By Myrle Crown
On Christmas Eve, I waited at the bus station in Salt Lake City, Utah, to pick up my parents after their five-hour bus ride from Vernal, Utah, to spend Christmas with my sister’s family and me. The bus arrived very late—two hours in fact.
While
I waited, I thought about how difficult this holiday season had been for me. I
had tried to focus on my preparations for Christmas, but this year my children
were traveling with their own families and my husband had passed away, and I
soon discovered that no amount of shopping and wrapping or beautiful Christmas
music could lighten my heavy heart. However, I pushed these thoughts from my
mind when I saw my parents get off the bus.
Soon
my mother and I were chatting, waiting in line to pick up their baggage. She
casually mentioned that a grandmother on the bus had traveled all the way from
Chicago, Illinois, to connect with another bus that would take her to her final
destination in Pocatello, Idaho. This traveler was sad and upset, however,
because she had missed her connection. Even if she boarded the next bus to
Pocatello, she would still miss Christmas with her daughter and new
granddaughter.
I
pictured in my mind a disappointed grandma alone in a hotel room in a strange
city on Christmas Eve. I felt a terrible sadness for her and wanted to do
something to help her.
I
soon found her talking on a pay phone to her daughter. I walked up to her,
gently tapped her on the arm, and asked if I could speak with her. She looked
startled but put her hand over the receiver and said, “Yes?”
“Are
you the lady who missed the connection to Pocatello?” I asked.
She
responded, “Yes.”
The
next words out of my mouth surprised both my mother and the stranger. “Will you
ask your daughter if she is familiar with Tremonton, Utah?”
With
hesitation in her voice, she asked her daughter the question. “Yes, she knows
where that is,” came the reply.
“Ask
her if she could drive there tonight. That is about halfway from Salt Lake City
to Pocatello.”
She
again relayed my question to her daughter, and again the answer was
affirmative.
“You
two decide on a time to meet,” I said, “and I will have you there—but give her
this phone number in the event that something goes wrong, and we need to
communicate.”
I
couldn’t hear any more of the conversation, but after she hung up, she looked
at me in utter amazement. My mother, too, was in shock as she said to my
stepfather, “Harold, make room in the back of Myrle’s car for this lady’s luggage.
She is going home with us.”
I
introduced myself and my parents to the stranger and learned that her name was
Vanessa Black. My stepfather loaded Vanessa’s bags into my little car, Vanessa
climbed into the only spot left, and then we all headed to my sister’s house
for dinner before leaving for our destination. My heart was joyful as I kept
reassuring her that she was no inconvenience (just 80 or so miles out of the
way).
Our
arrival at Tremonton was greeted by an empty town. The service stations and
restaurants were closed, and everything was dark as we looked for the place
where we were to meet Vanessa’s daughter. Meanwhile, the daughter, who had
understood that we would be arriving a half hour earlier, was anxiously trying
to contact us by phone. We pulled up to a phone booth, and as my car lights
shined into the booth, there stood Vanessa’s daughter. When she saw the lights
of my car, she came running, and Vanessa jumped out of the car to embrace her
sobbing daughter.
After
a short introduction, I said, “Well, we both have a drive ahead of us, so we
will leave you now. I hope you have a wonderful Christmas.”
Her
daughter threw her arms around me and in a teary voice responded, “We will,
thanks to you! Merry Christmas to you too.”
When
I look back on that Christmas, my heart warms at the memory of the most joyous,
peaceful Christmas I ever had. My gift to Vanessa Black was a perfect way for
me to remember the birth of the Savior, who said, “Inasmuch as ye have done it
unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me” (Matthew
25:40).
That Christmas, I received the best possible gift to brighten my Christmas—the gift of giving.
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