A woman was getting a pie ready to put into the oven when the phone
rang. It was the school nurse. Her son had some down with a high fever
and would she come and take him home? The mother calculated how
long it would take to drive to school and back, and how long the pie
should bake, and concluded there was enough time. Popping the pie
in the oven, she left for school. When she arrived, her son's fever
was worse and the nurse urged her to take him to the doctor. Seeing her
son like that -- his face flushed, his body trembling and dripping
with perspiration -- frayed her, and she drove to the clinic as fast as
she dared. She was frayed a bit more waiting for the doctor to emerge
from the examining room, which he was doing now, walking toward
her with a slip of paper in his hand. "Get him to bed," he told her,
handing her the prescription, "and start him on this right away."
By the time she got the boy home and in bed and headed
out again for the shopping mall, she was not only frayed, but frazzled
and frantic as well. And she had forgotten about the pie in the oven.
At the mall she found a pharmacy, got the prescription filled and
rushed back to the car . . . . . . Which was locked. Yes, there
were her keys, hanging in the ignition switch, locked inside the car.
She ran back into the mall, found a phone and called home. When
her son finally answered, she blurted out, "I've locked the keys
inside the car!" The boy was barely able to speak. In a hoarse
voice he whispered, "Get a wire coat hanger, Mom. You can get
in with that." The phone went dead. She began searching the mall
for a wire coat hanger -- which turned out not to be easy. Wooden
hangers and plastic hangers were there in abundance, but shops
didn't use wire hangers anymore. After combing through a dozen
stores, she found one that was behind the times just enough to
use wire hangers. Hurrying out of the mall, she allowed herself
a smile of relief. As she was about to step off the curb, she halted.
She stared at the wire coat hanger. "I don't know what to do with
this!" Then she remembered the pie in the oven. All the frustrations
of the past hour collapsed on her and she began crying. Then
she prayed, "Dear Lord, my boy is sick and he needs this medicine
and my pie is in the oven and the keys are locked in the car and,
Lord, I don't know what to do with this coat hanger. Dear Lord, send
somebody who does know what do with it, and I really need that
person NOW, Lord. Amen," She was wiping her eyes when a
beat-up older car pulled up to the curb and stopped in front of her.
A young man, twentyish-looking, in a T-shirt and ragged jeans,
got out. The first thing she noticed about him was the long, stringy
hair, and then the beard that hid everything south of his nose. He
was coming her way. When he drew near she stepped in front of him
and held out the wire coat hanger. "Young man," she said, "do you
know how to get into a locked car with one of these?" He gaped at
her for a moment, then plucked the hanger from her hand. "Where's
the car?" Telling the story, she said she had never seen anything
like it -- it was simply amazing how easily he got into her car. A
quick look at the door and window, a couple of twists of the coat
hanger and bam! Just like that, the door was open. When she saw
the door open she threw her arms around him. "Oh," she said,
"the Lord sent you! You're such a good boy. You must be a
Christian," He stepped back and said, "No ma'am, I'm not a
Christian, and I'm not a good boy. I just got out of prison
yesterday." She jumped at him and she hugged him again fiercely.
"Bless God! she cried. "He sent me a professional!"
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