
miracle for
little
brothers."
He took her
money in one
hand and with
the other hand
he grasped her
mitten and said,
"Take me to
where you live.
I want to see
your brother and
meet your
parents. Let's
see if I have
the kind of
miracle you
need."
That well dressed man was Dr. Carlton Armstrong, a
surgeon,
specializing in
neuro-surgery.
The operation
was completed
without charge
and it wasn't
long until
Andrew was home
again and doing
well. Mom and
Dad were happily
talking about
the chain of
events that had
led them to this
place.
"That surgery", her Mom whispered, "was a
real miracle. I
wonder how much
it would have
cost?"
Tess smiled. She knew
exactly how much
a miracle cost
.............
one dollar and
eleven cents
........ plus
the faith of a
little child.
|