http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/bizarre/1692161

A woman who had been wandering the streets for eight years was headed home
for a Christmas reunion with her family today because she remembered she
once had invested in the stock market.
When a bedraggled Alice Perley wandered into the brokerage firm of A.G.
Edwards & Sons in Nashville earlier this week the first person she met by
the elevator was Michael Guess.

"I could tell she was homeless," Guess, a financial analyst with the firm,
told Reuters Friday. "It was obvious she needed help."

When the woman told him she thought she had some money invested with the
firm, Guess was skeptical but "we need to help people regardless and I
wasn't going to walk away from her." So the 44-year-old Guess invited the
woman into his office and listened to her story.

"She was vague about everything except that she remembered the name of our
firm and felt that somehow she had money with us," said Guess.

Guess said he and another broker took some cash from their own pockets to
give her but she refused, insisting she had money in an account.

"I knew something was going on then," Guess said. "So I put through a call
to our company's office in Atlanta and asked them to check on it."

A few minutes later he had confirmation that Perley was a client -- and that
she had been missing for eight years despite exhaustive search efforts by
her family.

Guess said it appeared that Perley, a college graduate with a chemistry
degree, property and other investments, had disappeared from her home in
Kentucky after a painful divorce. She left a commercial flight during a
stopover at Nashville's airport and lived in the woods, on the streets and
in shelters in the intervening years.

The firm refused to say what her investment amounted to or to characterize
it in any way, citing customer confidentiality.

While Guess was still on the phone with the Edwards office in Atlanta, the
woman's brother, Fred Perley of Charlotte, N.C., called and talked to her.

"She was happy -- really very happy when she heard her brother's voice,"
Guess said. "It was obvious she was ready to come home. At that point, I
left the office to give them privacy but I don't mind saying I felt a real
glow myself."

The brother came to Nashville Friday to take the woman home. Said Guess:

"Well, that's what Christmas is really all about, isn't it? We're not
supposed to judge others. We're supposed to remember to help one another and
not just walk on by -- aren't we?"



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